Month: June 2019

Кернес і Труханов очолили партію «Довіряй справам»

Міські голови Харкова Геннадій Кернес та Одеси Геннадій Труханов очолили партію «Довіряй справам», з’їзд якої відбувся 2 червня в Харкові. Кернес був обраний головою, Труханов – співголовою політичної сили, яка оголосила про намір брати участь у дострокових парламентських виборах 21 липня.

Серед інших ініціаторів створення партії та учасників з’їзду є міські голови Ужгорода, Кропивницького, Чугуєва, Бахмута та інших міст, голова Харківської обласної ради Сергій Чернов, повідомляє харківське видання «Медіапорт», яке вело текстову трансляцію з’їзду.

Перед початком з’їзду партії біля будівлі Палацу спорту опоненти Кернеса влаштували акцію протесту, згодом частина учасників протесту повалила погруддя радянського маршала Жукова за кількасот метрів від місця з’їзду. Міський голова Харкова заявив, що пам’ятник буде відновлений.

Партія зелених України оголосила про участь у парламентських виборах

Партія зелених України оголосила про участь у дострокових парламентських виборах, які відбудуться 21 липня. Це рішення партія ухвалила на форумі, який відбувся 1 червня в Києві в Національному ботанічному саду імені Гришка, повідомила партійна прес-служба.

«Партія зелених України йде на парламентські вибори, щоб захистити майбутнє українців. Ми живемо не в світі залишеному нам батьками, а у світі позиченому у наших дітей та онуків», заявив багаторічний лідер партії Віталій Кононов.

Серед ідей, які пропонують «зелені», – запровадження безумовного базового доходу, що передбачає «регулярну виплату певної суми грошей кожному громадянину держави, незалежно від рівня доходу і без необхідності виконання роботи, незалежно від віку».

Партія зелених України була створена як екологічна політична партія у вересні 1990 року, офіційно зареєстрована у травні 1991 року. На парламентських виборах 1998 року ця партія пройшла до парламенту і мала фракцію в складі 19 депутатів. Усі наступні спроби потрапити до Верховної Ради завершилися для «зелених» невдало.

Кернес обіцяє відновити пам’ятник Жукову у Харкові

Міський голова Харкова Геннадій Кернес заявив, що відновить пам’ятник маршалу СРСР Георгію Жукову, який протестувальники знесли 2 червня. Про це Кернес заявив на з’їзді нової партії, яку він і міський голова Одеси Геннадій Кернес утворюють разом із союзниками.

Перед тим у Харкові учасники акції протесту проти з’їзду партії «Довіряй справам» знесли бюст Жукову, повідомляє UA: Харків. Участь в акції взяли представники «Самооборони», «Харківського Євромайдану», «Національних дружин» і партії «Національний корпус».

Під Палацом спорту, де відбувся з’їзд, сталися сутички, постраждала щонайменше одна людина. Після того, як на місці акції з’явилися посилені наряди поліції, активісти перемістилися до погруддя Жукову і знесли його. Замість бюста учасники акції встановили на постаменті прапор України. Сам бюст почали розбивати молотками і сокирами. На спині Жукова зробили напис «Кат».

Георгій Жуков – радянський полководець часів Другої світової війни. Особистість маршала Жукова в історичній і публіцистичній літературі має протилежні оцінки, критики вважають, що він не цінував життя солдатів. «Жуковське оперативне мистецтво — це перевага в силах у 5–6 разів, інакше він не буде братися за справу, він не вміє воювати не кількістю, і на крові будує собі кар’єру», – так оцінив Жукова інший радянський воєначальник, маршал Андрій Єрьоменко.

US Envoy Discusses Afghan Peace in Visit to Pakistan

U.S. special representative for Afghanistan reconciliation, Zalmay Khalilzad, visited Pakistan Sunday at the beginning of his 16-day multi-nation trip that will also take him to Qatar for another round of peace negotiations with the Taliban.

Officials said Khalilzad held delegation-level talks at the Foreign Ministry before meeting with other senior Pakistani civilian and military leaders during his day-long stay in Islamabad.

The Pakistani government takes credit for arranging the U.S.-Taliban peace dialogue by using its contacts with the Afghan insurgent group.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Faisal said that in the talks with Khalilzad’s team its delegation reiterated Pakistan’s commitment for Afghan peace.

“It encouraged all sides to agree to seize the moment to end the prolonged conflict through a political settlement,” Faisal added.

US-Taliban talks

Afghan-born chief American negotiator Khalilzad has held six rounds of direct talks with Taliban envoys in the Qatari capital of Doha since the process began last fall in a bid to bring an end to what has now become the longest U.S. overseas military intervention.

At the end of their latest round of discussions in early May, insurgent officials and Khalilzad noted the two sides have reached a preliminary draft agreement that would see foreign troops leave Afghanistan in exchange for assurances the Taliban would disallow transnational terrorists from using Afghan soil for attacks against other countries.

Khalilzad tweeted on Saturday he would “try to bring the first two parts of our peace framework to closure” during the engagement with the Taliban later this month.

“We’ve made substantial progress over the last month. On this trip, I want to take that momentum and accelerate the Afghan peace process,” he noted.

The American envoy in previous statements repeatedly explained that a final agreement must also cover a Taliban cease-fire and the insurgent group’s participation in internal peace talks in post-withdrawal Afghanistan.

For its part, the insurgent group has refused to discuss issues related to a cease-fire and intra-Afghan peace talks until all American and other foreign troops leave the country.

The differences have slowed down, if not stalemated, further progress in U.S.-Taliban meetings.

Skeptics continue to caution Washington against concluding a deal without seeking political reconciliation and other pledges from the Taliban.

“Pushing process forward is good, but “closure” of US-Taliban deal on troop withdrawal in exchange for counter-terrorism promises before peace talks among Afghans have even begun is a dangerous concession. Balance of leverage would shift even more to Taliban,” tweeted Laurel Miller, a former U.S. special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Taliban chief rejects cease-fire calls

On Saturday, Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada again rejected cease-fire calls and stopped just short of saying his group’s demand for foreign troop withdrawal must be met for ending the current stalemate in the dialogue process.

”The Islamic Emirate [Taliban] with its peaceful policy invites America to adopt a policy of reason and understanding, to remain a sincere partner in the negotiations process and accept the logical proposals of the Islamic Emirate for advancement of this process,” emphasized Akhundzada in his annual message ahead of this week’s Muslim festival of Eid in Afghanistan.

Khalilzad in his response, tweeted Sunday that the Taliban leader’s statement provides “some welcome support” for the Afghan peace process.

“At the same time, the statement’s bombastic tone is unnecessary and only serves to complicate and disrupt as we advance peace talks, lamented the American envoy. The Taliban statement, he noted, suggests the United States seeks violence.

“We do not. The level of violence in Afghanistan is unacceptable and we have no desire to perpetuate it,” Khalilzad stressed.

 

Pentagon Tells White House Not to Politicize Military

The Pentagon has told the White House to keep the military out of politics, after someone from the White House directed the Navy to keep the warship USS John S. McCain “out of sight” when President Donald Trump visited Japan.

“On Friday, May 31, Secretary Shanahan directed his Chief of Staff to speak with the White House Military Office and reaffirm his mandate that the Department of Defense will not be politicized,”  Shanahan’s spokesman Army Lt. Col. Joe Buccino said Sunday.

Eric Chewning, Shanahan’s chief of staff, told the defense secretary that he had reinforced this message to the White House, according to Buccino.

“There’s no room for politicizing the military,” Shanahan told reporters aboard a U.S. military aircraft en route to Seoul. “We take these things seriously, and my office and others will deal with it directly.”

The directive to hide the USS John S. McCain from Trump was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

An email seen by VOA showed discussions about the warship between the White House Military Office and an officer with the U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet ahead of Trump’s trip.

“USS John McCain needs to be out of sight,” reads the email’s third bullet-pointed request.

“Please confirm #3 will be satisfied,” the email emphasized.

Shanahan confirmed Sunday that the White House Military Office gave the directive that the warship should be hidden from view “directly” to the Navy’s Seventh Fleet, which manages naval operations in the Western Pacific.

“The directive was not carried out,” Shanahan added.

According to Shanahan, officials have told him that a white tarp was placed over the ship’s stern on the days preceding the visit, but the tarp was for “hull preservation” and was removed prior to the president’s visit.

A paint barge was moved the day prior to Trump’s visit “to support ongoing maintenance,” but the barge “did not obscure the view of the ship during the visit,” said Shanahan.

Sailors with the USS John S. McCain and the USS Stethem were on a 96-hour Memorial Day weekend liberty unrelated to the visit and did not participate in the Trump event, he confirmed.

VOA had previously reported these details provided by a U.S. Navy official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Shanahan said he had called the late Senator John McCain’s wife “a couple days ago” after news of the incident broke, but declined to discuss the “private conversation.

On Thursday, Shanahan said he did not authorize and was not aware of the White House directive to hide the USS John S. McCain from Trump.

“I would never dishonor the memory of a great American patriot like Senator [John] McCain,” Shanahan told reporters traveling with him. “I’d never disrespect the young men and women who crew that ship.”

Trump tweeted Thursday that he was not informed about the controversy surrounding the USS John S. McCain during his visit to Japan.

The president later told reporters outside the White House that whoever was involved in the move was “well meaning” but that he was unaware of the decision to hide the warship.

“I don’t know what happened. I wasn’t involved. I would not have done that,” he said, adding, “I was not a big fan of John McCain in any way, shape or form.”

Trump frequently feuded with longtime Republican senator and 2008 Republican presidential candidate John McCain, who died last year.

The USS McCain was originally named for the senator’s father and grandfather, both Navy admirals, and now honors all three men.

Trump’s Europe Visit Includes Britain, Ireland, France

U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump will be on a state visit to the Britain June 3 to June 5.

What to know for the visit?

It’s not Trump’s first visit to Britain.

What’s so special this time?

 

Trump was in Britain in July 2018 on a working visit, which involved much less pomp and pageantry than a state visit. On a working visit, the visiting country and not the host country covers the bill.

 

A state visit is a formal visit by a head of state and is normally done at the invitation of the queen on the advice of her government. Queen Elizabeth II, as the current head of state, will act as Trump’s official host for the duration of the visit.

An invitation for a state visit was extended soon after Trump took office in 2017, but a number of concerns, including security have been hampering plans.

 

The White House said the upcoming trip would reaffirm the “steadfast and special relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom.”

Twelve U.S. presidents have visited Britain, though only two were there on state visits: George W. Bush in 2003 and Barack Obama in 2011.

What’s on the agenda?

 

In addition to a private lunch and a state banquet hosted by the queen, the president and the first lady also will attend cultural engagements with other members of the royal family.

 

They will participate in events to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion during World War II, including a visit to Portsmouth, a launch site for the offensive that led to the liberation of Europe. Other countries’ representatives are expected to attend.

 

Trump will hold a business round table at St. James’s Palace, and he’ll attend a bilateral meeting at 10 Downing Street, the residence and home of British Prime Minister Theresa May, who is resigning after failing to achieve an agreement on Britain’s departure from the European Union. May has said she will resign on June 7, two days after Trump is scheduled to leave.

Trump, who has supported Brexit since his 2016 presidential campaign, has criticized May’s handling of the issue. Responding to a reporter’s question on Thursday, Trump said he might meet with Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage — pro-Brexit politicians who are seeking to replace May. Trump said they both were his friends, “very good guys, very interesting people.”

In an interview Friday with British tabloid The Sun, Trump said Boris Johnson would be an “excellent” choice for the Conservative Party leadership. “I think Boris would do a very good job,” he said, adding that his endorsement “could help anybody.”

 

After his three-day visit to Britain, Trump will fly to Shannon, Ireland, for a bilateral with Prime Minister Leo Varadkar. Trump said he will stay overnight in Doonbeg, the luxury golf resort in County Clare that he bought in 2014.

On June 6, Trump will head to France where he will observe the D-Day anniversary in Normandy, alongside French President Emmanuel Macron.

Who else is coming and who are they meeting?

 

Other than the president and the first lady, the White House has confirmed the president’s adult children also will be on the trip.

 

They will meet members of the royal family, including Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla Parker Bowles; Prince William and his wife, Kate Middleton; and Prince Harry. The Trumps will not be meeting Prince Harry’s wife, Meghan Markle, nor their new baby, Archie. Markle, who is American, is still on maternity leave.

 

Additionally, Trump will attend a reception at the U.S. Embassy to meet staff and their families.

Where are they staying?

 

State visitors usually stay with Queen Elizabeth at either Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle. President George W. Bush and President Obama both stayed at Buckingham Palace. A spokesperson for the royal household said the Trumps will not be staying with the queen, however, due to renovation work that is being carried out at the royal residence.

 

Buckingham Palace is currently undergoing a 10-year, $477 million renovation, including major electrical and plumbing work.

Will there be protests?

 

During Trump’s visit last July, more than 100,000 people protested on the streets of London, according to police. This year, protest organizers say they expect similar numbers.

The main protest, “Together Against Trump,” will take place in London on Tuesday, June 4. Smaller protests are planned elsewhere in Britain.

The protests are organized in general opposition to Trump’s views and policies on issues such as immigration and climate change. The campaign group Stop Trump said, “We will make it clear to the British government that it’s not OK to normalize Trump’s agenda and fear it has sparked.”

The “Trump Baby” — a 6-meter balloon by artist Matt Bonner depicting the president as an infant in a diaper holding a cellphone — is expected to appear, as it did during Trump’s 2018 visit to Britain and during his visits to France and Argentina.

Greens Are Now Germany’s Most Popular Party, Poll Finds

The Greens have overtaken Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives to become the most popular party in Germany, an opinion poll released Saturday showed, while her Socialist SPD coalition partners fell to an all-time low.

The poll, asking voters which party they would back in a national election, showed the Greens at 27% support, one point ahead of Merkel’s conservative CDU/CSU bloc.

It suggests a trend that saw the Greens surge past the SPD into second place in a European election a week ago has only intensified since.

The Greens were now 9 points ahead of their result in a poll conducted a week before the European vote, while the CDU was down by 2 points.

The SPD, one of Europe’s flagship center-left parties, was down 5 points to 12%, putting it just a single point ahead of the far right AfD. The pro-business FDP stood at 8 percent.

The nationwide poll was conducted May 27-31 by Forsa on behalf of German broadcasters RTL and ntv.

Merkel’s conservatives won last week’s European election with 28.9% of the vote, down 7 percentage points from five years ago. The Greens with 20.5% beat the SPD into third place with just 15.8%.

“The Christian Democrats and the SPD appear to have ignored a shift observed during regional elections in the states of Hesse and Bavaria, which showed that voters are moving from the liberal center toward the Greens,” Forsa executive Manfred Guellner told RTL.

Both major traditional parties have emphasized the importance of the environment in the aftermath of the European elections, but this only appears to have benefited the Greens, Guellner said.

6 Quakes in 2 Hours Wreak Havoc on Albania Town

Six earthquakes in the space of two hours, the first with a magnitude of 5.3, shook southeastern Albania on Saturday, injuring four people and damaging 100 houses, authorities and eyewitnesses said.

Four people were hurt from the collapse of the walls, roofs and plaster of their houses, and were taken to a hospital in the region’s main town of Korce in eastern Albania, the Defense Ministry said.

“It was 6:30 when I went out to milk the cows when the earthquake struck. I woke up the children and the adults and we ran outside, all of us,” Petrit, 60, told Reuters in the village of Floq, the epicenter of the earthquakes.

The roof of Petrit’s house had collapsed over two rooms.

About 70 houses were damaged in Floq and the nearby village of Dvoran, the Defense Ministry said.

Half of the 100 damaged houses were abandoned old structures, the Defense Ministry said. Soldiers were pitching military tents in Floq and firefighters were also there.

Fifty families in the mostly damaged neighborhood of Floq had abandoned their houses for fear of other quakes, finding shelter either in the military tents or with relatives, the villagers said.

The first earthquake had its epicenter 15 km southeast of the town of Korce at a depth of 14 km and was followed by another seven minutes later at a depth of 18 km in an area bordering Greece and North Macedonia.

Lower intensity tremors continued in Korce and the southern area of Gjirokaster, on the border with northern Greece.

Вибух на оборонному підприємстві в Росії: кількість постраждалих сягнула 38

Кількість відомих постраждалих внаслідок вибуху на державному підприємстві, що виробляє вибухівку, в російському Дзержинську сягнула 38.

За даними російських ЗМІ, науково-дослідницький інститут «Кристал», де розробляють вибухові речовини, почасти зруйнований внаслідок вибухів і пожежі.

Також, згідно з заявою заступника губернатора Дмитра Краснова, двоє людей пропали без вісти.

1 червня стало відомо про вибух на території державного науково-дослідницького інституту «Кристал». Це підприємство займається створенням вибухових речовин в тому числі для оборонного сектору Росії.

Повідомляється, що вибухи сталися в цеху з виробництва тротилу. Як стверджує джерело інформаційної агенції «Інтерфакс», цех повністю зруйнований.

Іспанський футболіст Хосе Антоніо Реєс загинув у автокатастрофі

Відомий футболіст Хосе Антоніо Реєс загинув у автокатастрофі 1 червня. Про це повідомив його перший футбольний клуб «Севілья».

«Найгірші новини, що ми могли підтвердити. Улюблена зірка «Севільї» Хосе Антоніо Реєс загинув у автомобільній аварії», – повідомили в клубі.

Новину про смерть футболіста прокоментували і в командах, за які він встиг виступити протягом своєї кар’єри.

«Реал Мадрид» хотів би висловити свої найглибші співчуття рідним, друзям та близьким Реєса, до яких приєднується у величезному болю цієї втрати. Також ми висловлюємо співчуття його нинішньому клубу», – мовиться в заяві іспанського «Реалу».

«Із жалем повідомляємо про смерть Хосе Антоніо Реєса внаслідок автомобільної катастрофи. Ти є, був і назавжди залишишся частиною нашої історії. Спочивай із миром», – заявили у футбольному клубі «Кордова».

Свої співчуття висловили також і інші футбольні команди, зокрема «Барселона», у якій Реєса згадують як «блискучого та харизматичного, одного з найбільш видатних» гравців.

Хосе Антоніо Реєс народився в іспанській Утрері і почав свою кар’єру в місцевому осередку «Севільї» ще в 10 років. У 16 він почав виступати за клуб, згодом перейшов до «Арсеналу». Також Реєс виступав, зокрема, за «Реал Мадрид», «Атлетіко Мадрид», «Кордобу», китайський клуб «Сіньцзян Тяньшань Леопард», грав у національній збірній Іспанії. Незадовго до смерті він повернувся до Іспанії і приєднався до клубу «Естремадура».

У 35-річного спортсмена залишилися дружина, дві дочки і син.

Пожежа на оборонному підприємстві в Росії: кількість постраждалих росте

Кількість постраждалих внаслідок вибухів у російському Дзержинську зросла до 27, повідомляють російські ЗМІ. Загиблих немає.

Пожежа, яку спричинили вибухи, досі триває, рятувальники намагаються її загасити. Місцева влада не виключає подальших вибухів.

Заступник губернатора Нижньогородської області Дмитро Краснов повідомив, що двоє людей пропали без вісти.

1 червня стало відомо про вибух на території державного науково-дослідницького інституту «Кристал». Це підприємство займається створенням вибухових речовин в тому числі для оборонного сектору Росії.

Повідомляється, що вибухи сталися в цеху з виробництва тротилу. Як стверджує джерело інформаційної агенції «Інтерфакс», цех повністю зруйнований.

Про причини вибухів наразі не повідомляють.

Acting US Defense Chief Criticizes China’s Bad Behavior

VOA Mandarin service’s Libo Lui contributed to this report

SINGAPORE – Since the first week acting U.S. Defense Secretary Pat Shanahan took the reins at the Pentagon, he’s said his top concern is “China, China, China.”

On Saturday, Shanahan told an audience at the annual Shangri-La defense forum that the U.S. would not ignore Chinese behavior, which he says has threatened prosperity in the region.

“It’s not about conflict. It’s not about building walls. This is about security,” Shanahan said.

China is infamous for its theft of other nations’ military and civilian technology, and the U.S. secretary said he took issue with Beijing’s cyber attacks and state-sponsored stealing of intellectual property.

Experts say China has used this theft to narrow the gap between some critical American and Chinese military abilities.

“The kind of advantage that we had against China and the western Pacific during the Cold War is gone for good,” Michael O’Hanlon, a senior defense expert with the Brookings Institution, told VOA.

China also has continued to project more military power beyond its borders, most notably by constructing artificial islands in the South China Sea and placing heavy weapons on them to support territorial claims not recognized under international law.

Speaking to reporters Friday, Shanahan called the moves “excessive,” saying that while the Chinese “argue that it’s defensive, it looks like it’s a bit overkill.”

Recently, the U.S. has pushed for more international patrols in the South China Sea, including one last month with Japan, India and the Philippines.

Bradley Bowman, of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said working with allies to combat Chinese aggression in the region will bolster the U.S. position of protecting international waterways key to global trade.

“I think we need to characterize this conflict for what it is. It’s not a conflict between China and the US. It’s a conflict with China in the world,” he said.

Speaking to VOA at the conference, Rep. Adam Smith, the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said China has to some extent “overplayed their hand.”

“They are seen as a bully in the region by a lot of people. They encroached on people’s territory in a variety of disputes…and in doing that, those countries have turned to the U.S.,” Smith said.

 In his speech Saturday, Shanahan stressed that the U.S. doesn’t want any nation in the region to have to choose positive relations with one partner over another, but, he said, the world deserved a fair playing field.

U.S. allies at the conference expressed anxiety over rising tensions between the two powers, and as one leader pointed out, many believe that if China and the U.S. won’t work together, they risk upending the global system.

 

 

Coal Industry’s Survival in Question as Companies Go Green 

You know things are not going well for your industry when one of your best customer gives a keynote speech at your annual conference to talk up your competition.

At the Virginia Coal and Energy Alliance’s 40th Annual Conference in May, electric utility Dominion Energy highlighted the company’s agreement with Smithfield Foods to generate electricity from hog waste.

“That’s right,” Dominion lobbyist James Beamer told the coal crowd, “Hog poop to green energy.”

Speakers from both main utilities at the conference said they have big plans for renewable energy, and they aim to reduce their emissions of planet-warming carbon dioxide 80% by 2050. 

None of this was good news for coal, the most carbon-heavy fuel for power generation.

Saturday marks the two-year anniversary of President Trump’s announcement that the United States would withdraw from the Paris climate agreement. But momentum to combat climate change continues anyway.

But it’s not enough. Greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise in the United States and globally, putting the world farther and farther from the goal set in Paris to avoid catastrophic climate change.

Gloom in coal country

Beamer told the crowd at the Virginia coal conference that Dominion’s biggest upcoming investment in coal country would be a storage facility for renewable power. The company plans to build 3 gigawatts of solar by 2022 and a pioneering offshore wind project, he added. 

Although the Trump administration has acted to loosen regulations on mining and burning coal for power, utilities aren’t interested. Since 2010, 289 coal-fired power plants have shut down or plan to, according to the Sierra Club.  That’s more than half the national fleet. No new coal plants have been built. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) predicts coal will continue to lose market share to natural gas and renewable energy through at least 2050. 

Kentucky’s energy and environment secretary, Charles Snavely, a former coal executive, told the conference that EIA may be underestimating. 

“If we’re already projecting a significant decrease over time,” he said, “I think that it will probably be worse than that.”

Private sector pressure

One big reason utilities are moving away from fossil fuels is that some of their biggest customers are demanding renewable energy. Big, energy-hungry corporations are pushing for solar and wind power in states where fighting climate change is not a priority. 

In Alabama, for example, the state public service commission first opened the door to large-scale solar projects in 2015 “based solely on the Walmart decision to come in and use solar power,” according to Commissioner Jeremy Oden, speaking on a panel of state utility regulators at the Virginia coal conference.

The company aims to power half its operations with renewable energy by 2025. 

Other corporations that Alabama is courting, including Toyota and Amazon, also have goals to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and are willing, in some cases, to pay a premium to get it. 

Companies like these are telling state regulators that they want renewable energy “no matter what,” said Missouri Public Service Commission Chairman Ryan Silvey. 

“No matter what,” agreed Kentucky Public Service Commissioner Talia Mathews.

Federal climate

Major corporations also are lobbying the federal government to do more. Levi’s, Nike, Mars Incorporated, Microsoft, PepsiCo, eBay and dozens of others are making the case that “we need federal policy. We need a price on carbon. And this is an issue that is not only about the future of our planet, our families, our kids, but our economy,” said CEO Mindy Lubber with the corporate sustainability nonprofit Ceres. 

Since the November 2018 elections swept a wave of left-leaning lawmakers into office, several states have stepped up their plans to fight climate change. 

This year, New Mexico, Nevada and Washington committed to producing 100 percent clean energy by 2050 or earlier. California and Hawaii already passed similar laws. 

The 2018 elections put climate change on the agenda at the federal level, too, for the first time in a decade. Democrats see an opportunity to campaign against Republican climate denial and inaction in the 2020 presidential election. 

World falling short

No other country has followed the United States on its path out of the Paris climate agreement. 

President Trump and his supporters have said the agreement puts the United States at a competitive disadvantage because it requires Americans to cut their emissions but does not impose the same restrictions on other countries. 

“The biggest emitters in the emerging economies, including China, India and Indonesia, all have very ambitious pledges under Paris,” said Andrew Light, Distinguished Senior Fellow at the World Resources Institute and a former Obama administration climate advisor. “And it looks like they are on track to meeting them.” 

Meeting those pledges still would not keep the planet from disastrous warming. And efforts so far have not stopped greenhouse gas levels from rising, in the United States or globally. Emissions reached an all-time high last year, climbing more than 2% over 2017,  at a time when U.N. scientists say global emissions must fall 45% by 2030 to avoid the worst consequences of climate change. 

Some 80 countries are prepared to announce bigger steps to cut their emissions at the U.N. climate summit in September, according to U.N. climate envoy Luis Alfonso de Alba, although he did not specify which ones. 

“I am asking leaders not to come with beautiful speeches but to come with concrete plans to promote the climate action we need,” said U.N. Secretary-General Luis Guterres.

UN Watchdog: Iran Complying with 2015 Nuclear Deal

The U.N. atomic watchdog said Friday that Iran continues to stay within the limitations set by the nuclear deal reached in 2015 with major powers, though its stockpiles of low-enriched uranium and heavy water are growing.

In a confidential quarterly report distributed to member states and seen by The Associated Press, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Iran has stayed within key limitations set in the so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA.

The deal is meant to keep Tehran from building atomic weapons in exchange for economic incentives. It has been complicated by the unilateral withdrawal of the United States last year and Washington’s increased sanctions, which has been taking a toll on the Iranian economy.

That has left the other signatories — Germany, Britain, France, Russia and China — struggling to come up with enough incentives to keep Iran in the deal.

Iran’s 60-day deadline

Earlier this month, Iran announced that if a way couldn’t be found within 60 days to shield it from U.S. sanctions targeting its economy and oil industry, it would increase its enrichment of uranium beyond the purity allowed under the JCPOA. And about a week ago, Iran said it had increased its uranium-enrichment production capacity, though only of the lower-enriched uranium permitted by the agreement.

In its first quarterly report since those announcements, however, the Vienna-based IAEA found Iran continued to be in compliance with the JCPOA and also said its inspectors had been given unfettered access to Iranian nuclear facilities.

“Timely and proactive cooperation by Iran in providing such access facilitates implementation of the additional protocol and enhances confidence,” the report stated, referring to the procedure detailing safeguards and tools for verification.

The numbers

The IAEA said Iran’s heavy water stockpile was 125.2 metric tons (138 U.S. tons) as of May 26, up from 124.8 tons in February but below the 130 ton limit. Its stock of low-enriched uranium was 174.1 kilograms (383.8 pounds) as of May 20, up from 163.8 kilograms in February; the limit is 202.8 kilograms.

It added that Iran had not enriched any uranium above the level allowed by the JCPOA.

“All centrifuges and associated infrastructure in storage have remained under continuous agency monitoring,” the IAEA said.

Trump to End India’s Preferential Trade Status

President Donald Trump said Friday that the United States would end its preferential trade treatment for India June 5.

Trump had announced his intention to remove India from the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) program in early March.

“I have determined that India has not assured the United States that India will provide equitable and reasonable access to its markets,” Trump said in a statement Friday.

India is the biggest beneficiary of the GSP, which allows preferential duty-free imports of up to $5.6 billion from the South Asian nation.

Indian officials have raised the prospect of higher import duties on more than 20 U.S. goods if Trump drops India from the program.

Twenty-four members of the U.S. Congress sent the administration a letter on May 3 urging it not to terminate India’s access to the GSP.

Officials Hope for Strife-Free Trump Visit to London

U.S. President Donald Trump and Britain’s Theresa May will want a strife-free, three-day state visit to London for the American leader starting Monday, their aides say.

To reduce the possibility of mishaps, with protesters getting too close to the American leader, the traditional ride in a horse-drawn carriage down the tree-lined Mall to Buckingham Palace for visiting heads of state has been axed — although Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama, also dropped the jaunt because of “security concerns.”

A huge London police operation is being planned to try to ensure the state visit goes off without a hitch.

​Other risks to contain

But aside from protests, there will be other risks on this presidential trip that British officials are keen to contain as they press the U.S. leader for more details on a possible post-Brexit trade deal, and as they seek to ease strains in what British politicians especially like to dub the “special relationship” between Britain and the U.S.

London and Washington are at odds on a range of global issues, including climate change, policy toward Iran and Britain’s trade dealings with China.

The differences haven’t been helped by the lack of personal chemistry between the two leaders; Trump once complained May was too “politically correct,” triggering a transatlantic spat, and his aides have confided in the past that her “school mistress” manner makes the U.S. leader bristle. The two leaders have clashed publicly over several of Trump’s tweets, and in 2018 the U.S. President declined to have a one-on-one meeting with her at the G7 summit.

The U.S. leader’s free-wheeling style contrasts with May’s cautious, risk-averse and detail-oriented approach.

Like many of her European counterparts, she’s found it hard to know how to react to a U.S. leader who largely sees foreign policy as a zero-sum game and is unsentimental about America’s traditional alliances, admits a Downing Street aide.

​Looking beyond May

Not that the U.S. president is spoiling for a fight on this trip, say U.S. officials, or eager to wage an ideological skirmish, as he did nearly a year ago at a NATO summit, where he shook up Europeans as he berated them over greater alliance burden-sharing.

But Trump appears now to be looking beyond the Brexit-fouled May, who will leave office shortly after his trip. He’s unlikely to hold back on offering a norm-breaking running commentary about the British Conservative leadership race or repeating his lavish praise Saturday of key British Brexiters Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage. Johnson is running to succeed Theresa May, and Farage, leader of the Brexit Party, is soon to run for a seat in the House of Commons.

Although there’s nothing listed in the official schedule, Trump has raised the possibility of meeting both men privately this week, possibly at a dinner at the U.S. envoy’s residence in central London, in what diplomats say would be a breach of convention. In an interview with Britain’s Sun newspaper Trump shied away from formally endorsing Johnson but made clear he was his favorite, saying Johnson is a “very good guy” and would be an “excellent” prime minister.

Asked by Britain’s Sky News whether Trump should refrain from praising Brexit leaders during a politically charged time in Britain, which is split down the middle over whether to exit the European Union or not, U.S. national security adviser John Bolton said: “The president will do what the president wants.”

Some analysts in London have speculated that Trump will urge Johnson and Farage to forge a political pact.

​Iran nuclear deal

Aside from Brexit, President Trump will be pressing for British support in his escalating standoff with Iran, U.S. officials say.

So far the British government has sided with the other major European powers in their efforts to bypass U.S. sanctions on Iran in an effort to preserve the 2015 Iran nuclear deal authored by Barack Obama, an agreement President Trump withdrew from last year, arguing it had failed to restrict Iran from waging foreign wars or backing international terrorism.

According to Nile Gardiner, a former aide to Margaret Thatcher and now an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based think tank, May’s opposition to Trump’s Iran strategy “has damaged the U.S.-U.K. alliance.”

He — as some Brexit-favoring aides of the U.S. president, as well as Conservative Euro-skeptics in London — believes some of the policy differences between London and Washington are the consequence of Britain being pulled in two directions between Europe and the U.S.— a state of affairs he hopes will end if Britain exits the EU.

But it isn’t clear that would be the case, say other analysts. Most senior British policymakers, regardless of whether they’re pro-EU or are Brexiters, share European qualms about the U.S. leader’s approach to Iran, and also are critical of Trump’s withdrawal of the U.S. from the Paris climate accord.

Leaving EU? Still neighbors

Further, whether Britain is a member or not of the EU, they say, the country’s future would continue post-Brexit to be intertwined with fellow European nations.

“The irony of Brexit is that the U.K. will end up having Europe as its principle external relationship in the future,” Robin Niblett, director of Chatham House, said last week at an event at the London-based think tank.

At the same event, former British prime minister, John Major, said: “Europe’s success matters to us, because whether we are part of the European Union or not, they are our biggest neighbor, their security and our security are inextricably linked, and we need the best possible relationship with them.”

WATCH: Pompeo Seeks Common Ground on Iran, Huawei in Europe

​China and Huawei

Another source of dispute that will likely feature in behind-the-scenes bilateral discussions in London this week will be whether the West should confront China. British officials expect Trump and his top aides to push hard for a reversal in a provisional British decision to allow Chinese telecom giant Huawei to develop Britain’s fifth-generation (5G) mobile phone network.

U.S. officials fear Beijing will use Huawei, which ultimately is answerable to the Chinese government, to eavesdrop and to sweep up data passing through Britain’s 5G network. The prospect is alarming to U.S. security chiefs, who fear Chinese spies will be able to penetrate, via Britain’s 5G, American communication networks and capture intelligence shared with Britain.

On a visit last month to London, America’s top diplomat, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, bluntly warned British officials against allowing Huawei to participate in building Britain’s 5G network, cautioning them that the tech giant’s political master Beijing wants “to divide Western alliances through bits and bytes, not bullets and bombs.”

If Britain went ahead, he said, it would put at risk the longstanding intelligence-sharing arrangement London has with Washington.

Pompeo’s threat sent shockwaves through the British establishment.

Intelligence ties bind

Britain is a key member of the so-called Five Eyes alliance, the U.S.-led Anglophone intelligence pact also linking Australia, Canada and New Zealand. Norman Roule, who was in the CIA’s Directorate of Operations for 34 years, and served as a division chief and chief of station, says “the U.S. intelligence relationship with the British is the closest on the planet.”

And for the British it is the foundation stone of the “special relationship.” When relations have soured between individual U.S. presidents and British prime ministers, the transatlantic partnership has endured thanks largely to the tight intelligence-military partnership between London and Washington.

“The U.K.-U.S. relationship is far less about the dynamics between two leaders, and far more about daily interactions between thousands of officials and military personnel who work closely together in person or electronically,” according to a former top British defense official in a commentary for the Royal United Services Institute, Britain’s influential international defense and security think tank.

Of equal concern for Britain’s spy chiefs is another explosive issue which is likely to be raised by the U.S. leader this week about whether Britain’s MI6 foreign espionage service helped the FBI to spy on his presidential campaign, something the president alleges. British officials have denied the charge.

Pompeo Seeks Common Ground on Iran, Huawei in Europe

On a trip to Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Britain, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is seeking common ground with European allies, despite fundamental differences over the United States’ withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal and doing business with Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei. VOA’s Diplomatic Correspondent Cindy Saine has more from Washington, as talks between Pompeo and German Chancellor Angela Merkel wrapped Friday.

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