Daily News Usa

1

Friday, May 30, 2025

President Donald Trump says the increase in tariffs will protect America's steel industry, along with an expected partnership with Japan


                                                                    Click here full news 

                                             https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy0k5x21y35

Source of news BBC.com

President Donald Trump has announced the US will double its current tariff rate on steel and aluminium imports from 25% to 50%, starting on Wednesday.

Speaking at a rally in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Trump said the move would help boost the local steel industry and national supply, while reducing reliance on China.

Trump also said that $14bn would be invested in the area's steel production through a partnership between US Steel and Japan's Nippon Steel, though he later told reporters he had yet to see or approve the final deal.

The announcement is the latest turn in Trump's rollercoaster approach to tariffs since re-entering office in January.There will be no layoffs and no outsourcing whatsoever, and every US steelworker will soon receive a well deserved $5,000 bonus," Trump told the crowd, filled with steelworkers, to raucous applause.

One of the major concerns from steelworkers about the US-Japan trade deal was how Japan would honour the workers' union contract which regulates pay and hiring.

Trump began his remarks by saying he had "saved" US Steel, America's biggest steel manufacturer, located in Pittsburgh, with the 25% tariffs he implemented during his first term as president in 2018.

He touted the increase to 50% as a way to ensure US Steel's survival.

"At 50%, they can no longer get over the fence," he said. "We are once again going to put Pennsylvania steel into the backbone of America, like never before."

US steel manufacturing has been declining in recent years, and China, India and Japan have pulled away as the world's top producers. Roughly a quarter of all steel used in the US is imported, and the country's reliance on Mexican and Canadian steel has angered Trump.

The announcement comes amid a court battle over the legality of some of Trump's global tariffs, which an appeals court has allowed to continue after the Court of International Trade ordered the administration to halt the taxes.

His tariffs on steel and aluminium were untouched by the lawsuit.

It is a good day for steelworkers," JoJo Burgess, a member of the local United Steelworkers union who was at Trump's rally, told the BBC.

Mr Burgess, who is also the city mayor of nearby Washington, Pennsylvania, expressed optimism over the reported details of the partnership with Nippon Steel, saying he hoped it would help breed a new generation of steel workers in the area.

He recalled "making a lot of money" in the years after Trump instituted steel tariffs in his first term.

Although Burgess would not label himself a Trump supporter, and says he has only voted for Democratic nominees for president in the last two decades, he said: "I'm never going to disagree with something that's going to level the playing field for American manufacturing."

But so far the impacts of Trump's tariffs have largely led to global economic chaos. Global trade and markets have been upended and cracks have formed - or widened - in relations between the US and other countries, including some of its closest partners.

The levies have strained relations between China and the US, the world's two biggest global economies, and launched the countries into a tit-for-tat trade battle.


Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Yemen war plans: What did Trump aides leak to The Atlantic in Signal chat?


A shocking breach’: Trump officials leak Yemen attack plans in Signal chat



The editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine revealed in an article on Monday that Trump administration officials disclosed to him crucial military details about air strikes on Yemen’s Houthi rebel targets on March 15, hours before the United States carried out the attack.

Jeffrey Goldberg, a veteran journalist, said the US government officials accidentally added him to a texting channel where they mapped out the strikes.

The US government has acknowledged that the message thread appears to be authentic. The incident has prompted accusations by critics of the Trump administration that senior officials were guilty of a major security breach.

Here is more about what happened, what was revealed, how US officials have responded, and what’s next:

What happened?

“The world found out shortly before 2pm eastern time [18:00 GMT] on March 15 that the United States was bombing Houthi targets across Yemen,” Goldberg wrote, as he opened his Monday article for The Atlantic.

“I, however, knew two hours before the first bombs exploded that the attack might be coming. The reason I knew this is that Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, had texted me the war plan at 11:44am [15:44 GMT].

Here is what happened.

On March 11, Goldberg received a connection request from someone named Michael Waltz on Signal, an encrypted messaging service. Michael “Mike” Waltz is the US national security adviser.

Goldberg wrote that he did not initially think this was the actual Waltz trying to connect with him. He thought it could be someone pretending to be Waltz, who would attempt to get information out of Goldberg.

But the editor added that he had met Waltz in the past. “I didn’t find it particularly strange that he might be reaching out to me, I did think it somewhat unusual,” considering the contentious relationship Trump’s administration has with journalists, Goldberg wrote.

news source of  


 

Monday, March 24, 2025

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accuses opposition politicians in Turkey of "disturbing the peace of our citizens with provocations" after a week of protests

 






Recep Tayyip Erdogan has held office for the past 22 years, as both prime minister and president of Turkey for the Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) he founded.

Due to term limits, he cannot run for office again in 2028 unless he changes the constitution.

He and his AKP government survived an attempted coup in 2016 which saw clashes on the streets of Istanbul and Ankara, leaving 256 people dead.

To his supporters, Erdogan has brought Turkey years of economic growth, but to his critics he is an autocratic leader intolerant of dissent who harshly silences anyone who opposes him.


"This news is reported by BBC. You can read the full article here: https://www.bbc.com"

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Trump tells US media he's the only one that can 'stop' Putin

Trump tells US media he's the only one that can 'stop' Putin

Speaking on Air Force One on Saturday night, US President Donald Trump told sports journalist Clay Travis, external that there's nobody in the world that can stop Putin "except me".

In the interview, he says: "I think I'm going to be able to stop him."

"We've had some very rational discussions, and I just want to see the people stop getting killed," Trump adds.

"This news is reported by BBC. You can read the full article here: https://www.bbc.com"
 

US hopes for 'real progress' in peace talks, as three killed in Russian strikes on Ukraine


 

US hopes for 'real progress' in peace talks, as three killed in Russian strikes on Ukraine


As Russia continues its aerial bombardment of Ukraine with drones and missiles, Ukraine has been successfully targeting the sources of some of those attacks.

One of those was at Engels-2 Airbase, deep inside Russia and which is a key base for Moscow's strategic bombers and also serves as a refuelling point.

Engels-2, says Ukraine, also stores weapons including Kh-101 subsonic, air-launched cruise missiles, which, costing millions of dollars per missile, have been frequently used in overnight strikes.

A drone strike on Engels is reported to have destroyed ammunition storage facilities, with before-and-after images from Maxar satellite imagery detailing the extent of the operation.

Andriy Kovalenko wrote on Telegram: "At Engels, the Russians lost missiles, including the Kh-101, as a result of the strike. The number will be clear later. This airfield stores the largest number of missiles used by strategic aviation to strike Ukraine."

While Russia's military operation is defined by the sheer size of attacks, Ukraine's much more limited resources are having to be focused on pinpoint hits on key military installations.

Russia will try to continue its overnight raids to overwhelm air defences and the electronic warfare systems Kyiv uses to try to defeat the drones that pour in.

"This news is reported by BBC. You can read the full article here: https://www.bbc.com"

Saturday, March 22, 2025

A life searching rows of unclaimed bodies for disappeared brothers and sons

 

A life searching rows of unclaimed bodies for disappeared brothers and sons



                                                                                               
Saira Baloch is among thousands of women in Balochistan seeking answers about men they say were forcibly disappeared by Pakistan's security forces

Saira Baloch was 15 when she stepped into a morgue for the first time.

All she heard in the dimly-lit room were sobs, whispered prayers and shuffling feet. The first body she saw was a man who appeared to have been tortured.

His eyes were missing, his teeth had been pulled out and there were burn marks on his chest.

"I couldn't look at the other bodies. I walked out," she recalled.

But she was relieved. It wasn't her brother - a police officer who had been missing for nearly a year since he was arrested in 2018 in a counter-terrorism operation in Balochistan, one of Pakistan's most restive regions.

Inside the morgue, others continued their desperate search, scanning rows of unclaimed corpses. Saira would soon adopt this grim routine, revisiting one morgue after another. They were all the same: tube lights flickering, the air thick with the stench of decay and antiseptic.

On every visit, she hoped she would not find what she was looking for - seven years on, she still hasn't.Activists say thousands of ethnic Baloch people have been disappeared by Pakistan's security forces in the last two decades - allegedly detained without due legal process, or abducted, tortured and killed in operations against a decades-old separatist insurgency.

The Pakistan government denies the allegations, insisting that many of the missing have joined separatist groups or fled the country.

Some return after years, traumatised and broken - but many never come back. Others are found in unmarked graves that have appeared across Balochistan, their bodies so disfigured they cannot be identified.

And then there are the women across generations whose lives are being defined by waiting.

Young and old, they take part in protests, their faces lined with grief, holding up fading photographs of men no longer in their lives. When the BBC met them at their homes, they offered us black tea - Sulemani chai - in chipped cups as they spoke in voices worn down by sorrow.

Many of them insist their fathers, brothers and sons are innocent and have been targeted for speaking out against state policies or were taken as a form of collective

Saira is one of them.

She says she started going to protests after asking the police and pleading with politicians yielded no answers about her brother's whereabouts.

Muhammad Asif Baloch was arrested in August 2018 along with 10 others in Nushki, a city along the border with Afghanistan. His family found out when they saw him on TV the next day, looking scared and dishevelled.

Authorities said the men were "terrorists fleeing to Afghanistan". Muhammad's family said he was having a picnic with friends.

Saira says Muhammad was her "best friend", funny and always cheerful - "My mother worries that she's forgetting his smile."

The day he went missing, Saira had aced a school exam and was excited to tell her brother, her "biggest supporter". Muhammad had encouraged her to attend universty in Quetta, the provincial capital.

"I didn't know back then that the first time I'd go to Quetta, it would be for a protest demanding his release," Saira says.

Three of the men who were detained along with her brother were released in 2021, but they have not spoken about what happened.

Muhammad never came home.

"This news is reported by BBC. You can read the full article here:  https://www.bbc.com"


Trump revokes security clearance for Harris, Clinton, and critics



 US President Donald Trump revoked security clearances from his previously defeated Democratic election rivals, Kamala Harris and Hillary Clinton, as well as a number of other former officials and critics.

Trump said in February he was revoking security clearance for his predecessor Joe Biden. His order confirmed that decision, adding that he was also revoking the security clearance of "any other member" of the Biden family.

"I have determined that it is no longer in the national interest for the following individuals to access classified information," Trump's memorandum read.

Former US presidents and top security officials usually keep their security clearance

Trump ordered department and agency leaders to "revoke unescorted access to secure United States government facilities for these individuals."

"This action includes, but is not limited to, receipt of classified briefings, such as the President's Daily Brief, and access to classified information held by any member of the intelligence community by virtue of the named individuals' previous tenure in the Congress," the order stated.

For several named figures, the loss of access to classified material and spaces will have a more symbolic impact.

It may limit the materials they are able to review, or restrict access to some government buildings or secure facilities.

The lawyers and prosecutors named by Trump, however, could potentially face roadblocks in accessing or reviewing information for their cases or clients.

Trump's revocations focus on top Biden administration officials, as well as prominent political critics and attorneys who have challenged Trump or his allies in court.

Biden's secretary of state Antony Blinken, national security advisor Jake Sullivan, and deputy attorney general Lisa Monaco all lost their clearances.

Trump also targeted two of his own former officials from his first term: Fiona Hill and Alexander Vindman, who testified during his first impeachment trial that began in 2019.

Trump also revoked access for high-profile Republican critics, former Representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger.

They were the only two Republican lawmakers who joined a US House investigation into Trump's role in the 6 January 2021 attack on Congress.

Both also voted to charge Trump in his second impeachment, which a Democratic-led US House of Representatives instigated after the riot. Trump was acquitted by the Senate on the charge of inciting the 6 January riot.

Trump has also singled out top legal opponents in his latest decision on security access. His order revoked clearance for New York attorney general Letitia James, who brought multiple lawsuits against Trump and his businesses.

In a civil fraud lawsuit that concluded in 2024, a judge found Trump liable for hundreds of millions of dollars in fines. Trump is appealing the decision.

Manhattan district attorney Alvin Bragg, who prosecuted and won Trump's criminal hush money case last year, also lost his clearance.

"This news is reported by BBC. You can read the full article here: https://www.bbc.com"

Site Search