Jumat, 24 Mei 2019

US to send 1,500 extra troops to Middle East amid tensions - BBC News

The US is to send additional troops to the Middle East to counter the "ongoing threat posed by Iranian forces", the acting defence secretary says.

Congress has been notified about the plans, Patrick Shanahan said in a statement. Troops, fighter jets and engineers will all be deployed.

President Donald Trump announced the move earlier on Friday. He said the deployment was "relatively small".

Tensions rose this month, and the US sent an aircraft carrier to the Gulf.

The US has also deployed more planes to the region in recent days, with officials saying there was a threat from Iran-backed forces in Iraq.

But only on Thursday, Mr Trump said he did not think more troops were needed.

"I don't think we're going to need them," he told reporters. "I really don't. I would certainly send troops if we need them."

What is the latest US move?

In his statement, Mr Shanahan said he had "approved a request from the combatant commander for additional resources" in the region.

He said the move was intended to "safeguard US forces given the ongoing threat posed by Iranian forces, including the IRGC [Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps] and its proxies."

Mr Shanahan said that "additional intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance aircraft" would be deployed as well as a team of engineers. He said a fighter aircraft squadron would also be sent.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The IRGC is the most elite military unit in Iran. Last month, the US designated it as a foreign terrorist organisation.

Earlier on Friday, President Trump told reporters outside the White House that a "relatively small" deployment had been approved.

"We want to have protection in the Middle East," he said, adding that the extra troops would be "mostly protective."

A military boost amid high tensions

The additional 1,500 troops will add to the more than 50,000 US military personnel already spread across the region.

The deployment, which is smaller than some of the numbers talked of earlier in the week, comes at a time of high tensions. US officials say there's been a spike in threats against American assets from Iran and its proxies.

The Pentagon is portraying this as a defensive rather than offensive move. Mr Shanahan said earlier this week that US action had already forced Iran to put its planned actions on hold.

President Trump, meanwhile, has indicated that he does not want a war with Iran. He's had to rein in more hawkish aides, such as his National Security Adviser John Bolton. But on Twitter he has sounded more impulsive, warning last weekend. "If Iran wants to fight that will be the official end of Iran. Never threaten the United States again!"

What is behind the tensions?

Tensions between the US and Iran began rising this month when Washington ended exemptions from sanctions for countries still buying from Iran. The decision was intended to bring Iran's oil exports to zero, denying the government its main source of revenue.

Mr Trump reinstated the sanctions last year after abandoning the landmark nuclear deal that Iran has signed with six nations - the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany.

Iran has now announced it it will suspend several commitments under the deal.

The US has proceeded to send an aircraft carrier, B-52 bombers and a Patriot missile defence battery to the region because of "troubling and escalatory indications" related to Iran.

Earlier this month, four oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman were damaged in what the United Arab Emirates said were sabotage attacks while drone attacks on two oil pumping stations in Saudi Arabia by Yemen's Houthi rebels - who are supported by Iran - forced the temporary closure of a pipeline.

Iran has denied that it was behind the incidents.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48404141

2019-05-24 18:11:15Z
52780302924096

Theresa May to resign: In tearful remarks, U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May announced today she will resign on June 7 after Brexit revolt - live updates - CBS News

London -- Beleaguered British Prime Minister Theresa May announced on Friday that she will resign on June 7, following a mutiny in her Conservative Party over her handling of Britain's withdrawal from the European Union. May met with the leader of a group of hardline Brexit supporters from her party earlier Friday to agree a timetable to stand down and allow a successor to be chosen from amongst the Conservative ranks.

May is expected to continue as caretaker prime minister until her party elects a new leader. That internal election process will begin in the days immediately following her resignation on June 7. The leader of the party automatically becomes the prime minister.  

Speaking to the nation outside her office, May said she believed that "if you give people a choice, you have a duty to implement what they decide," referring to the 2016 public referendum that saw the nation opt to leave the EU. "I have done my best," she said. 

"I have done everything I can to convince MPs," she said, noting that she had "tried three times" to get the deal she reached with European negotiators approved by Parliament.

"I believe it was right to persevere even where the odds against success seemed high," she said. "But it is now clear to me that it is in the best interests of the country for a new prime minister to lead that effort." (Watch the video below to see more of May's remarks.)

U.K. PM Theresa May says she will resign amid Brexit mutiny

May said "I deeply regret" being unable to deliver on the Brexit commitment. 

"I will shortly leave the job that it has been the honor of my life to hold," she said. "The second female prime minister, but certainly not the last."

Choking up with tears, May continued: "I do so with no ill will, but with enormous and enduring gratitude to have had the opportunity to serve the country I love."

The humiliating spectacle of the prime minister detailing her departure date followed a toxic response to the latest draft of her Brexit plan -- her forth -- this week from cabinet colleagues and fellow Conservative lawmakers.

May had previously said she would step aside once a Brexit deal had been passed by parliament, and launched a fresh bid on Tuesday for lawmakers to vote on it in early June, but the government postponed that vote.

MPs have already overwhelmingly rejected three slightly different versions of the EU divorce plan May's government spent more than two years hammering out with European leaders. Her latest proposals, which included giving them the option of choosing to hold a new referendum on the deal, prompted a furious reaction among Conservatives.

Pressure intensified on May after Andrea Leadsom -- one of the cabinet's strongest Brexit backers -- resigned on Wednesday from her post as the government's representative in parliament. In her resignation letter Leadsom told the prime minister she no longer believed that her approach would deliver on the 2016 referendum result to leave the EU.

EU leaders and British Prime Minister Theresa May agree to Brexit extension

What happens next

With the stalemate in Parliament, Britain's originally scheduled EU departure date of March 29 was extended, first to April 12, and now to October 31 which, as CBS News contributor Simon Bates noted, is Halloween. Amid the political paralysis, the clamor for May to stand down grew fast, and it intensified after disastrous results for the Conservatives in the May 2 English local elections.

It will likely take a few weeks for the party to pick its new leader from about four lawmakers who have put their names forward. 

Once the new prime minister takes office, they will have until the end of October deadline to do what May failed to; get a divorce proposal agreed to by parliament and then presented back to the EU for approval by the other 27 member states. 

If that doesn't happen, Britain would likely crash out of the EU with no future arrangements in place -- a so-called "no-deal" Brexit. Economists and analysts have warned that such a disorderly exit would likely hit Britain's economy hard and cause backups of goods and people at entry points. Some have predicted shortages in Britain of medicines and even some food items, given expected bottlenecks at shipping ports.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cbsnews.com/news/prime-minister-theresa-may-resign-date-announcement-today-tearful-remarks-after-brexit-revolt-live-updates-2019-05-24/

2019-05-24 15:09:00Z
52780302735748

Theresa May to resign: In tearful remarks, UK Prime Minister Theresa May announced today she will resign on June 7 after Brexit revolt - live updates - CBS News

London -- Beleaguered British Prime Minister Theresa May announced on Friday that she will resign on June 7, following a mutiny in her Conservative Party over her handling of Britain's withdrawal from the European Union. May met with the leader of a group of hardline Brexit supporters from her party earlier Friday to agree a timetable to stand down and allow a successor to be chosen from amongst the Conservative ranks.

May is expected to continue as caretaker prime minister until her party elects a new leader. That internal election process will begin in the days immediately following her resignation on June 7. The leader of the party automatically becomes the prime minister.  

Speaking to the nation outside her office, May said she believed that "if you give people a choice, you have a duty to implement what they decide," referring to the 2016 public referendum that saw the nation opt to leave the EU. "I have done my best," she said. 

"I have done everything I can to convince MPs," she said, noting that she had "tried three times" to get the deal she reached with European negotiators approved by Parliament.

"I believe it was right to persevere even where the odds against success seemed high," she said. "But it is now clear to me that it is in the best interests of the country for a new prime minister to lead that effort." (Watch the video below to see more of May's remarks.)

U.K. PM Theresa May says she will resign amid Brexit mutiny

May said "I deeply regret" being unable to deliver on the Brexit commitment. 

"I will shortly leave the job that it has been the honor of my life to hold," she said. "The second female prime minister, but certainly not the last."

Choking up with tears, May continued: "I do so with no ill will, but with enormous and enduring gratitude to have had the opportunity to serve the country I love."

The humiliating spectacle of the prime minister detailing her departure date followed a toxic response to the latest draft of her Brexit plan -- her forth -- this week from cabinet colleagues and fellow Conservative lawmakers.

May had previously said she would step aside once a Brexit deal had been passed by parliament, and launched a fresh bid on Tuesday for lawmakers to vote on it in early June, but the government postponed that vote.

MPs have already overwhelmingly rejected three slightly different versions of the EU divorce plan May's government spent more than two years hammering out with European leaders. Her latest proposals, which included giving them the option of choosing to hold a new referendum on the deal, prompted a furious reaction among Conservatives.

Pressure intensified on May after Andrea Leadsom -- one of the cabinet's strongest Brexit backers -- resigned on Wednesday from her post as the government's representative in parliament. In her resignation letter Leadsom told the prime minister she no longer believed that her approach would deliver on the 2016 referendum result to leave the EU.

EU leaders and British Prime Minister Theresa May agree to Brexit extension

What happens next

With the stalemate in Parliament, Britain's originally scheduled EU departure date of March 29 was extended, first to April 12, and now to October 31 which, as CBS News contributor Simon Bates noted, is Halloween. Amid the political paralysis, the clamor for May to stand down grew fast, and it intensified after disastrous results for the Conservatives in the May 2 English local elections.

It will likely take a few weeks for the party to pick its new leader from about four lawmakers who have put their names forward. 

Once the new prime minister takes office, they will have until the end of October deadline to do what May failed to; get a divorce proposal agreed to by parliament and then presented back to the EU for approval by the other 27 member states. 

If that doesn't happen, Britain would likely crash out of the EU with no future arrangements in place -- a so-called "no-deal" Brexit. Economists and analysts have warned that such a disorderly exit would likely hit Britain's economy hard and cause backups of goods and people at entry points. Some have predicted shortages in Britain of medicines and even some food items, given expected bottlenecks at shipping ports.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cbsnews.com/news/prime-minister-theresa-may-resign-date-announcement-today-tearful-remarks-after-brexit-revolt-live-updates-2019-05-24/

2019-05-24 13:36:00Z
52780302735748

Everest: Three more die amid overcrowding near summit - BBC News

Three more climbers have died on Mount Everest, taking the death toll to seven in a week - more than the total for the whole of last year.

The three died of exhaustion while descending on Thursday.

It comes amid traffic jams near the summit as record numbers make the ascent, despite calls to limit the number of climbing permits.

Nepal has issued 381 permits at $11,000 (£8,600) each for the spring climbing season at the world's highest peak.

Two Indian climbers - Kalpana Das, 52, and Nihal Bagwan, 27 - died while scaling back down the mountain on Thursday.

Local tour organiser Keshav Paudel told AFP news agency that Bagwan had been "stuck in the traffic for more than 12 hours and was exhausted".

A 65-year-old Austrian climber died on the northern Tibet side of the mountain.

An Indian and an American lost their lives on the mountain on Wednesday, while an Irish professor, Séamus Lawless, is presumed dead after falling on 16 May.

Conditions this year have also been worse than usual, with high winds leaving a large number of climbers a narrow time frame to reach the summit.

Five people are known to have died on Everest and one in Lhotse in the spring season last year.

The number of people climbing Everest in 2019 could exceed last year's record of 807 people reaching the summit.

The rising numbers of people climbing - and dying - on Everest has led for calls for permits to be limited.

Ben Fogle, the adventurer and television presenter who climbed the mountain last year, called for "London Marathon style lottery for climbing permits" in a Twitter post.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-48395241

2019-05-24 12:45:00Z
52780301379017

Three more dead on Everest amid concerns about congestion near summit - NBC News

Breaking News Emails

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

SUBSCRIBE

 / Updated 

By Saphora Smith

LONDON — The deaths of three more climbers on Mount Everest have raised concerns that a traffic jam of mountaineers near the summit is making the ascent even more treacherous.

Officials and mountaineering agencies confirmed to NBC News Friday that three Indian nationals died on Thursday while trying to climb the world’s highest mountain, which sits on the border of Nepal and Tibet, an autonomous region of South-west China.

Nihal Bagwan, 27, died after collapsing from exhaustion on the balcony area of the mountain where he was waiting in a line to reach the summit, according to Krishma Poudel of Peak Promotion, a mountaineering agency in Nepal.

Anjali Kulkarni, 54, and Kalpana Das, 49, also died while descending the mountain on Thursday, according to Mira Acharya, the director of Nepal’s Department of Tourism. Their cause of deaths is not yet known, she added.

The news comes after it was confirmed that an American man from Utah also died earlier this week having reached the summit and fulfilling his life’s dream, his children told NBC affiliate KSL-TV. Don Cash, 55, was a passionate climber who had left his job to join the "Seven Summits Club," — in which climbers attempt to summit the highest mountain on every continent.

Don Cash died this week on Mount Everest. The 55-year-old had just completed his goal of reaching the summit of the highest mountain on every continent.

Five climbers have died on Mount Everest since the beginning of the climbing season which started on May 14, according to Acharya. She said the fifth climber was a 28-year-old Indian national, Mr. Ravi, who died on May 17.

Tweeting a picture of a long line of climbers waiting to get to the summit on Wednesday, the British broadcaster and adventurer Ben Fogle, the U.N. Patron of the Wilderness, called on the countries that share Everest to limit the number of climbers on the mountain suggesting instead for a marathon-style lottery system for climbing permits.

Since Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first people to reach the summit of the mountain in 1953, attempting the 29,029 ft peak has become more and more popular. Expeditions can cost tens of thousands of dollars, according to the British Mountaineering Council.

Poudel explained the mountain was busy during peak season. “There’s a long queue during the summertime as there’s a limited window to climb — a lot of people tried to summit yesterday and day before," she said, using a British word for line.

Poudel said that lines to reach the summit started from the balcony area of the mountain but said she did not know how long Bagwan had been waiting there. “Before you reach the summit you have to wait and every minute counts at the height,” she explained, but cautioned that she could not say if waiting there had caused Bagwan’s death.

“You’ve been walking since 8 a.m. the day before without eating or a proper rest and exposed to that temperature there’s a high risk of being frostbitten and hypothermia,” she added.

Poudel said that Bagwan was barely conscious when Sherpas brought him down to Camp 4 — the last pit-stop ahead of what is commonly referred to as the “death zone” before the summit. He died there at around 11.30 p.m. Thursday night, she added.

She would not comment on whether officials should limit the number of climbers on the mountain but acknowledged that if there were fewer people it would reduce the risk that they suffer from exhaustion in the line. “Waiting for hours at that kind of height really takes a toll,” she said.

Acharya, of the Department of Tourism, said she could not comment on the question of whether the lines were dangerous for climbers.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/three-more-dead-everest-amid-concerns-about-congestion-near-summit-n1009586

2019-05-24 11:52:00Z
52780301379017

Theresa May tears up as she announces resignation - CNN

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Theresa May tears up as she announces resignation  CNN
  2. UK PM Theresa May announces resignation amid fury over Brexit handling  Fox News
  3. UK set for new PM as Theresa May quits  BBC News
  4. Theresa May Meets Her Lonely End  The New York Times
  5. Theresa May net worth: How much is Theresa May worth? Salary, earnings and more  Express
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2019/05/24/theresa-may-resignation-vpx.cnn

2019-05-24 11:25:10Z
52780302735748

Theresa May tears up as she announces resignation - CNN

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Theresa May tears up as she announces resignation  CNN
  2. Theresa May to resign June 7 | Downing Street LIVE  The Sun
  3. UK PM Theresa May announces resignation amid fury over Brexit handling  Fox News
  4. Theresa May Meets Her Lonely End  The New York Times
  5. Theresa May net worth: How much is Theresa May worth? Salary, earnings and more  Express
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2019/05/24/theresa-may-resignation-vpx.cnn

2019-05-24 11:06:12Z
52780302735748