On July 8, 1950, President Harry S. Truman named the WWII hero commander of U.S. and Allied Forces in Korea
Here is the original post:
Almanac: Gen. Douglas MacArthur
On July 8, 1950, President Harry S. Truman named the WWII hero commander of U.S. and Allied Forces in Korea
Here is the original post:
Almanac: Gen. Douglas MacArthur
MAE SAI, Thailand (CBSNewYork) — At least four of the 12 boys trapped in a cave in Thailand have been rescued, Thai navy SEALs said. The rescue operation began Sunday morning and Thai officials say it could take two to four days depending on conditions inside the cave. MORE FROM CBS NEWS The boys are expected to walk for much of the journey since the water level has been brought down. “Divers will work with doctors in the cave to examine each the kids’ health to determine who should get to come out first,” Chiang Rai acting Gov. Narongsak Osatanakorn said Sunday. The boys, between the ages of 11 and 16, and their soccer coach have been trapped inside the flooded cave for nearly two weeks. They became stranded after they went exploring following a practice game on June 23 and weren’t found for almost 10 days. The U.S. is working very closely with the Government of Thailand to help get all of the children out of the cave and to safety. Very brave and talented people! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 8, 2018 On Sunday, President Donald Trump said in a tweet that “The U.S. is working very closely with the Government of Thailand to help get all of the children out of the cave and to safety. Very brave and talented people!” A former Thai navy SEAL died on Friday after passing out underwater while delivery oxygen tanks inside the cave. Three workers were injured in a fall at the site on Saturday.
Continue reading here:
At Least 4 Boys Rescued From Thailand Cave
TOKYO, Japan (CBS News) — In a face-to-face visit with hopes of putting meat on the bones after the historic summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spent two days in North Korea this week negotiating with counterparts . In a first, he even spent a night in a guesthouse belonging to the regime in Pyongyang, North Korea’s capital. But late Saturday , North Korea’s Foreign Ministry called talks with Pompeo “regrettable.” A statement by an unnamed North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman said the U.S. betrayed the spirit of the summit by making unilateral demands on the complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearization of the country, The Associated Press reported. The spokesman characterized demands by the U.S. that were “gangster-like,” and described the talks as “very concerning” because they had led to a “dangerous phase that might rattle our willingness for denuclearization that had been firm.” The statement from North Korea did not, however, take direct aim at Mr. Trump. “We still cherish our good faith in President Trump,” it wrote. Experts say this indicates that the regime is not completely backing away from negotiations, but giving itself breathing room at the negotiating levels. Yet the language also raises questions about what the countries actually agreed to during the Singapore Summit. Earlier on Saturday, Pompeo had been more positive. “I think we made progress in every element of our discussions,” Pompeo told reporters after he was asked if a timeline was set for denuclearization and if there was an agreement for the regime’s destruction of its nuclear program. The trip was Pompeo’s third to North Korea this year. For the first time, he did not meet with leader Kim Jong Un while visiting the country. Pompeo, who was carrying out the first meeting between the U.S. and North Korea since Mr. Trump met with Kim Jong Un in Singapore last month, would not reveal any details on the progress he said was made. He didn’t cite any major breakthroughs. Ahead of the visit, the State Department did not make promises about what Pompeo might walk away with. After the meetings, Pompeo admitted that certain areas of U.S.-North Korea negotiations still have a long way to go. “These are complicated issues, but we made progress on almost all of the central issues,” Pompeo said. “Some places a great deal of progress. Other place(s) there’s still more work to be done.” State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert said there was never an expectation that Pompeo would meet with Kim, although other U.S. government officials previously indicated that was the plan. Pompeo never definitively said he would not meet with Kim. Pompeo went to Pyongyang with a letter for Kim Jong Un from Mr. Trump. The last time the two leaders exchanged letters was in early June when Kim Yong Chol — the country’s former spy chief and now the vice chairman of the Workers’ Party Central Committee — brought a letter to the White House for Mr. Trump on behalf of the leader. Kim Yong Chol delivered that letter by hand and met with Mr. Trump for about two hours. Pompeo pointed to an incremental development in North Korea’s commitment to return the remains of missing American soldiers . Department of Defense officials will meet with North Korean counterparts on July 12 to discuss the return of the remains. The conversations are based on a commitment that Kim Jong Un made last month during the Singapore summit. Last month Mr. Trump incorrectly stated that the remains were already sent to the United States. Before Pompeo’s visit, U.S. officials had named the missile test engine site that the North Koreans agreed to destroy — a commitment that was also made at the Singapore summit. Pompeo spoke with his counterparts about this commitment, but details were lacking. Pompeo did not say there was an agreement to monitor that destruction or if there would be any kind of technical verification that the destruction actually happened. Before Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol dove into Saturday’s long day of negotiations, Kim Yong Chol made some snarky comments as he sat with Pompeo in front of cameras. “Thinking about those discussions you might have not slept well last night,” he said to Pompeo, referencing their close to three-hour meal the night before during which they discussed “very important matters.” Pompeo told the North Korean negotiator that he “slept just fine.” Neither side revealed any details about the evening’s conversation. Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol indicated that a significant distance remains between the two sides in terms of expectations and demands. They both said they had things to “clarify.” Pompeo, who is now in Tokyo, is expected to meet with Japanese and South Korean counterparts to brief them on his visit. — Kylie Atwood (© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
Excerpt from:
North Korea Calls Talks With Pompeo ‘Regrettable’ After He Said ‘Progress’ Was Made
TOKYO, Japan (CBS News) — In a face-to-face visit with hopes of putting meat on the bones after the historic summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spent two days in North Korea this week negotiating with counterparts . In a first, he even spent a night in a guesthouse belonging to the regime in Pyongyang, North Korea’s capital. But late Saturday , North Korea’s Foreign Ministry called talks with Pompeo “regrettable.” A statement by an unnamed North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman said the U.S. betrayed the spirit of the summit by making unilateral demands on the complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearization of the country, The Associated Press reported. The spokesman characterized demands by the U.S. that were “gangster-like,” and described the talks as “very concerning” because they had led to a “dangerous phase that might rattle our willingness for denuclearization that had been firm.” The statement from North Korea did not, however, take direct aim at Mr. Trump. “We still cherish our good faith in President Trump,” it wrote. Experts say this indicates that the regime is not completely backing away from negotiations, but giving itself breathing room at the negotiating levels. Yet the language also raises questions about what the countries actually agreed to during the Singapore Summit. Earlier on Saturday, Pompeo had been more positive. “I think we made progress in every element of our discussions,” Pompeo told reporters after he was asked if a timeline was set for denuclearization and if there was an agreement for the regime’s destruction of its nuclear program. The trip was Pompeo’s third to North Korea this year. For the first time, he did not meet with leader Kim Jong Un while visiting the country. Pompeo, who was carrying out the first meeting between the U.S. and North Korea since Mr. Trump met with Kim Jong Un in Singapore last month, would not reveal any details on the progress he said was made. He didn’t cite any major breakthroughs. Ahead of the visit, the State Department did not make promises about what Pompeo might walk away with. After the meetings, Pompeo admitted that certain areas of U.S.-North Korea negotiations still have a long way to go. “These are complicated issues, but we made progress on almost all of the central issues,” Pompeo said. “Some places a great deal of progress. Other place(s) there’s still more work to be done.” State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert said there was never an expectation that Pompeo would meet with Kim, although other U.S. government officials previously indicated that was the plan. Pompeo never definitively said he would not meet with Kim. Pompeo went to Pyongyang with a letter for Kim Jong Un from Mr. Trump. The last time the two leaders exchanged letters was in early June when Kim Yong Chol — the country’s former spy chief and now the vice chairman of the Workers’ Party Central Committee — brought a letter to the White House for Mr. Trump on behalf of the leader. Kim Yong Chol delivered that letter by hand and met with Mr. Trump for about two hours. Pompeo pointed to an incremental development in North Korea’s commitment to return the remains of missing American soldiers . Department of Defense officials will meet with North Korean counterparts on July 12 to discuss the return of the remains. The conversations are based on a commitment that Kim Jong Un made last month during the Singapore summit. Last month Mr. Trump incorrectly stated that the remains were already sent to the United States. Before Pompeo’s visit, U.S. officials had named the missile test engine site that the North Koreans agreed to destroy — a commitment that was also made at the Singapore summit. Pompeo spoke with his counterparts about this commitment, but details were lacking. Pompeo did not say there was an agreement to monitor that destruction or if there would be any kind of technical verification that the destruction actually happened. Before Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol dove into Saturday’s long day of negotiations, Kim Yong Chol made some snarky comments as he sat with Pompeo in front of cameras. “Thinking about those discussions you might have not slept well last night,” he said to Pompeo, referencing their close to three-hour meal the night before during which they discussed “very important matters.” Pompeo told the North Korean negotiator that he “slept just fine.” Neither side revealed any details about the evening’s conversation. Pompeo and Kim Yong Chol indicated that a significant distance remains between the two sides in terms of expectations and demands. They both said they had things to “clarify.” Pompeo, who is now in Tokyo, is expected to meet with Japanese and South Korean counterparts to brief them on his visit. — Kylie Atwood (© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
Excerpt from:
North Korea Calls Talks With Pompeo ‘Regrettable’ After He Said ‘Progress’ Was Made
North Korea said the U.S. betrayed the spirit of last month’s summit between President Trump and Kim Yong Un in Singapore
Read this article:
North Korea accuses U.S. of making unilateral demands for denuclearization
New York Magazine national correspondent Gabe Debenedetti joins “CBS This Morning: Saturday” to discuss the only way Democrats can hope to block President Trump’s Supreme Court justice nominee, the growing trade dispute with China and the looming deadline to reunite children separated from their families at the border.
View post:
Why can’t the Trump administration reunite families more quickly?
New York Magazine national correspondent Gabe Debenedetti joins “CBS This Morning: Saturday” to discuss the only way Democrats can hope to block President Trump’s Supreme Court justice nominee, the growing trade dispute with China and the looming deadline to reunite children separated from their families at the border.
Read this article:
Why can’t the Trump administration reunite families more quickly?
LOS ANGELES, United States (AFP) — A California judge on Friday gave the US government until the following night to submit a list of children under five separated from their families at the border, a government official said.US President Donald Trump’s administration had asked the court to extend a deadline to reunite some detained children with their migrant parents, arguing it needed more time to perform necessary checks and confirm identities.
Follow this link:
US judge orders list of children separated from migrant parents
This week in Washington, new tariffs hit Chinese goods, the president promised he would soon name his choice for SCOTUS nominee and EPA chief Scott Pruitt resigned. CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett joins CBSN to break down the week in politics.
Excerpt from:
Inside politics this week: Tariffs, SCOTUS and Scott Pruitt resigns
MAE SAI, Thailand (CBS News) – Thai authorities overseeing the rescue operation for 12 boys and their soccer coach trapped in a flooded cave in the country’s north said they have a “limited amount of time” to get them out, as they raced Friday against worsening weather and lowered oxygen levels in the underground complex. Thai rescue personnel are seen at the Tham Luang cave area as operations continue for the 12 boys and their coach trapped at the cave in Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park in Chiang Rai on July 6, 2018. (Getty Images) The massive operation inside and around Tham Luang Nang Non cave in Chiang Rai province suffered its first fatality Friday when a former Thai navy SEAL passed out underwater on an overnight mission and was unable to be revived. “We can no longer wait for all conditions (to be ready) because circumstances are pressuring us,” Thai SEAL commander Arpakorn Yookongkaew told a news conference. “We originally thought the boys can stay safe inside the cave for quite some time but circumstances have changed. We have limited amount of time.” The oxygen levels inside the cave were getting lower because of all the workers inside, and authorities on Friday were trying to install a 3-mile-long oxygen tube to pump in air, CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy reports. A senior army commander, Maj. Gen. Chalongchai Chaiyakam, said that the most pressing mission was to provide the oxygen line to reach the kids, who are stuck deep in the complex but are being looked after by four SEALs, including a medic. He said the oxygen line was also tied to a telephone line that would provide a channel of communication for the team. The boys, aged 11-16, and their 25-year-old coach went exploring in the cave after a soccer game June 23. Monsoon flooding cut off their escape and prevented rescuers from finding them for almost 10 days as the only way to reach them was by navigating a series of dark and tight passageways filled with muddy water and strong currents. Authorities have been racing to pump out water from the cave before more storms hit the region in the coming days and send water levels rising again. Due to high water levels, the only way for the boys to get out of the cave would be by diving, something cave rescue experts warn is extremely dangerous, even for those with experience. Authorities were trying to drain the flood waters to a level where the boys would not have to dive and could swim out with their heads above water, Tracy reports, but there were worries that even if the water levels were lowered, the boys would not have the endurance to make the trip. Friday’s death of the former SEAL underscores the risks of diving. The diver was working in a volunteer capacity and died during an overnight mission in which he was placing oxygen canisters along the route divers must take to get to the children. The strategically placed canisters would allow divers to stay under water for longer during the approximately five hour trip to reach the stranded team. While underwater, the rescuer passed out and efforts to resuscitate him failed. The governor has said the 13 boys may not be extracted at the same time, depending on their condition. The boys were reportedly weak but for the most part physically healthy. They had been practicing wearing diving masks and breathing, in preparation for the possibility of diving. Cave rescue experts have said it could be safest to simply supply the boys where they are and wait for the flooding to subside. That could take months, however, given that Thailand’s rainy season typically lasts through October. And without proper oxygen levels, staying put could also prove deadly. Meanwhile on Friday, FIFA, the organizers of the World Cup, sent a letter to the president of the Football Association of Thailand offering their “deepest sympathies and support” to the families of young soccer players and their coach. The letter, signed by FIFA President Gianni Infantino, invited the team to the World Cup final in Russia, should they be rescued in time and be healthy enough to travel. It said that the team’s appearance at the final would “undoubtedly be a wonderful moment of communion and celebration.” The boys have asked the navy SEALs taking care of them in the cave for details about what has happened in the World Cup since they got trapped on June 23. © 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Follow this link:
Following Diver’s Death, Time Running Out To Rescue Trapped Boys, Thai Official Says
EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt has resigned following a wave of ethics and management scandals. But environmentalists say Pruitt’s replacement, Andrew Wheeler, should “scare anyone who breathes.” CBS News Washington correspondent Paula Reid joined CBSN to discuss those concerns and why President Trump stood by his embattled EPA chief for months.
Continued here:
Scott Pruitt out at EPA after months of ethics scandals
EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt has resigned following a wave of ethics and management scandals. But environmentalists say Pruitt’s replacement, Andrew Wheeler, should “scare anyone who breathes.” CBS News Washington correspondent Paula Reid joined CBSN to discuss those concerns and why President Trump stood by his embattled EPA chief for months.
Continued here:
Scott Pruitt out at EPA after months of ethics scandals
WASHINGTON, DC (CBSNewYork) – The Trump administration has been threatening for months to impose trade tariffs on China, and this morning it became a reality – with an immediate response on American goods in return. “The era of global freeloading and taking advantage of the United States is over, it’s just over,” said President Donald Trump when promoting his commerce policy with the Asian economic giant. Trump spoke with journalists last week, saying U.S. tariffs on an additional $16 billion worth of Chinese goods are also set to take effect in two weeks, reports CBS2’s Reena Roy. He argues this is necessary to pressure china into stopping its pattern of unfair trade practices and theft of American intellectual property. “We are going to make trade fair and reciprocal,” he said. “Reciprocal, you know what that is. They do it to us, we do it to them. We are placing very big tariffs on some of these countries because they have tariffs on us.” In a statement, China’s commerce ministry announced plans to impose their own measures. “The Chinese side promised not to fight the first shot, but in order to defend the core interests of the country and the interests of the people, they had to be forced to make the necessary counterattacks,” it read, but no details were provided. Previously officials in Beijing released a target list of American goods including soybeans electric cars and whiskey. Meanwhile the U.S. tariffs hit more than 800 Chinese items, including industrial machinery, medical devices and auto parts. American manufacturing companies that supply carmakers like Ford and General Motors now face a 25 percent increase on imported parts from China.
Read the original here:
Trade Tariffs On China Begin, Response On U.S. Goods Announced
It’s a busy beginning to July for President Trump: He will announce his Supreme Court nominee, attend a NATO meeting, visit Britain and meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin. CBSN political contributor and Associated Press White House reporter Zeke Miller and NPR White House reporter Ayesha Rascoe, join “Red & Blue” to discuss how the White House is managing the major domestic and foreign policy initiatives.
Go here to read the rest:
Trump to announce SCOTUS nominee, attend NATO meeting, visit U.K and meet with Putin in a span of less than two weeks
WASHINGTON (CNN) — A former coal lobbyist will be the new acting head of the Environmental Protection Agency after former agency Administrator Scott Pruitt resigned on Thursday. Andrew Wheeler was confirmed by the Senate in April to be the EPA’s deputy administrator, but he was criticized by Democrats for his past ties to energy lobbyists. Wheeler worked at FaegreBD Consulting and Faegre Baker Daniels law firm before going to the EPA. His firm’s clients included Murray Energy, which calls itself “the largest coal mining company in America.” Prior to his time lobbying, Wheeler served on Capitol Hill as a Republican staff member for the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee and as a top aide to Sen. Jim Inhofe, an Oklahoma Republican who’s an outspoken climate change skeptic. Wheeler is originally from Hamilton, Ohio, his biography on the EPA website said. He has a law degree from Washington University in St. Louis and an MBA from George Mason University. His appointment to a government position has come with lots of criticism from Democrats. CNN previously reported that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer dubbed Wheeler “a former industry lobbyist who has worked on behalf of big polluters and climate change deniers.” “He has spent years working to undermine or lobby against the environmental protections he may soon oversee,” the New York Democrat said at the time of Wheeler’s confirmation hearing. Pruitt, whose tenure as head of the organization was plagued by numerous scandals, officially stepped down from his role Thursday, according to a tweet from President Donald Trump. The move left Wheeler to assume his duties. “Now we have his deputy administrator coming in, and it’s not clear whether this person is committed to protecting the environment. That’s the real problem,” Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Maryland, said Thursday. The-CNN-Wire & © 2018 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.
Read more:
EPA Shuffle: Scott Pruitt Out; Former Coal Lobbyist In