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By Labeling Putin a ‘War Criminal,’ Biden Personalizes the Conflict

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By Labeling Putin a ‘War Criminal,’ Biden Personalizes the Conflict

Simply hours earlier than Mr. Biden’s declaration, his nationwide safety adviser, Jake Sullivan, informed Nikolai P. Patrushev, Mr. Putin’s predominant nationwide safety adviser, that “any attainable Russian choice to make use of chemical or organic weapons in Ukraine” would end in a good harsher Western response. Whereas none would say it publicly, a number of of Mr. Biden’s aides have been involved in current days that if the Russian chief feels cornered — or believes america is making an attempt to foment opposition to his rule — the possibilities that he’ll attain for such weapons might be heightened.

So the controversy underway in Washington now could be what, precisely, may set off Mr. Putin. Some consider he might lash out if dissent in Russia, already seen in road demonstrations, poses an actual menace to him. Others consider that his set off level could be a extra direct entry into the battle by NATO international locations, that are already offering antitank and antiaircraft weapons which have contributed to what the Pentagon now estimates is a Russian loss of life toll of at the least 7,000 troops.

One former intelligence official famous that it was Hillary Clinton’s help for road demonstrators who protested the election of pro-Putin lawmakers in Russia that prompted the Russian chief to order the hacks on the Democratic Nationwide Committee when Mrs. Clinton was operating for president in 2016. Mr. Putin is a believer, the official stated, in retribution.

Mr. Putin would have good motive to assume the Biden administration is wanting ahead to his exit, although American officers select their phrases rigorously to keep away from the implication that Washington’s coverage is to hurry the method. Mr. Blinken, chatting with reporters on Thursday, stated that “when all is claimed and accomplished, an impartial Ukraine will probably be there, and sooner or later Vladimir Putin is not going to.”

The final time an American president went head-to-head with a Russian or Soviet chief with a lot at stake was 60 years in the past, in the course of the Cuban missile disaster, extensively considered the closest the world got here to Armageddon. And but at that second, in October 1962, President Kennedy’s intuition was to keep away from personalizing the battle — and to assist his Soviet counterpart, Nikita S. Khrushchev, discover a means out of direct confrontation.

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“I feel it’s the most pure comparability to this second,” stated Fredrik Logevall, a Harvard historian and Kennedy biographer.

“He stored warning the members of X-COMM,” the committee Kennedy established to information via the 13 days of the disaster, “that they needed to see issues from Khrushchev’s perspective,” he stated. “He stated we needed to give him one thing right here to step away. And he was cautious in his public feedback to not personalize his criticisms of Khrushchev himself. It’s a direct distinction to what Biden did.”

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Donald Trump Agrees With Fox News to Debate Kamala Harris on Sept. 4

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Donald Trump Agrees With Fox News to Debate Kamala Harris on Sept. 4
(Reuters) – U.S. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has agreed with Fox News to a debate with Democratic U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris on Sept. 4, he said in a post on Truth Social late Friday. “If for any reason Kamala is unwilling or unable to debate on that date, I have agreed with …
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Rights group says security forces have killed 9 as Nigeria protests over hardship enter a second day

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Rights group says security forces have killed 9 as Nigeria protests over hardship enter a second day

Nigerian security forces clashed with protesters during mass demonstrations over the country’s economic crisis, leaving at least nine people dead, a rights group said Friday. One police officer was killed as the military threatened to intervene to quell any violence.

Meanwhile, four people were killed and 34 injured Thursday when a bomb went off in a crowd of protesters in the conflict-hit northeastern state of Borno, authorities said.

Police continued to fire tear gas at protesters in various locations, including the capital of Abuja, as they regrouped on Friday.

SECURITY FORCES RESCUE 14 NIGERIAN STUDENTS ABDUCTED BY GUNMEN

The military will also intervene if the looting and destruction of public properties witnessed on Thursday continued, Nigeria’s defense chief Gen. Christopher Musa said. “We will not fold our arms and allow this country to be destroyed,” Musa told reporters in Abuja.

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More than 400 protesters had been arrested as of Friday, the Nigerian police said. Curfews were imposed in five northern states after the looting of government and public properties, but protesters defied the curfews in some places, resulting in arrests and clashes with police.

National police chief Kayode Egbetokun said Thursday night that the police are on red alert and may seek the help of the military.

People protest against the economic hardship on the street in Lagos, Nigeria, Friday, Aug 2, 2024.  (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

Amnesty International’s Nigeria director Isa Sanusi said in an interview that the group independently verified deaths that were reported by witnesses, families of the victims, and lawyers.

The protests were mainly over food shortages and accusations of misgovernment and corruption in Africa’s most populous country. Nigeria’s public officials are among the best paid in Africa, a stark contrast in a country that has some of the world’s poorest and hungriest people despite being one of the continent’s top oil producers.

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The cost-of-living crisis — the worst in a generation — is fueled by surging inflation that is at a 28-year high and the government’s economic policies that have pushed the local currency to record low against the dollar.

Carrying placards, bells, tree branches and Nigeria’s green-and-white flag, the mostly young protesters chanted songs as they listed their demands, including the reinstatement of gas and electricity subsidies that were canceled as part of an economic reform effort.

Violence and looting were concentrated in Nigeria’s northern states, which are among the hardest hit by hunger and insecurity. Dozens of protesters were seen running with looted goods including furniture and gallons of cooking oil.

Egbetokun, the police chief, said officers “aimed at ensuring peaceful conduct.” But, he added “regrettably, events in some major cities today showed that what was being instigated was mass uprising and looting, not protest.”

The police chief’s claim was disputed by rights groups and activists. “Our findings so far show that security personnel at the locations where lives were lost deliberately used tactics designed to kill,” Sanusi said.

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Authorities feared the protests, which have been gathering momentum on social media, could be a replay of the deadly 2020 demonstrations against police brutality in this West African nation, or as a wave of violence similar to last month’s chaotic tax hike protests in Kenya.

However, the threats that emerged as the protests turned violent in some places did “not require that level of response” from police officers, said Anietie Ewang, a Nigerian researcher with Human Rights Watch.

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Qassam Brigades local commander among 5 killed in Israel attack on Tulkarem

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Qassam Brigades local commander among 5 killed in Israel attack on Tulkarem

Medical sources tell Al Jazeera that Haitham Balidi, a leader of Hamas’s military wing in Nablus, was killed in an air attack on a car in the occupied West Bank.

At least five people, including a local commander of Hamas’s military wing, have been killed in an Israeli air strike on a car in Tulkarem in the occupied West Bank.

Medical sources confirmed to Al Jazeera on Saturday that one of the people killed was Haitham Balidi, leader of the Qassam Brigades in the Nablus area. Another person was identified by a relative as one of the leaders of al-Quds Brigades, the armed wing of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group.

The identities of the other people were not immediately clear. Family members went to a hospital in Tulkarem to identify the dismembered bodies brought there.

The Israeli military said the car contained a “terrorist squad,” without further elaborating. Air attacks in the occupied Palestinian territory have surged since the start of the war in Gaza on October 7, with authorities recording at least 29 strikes which killed more than 80 Palestinians.

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The attack took place as the Israeli army raided several towns across the West Bank.

In Tulkarem city, Israeli bulldozers destroyed infrastructure, while in Nablus Israeli soldiers rounded up three Palestinians, including a journalist. Other incursions were reported in Jenin, Faqqa, Deir Abu Daif, Bethlehem and near Ramallah. In occupied East Jerusalem, Israeli forces once again arrested activist Ramzi Abbasi after he had been released last November.

Since October 7, Israeli forces have killed at least 600 Palestinians in the West Bank, including 144 children.

Meanwhile, ground Israeli raids and mass arrests in the West Bank have also ballooned over the same period, becoming a nearly daily occurrence.

The Palestinian Prisoner’s Society watchdog says more than 9,300 people have ended up in Israeli prisons. Of these, at least 3,400 are in so-called administrative detention, a controversial practice that allows Israel to hold suspects for extended periods without having committed an offence.

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Israeli incursion in cities and towns across the occupied West Bank is also causing major disruption for civilian life. The UNRWA agency for Palestinian refugees said on Friday that the situation in the West Bank is worsening daily in what it described as a “silent war” amid water shortages and electricity outages.

Since 1967, the West Bank has been under Israeli occupation. In a landmark, yet non-binding ruling, the International Court of Justice last month declared Israel’s continued presence unlawful.

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