Sabtu, 14 Maret 2020

Iraq officials: New rocket attack hits base housing US troops - Fox News

BAGHDAD — A barrage of rockets hit a base housing U.S. and other coalition troops north of Baghdad, Iraqi security officials said Saturday, just days after a similar attack killed three servicemen, including two Americans.

There was no immediate word on casualties at Camp Taji, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

The officials said over a dozen rockets landed inside the base, some struck the coalition quarters while others fell on a runway used by Iraqi forces.

US FORCES LAUNCH STRIKES TARGETING IRAN-BACKED MILITIAS AFTER DEADLY ROCKET ATTACK, OFFICIAL SAYS

The attack was unusual because it occured during the day. Previous assaults on military bases housing U.S. troops typically occurred overnight.

The earlier attack against Camp Taji on Wednesday prompted American airstrikes Friday against what U.S. officials said were mainly weapons facilities belonging to Kataib Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militia group believed to be responsible.

However, Iraq's military said those airstrikes killed five security force members and a civilian.

Iran-backed Shiite militia groups vowed to exact revenge for Friday's U.S. strikes, signalling another cycle of tit-for-tat violence between Washington and Tehran that could play out inside Iraq.

Wednesday's attack on Camp Taji was the deadliest to target U.S. troops in Iraq since a late December rocket attack on an Iraqi base. That attack killed a U.S. contractor and set in motion a series of attacks that brought Iraq to the brink of war.

After the contractor was killed, American airstrikes targeting the Kataib Hezbollah led to protests at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.

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A U.S. drone strike in Baghdad then killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani, a top commander responsible for expeditionary operations across the wider Mideast. Iran struck back with a ballistic missile attack on U.S. forces in Iraq, the Islamic Republic’s most direct assault on America since the 1979 seizing of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.

The U.S. and Iran stepped stepped back from further attacks after the Soleimani incident. A senior U.S. official said in late January, when U.S.-Iran tensions had cooled, that the killing of Americans constituted a red line that could spark more violence.

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2020-03-14 09:40:42Z
CBMiWmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZveG5ld3MuY29tL3dvcmxkL2lyYXEtb2ZmaWNpYWxzLW5ldy1yb2NrZXQtYXR0YWNrLWhpdHMtYmFzZS1ob3VzaW5nLXVzLXRyb29wc9IBXmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZveG5ld3MuY29tL3dvcmxkL2lyYXEtb2ZmaWNpYWxzLW5ldy1yb2NrZXQtYXR0YWNrLWhpdHMtYmFzZS1ob3VzaW5nLXVzLXRyb29wcy5hbXA

Trump won’t be tested for virus, doc says; 2 more Mar-a-Lago guests test positive - Fox News

President Trump doesn’t need to be tested for coronavirus, a White House doctor said Friday evening after a second Brazilian official who recently met with the president at Mar-a-Lago tested positive.

That's because Trump's interactions with the infected guests were “low risk,” Dr. Sean P. Conley, the president's physician, wrote.

“The President’s exposure to the first individual was extremely limited (photograph, handshake) and though he spent more time in closer proximity to the second case, all interactions occurred before any symptom onset,” Conley's statement said. “These interactions would be categorized as LOW risk for transmission per CDC guidelines, and as such, there is no indication for home quarantine at this time.”

Acting Brazilian Chargé d'Affaires Ambassador Nestor Forster has tested positive for the virus, the Brazilian Embassy said Friday, according to The Washington Post.

House OKs coronavirus relief bill, after urging from Trump, in 363-40 vote

Forster sat at Trump’s table during the Brazilian delegation's Mar-a-Lago dinner last Saturday.

Fabio Wajngarten, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s communications secretary, tested positive on Wednesday. He posed for a photo with the president at the event.

Brazilian Sen. Nelsinho Trad, who attended the Mar-a-Lago dinner, also tested positive for the virus, according to a statement from his office Friday evening, AgĂȘncia Brasil, a state news agency, reported.

Another unidentified guest from a Sunday afternoon Trump Victory event, where the president spoke, also tested positive for COVID-19, The Post reported. It was unclear if the guest had close contact with Trump.

Earlier Friday, Trump told reporters he would “likely” get tested "not for that reason, but because I think I will do it anyway.”

Bolsonaro’s son said Friday that his father -- who was at the Saturday dinner -- had tested negative for the virus hours after Brazilian reports indicated he tested positive.

“The information I have is the results that just came up telling that he is negative for coronavirus," Eduardo Bolsonaro said of his father. "I never listened that it was positive in the first exam. This is something that I don’t know. But, uh, everything’s good now.”

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

As of Saturday morning, more than 2,100 patients have contracted the virus in the U.S. and at least 50 have died.

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2020-03-14 08:24:08Z
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Live updates: Third Mar-a-Lago guest tests positive for coronavirus; Pentagon halts domestic travel - The Washington Post

AUCKLAND, New Zealand — All people arriving in New Zealand will have to isolate themselves for 14 days upon arrival, except for those landing from nearby Pacific islands, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced Saturday.

Describing the “unprecedented” step, Ardern told reporters that every person entering the country from midnight Sunday would be subjected to new rules. “We must go hard and we must go early,” she said. “I make no apologies. This is an unprecedented time.”

People arriving from everywhere except the Pacific islands will have to isolate themselves at home for two weeks, regardless of where they are coming from and whether they are citizens or not.

In addition, Ardern said her government would impose strict new exit rules for people traveling to the Pacific islands. New Zealand has large Samoan and Tongan communities in particular, and Ardern said that New Zealand had a responsibility to look after the people there. Samoa suffered a devastating measles epidemic last year.

“These [new exit measures for the Pacific] include: No travel for people who have traveled outside of New Zealand in the past 14 days,” Ardern said. “No travel for close or casual contacts of a confirmed case. No travel for anyone who is symptomatic, and health assessments, including temperature checks.”

In addition, New Zealand has banned cruise ships from entering the country until at least June 30, but Ardern said cargo ships would still be allowed.

She advised all New Zealanders not to travel overseas unless absolutely necessary.

New Zealand has seen only six cases of the coronavirus, the latest diagnosed in an Auckland man in his 60s who recently returned from the United States.

The previous five people are all isolated at home and recovering. There have been no reports of community transmission, but New Zealand was acting preemptively to avoid that, the prime minister said.

Her government had previously canceled a national memorial due to be held in Christchurch on Sunday, the anniversary of the attacks on two mosques in the city, which claimed 51 lives. Ardern said the decision was a “pragmatic” one made to ensure the coronavirus is not spread at large gatherings.

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2020-03-14 07:55:26Z
CAIiEFZMS4m-z_ypApViPMc9f-8qGAgEKg8IACoHCAowjtSUCjC30XQwn6G5AQ

Jumat, 13 Maret 2020

Brazil President Bolsonaro's son claims father tested negative for coronavirus despite earlier reports - Fox News

Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro has tested negative for coronavirus, his son Eduardo told Fox News, contradicting earlier reports that the South American leader had tested positive.

Reports out of Brazil had initially indicated Bolsonaro had tested positive, and his son appeared to confirm this to Fox News earlier Friday, adding that further testing was being done to confirm the diagnosis and the second set of testing was expected later in the day.

However, in a subsequent appearance on "America's Newsroom," Eduardo denied his father had ever tested positive.

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

Host Sandra Smith asked Bolsonaro if he could confirm his father had first tested positive for the virus and what had happened in between then.

“I don’t have this information,” he replied. “The information I have is the results that just came up telling that he is negative for coronavirus. I never listened that it was positive in the first exam. This is something that I don’t know. But, uh, everything’s good now.”

Bolsonaro then told Smith, to his knowledge, this was his first test for the virus.

BRAZILIAN OFFICIAL WHO MET WITH TRUMP TESTS POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS

“I have to get more information about what is going on because together with Bolsonaro, there were other guys, other people in the same team that went to the U.S. So, we are also waiting for the exams about the other guys."

He denied his father was showing any symptoms. “He is okay,” he confirmed.

“They have to see what they are going to do. I think the best thing to do is everybody who was involved there, everybody who was there, should do the tests,” Bolsonaro advised, referring to the Brazilian president’s meeting with President Trump.

“Has there been communication with the White House on this?” asked Smith. Bolsonaro said that the president’s team has “connected” with the White House.

Bolsonaro then told Smith, to his knowledge, this was his first test for the virus.

“I have to get more information about everything -- what is going on. Because, together with President Bolsonaro, there were other guys, other people in the same team that went to the U.S. So, we are also waiting for the exams about the other guys.”He denied his father was showing any symptoms.

“No. He is okay,” he confirmed. However, he said he believed his father was taking extra precautions after an aide that went on the trip tested positive.

AUSTRALIAN OFFICIAL WHO MET IVANKA TRUMP, BILL BARR, TESTS POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS

“They have to see what they are going to do. I think the best thing to do is everybody who was involved there, everybody who was there, should do the tests,” Bolsonaro advised, referring to the Brazilian president’s meeting with President Trump.

“Has there been communication with the White House on this?” asked Smith.

Bolsonaro said that the president’s team has “connected” with the White House.

The confusion surrounding the results came just days after Bolsonaro met with President  Trump at the U.S. leader's Florida home, Mar-a-Lago.

Bolsonaro had been tested after one of his deputies, who was also in attendance at the Florida resort, was diagnosed with COVID-19.

Fabio Wajngarten, the communications secretary for the 64-year-old Brazilian leader who had traveled to Miami for the meeting as well, showed flu-like symptoms and tested positive for the virus early Wednesday.

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The developments also came after Peter Dutton, Australia's minister for home affairs, tested positive after traveling back from Washington D.C., where he met Attorney General William Barr and Ivanka Trump.

Fox News' Joe Shikhman and Julia Musto contributed to this report. 

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2020-03-13 16:44:01Z
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Australian official who met with Ivanka Trump and Barr last week tests positive for coronavirus - CNN

In a statement, Minister Peter Dutton said that he woke up on Friday morning "with a temperature and sore throat" and was "subsequently tested for COVID-19." Dutton was advised by Queensland Health that his tests returned positive on Friday afternoon.
Dutton had met with Trump, Barr, Counselor to the President Kellyanne Conway and Director of the Domestic Policy Council Joe Grogan in the US less than a week ago.
CNN has reached out to the White House for comment.
Barr is "feeling great and not showing any symptoms" of the coronavirus, Department of Justice spokeswoman Kerri Kupec said in a statement Friday.
"He is staying home today and has consulted with CDC. CDC is not recommending he be tested at this point," Kupec said.
Dutton said Friday that under the policy of Queensland Health, "anyone who tests positive is to be admitted into hospital and I have complied with their advice." Dutton added that "I feel fine and will provide an update in due course."
The coronavirus has impacted the work of dozens of government officials around the world — including heads of state — some of whom have tested positive and others who are working in self-isolation out of precaution after coming into contact with another infected person.
A Brazilian official tested positive for virus on Thursday, just days after meeting with President Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago in Florida.
White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said in a statement Thursday that Trump "had almost no interactions with the individual who tested positive" and does not require being tested.
CNN reported that Trump has been telling people close to him that he's concerned about coming into contact with people who have contracted the coronavirus, including the Brazilian official.
Several US lawmakers, some of whom had recent contact with Trump, have also taken steps to self-quarantine.

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2020-03-13 16:20:00Z
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U.S. counters Iraq’s condemnation of U.S. airstrikes on Iran-backed militia facilities - The Washington Post

LONDON — The United States and Iraq were at odds Friday over the impact of airstrikes aimed at avenging the deaths of coalition soldiers this week, with a top U.S. general saying the munitions hit military targets while Iraq insisted that there were regular troops and a civilian among the dead.

The U.S. military said early Friday morning that it had launched “defensive precision strikes” against targets linked to the Kataib Hezbollah group, calling them a proportional response to a rocket attack which killed one British and two American service members Wednesday on an Iraqi military base north of Baghdad.

Marine Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie Jr., the chief of U.S. Central Command, said in a briefing at the Pentagon that strikes hit five facilities used by Kataib Hezbollah to store advanced conventional weapons. “The strikes, carried out by manned aircraft, all occurred south and west of Baghdad,” McKenzie said.

He showed before and after photographic imagery of sites in Jurf al-Sakhar, Karbala, Al Musayyib and Arab Nawar Ahmad, and said they showed that precise weapons were used to maximize damage but limit civilian harm.

“We assessed that each location stored weapons that would enable lethal operations against U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq,” the general said. “We also assessed that the destruction of these sites will degrade Kataib Hezbollah’s ability to conduct future strikes.” McKenzie said the U.S. military was “very comfortable with the level of damage that we were able to achieve,” at that those sites.

But in Iraq, the strikes were met with a flurry of condemnation, as leading military and political figures said that three soldiers and two policemen had been killed in the attacks, along with a civilian who was working in an airport that was under construction.

It was unclear if any militiamen had been killed.

The Iraqi military described the attacks as “treacherous,” saying three regular soldiers had been killed in the strikes, as well as two policemen whose bodies had yet to be recovered from the rubble. Iraq’s president, Barham Salih, described the strikes as a “violation of national sovereignty.”

Authorities in charge of the Karbala International Airport said that one of their facilities had also been hit and that a civilian working there had been killed. “The airport is purely civilian,” they said in a statement, calling local media to the scene to back up their assertion.

McKenzie, in response to a question, acknowledged that one of the strike sites was at a civilian airport. The facility has been under construction since 2017. Iraqi state television channels showed a dilapidated building with windows blown out. Peeling off above the door was blue lettering that read ‘Karbala International Airport’ and ‘Site Offices’.

U.S. officials are still assessing the target sites, he said, in part because bad weather has made it difficult to do so immediately. The locations were “clearly terrorist bases,” he added, and that if Iraqi military forces were there, “it’s probably not a good idea to position yourself with Kataib Hezbollah in the wake of a strike killed Americans and coalition members.”

The strikes risk intensifying already simmering tensions between the U.S.-led coalition and an array of political and armed forces who want western soldiers to leave Iraq. Kataib Hezbollah has threatened Iraqis working with the U.S.-led coalition and told them to distance themselves before March 15, or face attack.

Iran backs a handful of powerful militias in Iraq, including Kataib Hezbollah, and representatives of each group hold positions within the state apparatus.

The militias often help to enforce Tehran’s interests, attacking a protest movement that is critical of it, or the U.S. forces that Iran wants to expel. But experts say Iran’s overall control of these militias remains unclear. At the local level, for example, they also pursue their own strategic goals.

In the briefing Friday, McKenzie insisted that the Karbala airport site had been used to store weapons.

“The fact of the matter is, that was a very clear target,” he said. “It may have been on the airfield. I can’t tell you what else was in there, but I know it was being used for purposes of targeting us. That’s the reason we struck it.”

President Trump has made it clear that the death of American personnel in Iraq is a red line for his administration. The death of a U.S. contractor in a rocket attack late last year set in motion escalating tit-for-tat strikes that brought Washington and Tehran to the brink of war: Iran-backed militias besieged Baghdad’s U.S. Embassy as guards in the capital’s Green Zone stepped aside. Trump then ordered the killing of renowned Iranian military commander Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani on Iraqi soil, and Iran hit back with a wave of ballistic missiles that came close to killing U.S. soldiers and injured more than one hundred.

Tensions have ebbed since their peak in January, as has much of the immediate pressure for coalition troops to leave Iraq. But the potential for another round of escalation has never been far away. U.S. and European officials say Iran-backed militias have continued to launch rocket attacks on Iraqi military bases hosting coalition troops, or on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.

On Friday morning, the Pentagon also released the identities of the U.S. troops killed in the rocket attack on Camp Taji on Wednesday.

They were Army Spec. Juan Miguel Mendez Covarrubias, 27, of Hanford, Calif., and Air Force Staff Sgt. Marshal D. Roberts, 28, of Owasso, Okla. Mendez Covarrubias was a member of the 1st Cavalry Division’s 1st Air Cavalry Brigade at Fort Hood, Tex., while Roberts was a member of the Oklahoma Air National Guard’s 219th Engineering Installation Squadron.

The British government has identified their fatality at Camp Taji as Lance Cpl. Brodie Gillon, 26. She was a reservist and combat medical technician with the Scottish and North Irish Yeomanry and deployed with the Irish Guards Battle Group, the British Ministry of Defense said.

McKenzie said the Iraqi government knew the United States was planning strikes — something that was telegraphed publicly in Washington on Thursday in remarks from Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper and Army Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Although there was no immediate response from Kataib Hezbollah on Friday, the Iraqi militia network of which it is a part — known as the Popular Mobilization Forces — said it was preparing an “important” statement.

Lamothe reported from Washington; Salim reported from Baghdad.

Read more

U.S. launches strikes against Iran-backed militias in Iraq after attack kills coalition troops

U.S. and coalition troops killed in rocket attack in Iraq, potentially spiking tensions with Iran

Marine from Maryland dies battling Islamic State militants

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-03-13 16:06:28Z
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Trump plans to declare national emergency over coronavirus pandemic - CNBC

U.S. President Donald Trump talks to journalists while hosting Prime Minister of Ireland Leo Varadkar in the Oval Office at the White House March 12, 2020 in Washington, DC.

Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

President Donald Trump plans to declare a national emergency over the coronavirus pandemic, according to adminstration officials who spoke to NBC News.

The declaration would free up financial resources to assist Americans affected by the outbreak.

The president has scheduled a 3 p.m. ET press conference Friday at the White House.

The conference is set to occur shortly after Trump is scheduled to meet at the White House with major laboratory company executives about the response to the coronavirus, also known as COVID-19.

A White House spokesman declined to comment when asked about the plan.

Trump's emergency designation is expected to fall under the Stafford Act, a law which allows for two different types of presidential declarations.

The first is an emergency, which is what Trump is expected to declare.

The second designation is a major disaster, which gives emergency management even more access to resources. Either way, both of the designations place FEMA in charge of what happens.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Friday that he, Trump and the rest of leaders of the Group of 7 economic giant nations have "agreed to organize an extraordinary Leaders Summit by videoconference on Monday on Covid-19," the name of the diseased caused by the coronavirus.

"We will coordinate research efforts on a vaccine and treatments, and work on an economic and financial response," Macron announced in a tweet.

The announcement of a national emergency in the United States would come just a day after Trump said he was not yet ready to make such a declaration.

"We have very strong emergency powers under the Stafford Act, and we are — we have it — I mean, I have it memorized, practically, as to the powers in that act. If I need to do something, I'll do it," Trump said in an Oval Office meeting with Ireland's Prime Minister, Leo Varadkar. 
 
"I have the right to do a lot of things that people don't even know about." 
 
An emergency declaration also would put to rest weeks of debate within the White House, where different factions of Trump's top aides disagreed about whether a Stafford Act declaration is necessary. 

Those opposed to making the declaration, which had included Trump himself, worried that it would cause financial markets to panic.

They also feared political fallout if it appeared Trump was sending the opposite message about coronavirus, namely that it is an emergency, from the one he had consistently delivered so far.
 
Trump has falsely claimed that coronavirus is no more dangerous than the common flu, and that it will likely disappear quickly and without a significant impact on American life.

Health officials say neither of these statements is accurate.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio declared a state of emergency in the Big Apple on Thursday. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on the same day banned gatherings of 500 or more in the state "for the forseeable future."

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CNBC earlier Friday the White House and Congress are nearing a deal that would provide stimulus to the U.S. economy amid the coronavirus outbreak.

"I think we're very close to getting this done," Mnuchin said in a "Squawk on the Street" interview.

"The president is absolutely committed that this will be an entire government effort, that we will be working with the House and Senate."

As of Friday, there were more than 135,000 known cases of coronavirus globally, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

There also were nearly 5,000 known deaths from the virus world wide.

In the United States, there are at least 1,700 known cases, with at least 40 deaths tied to the virus, according to Johns Hopkins University.

- Additional reporting by Yelena Dhzanova

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2020-03-13 16:09:15Z
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