“Do you think inflation is a political liability ahead of the midterms?” Doocy asked, according to the official White House transcript, which included the full exchange.

The president, who is known for having a short temper and not the cleanest of vocabularies during heated moments, spoke right above his microphone. “No, it’s a great asset — more inflation,” Biden said, shaking his head. “What a stupid son of a bitch.”

It didn’t take long for Fox to blast the exchange: “Biden blows up at Peter Doocy,” the chyron read.

Fox’s Jesse Watters, talking to Doocy on air, made a joke of the moment. “Doocy, I think the president’s right. You are a stupid SOB,” he said.

“Nobody has fact-checked him yet and said it’s not true,” Doocy quipped.

Last week, Biden took questions from reporters for 111 minutes at the White House, answering on everything from Covid missteps and his Build Back Better agenda to Russia and Ukraine. When it was Doocy’s turn, Biden joked that the reporter always asked him the “nicest questions.” 

“I got a whole binder full,” Doocy said. 

“I know you do,” Biden said. “None of them make a lot of sense to me.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2022/01/24/biden-fox-reporter-profanity-00001578

Legal experts have been watching the Georgia case for months, and say that the former president’s criminal exposure could include charges of racketeering or conspiracy. It is the only known criminal case that focuses directly on Mr. Trump’s efforts to overturn the election.

Politically, the case takes place in a state that played a pivotal role in President Biden’s path to the White House. Mr. Biden became the first Democrat since 1992 to win Georgia’s electoral votes in 2020. The actions of Mr. Trump and his allies during the two-month period that followed Mr. Biden’s victory has been the focus of Ms. Willis’s criminal investigation.

After Mr. Trump’s election loss — and before Georgia held two Senate elections in January — Mr. Trump began to publicly dispute the results of the election in states he lost, including Georgia. On Jan. 2, he called Brad Raffensperger, Georgia’s secretary of state, and asked him to “find 11,780 votes” — the margin by which Mr. Trump lost the state.

The call kicked off a firestorm that continues to have political and legal ramifications. Mr. Trump, who remains the most influential figure in the Republican Party and is a likely candidate for president in 2024, has previously stated that his call with Mr. Raffensperger was “perfect.”

The former president has stared down legal troubles before, including investigations into his businesses and finances, and is the only president to have been impeached twice. He has previously dismissed other investigations as politically motivated. Ms. Willis, the Atlanta prosecutor, is a Democrat

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/24/us/politics/trump-grand-jury-fani-willis-georgia.html

Sheldon Silver, the Democratic powerhouse who ruled Albany with an iron fist until he was busted and later convicted on federal corruption charges in a stunning fall from grace, died Monday in prison. He was 77. 

The disgraced politician died at the Nashoba Valley Medical Center in Ayer, Massachusetts, while serving out a six-and-half-year sentence at a nearby prison after he was convicted for accepting nearly $4 million in bribes while in office, the Federal Bureau of Prisons confirmed. 

His official cause of death will be determined by a medical examiner but the longtime kingmaker had a history of chronic kidney disease and cancer. 

“For all our many disagreements and battles, it’s a sad day and a stark reminder that integrity in public service matters,” former Gov. George Pataki told The Post after learning of Silver’s death. 

“When I look back, I always try to think about the good, the accomplishments we achieved together and there were many, but there could have and should have been more. It’s a shame that his career in public service ended in such a tragic way, but it is a lesson that is important today.”

Silver’s family didn’t immediately return a request for comment. 

Born in 1944 to Russian immigrants, the Manhattan native first took office in 1976 and later became the Assembly Speaker in 1994, a powerful position that made him one of Albany’s “three men in a room” negotiating annual budgets and major legislation with the governor and state Senate leader.

Throughout four-decades in office, Silver served as Speaker under five New York governors, from Mario Cuomo to Andrew Cuomo, and earned a reputation as one of the most feared men in Albany. He was a harsh negotiator who blocked proposals so often, he earned the moniker “Dr. No” and was the legislator responsible for blocking a series of high-profile initiatives under former Mayor Mike Bloomberg. 

Silver served six-and-a-half-year sentence at a federal medical center in Massachusetts.
NY Post

When Bloomberg tried to find a location for a football stadium on Manhattan’s West Side, Silver scuttled the plan and in 2008, he was blamed when a congestion-pricing program failed to make its way through the legislature. 

Bloomberg wanted to impose a toll on motorists driving through the borough’s most highly trafficked neighborhoods and when the plan died in Albany, the mayor put out a press release saying it “takes a special kind of cowardice” not to have lawmakers weigh in. Silver responded that he didn’t have the votes.

For nearly 25 years, Silver had a near-impenetrable powerhold on state politics until 2015 when he was arrested on federal extortion, wire fraud and mail fraud charges for running a series of corrupt kickback schemes while in office. 

Once the most powerful man in New York’s capital, Silver soon lost his grip on the statehouse and was forced to resign from the Assembly. 

He was convicted on all charges in Nov. 2015 and sentenced to 12 years in prison but used his influence and considerable means to stave off jail time for another five years. 

In 2017, his conviction was overturned after an appeals court found the jury instructions used in the trial were invalid and when he was found guilty again the following year, he appealed a second time and remained free on bail while New York’s highest court reviewed the case. 

Sheldon Silver died in prison Monday.
Erik Thomas/NYPost

Panelists from the Second Circuit Court of Appeals eventually upheld his conviction on four of the charges after they unanimously affirmed Silver had illegally used his office to benefit two real estate developers in exchange for money. 

In the scheme, Silver steered the real estate developers, Glenwood Management and the Witkoff Group, to do tax business with a law firm that gave Silver hundreds of thousands of dollars.

In exchange, Silver supported legislation that benefited the real estate developers, including provisions to 2011 rent legislation that were specifically tailored to help Glenwood.

In July 2020, more than five years after he was originally arrested, Silver was sentenced to six and a half years in prison, ending his years-long battle to avoid jail time by tying up his convictions in lengthy legal battles. 

“This was corruption pure and simple,” Judge Valerie Caproni told the fallen leader during his sentencing hearing. 

“The time, however, has now come for Mr. Silver to pay the piper.”

Ahead of his sentencing, Silver and his attorney petitioned Caproni to let him complete his time at home, citing his advanced age and medical issues. 

“Your honor, I do not want to die in prison,” Silver wrote in a letter at the time. 

Caproni denied the request. 

In 2021 Silver was temporarily allowed back home on furlough under the Department of Justice’s expanded powers to grant inmates release amid the pandemic.
Gabriella Bass

In May 2021, after completing less than a year of his sentence, Silver was briefly allowed back home on furlough under the Department of Justice’s expanded powers to grant inmates release amid the coronavirus pandemic but by the end of the month, he was back in custody

Despite his many misdeeds, friends and colleagues remembered Silver for his commitment to Democratic policies, his devout faith as an Orthodox Jew and the indelible impact he had on state politics throughout four-decades as an elected official. 

“He was a fighter for his constituents and his work to rebuild Lower Manhattan after the terrible events of 9/11 will never be forgotten. I will remember Shelly for his many legislative accomplishments,” Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said. 

“For years he was the lone voice in the room pushing back against many regressive policies that would have harmed so many New Yorkers, and he presided over landmark laws to improve the lives of our most vulnerable residents. My heart goes out to his wife, Rosa, and his children, grandchildren and many friends during this difficult time.”

Former State Sen. Majority Leader John Flanagan, who served alongside Silver for about 16 years and played basketball with him during off-hours, recalled the pol’s “scrappy” sports skills and tenacious spirit. 

“There’s no question in my mind he had a very significant influence on state government – he played a pivotal role,” Flanagan said. 

“He could be tenacious, he could be so quiet for such long periods of time – that was sort of his mantra and how he was described. He was like a sphinx. It was his way of doing business.” 

Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa, who stopped by Silver’s house during his brief time at home last May to ring his doorbell and tell him “you belong back in jail,” didn’t remember the convict as fondly and said “Good riddance” when asked for comment on his death. 

“Silver was the Meyer Lansky of the Democratic Party,” Sliwa quipped, referencing the infamous Polish-born gangster known as the “Mob’s Accountant.”

“Let’s look under the mattresses.”

Additional reporting by Larry Celona, Post Wires 

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/01/24/disgraced-former-ny-politican-sheldon-silver-dead-at-77/

“This is a big scientific finding,” said Martha J. Farah, a neuroscientist at the University of Pennsylvania, who conducted a review of the study for the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, where it was published on Monday. “It’s proof that just giving the families more money, even a modest amount of more money, leads to better brain development.”

Another researcher, Charles A. Nelson III of Harvard, reacted more cautiously, noting the full effect of the payments — $333 a month — would not be clear until the children took cognitive tests. While the brain patterns documented in the study are often associated with higher cognitive skills, he said, that is not always the case.

“It’s potentially a groundbreaking study,” said Dr. Nelson, who served as a consultant to the study. “If I was a policymaker, I’d pay attention to this, but it would be premature of me to pass a bill that gives every family $300 a month.”

A temporary federal program of near-universal children’s subsidies — up to $300 a month per child through an expanded child tax credit — expired this month after Mr. Biden failed to unite Democrats behind a large social policy bill that would have extended it. Most Republicans oppose the monthly grants, citing the cost and warning that unconditional aid, which they describe as welfare, discourages parents from working.

Sharing some of those concerns, Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia, effectively blocked the Biden plan, though he has suggested that he might support payments limited to families of modest means and those with jobs. The payments in the research project, called Baby’s First Years, were provided regardless of whether the parents worked.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/24/us/politics/child-tax-credit-brain-function.html

Mayor Brandon Scott of Baltimore said Monday evening that the hospitalized firefighter was in critical condition and “fighting for his life.”

“Baltimore has lost three of the bravest among us,” Mr. Scott said. “This is a gut wrenching tragedy for our city, for our Fire Department, and most importantly, for the families of our firefighters. There are no words — none — to describe the pain and the severity of the losses that we suffered today.”

The three firefighters who died were Lt. Paul Butrim, who had been with the department for 16 years; Kelsey Sadler, a 15-year department veteran; and Kenny Lacayo, who had been with the department for seven years, city officials said.

The hospitalized firefighter, John McMaster, who was on life support on Monday evening, has been with the department for six years, city officials said.

James Sadler, Ms. Sadler’s father-in-law, described Ms. Sadler as a “lovely woman” whom he loved like a daughter.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/24/us/baltimore-firefighters-killed.html

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III has put 8,500 American troops on “high alert” for possible deployment to Eastern Europe, as NATO and the United States braced for a possible Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Pentagon announced on Monday.

Most of the 8,500 troops would take part in a NATO response force that might soon be activated, said John F. Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman. The remaining personnel would be part of a specific U.S. response to the deepening crisis, Defense Department officials said, most likely to provide assurance to American allies in Eastern Europe who are fearful that Russia’s plans for Ukraine could extend to the Baltics and other countries in NATO’s so-called eastern flank.

“It’s very clear the Russians have no intention right now of de-escalating,” Mr. Kirby said at a news conference on Monday. “What this is about, though, is reassurance to our NATO allies.”

Mr. Kirby’s announcement comes after The New York Times reported on Sunday that President Biden was considering the deployment of several thousand U.S. troops, as well as warships and aircraft, to NATO allies in the Baltics and Eastern Europe.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/24/us/politics/russia-ukraine-us-troops.html

WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court said it would decide whether to prohibit the use of race-conscious admissions in higher education, agreeing to consider challenges to policies at Harvard and the University of North Carolina.

The court in a brief written order on Monday said it would consider a pair of challenges by a group called Students for Fair Admissions, led by conservative legal activist Edward Blum, which sued both schools on the same day in 2014.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/supreme-court-to-consider-challenges-to-race-conscious-admissions-policies-at-harvard-unc-11643035684

NEW YORK — An unvaccinated Sarah Palin tested positive for COVID-19 Monday, forcing a postponement of the start of a trial in her libel lawsuit against The New York Times

The former Alaska governor’s positive test was announced in court just as jury selection was set to begin at a federal courthouse in New York City.

Palin claims the Times damaged her reputation with an opinion piece penned by its editorial board that falsely asserted her political rhetoric helped incite the 2011 shooting of then-Arizona U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords. The newspaper has conceded the initial wording of the editorial was flawed, but not in an intentional or reckless way that made it libelous.

U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff said the trial can begin Feb. 3 if Palin, 57, has recovered by then.

Palin, a one-time Republican vice presidential nominee, has had COVID-19 before. She’s urged people not to get vaccinated, telling an audience in Arizona last month that “it will be over my dead body that I’ll have to get a shot.”

When he first announced that Palin had gotten a positive result from an at-home test, Rakoff said: “She is, of course, unvaccinated.”

Additional tests in the morning also came out positive, Palin’s lawyer told the court.

“Since she has tested positive three times, I’m going to assume she’s positive,” the judge said.

Rakoff said that courthouse rules would permit her to return to court Feb. 3, even if she still tests positive, as long as she has no symptoms. If she does have symptoms, she can be looked at on Feb. 2 by a doctor who provides services to the courts, he said.

Palin’s case survived an initial dismissal that was reversed on appeal in 2019, setting the stage for a rare instance that a major news organization will have to defend itself before a jury in a libel case involving a major public figure.

It’s presumed that Palin will be the star witness in the civil case. She’s seeking unspecified damages, saying the Times hurt her budding career as a political commentator.

In the editorial, the Times wrote that, before the 2011 mass shooting that severely wounded Giffords and killed six others, Palin’s political action committee circulated a map of electoral districts that put Giffords and 19 other Democrats under stylized crosshairs.

In a correction two days later, The Times said the editorial had “incorrectly stated that a link existed between political rhetoric and the 2011 shooting” and that it had “incorrectly described” the map.

The disputed wording had been added to the editorial by James Bennet, then the editorial page editor. At trial, a jury would have to decide whether he acted with “actual malice,” meaning that he knew what he wrote was false, or with “reckless disregard” for the truth.

In pretrial testimony, Bennet cited deadline pressures as he explained that he did not personally research the information about Palin’s political action committee before approving the editorial’s publication. He said he believed the editorial was accurate when it was published.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory/sarah-palins-defamation-suit-ny-times-set-trial-82438893

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A Covid-19 intensive care unit in Cremona, Italy, this month.Credit…Miguel Medina/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The pandemic that has convulsed the world for more than two years is entering a “new phase” globally and the rapid spread of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus could help set the stage for a return to normalcy in the months ahead, according to a top health official in Europe.

Dr. Hans Kluge, the director for the World Health Organization’s European region, warned that it was too early for nations to drop their guard, with so many people unvaccinated around the world. But, he said, between vaccination and natural immunity through infection, “Omicron offers plausible hope for stabilization and normalization.”

The question that remains, however, is what normal looks like — and how long it could last.

Over the past two years, people around the world have become exhaustingly familiar with the wicked way the virus has of evolving and confounding expectations.

Video

transcript

W.H.O. Chief Cautions Against Predicting a Pandemic ‘Endgame’

The World Health Organization’s director general said it was dangerous to assume the end of the pandemic was nearing and warned that current global conditions were “ideal for more variants to emerge.”

There are different scenarios for how the pandemic could play out and how the acute phase could end. But it’s dangerous to assume that Omicron will be the last variant or that we are in the endgame. On the contrary, globally, the conditions are ideal for more variants to emerge. To change the course of the pandemic, we must change the conditions that are driving it. It’s true that we will be living with Covid for the foreseeable future, and that we will need to learn to manage it through a sustained and integrated system for acute respiratory diseases, which will provide a platform for preparedness for future pandemics. But learning to live with Covid cannot mean that we give this virus a free ride. It cannot mean that we accept almost 50,000 deaths a week from a preventable and treatable disease.

The World Health Organization’s director general said it was dangerous to assume the end of the pandemic was nearing and warned that current global conditions were “ideal for more variants to emerge.”CreditCredit…Fabrice Coffrini/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the W.H.O., offered a more cautious assessment of the moment, emphasizing the risks posed by possible new variants.

“It’s dangerous to assume that Omicron will be the last variant or that we are in the endgame,” he said on Monday at an executive board meeting of the organization “On the contrary, globally, the conditions are ideal for more variants to emerge.”

In places where Omicron is just gaining a foothold, the known number of new infections is staggering. (Case numbers are largely thought to be an undercount given issues with access to testing and the use of at-home tests that may not always be officially reported.)

Germany’s health minister, Karl Lauterbach, said he expects numbers to peak in mid-February, with as many as 600,000 new cases per day.

Omicron is also just now spreading across Eastern and Central Europe, including in many countries with worryingly low vaccination rates.

In countries across Asia that have pursued a “zero-Covid” policy with stringent lockdowns, the path Omicron will chart is unclear.

But it is the very speed and depth of the spread of Omicron that also offers some of the cautious optimism among public health officials.

Scientists have said that the Omicron variant will undoubtedly leave behind much higher levels of immunity in the population. But the protection offered by a previous infection may wane over time, and may not apply as well to future versions of the virus.

The sharp rise in cases in the places where Omicron has already taken hold has often been followed by a remarkable decline, such as South Africa, Britain and Israel.

As research has emerged that Omicron causes less severe disease and vaccines remain protective against the worst outcomes, many public health experts have encouraged less focus on cases and more emphasis on hospitalizations amid record-breaking spikes.

Global coronavirus cases by region

This chart shows how reported cases per capita have changed in different parts of the world.

In the United States, Omicron cases appear to have crested in the Northeast, parts of the Upper Midwest and other areas where it first arrived, while nationally, new cases and hospital admissions have leveled off in recent days. But hospitals in other areas across the country remain overstretched, straining to handle patients after multiple surges and staffing shortages, including in Mississippi, where nearly all of the state’s acute-care hospitals have been pushed to capacity. And new deaths remain high.

Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, President Biden’s top pandemic adviser, said on Sunday that while there would be pain in the weeks ahead, especially as Omicron moves through lower-vaccinated areas, the hope was that its continued spread would not disrupt society to the same degree as other variants.

Still, he, too, cautioned about the possibility of future variants: “I’m not saying it’s going to happen, but we have to be prepared,” he said.

Given how the virus has offered new surprises and challenges Dr. Kluge also offered a mix of caution and optimism.

“The pandemic is far from over, but I am hopeful we can end the emergency phase in 2022 and address other health threats that urgently require our attention,” Dr. Kluge said. “Backlogs and waiting lists have grown, essential health services have been disrupted, and plans and preparations for climate-related health stresses and shocks have been put on hold.”

The European Center for Disease Prevention and Control and the W.H.O. estimate that Covid vaccines saved the lives of 469,186 people aged 60 years and over in 33 countries in the region, between December 2020 and November 2021.

“Too many people who need the vaccine remain unvaccinated,” Dr. Kluge said. “This is helping to drive transmission, prolonging the pandemic and increasing the likelihood of new variants.”

New fast-spreading variants will most likely emerge — and, if previous variants are any indication, they may be only distantly related to Omicron, scientists said. And there is no reason to believe that the virus will evolve only into milder forms.

Eventually, scientists believe that the coronavirus will become endemic and start circulating at more predictable levels, though how serious a threat it poses at that stage will depend in large part on what levels of illness countries decide to tolerate and how hospitals manage to cope.

“This pandemic, like all other pandemics before it, will end, but it is far too early to relax,” Dr. Kluge said. He added that it was “almost a given that new Covid-19 variants will emerge and return.”

But the world was in a much better place to deal with what might come, he noted.

“I believe that a new wave could no longer require the return to pandemic-era population-wide lockdowns or similar measures,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/01/24/world/omicron-covid-vaccine-tests

Once the students got inside, some informed their parents via phone that they were being placed into an auditorium, away from other students. Clint Thomas, one of the parents, pressed the intercom button at the school’s front doors repeatedly to demand a meeting with the school’s principal, William Shipp. About 15 minutes later, Shipp walked outside, removing his mask as he did so.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2022/01/24/youngkin-masking-order-takes-effect/

“A serious change in the security situation of late has not occurred,” Oleg Nikolenko, the spokesman for Ukraine’s foreign ministry, said in a statement. “The threat of a new wave of Russian aggression has been permanent since 2014, and the build up of Russian forces on the state border began in April last year.”

While the United States has warned that President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia could order an attack at any time, Ukraine’s government has shown less sense of urgency and has at times presented contradictory assessments of the situation. In an address to the nation last week, Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, played down the threat, urging Ukrainians to remain calm and not “run out for buckwheat and matches.”

“This danger has existed for more than one day and it has it has not become greater,” he said.

In his statement, Mr. Nilolenko, the foreign ministry spokesman, suggested that giving into panic would simply give the Russians a victory as it attempts to sow discord through information warfare.

“The Russian Federation is currently working actively to destabilize the internal situation in Ukraine,” he said. “In this situation it is important to soberly evaluate the risks and preserve calm.”

Despite the pullout of family members and some personnel, both the American and British embassies have been ordered to remain open. The State Department said that the decision was made “out of an abundance of caution,” but that the United States would “not be in a position” to evacuate U.S. citizens should Russia invade Ukraine.

Anton Troianovski contributed reporting from Moscow.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/24/world/europe/ukraine-nato-russia-embassies.html

Members of the Nato alliance, including Denmark, Spain, Bulgaria and the Netherlands, are sending more fighter jets and warships to Eastern Europe to bolster defences in the region. With an estimated 100,000 Russian troops now at the border with Ukraine, the head of Nato has warned there is a risk of fresh conflict in Europe.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-60113271

The State Department has ordered families of U.S embassy employees in Kyiv, Ukraine, to leave the country and authorized some U.S. government employees to depart due to the potential of Russian military action. 

Russian military action anywhere in Ukraine would severely impact the embassy’s ability to provide consular services, including assistance to U.S. citizens in departing Ukraine, a State Department official told reporters on Sunday night. The State Department is urging those who can depart to do so on commercially-available flights.   

The decisions were made out of an abundance of caution due to Russia’s continued military buildup and disinformation campaigns, a separate senior State Department official said. 

The State Department does not have a “solid number” of how many Americans are in Ukraine, according to the official, because no one is required to register with the embassy while there. 

Russia has amassed over 100,000 troops on Ukraine’s border, and although the U.S. does not know if Russian President Vladimir Putin has made a decision to invade or if a decision is imminent, he has built the military capacity to invade at any point, one of the officials said.  

An instructor trains members of Ukraine’s Territorial Defense Forces, volunteer military units of the Armed Forces, in a city park in Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday, Jan. 22, 2022. Dozens of civilians have been joining Ukraine’s army reserves in recent weeks amid fears about Russian invasion.

Efrem Lukatsky / AP


The concern has grown because of Russian forces entering Belarus, just north of Ukraine, to conduct joint military exercises, according to the Russian Ministry of Defense. 

“If Russia chooses to engage in further military aggression, it has the opportunity to launch the attack from different directions based on where it can launch these incursions against Ukraine,” one official said.

The State Department’s travel advisory to Ukraine was already at a level four, the highest level, because of COVID-19, but the advisory was updated to urge citizens not to travel to the country over concerns of the potential of a significant Russian military action against Ukraine. 

If an incursion were to occur, the security conditions along occupied Crimea and eastern Ukraine are unpredictable and could deteriorate at any moment, according to the official. Though Crimea and the eastern parts of Ukraine are of particular concern, Russian military action anywhere in Ukraine would severely impact the embassy’s ability to provide services. 

The U.S. last month authorized an additional $200 million in defensive aid, and the first shipment which contains lethal aid for the Ukraine defensive forces arrived in Kyiv on Saturday. 

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told “Face the Nation” on Sunday that there will be “massive consequences” for Russia if its military forces invade Ukraine.


Blinken warns of “massive consequences” for R…

08:18

“Russia will make its decisions based on President [Vladimir] Putin’s calculus of what’s in their interest,” Blinken said. “We are working very hard to affect that calculus, both in terms of offering a diplomatic path forward that could enhance collective security for all of us and equally a path of defense and deterrence, that makes very clear that if there’s aggression, there’ll be massive consequences. So the choice is his.”

President Biden last week said it was his “guess” that Russia would invade Ukraine, and the White House sought to walk back comments he made at a press conference Wednesday that suggested there could be divisions among Western nations about the consequences Russia could face if it launched a “minor incursion” into Ukrainian territory. 

Russia’s government has consistently denied any plans to attack Ukraine, but it also leaves the option of unspecified “military action” on the table if the U.S. and the West refuse to grant what Putin has called “security guarantees” constraining NATO’s actions in the region.

On Monday, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said staffing at the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv was “a question for the American side,” but she suggested it was more to do with “how they are building their information agenda” than actual security concerns.

Ukraine, NATO allies respond

Britain, which has remained in close sync with U.S. rhetoric on Ukraine, said Monday that it, too, was pulling some members of its embassy staff and their dependants out of Kyiv due to “a growing threat from Russia,” but that the British Embassy would remain open “and will continue to carry out essential work.”

Other European nations have been hesitant to back the level of sanctions that the U.S. has proposed as a response to any Russian military action against Ukraine, however, and on Monday, top European Union diplomat Josep Borrell said the bloc was “not going to do the same thing” as the U.S. and the U.K. with its embassy staff, “because we don’t know any specific reasons.” 

“I don’t think we had to dramatize as far as the negotiations are going on,” Borrell said, referring to talks with Russia, “and they are going on.”


Russia ups military presence at Ukraine borde…

01:44

Even Ukraine appeared uncomfortable with the latest U.S. move.

“We consider such a step by the American side premature and a display of excessive caution,” Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Oleg Nikolenko said in a statement. He said there had been “no radical changes” in the security situation along his country’s borders.

Nikolenko said that amid “active efforts” by Russia to destabilize his country, through “disinformation, manipulation,” to “sow panic among Ukrainians and foreigners… it is important to soberly access the risks and keep calm.”

CBS News’ Tucker Reals contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/russia-ukraine-us-embassy-families-leave-kyiv/

BRUSSELS, Jan 24 (Reuters) – The European Union is ready to impose “never-seen-before” economic sanctions on Russia if it attacks Ukraine, Denmark said on Monday, and EU foreign ministers said they would send a unified warning to Moscow.

East-West tensions have risen since Russia massed troops near Ukraine’s border, with Western countries fearing Moscow is preparing an invasion. Russia denies such plans.

Divergent interests in the 27-nation EU could hinder efforts to agree a joint position, and the EU is sidelined by direct Russia-U.S. talks, but ministers said it was essential to find unity.

“Knowing Russia’s tactics, I’m sure one of their aims is to splinter the West,” Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said as ministers gathered for regular talks in Brussels. “This is a victory we cannot afford to give to the Russians.”

Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod told reporters: “There’s no doubt we are ready to react with comprehensive, never-seen-before sanctions if Russia were to invade Ukraine again.”

He declined to say what sectors would be targeted.

“Russia should know, (President Vladimir) Putin should know that the price of using provocations and military forces to change borders in Europe will be very, very high… We are ready to undertake the most severe sanctions, also more severe than in 2014,” he said.

The EU, along with the United States, imposed economic sanctions on Moscow targeting its energy, banking and defence sectors after Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula in 2014.

U.S. Senate Democrats have unveiled a bill to potentially punish Russian officials, military leaders and banking institutions. The EU says it is working with Washington on a sanctions package but has given no details.

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A grenade launcher operator of the Russian armed forces takes part in combat drills at the Kadamovsky range in the Rostov region, Russia December 14, 2021. REUTERS/Sergey Pivovarov

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has urged Europe and the United States to think carefully when considering sanctions. read more

Asked whether cutting Russia off from the SWIFT global messaging system should be an option, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said in Brussels the “hardest stick” may not always be the best way to deal with such a situation.

GAS DEPENDENCY

Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg said everything was on the table but also pointed to Austria’s dependency on Russia for 40% of its gas.

Asked about potential sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline from Russia to Germany, which is yet to win regulatory approval, he said sanctioning something that is not yet operative was not a credible threat.

Blinken is expected to join the EU meeting online at around 1400 GMT.

The top U.S. and Russian diplomats made no major breakthrough at talks on Ukraine on Friday but agreed to keep talking. read more

“We are here to do everything we can so that war does not break out,” Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn said.

For now, the EU does not plan to withdraw diplomats’ families from Ukraine, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said after Washington announced such a move. read more

The British Embassy in Ukraine said some of its staff and dependants were being withdrawn from Kyiv.

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Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/eu-leave-diplomats-families-ukraine-now-borrell-says-2022-01-24/