Tag Archives: attempt

Murder suspect strangles deputy and crashes van in botched attempt to escape prison – New York Post

  1. Murder suspect strangles deputy and crashes van in botched attempt to escape prison New York Post
  2. An inmate used the chain of his handcuffs to choke an Indiana sheriff’s deputy who later died at hospital, affidavit says CNN
  3. Police reports detail a disturbing timeline of the attack on deputy John Durm during an escape attem FOX59 News
  4. Marion Co. Sheriff wants Orlando Mitchell moved to Indiana Dept. of Correction WISH TV Indianapolis, IN
  5. What did Orlando Mitchell do? Indiana inmate accused of killing a sheriff’s deputy during an escape attempt Sportskeeda
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

The Kingsessing mass shooting suspect told police the rampage was an attempt to fight gun violence, sources say – The Philadelphia Inquirer

  1. The Kingsessing mass shooting suspect told police the rampage was an attempt to fight gun violence, sources say The Philadelphia Inquirer
  2. Philadelphia DA underscores mass shooting’s impact on victims’ families, medical professionals MSNBC
  3. The latest mass shooting in Philadelphia puts focus on America’s unique, enduring gun problem Vox.com
  4. Philadelphia mass shooting: Suspect Kimbrady Carriker charged with 5 counts of murder for Kingsessing rampage WPVI-TV
  5. July 4, 2023: Philadelphia shooting, Israel, West Bank, China on US chips, France riots, El Nino Reuters
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Mobs attempt to torch houses of BJP leaders; opposition parties demand PM Modi’s intervention: Key develo – Times of India

  1. Mobs attempt to torch houses of BJP leaders; opposition parties demand PM Modi’s intervention: Key develo Times of India
  2. Kuki Man Appeals for Peace After Meitei Wife, Son Set On Fire in Violence-hit Manipur | Exclusive News18
  3. Mob Clashes With Cops In Manipur, Try To Set BJP Leaders’ House Afire & OtherHeadlines|News Wrap@8PM Hindustan Times
  4. Mobs in Manipur target BJP politicians’ houses, offices Times of India
  5. Professor-turned-BJP leader Rajkumar Ranjan Singh, the MoS External Affairs whose home was torched in Manipur The Indian Express
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Philadelphia 76ers stave off Boston’s comeback attempt, beating the Celtics 116-115 in overtime – Daily Mail

  1. Philadelphia 76ers stave off Boston’s comeback attempt, beating the Celtics 116-115 in overtime Daily Mail
  2. Celtics’ Grant Williams bloodied as head accidentally stepped on by Joel Embiid: ‘I really got curb stomped’ Fox News
  3. Celtics And 76ers Final Injury Reports And Starting Lineups Sports Illustrated
  4. Instant observations: James Harden saves Sixers in wild Game 4 vs. Celtics PhillyVoice.com
  5. NBA Playoffs 2023: Sixers’ James Harden caps brilliant performance with game-winner, signs sneakers for Michi NJ.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Russian media report assassination attempt on Russian oligarch Malofeev, who financed Russian militants – Yahoo News

  1. Russian media report assassination attempt on Russian oligarch Malofeev, who financed Russian militants Yahoo News
  2. Russia’s FSB Says Foiled Assassination Attempt on Orthodox Tycoon The Moscow Times
  3. Russian FSB claims it prevented assassination attempt on conservative media group founder Konstantin Malofeev by Russian Volunteer Corps head Denis Kapustin Meduza
  4. Russia says it thwarts Ukraine-backed murder plot against nationalist tycoon Reuters
  5. Ukrainian Saboteurs Accused Of Attempting To Assassinate Pro-Kremlin Businessman Malofeyev Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Russia’s FSB Says Foiled Assassination Attempt on Orthodox Tycoon – The Moscow Times

  1. Russia’s FSB Says Foiled Assassination Attempt on Orthodox Tycoon The Moscow Times
  2. Russian media report assassination attempt on Russian oligarch Malofeev, who financed Russian militants Yahoo News
  3. Ukrainian Saboteurs Accused Of Attempting To Assassinate Pro-Kremlin Businessman Malofeyev Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  4. Russia says it thwarts Ukraine-backed murder plot against nationalist tycoon Reuters
  5. Russian FSB claims it prevented assassination attempt on conservative media group founder Konstantin Malofeev by Russian Volunteer Corps head Denis Kapustin Meduza
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Marilyn Manson Rape Accuser Pressured To Recant Claims, Evan Rachel Wood Asserts; Judge Rejects Singer’s Attempt To Add New Declaration To Case Against ‘Westworld’ Actress – Deadline

  1. Marilyn Manson Rape Accuser Pressured To Recant Claims, Evan Rachel Wood Asserts; Judge Rejects Singer’s Attempt To Add New Declaration To Case Against ‘Westworld’ Actress Deadline
  2. Evan Rachel Wood Shared Instagram Screenshots To Back Up Her Claim She Never Pressured A Model Into Making Sexual Assault Allegations Against Marilyn Manson BuzzFeed News
  3. Evan Rachel Wood Says She ‘Never Pressured’ Marilyn Manson Accuser PEOPLE
  4. Evan Rachel Wood refutes claims that she “manipulated” Manson accuser The A.V. Club
  5. Evan Rachel Wood Says She ‘Never’ Manipulated Fellow Marilyn Manson Accuser Who Retracted Claim Jezebel
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

A federal judge’s hilarious attempt to troll the Supreme Court on abortion, in United States v. Handy – Vox.com

  1. A federal judge’s hilarious attempt to troll the Supreme Court on abortion, in United States v. Handy Vox.com
  2. D.C. Judge Argues 13th Amendment Prohibiting Slavery May Provide Constitutional Right to Abortion Yahoo News
  3. Federal judge suggests abortion may still be protected by 13th Amendment The Hill
  4. Federal judge suggests Constitution protects abortion rights, despite Dobbs decision Fox News
  5. Does U.S. Constitution amendment barring slavery protect abortion rights? Federal judge suggests it might cleveland.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

US and Japan to strengthen military relationship with upgraded Marine unit in attempt to deter China



CNN
 — 

The US and Japan are set to announce a significant strengthening of their military relationship and upgrading of the US military’s force posture in the country this week, including the stationing of a newly redesignated Marine unit with advanced intelligence, surveillance capabilities and the ability to fire anti-ship missiles, according to two US officials briefed on the matter.

The announcement sends a strong signal to China and will come as part of a series of initiatives designed to underscore a rapid acceleration of security and intelligence ties between the countries.

The news is expected to be announced on Wednesday as US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Secretary of State Antony Blinken meet with their Japanese counterparts in Washington. The officials are coming together as part of the annual US-Japan Security Consultative Committee meeting, days before President Joe Biden plans to meet with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at the White House.

The newly revamped Marine unit will be based on Okinawa and is intended to bolster deterrence against Chinese aggression in a volatile region and provide a stand-in force that is able to defend Japan and quickly respond to contingencies, the officials said. Okinawa is viewed as key to the US military’s operations in the Pacific – in part because of its close proximity to Taiwan. It houses more than 25,000 US military personnel and more than two dozen military installations. Roughly 70% of the US military bases in Japan are on Okinawa; one island within the Okinawa Prefecture, Yonaguni, sits less than 70 miles from Taiwan, according to the Council on Foreign Relations.

It is one of the most significant adjustments to US military force posture in the region in years, one official said, underscoring the Pentagon’s desire to shift from the wars of the past in the Middle East to the region of the future in the Indo-Pacific. The change comes as simulated war games from a prominent Washington think tank found that Japan, and Okinawa in particular, would play a critical role in a military conflict with China, providing the United States with forward deployment and basing options.

“I think it is fair to say that, in my view, 2023 is likely to stand as the most transformative year in US force posture in the region in a generation,” said Ely Ratner, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs, at the American Enterprise Institute last month.

The news follows the stand-up of the first Marine Littoral Regiment in Hawaii last year, in which the 3rd Marine Regiment in Hawaii became the 3rd Marine Littoral Regiment – a key part of the Marine Corps’ modernization effort outlined in the 2030 Force Design report from Gen. David Berger.

As the service has described them, the Marine Littoral Regiments are a “mobile, low-signature” unit able to conduct strikes, coordinate air and missile defense and support surface warfare.

The Washington Post first reported the soon-to-be-announced changes.

In addition to the restructuring of Marines in the country, the US and Japan will announce on Wednesday that they are expanding their defense treaty to include attacks to or from space, US officials said, amid growing concern about the rapid advancement of China’s space program and hypersonic weapons development.

In November, China launched three astronauts to its nearly completed space station as Beijing looked to establish a long-term presence in space. China has also explored the far side of the moon and Mars.

The two allies will announce that Article V of the US-Japan Security Treaty, first signed in 1951, applies to attacks from or within space, officials said. In 2019, the US and Japan made it clear that the defense treaty applies to cyberspace and that a cyber attack could constitute an armed attack under certain circumstances.

The US has watched closely as China has rapidly developed its hypersonic weapon systems, including one missile in 2021 that circled the globe before launching a hypersonic glider that struck its target. It was a wake-up call for the United States, which has fallen behind China and Russia in advanced hypersonic technology.

The two countries will also build on their joint use of facilities in Japan and carry out more exercises on Japan’s southwest islands, a move sure to draw the ire of Beijing, given its proximity to Taiwan and even mainland China. US officials added that the US will temporarily deploy MQ-9 Reaper drones to Japan for maritime surveillance of the East China Sea, as well as launch a bilateral group to analyze and share the information.

The announcement comes less than a month after Japan unveiled a new national security plan that signals the country’s biggest military buildup since World War II, doubling defense spending and veering from its pacifist constitution in the face of growing threats from regional rivals, including China.

China has been growing its naval and air forces in areas near Japan while claiming the Senkaku Islands, an uninhabited Japanese-controlled chain in the East China Sea, as its sovereign territory.

In late December, Japan said Chinese government vessels had been spotted in the contiguous zone around the Senkakus, known as the Diaoyus in China, 334 days in 2022, the most since 2012 when Tokyo acquired some of the islands from a private Japanese landowner, public broadcaster NHK reported. From December 22 to 25, Chinese government vessels spent almost 73 consecutive hours in Japanese territorial waters off the islands, the longest such incursion since 2012, the NHK report said.

China has also been upping its military pressure on Taiwan, the self-governing island, whose security Japanese leaders have said is vital to the security of Japan itself. In August, that pressure included Beijing firing five missiles that landed in Japan’s exclusive economic zone near Taiwan in response to the visit of then-US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taipei.

Before the announcement of the increased partnership between the US and Japan was even made public, Chinese government officials were reacting to reports in Japanese media.

“US-Japan military cooperation should not harm the interests of any third party or undermine peace and stability in the region,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said at a regular press briefing Tuesday in Beijing.

A State Department official explained that the Ukraine war and strengthening of the China-Russia relationship have spurred the US and Japan to come to a series of new agreements that have been under consideration for some time.

“Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, sort of moved things on warp drive a little bit,” the official said. “The relationship between Putin and Xi Jinping that we saw in the lead up to the Beijing Olympics, that kind of showed, wait a minute, the Russians and the Chinese are working in new ways. We’re facing new challenges.”

And it’s not just the US – Japan and Britain also announced on Wednesday that the two countries would be signing a “historic defense agreement” that would allow them to deploy forces in each other’s countries.

The Reciprocal Access Agreement will allow both forces to plan military exercises and deployments on a larger and more complex scale, making it the “most significant defense agreement between the two countries in more than a century,” according to a statement on Wednesday from Downing Street.

The agreement still needs to be ratified by the respective parliaments before taking effect. It will be laid before Japan’s Diet and the UK Parliament in the coming weeks, according to the statement.

Read original article here

Spare by Prince Harry review – a flawed attempt to reclaim the narrative | Autobiography and memoir

The monarchy relies on fiction. It is a constructed reality, in which grown-up people are asked to collude in the notion that a human is more than a human – that he or she contains something approaching the ineffable essence of Britishness. Once, this fiction rested on political and military power, supported by a direct line, it was supposed, to God. Nowadays it relies on the much frailer foundations of habit, the mysteries of Britain’s unwritten constitution, and spectacle: a kind of symbolism without the symbolised. Ceremonials such as the late queen’s funeral are not merely decorative; they are the institution’s means of securing its continuance. The monarchy is theatre, the monarchy is storytelling, the monarchy is illusion.

All this explains why royals are so irresistible to writers of fiction, from Alan Bennett to Peter Morgan: they are already halfway to myth. And, it seems, no one cleaves harder to the myths than the royals themselves. There’s a fascinating passage in Prince Harry’s autobiography, Spare, in which he describes his father’s delight in Shakespeare: how he would regularly take his son to Stratford, how he “adored Henry V. He compared himself to Prince Hal.” Harry himself tried Hamlet. “Hmm. Lonely prince, obsessed with dead parent, watches remaining parent fall in love with … parent’s usurper? I slammed it shut.” At Eton, he was cast as Conrade, one of Don John’s comic minions in Much Ado About Nothing. To his surprise, he was rather good. “Being royal, it turned out, wasn’t all that far from being on stage.”

Prince Harry portrays himself as no great reader. Studying invited reflection; reflection invited grief; emotions were best avoided. But he does himself an injustice. He is a voracious reader – of the press. For years, it seems, he devoured every syllable published about him, in outlets from the London Review of Books to the Sun to the faecal depths of below-the-line on social-media feeds. His father’s most oft-quoted refrain in the book is “Don’t read it, darling boy”; his therapist, he writes, suggested he was addicted to it. Spare is about the torment of a royal in the age of the smartphone and Instagram; a torment of a different order from even that suffered by his mother, and certainly by Princess Margaret, forbidden from marrying the man she loved by her own sister. (For Harry, Margaret is “Aunt Margo”, a cold-blooded old lady who could “kill a houseplant with one scowl” and once gave him a biro – “Oh. A biro. Wow” – for Christmas.)

The fiction of royalty can be maintained only if its characters are visible, hence its symbiotic but rarely straightforward relationship with the media. Spare contends that portrayals of the royals in sections of the press – aside from having at times involved shocking criminality, outright invention, intolerable harassment and overt racism – have also often depended on a kind of zero-sum game, in which one family member’s spokesperson will attempt to protect their client at the expense of another, trading gossip for favours. Harry, in his role as the expendable “spare”, has often been the victim of this process, he argues. Narrative tropes and archetypes as old as the hills have been invoked in the distortions: the wayward son; the warring brothers. In Meghan’s case, something even more corrosive: the witch-like woman.

It is the monarchist press for which Harry reserves special loathing. The Telegraph’s royal correspondent “always made me ill”, he writes; and he cannot bear even to name Rebekah Brooks, chief executive of News UK, referring to her anagrammatically as Rehabber Kooks. As for her boss: “I didn’t care for Rupert Murdoch’s politics, which were just to the right of the Taliban’s”. Clueless as Harry may be about the sheer extent of his privilege – early in the book he writes, “It sounds posh and I suppose it was” of childhood meals of fishfingers served under silver domes by footmen – he isn’t remotely a snob, nor, I infer, temperamentally of the right.

Prince Harry on why he wrote memoir: ‘I don’t want history to repeat itself’ – video

A striking passage recounts the prince’s talking to his therapist about Hilary Mantel’s 2013 LRB essay about Kate Middleton. It became notorious, wilfully misread by the tabloids as being anti-Kate, even though it was the monstrosity of the representation of the now Princess of Wales that Mantel was skewering. Harry recalls his disgust at Mantel’s calling the royal family “pandas” – cosseted, fascinating animals kept in a zoo. “If even a celebrated intellectual could dismiss us as animals, what hope for the man or woman on the street?”

Still, he half gets what Mantel was driving at. The words “always struck me as both acutely perceptive and uniquely barbarous,” he writes. “We did live in a zoo.” Describing his unpreparedness for having his funding cut in 2020, he writes: “I recognised the absurdity, a man in his mid-30s being cut off by his father … But I’d never asked to be financially dependent on Pa. I’d been forced into this surreal state, this unending Truman Show in which I almost never carried money, never owned a car, never carried a house key, never once ordered anything online, never received a single box from Amazon, almost never travelled on the Underground.”

In her essay, Mantel remarked that “Harry doesn’t know which he is, a person or a prince”. Spare is clearly the prince’s attempt to claw back personhood, to claim his own narrative. Of his tabloid persecutors, he writes: “I was royal and in their minds royal was synonymous with non-person. Centuries ago royal men and women were considered divine; now they were insects. What fun, to pluck their wings.” That, of course, is half-remembered Shakespeare: “As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods; They kill us for their sport,” says the blinded Gloucester in Lear. The gods in Harry’s version are neither Olympians nor kings, but paparazzi and reporters – and so the circle has turned.

Spare is by turns compassion-inducing, frustrating, oddly compelling and absurd. Harry is myopic as he sits at the centre of his truth, simultaneously loathing and locked into the tropes of tabloid storytelling, the style of which his ghostwritten autobiography echoes. Had he seen more of the golden jubilee year of 2002, he would have observed that his impression that “Britain was intoxicated … Everyone wore some version of the union jack” was quite wrong; swaths of the UK were indifferent, some hostile. His observations about the darkness of the basement flat he once occupied in Kensington Palace, its windows blocked from the light by a neighbour’s 4×4, will seem insulting to those who can’t find a home, or afford to heat one. The logical corollary of the views he now holds would be a personal republicanism, but needless to say that is not the path he takes: “My problem,” he writes, “has never been with the concept of monarchy.” What he shows, though – whether intentionally or not – is that the monarchy makes fools of us all.

Spare by Prince Harry, The Duke of Sussex (Transworld, £28). To support The Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

Read original article here