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In war of words with Trump, fired FBI’s McCabe says he will no longer be silent
WASHINGTON — President Trump and fired FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe have unleashed a war of words over McCabe’s abrupt dismissal, with the president calling it a “great day” and the FBI official saying he would no longer remain silent after a “relenting assault” by Trump and other critics on his reputation and service.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced late Friday that he fired McCabe effective immediately — barely 48 hours before his retirement benefits would have set in after 21 years of service with the FBI.
McCabe, who had announced his intention to resign in January, was fired from the agency in the midst of a review into the FBI’s handling of the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server while serving as secretary of State.
Sessions, in a statement, said McCabe’s firing was the result of an “extensive and fair” probe of alleged misconduct, which concluded that he had made “an unauthorized disclosure to the news media and lacked candor − including under oath − on multiple occasions.”
“The FBI expects every employee to adhere to the highest standards of honesty, integrity, and accountability,” Sessions said.
McCabe, who rose through the counterterrorism and national security ranks, also served as the agency’s acting director this summer after Trump fired former director James Comey in May.
Trump, who has publicly castigated McCabe since he announced his retirement plans, applauded Sessions’ decision early Saturday, calling it “a great day for democracy” and “a great day for the hard working men and women of the FBI.”
More: FBI documents: Andrew McCabe had no conflict in Hillary Clinton email probe
“Sanctimonious James Comey was his boss and made McCabe look like a choirboy. He knew all about the lies and corruption going on at the highest levels of the FBI!,” the president tweeted.
McCabe shot back at his critics with a lengthy statement, saying he had held the post of deputy director during a “particularly tough time.”
“Articles too numerous to count have leveled every sort of false, defamatory and degrading allegation against us,” he said.”The President’s tweets have amplified and exacerbated it all. He called for my firing. He called for me to be stripped of my pension after more than 20 years of service.”
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Amid such criticism, McCabe said, he had remained silent “never wanting to distract from the mission of the FBI by addressing the lies told and repeated about us.”
But, he added, “No more.”
McCabe called the attacks on his credibility “one part of a larger effort not just to slander me personally, but to taint the FBI, law enforcement, and intelligence professionals more generally. “
“It is part of this Administration’s ongoing war on the FBI and the efforts of the Special Counsel investigation, which continue to this day,” he said in the statement. “Their persistence in this campaign only highlights the importance of the Special Counsel’s work.”
Special counsel Robert Mueller is investigating Russian involvement in the 2016 elections and whether there was any collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign.
Details of the investigation into McCabe’s conduct have yet to be released, but are reportedly centered on communications with journalists about an investigation into the Clinton Foundation. The report is due out any day and is expected to sharply criticize the bureau and McCabe.
McCabe’s accumulated leave time would have allowed him to qualify for retirement this month with full benefits.
The president’s fixation on McCabe’s personal political leanings were apparent soon after he was named acting FBI director when Trump pointedly asked McCabe in his initial interview at the White House who he voted for in the 2016 election. McCabe, according to an official with knowledge of the matter who was not authorized to comment publicly, told Trump that he did not vote.
CLOSE
While many are taking part in March Madness office pools, over in the White House, staffers are reportedly filling out brackets of their own, betting on who will be fired next.
Buzz60
Trump’s repeated public references to McCabe, in tweets and public statements subsequently, has helped feed suspicion among an ultra-conservative wing of House Republicans that the FBI was biased against the Trump administration.
Yet Trump’s unusual questions about McCabe’s political leanings and personal attacks also form another potential data point in the ongoing investigation into whether the president tried to obstruct justice in the federal probe into Russia’s election interference and possible collusion with Trump associates.
One official said Monday that McCabe — like his predecessor Comey — likely documented his encounters with Trump and may have maintained similarly detailed notes.
In memos that Comey has since turned over to federal prosecutors, the former director alleged that Trump last year urged him to drop the FBI’s investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn and requested a pledge of loyalty. The memos are now part of Mueller’s investigation into whether Trump sought to obstruct justice.
In response to accusations that McCabe exerted undue or partisan influence over the probe, the FBI has maintained McCabe had no personal conflicts, as he did not oversee that inquiry while his wife Jill McCabe was running for state office in Virginia as a Democrat.
In comments to The New York Times, McCabe said he was being singled out “because of the role I played, the actions I took, and the events I witnessed in the aftermath of the firing of James Comey.”
McCabe told the Times that his firing was intended to undermine the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election.
“The idea that I was dishonest is just wrong,” he told the Times. “This is part of an effort to discredit me as a witness.”
FBI Agents Association President Thomas O’Connor said the group “does not comment on personnel matters,” but is committed to ensuring that members are adequately protected.
“The FBIAA also strongly believes that personnel decisions should never be politicized,” said O’Connor who did not directly reference Sessions’ decision.
McCabe’s January announcement had been welcomed at the White House where Trump had said McCabe is “racing the clock to retire with full benefits.” White House press secretary Sarah Sanders has said the president was not involved in McCabe’s departure.
“The only thing the President has been applying pressure to was to make sure we get this (Russia investigation) resolved so that you guys (the media) and everyone else can focus on the things that Americans actually care about,” Sanders said then.
Sessions’ announcement comes as his own tenure has been called into question by the president, who has criticized the attorney general for recusing himself from overseeing the inquiry into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and for not removing McCabe after taking office as attorney general.
Even before McCabe’s January announcement that he was stepping down, Trump had trolled the former deputy FBI director on Twitter urging the Justice Department to take action against McCabe.
As recently as this week, Sanders referred to McCabe as a “bad actor” whose fate was in the hands of the attorney general.
The Daily 202: Trump may hire multiple cable news personalities as part of shake-up
With Breanne Deppisch and Joanie Greve.
THE BIG IDEA: Donald Trump’s reality television presidency may be getting more star power for season two.
Trump has decided to remove H.R. McMaster as his national security adviser and is actively discussing Fox News contributor John Bolton as a potential successor.
A leading contender to replace Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin is Pete Hegseth, the co-host of “Fox and Friends Weekend.”
The president named CNBC analyst and former host Larry Kudlow to replace former Goldman Sachs president Gary Cohn as his chief economic adviser on Wednesday.
Heather Nauert, a former co-host of “Fox and Friends,” got promoted on Monday from being a spokeswoman for the State Department to acting undersecretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs. She replaced Steve Goldstein, who was fired because he publicly contradicted the White House’s claim that Rex Tillerson knew he was being fired before Trump announced it on Twitter. (Is it any coincidence that Mike Pompeo got elevated from Langley to Foggy Bottom the morning after he aggressively went to bat for Trump on the Sunday shows?)
— Trump’s plot to poach from green rooms is an additional proof point that validates two important themes I’ve written about: Trump has debased the value of expertise and supercharged the celebrification of American politics.
— The president expressed interest in bringing Bolton, Hegseth and Kudlow on board during the transition, but he was dissuaded by traditionalists who said they weren’t qualified for such powerful posts. The VA secretary, for instance, manages the government’s second-largest bureaucracy, which employs 360,000. But Hegseth is just 37. The Iraq War veteran previously served as the executive director of Concerned Veterans for America, which is in the constellation of groups bankrolled by the billionaire Koch brothers. He ran for Senate in Minnesota against Amy Klobuchar in 2012, but his campaign was such a disaster that he unexpectedly lost the GOP nomination to a random Ron Paul supporter — who went on to lose in the general election by 35 points.
Hegseth’s views on reforming VA “are considered extreme even by some Republicans in Congress,” but Trump frequently calls him to discuss veterans’ policy, Lisa Rein reports: “Hegseth has dined at the White House and, during an Oval Office meeting between Trump and Shulkin last week, the president called Hegseth to seek his counsel on pending legislation that would expand private care. He also is disliked by traditional veterans’ advocacy groups, which fear a downsized VA and a privatized system, and which would probably mount a strong campaign against his nomination.”
— Bolton, an outspoken hawk who had a tumultuous and short-lived tenure as George W. Bush’s ambassador to the United Nations, is also seen as too extreme by many Republicans on Capitol Hill, but he wouldn’t need to get confirmed to become national security adviser. “Trump is now comfortable with ousting McMaster, with whom he never personally gelled, but is willing to take time executing the move because he wants to ensure both that the three-star Army general is not humiliated and that there is a strong successor lined up,” Ashley Parker, Josh Dawsey, Philip Rucker and Carol D. Leonnig reported last night. “Bolton has met with Trump several times and often agrees with the president’s instincts. Trump also thinks Bolton … is good on television.”
Another finalist for the job is Keith Kellogg, the chief of staff of the National Security Council. “Kellogg travels with Trump on many domestic trips, in part because the president likes his company and thinks he is fun,” my colleagues report.
— One reason Kudlow was attractive to Trump is that he can go on business news channels to promote his agenda. Ostensibly, Bolton and Hegseth could do the same. “The president likes me as a media communicator, so I will be more than happy to oblige,” Kudlow said Wednesday night on CNBC. He added that the president had phoned him a few hours earlier when the news broke of his selection to be director of the National Economic Council. “The president called and he said, ‘It’s out,’” Kudlow recalled. “And he said, ‘You’re on the air … I’m looking at a picture of you … Very handsome!’ So Trumpian.”
— But installing cable pundits in decision-making jobs has not worked out very well for Trump thus far. Foreign policy pros were aghast when Trump named K.T. McFarland as his deputy national security adviser during the transition. She had appeared frequently on Fox as an analyst and anchored her own program called “DEFCON3.” But the last time she’d worked in government was more than three decades earlier, as a junior Pentagon spokeswoman and speechwriter.
McFarland got marginalized after Michael Flynn went down. Then Trump nominated her to be ambassador to Singapore, but her nomination needed to be withdrawn when damning emails implicated her in the Russia scandal and imperiled her Senate confirmation.
Trump initially named another Fox talking head, Monica Crowley, as the senior director of strategic communications for the NSC. He stood by her for more than a week as news stories revealed egregious examples of plagiarism over several years, from a 2012 book to her PhD dissertation and op-eds. Just before the inauguration, under pressure, the president-elect dumped her.
Former Navy SEAL Carl Higbie, 34, was forced to resign two months ago as the chief of external affairs for the Corporation for National and Community Service after CNN uncovered bigoted statements he had made about African Americans, immigrants and gays as the host of an Internet radio show. He got the patronage because he had been a go-to Trump defender on Fox, CNN and MSNBC during the 2016 campaign.
America First Priorities, a Trump-sanctioned outside group, hired the 34-year-old on Thursday as its new advocacy director, with the expectation that he’ll again appear on TV to promote the president. “The fact that I’m coming back into the fray does not mean that the president endorses those comments by any stretch,” Higbie told the Hartford Courant yesterday. “We’ve all said something we’ve regretted. I just happened to say it on the radio. … But I’m committed to this administration and its policies.”
— The president reportedly has fewer events on his schedule than he did during the opening year of his presidency so that he can have extra “executive time” in the residence, which appears to be a euphemism for watching television. That’s only intensified the cable news feedback loop. Trump’s tweets routinely echo messages, sometimes word for word, that he heard on Fox minutes earlier. Remember Trump’s tweet about North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un’s “button”?
The president just threatened a nuclear strike while live-tweeting a Fox News segment.
Left, Fox, 7:37 pm
Right, Trump, 7:49 pm pic.twitter.com/vJciYH6LIA— Matthew Gertz (@MattGertz) January 3, 2018
The president’s cable habit almost led him to torpedo a compromise his own administration had negotiated to reauthorize Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act in January. “Trump issued an early morning tweet in response to Judge Andrew Napolitano’s criticism on a ‘Fox and Friends’ segment,” Tufts University professor Daniel Drezner notes. “Only direct intervention from the chief of staff, national security adviser, director of national intelligence, CIA director, and House Speaker Paul Ryan convinced Trump to post a follow-up tweet clarifying his position.”
Last Friday, Trump pardoned a former Navy sailor whose conviction for unauthorized retention of national defense information had made him a cause celebre on Fox. Commentators have often argued that the year he served in prison for taking pictures aboard a submarine showed Hillary Clinton was treated too leniently for how she mishandled classified material.
Kristian Saucier, 31, who is now a garbage collector in Vermont, had appeared on “Fox and Friends” earlier in the week to press his case. “Obviously, there’s two different sets of laws in this country, for the political elite and for, you know, those lower-level, individuals, Americans, like myself,” he said. “I think my case draws a very clear example of that.”
“A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment on its involvement, if any, in the process,” Matt Zapotosky reports.
The only other pardon Trump has issued since taking office was for Joe Arpaio, who also frequently appears on Fox shows. The former Arizona sheriff was convicted of criminal contempt of court for ignoring a federal judge’s order to stop racially profiling Latinos.
— Trump plainly enjoys the company of people he sees on TV. Trump invited Sebastian Gorka, a lightning rod who got fired from the White House last year but now spends a lot of time defending the president on Fox, over for dinner last week. Jesse Watters, a co-host of Fox’s “The Five,” joined them. “According to a White House official and two other sources familiar with the meeting, Trump invited Gorka and Watters because ‘he couldn’t get enough of them on TV,’ as one source put it, and wanted to confab with them about what he’d seen on Fox News, politics, gossip, and his administration,” The Daily Beast reported.
Watters tweeted a picture of the menu afterward:
— The embattled president also appears to be putting a greater premium on loyalty as he makes personnel decisions. He clearly feels burned by some of his early hiring decisions. For example, Trump interviewed Jeanine Pirro, the host of Fox’s “Justice with Judge Jeanine,” to be deputy attorney general. Instead, he went along with Rod Rosenstein, a respected DOJ insider who he had no prior relationship with. That’s a decision he’s repeatedly said that he regrets.
— Trump’s embrace of talking heads has become a punchline in popular culture. “To help find [Gary Cohn’s] replacement, the president turned to his most trusted confidante: the TV in his bedroom,” Comedy Central host Trevor Noah said on “The Daily Show” last night. “Basically, if Trump sees you on TV, there’s a really good chance that he’ll hire you. By the time his term is done, his attorney general is going to be ‘Judge Judy’ and his housing secretary will be ‘Bob the Builder.’”
WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING:
— The death toll rose to six in the bridge collapse near Miami. The new pedestrian bridge hailed for its novel construction collapsed onto moving traffic, crushing at least eight vehicles and leaving rescue workers racing to free victims. Francisco Alvarado, Susan Svrluga, Faiz Siddiqui and Aaron C. Davis report: “The bridge was designed to connect the city of Sweetwater with the sprawling campus of Florida International University, and to make it safer for students to cross a frenetic roadway. ‘It was going to be a significant project,’ Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said Thursday night. ‘To see it on the ground and underneath it those who died and who were injured is a tragedy.’ He said the cause of the collapse will be fully investigated. ‘The victims and their families deserve to know what went wrong.’”
GET SMART FAST:
- It’s official: Vanessa Trump has filed for divorce from Donald Trump Jr. Page Six reports that the former model filed for an uncontested proceeding from the president’s eldest son, meaning she’s not expecting a legal battle over assets or for custody of their five children.
- CBS plans to air its “60 Minutes” interview with Stormy Daniels on March 25. But the date isn’t set in stone, likely due to ongoing legal issues tied to Daniels’s nondisclosure agreement. (Frances Stead Sellers and Sarah Ellison)
- A helicopter carrying U.S. service members crashed in western Iraq. The accident likely killed at least some of the seven passengers on board. (Missy Ryan)
- Broward County police released 27 minutes of surveillance footage from last month’s high school massacre in Parkland, Fla. The video appears to capture the campus’s only armed officer, Scot Peterson, standing outside as a gunman rampaged inside the school. (Mark Berman)
- The 18-year-old sister of Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof was released from jail on a $5,000 cash bond and prohibited from returning to her South Carolina school. She was charged with drug possession and carrying weapons on school grounds. A school administrator first alerted police to Morgan Roof’s behavior after she posted a Snapchat that police said “caused alarm” to fellow students. (WISTV)
- Former ESPN chief John Skipper said he resigned in December after one of his cocaine dealers tried to extort him. “They threatened me, and I understood immediately that threat put me and my family at risk, and … would put my professional life at risk as well,” Skipper told the Hollywood Reporter. (Matt Bonesteel)
- An undocumented immigrant was named to a statewide post in California. Lizbeth Mateo will serve on an advisory committee seeking to improve access to higher education for the state’s low-income students. (Amy B Wang)
- Facebook said it has banned Britain First, a far-right political group that gained notoriety after Trump retweeted several of its anti-Muslim videos. Two of the group’s leaders were suspended from Twitter three months ago and are currently serving jail time for religiously aggravated harassment. (NBC News)
- A 13-year-old from Flint, Mich., died this week after relatives say a sinus infection spread to his brain. He allegedly sought treatment several weeks ago at an urgent care center, where doctors told him to let the infection “run its course.” (Lindsey Bever)
- A Washington state woman allegedly attempted to murder her boyfriend with a samurai sword after she saw a dating app on his phone. Police say she used the sword to stab him repeatedly in his sleep. Remarkably, he survived. (Kyle Swenson)
- The Buffalo Bulls delivered one of March Madness’s first major upsets. The 13th-seeded team defeated the No. 4 Arizona Wildcats, 89-68. CBS Sports said that 60.5 percent of the brackets filled out on its website had the Wildcats in their Sweet 16. (Cindy Boren, Jacob Bogage, Des Bieler and Matt Bonesteel)
THERE’S A BEAR IN THE WOODS:
— Robert Mueller has issued his first known subpoena to the Trump Organization, ordering the company to turn over all documents related to Russia and other areas of its investigation. The New York Times’s Michael S. Schmidt and Maggie Haberman report: “The breadth of the subpoena was not clear, nor was it clear why Mr. Mueller issued it instead of simply asking for the documents … There are few other publicly known examples of Mr. Mueller using subpoenas. … [But it] is the latest indication that the investigation, which Mr. Trump’s lawyers once regularly assured him would be completed by now, will drag on for at least several more months. Word of the subpoena comes as Mr. Mueller appears to be broadening his investigation to examine the role foreign money may have played in funding Mr. Trump’s political activities.”
— The Trump administration imposed new financial sanctions against Russian hackers and spy agencies in response to a spate of cyberattacks. Ellen Nakashima reports: “Sanctions also were imposed on individuals known as ‘trolls’ and the Russian organizations — including the [Internet Research Agency]— that supported their efforts to undermine the election. Additionally, the administration alerted the public that Russia is targeting the U.S. energy grid with computer malware that could sabotage the systems. Taken together, the moves represent the administration’s most significant actions to date against Russia for its aggression against the United States, though analysts say their impact is mostly symbolic.”
— The new sanctions fall well short of what lawmakers authorized last year. Anne Gearan and Ellen Nakashima write: “Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), the senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, called the sanctions announcement a ‘long overdue response’ but noted that the administration has failed to implement six other mandatory provisions of the law enacted last year, including penalties affecting Russian defense and other industries.”
— Scary: “American officials and private cybersecurity experts uncovered a series of Russian attacks aimed at the energy, water and aviation sectors and critical manufacturing, including nuclear plants, in the United States and Europe,” the New York Times’s Nicole Perlroth and David Sanger report. “In [an urgent June report], the Department of Homeland Security and the F.B.I. notified operators about the attacks but stopped short of identifying Russia as the culprit. By then, Russian spies had compromised the business networks of several American energy, water and nuclear plants, mapping out their corporate structures and computer networks. They included that of the Wolf Creek Nuclear Operating Corporation, which runs a nuclear plant near Burlington, Kan. … Forensic analysis suggested that Russian spies were looking for inroads — although it was not clear whether the goal was to conduct espionage or sabotage, or to trigger an explosion of some kind.”
— The United States, France and Germany joined Britain in denouncing Russia for the brazen assassination attempt of a former Russian spy and his daughter, saying the poisoning was the “first offensive use of a nerve agent” in Europe since World War II. “The joint statement signaled another step in the mounting international pressure on Russia over apparent ties to the assault,” Karla Adam and Matthew Bodner report, though it did not spell out any possible further reprisals by the U.K. or its allies. Russia plans to retaliate in similar fashion, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov telling reporters “of course, we will” when asked whether the country would expel British diplomats.
— Democrats believe a longtime NRA lawyer expressed concerns about the organization’s ties to Russia, McClatchy’s Peter Stone and Greg Gordon report: “Cleta Mitchell, a former NRA board member who has done legal work for the organization, is on a newly disclosed list of people whom Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee are seeking to interview. Democratic investigators for that committee’s Senate counterpart also are interested in what she may know about relationships between the NRA or its allies and wealthy Russians …Mitchell told McClatchy in an email that any suggestion she has concerns about the NRA’s Russia connections is a ‘complete fabrication.’”
— House Republicans fear they fumbled the rollout of their Russia report. Politico’s Kyle Cheney reports: “The blaring headline the GOP wanted from this week’s rollout was clear: After a year of searching, Republicans on [House intel] found no evidence that [Trump] or his associates aided Moscow’s scheme to interfere in the 2016 election[.] … Instead, much of the focus has been on lawmakers’ startling conclusion that the nation’s intelligence agencies botched their analysis when they determined Russia wanted Trump to defeat Hillary Clinton.The finding once again pitted the committee’s Republicans against the leaders of the intelligence community and led to a frenzy of news coverage that put members on the defensive.”
INSTITUTIONALIZED CHAOS:
— Based on 19 interviews with presidential advisers and administration officials, Ashley Parker, Josh Dawsey, Philip Rucker and Carol D. Leonnig paint a must read portrait of the turmoil: “The mood inside the White House in recent days has verged on mania, as Trump increasingly keeps his own counsel and senior aides struggle to determine the gradations between rumor and truth. At times, they say, they are anxious and nervous, wondering what each new headline may mean for them personally. But in other moments, they appear almost as characters in an absurdist farce — openly joking about whose career might end with the next presidential tweet. … The president is enjoying the process of assessing his team and making changes, tightening his inner circle to those he considers survivors and who respect his unconventional style, one senior White House official said.”
Here are five of the juiciest nuggets from the piece:
Chief of Staff John Kelly’s ouster has been widely speculated about for weeks: “But two top officials said Trump on Thursday morning expressed disbelief to Vice President Pence, senior advisers and Kelly himself that Kelly’s name was surfacing on media watch lists because his job is secure. Trump and Kelly then laughed about it … But others in the West Wing say Kelly’s departure could be imminent, and Mick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget, has been mentioned as a possible new chief of staff.”
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt “has made no secret inside the West Wing of his ambition to become attorney general should Trump decide to fire Jeff Sessions”: “White House officials have grown agitated that Pruitt and his allies are privately pushing for the EPA chief to replace Sessions, a job Pruitt has told people he wants. On Wednesday night, Kelly called Pruitt and told him the president was happy with his performance at EPA and that he did not need to worry about the Justice Department, according to two people familiar with the conversation …
“With Hope Hicks resigning her post as communications director, the internal jockeying to replace her has been especially intense between Mercedes Schlapp, who oversees the White House’s long-term communications planning, and Tony Sayegh, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s top communications adviser.
“Another episode haunting [VA secretary] Shulkin was a trip to the Invictus Games in Canada last September with first lady Melania Trump’s entourage. Shulkin fought with East Wing aides over his request that his wife accompany him on the trip because he was eager for her to meet Britain’s Prince Harry, who founded the games, according to multiple officials familiar with the dispute. The first lady’s office explained there was not room on the plane for Shulkin’s wife, and officials said the secretary was unpleasant during the trip …
“Trump has sometimes expressed confusion about what agencies and secretaries are in charge of what duties, a senior administration official said. For example, this official said, he has complained to Pruitt about regulatory processes for construction projects, although the EPA is not in charge of the regulations.”
ALL THE PRESIDENT’S MEN:
— Trump’s personal aide John McEntee lost his White House job after a security clearance investigation revealed he was a frequent gambler who bet tens of thousands of dollars at a time. Carol D. Leonnig and Josh Dawsey report: “There was no indication his gambling was illegal, but there was concern that the 27-year-old could be vulnerable to outside influence … McEntee, who had been one of the first staffers to join the Trump campaign … was escorted off the White House grounds Monday after being notified that he was being let go. McEntee was ‘very upset’ … and complained he had done nothing improper. Two White House advisers said they learned about McEntee’s gambling habit after his dismissal. His hasty exit … upset a number of staffers in the building, who described him as a loyal aide who deserved a more ceremonious departure.”
— Newly released documents showed Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin’s military flights have cost taxpayers nearly $1 million. From Politico’s Victoria Guida: “That includes a one-week trip to the Middle East in late October, which cost $183,646 for flights on military aircraft. That trip came on top of $811,797.81 in previously reported expenditures for government-funded military aircraft.”
— Former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe went to the Justice Department to make a final plea that he not be fired before his retirement benefits kick in. The bureau’s disciplinary officer recommended that McCable be fired, but it’s up to Jeff Sessions. Matt Zapotosky reports: “McCabe has become a lightning rod in the partisan squabbling over the Russia investigation and the political probes involving [the Clintons]. … If the veteran FBI agent is not terminated, that might upset conservatives and Trump, who feel he has been given undeserved leniency. If he is, supporters in the FBI might feel he has been treated too harshly because of pressure from the president.” Sarah Huckabee Sanders attacked McCabe from the podium during yesterday’s briefing: “We do think that it is well documented that he has had some very troubling behavior and by most accounts a bad actor.”
— A senior adviser at the Department of Housing and Urban Development resigned amid allegations that he committed fraud and exaggerated his biography. The Guardian’s Jon Swaine reports: “In November 2013, a judge ordered [Naved] Jafry and a fuel company he chaired to repay more than $800,000 to the family of Alfred Oglesby, a former NFL player and investor in [Jafry’s] fuel firm, who died in 2009. Oglesby’s widow accused Jafry of fraud. Jafry has not paid the money. Debt collectors said they had been trying to locate him for years. … During an interview, Jafry described himself as a veteran of the US army and said he was deployed to Kosovo. When confronted with his service record, though, he said he in fact served as a reservist in the army national guard, and remained in California while giving logistics support to colleagues in Kosovo.”
— Trump’s top trade adviser Peter Navarro received backing from an American steel company to produce a documentary on the dangers of China’s trade policy. The Wall Street Journal’s Nick Timiraos and Rebecca Ballhaus report: “Nucor made payments to fund the film through a San Diego nonprofit then led by a friend of Mr. Navarro. The arrangement was examined as part of a broader 2012 FBI investigation of the nonprofit’s finances, according to three former employees of the nonprofit. No charges were filed.”
— Top House Democrats said they have proof State Department employees were ousted because they were viewed as “disloyal” to Trump. From Karoun Demirjian and Carol Morello: “The ranking Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs and Oversight and Government Reform committees sent a letter to White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly and Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan, writing that they received documents [from a whistleblower] ‘indicating that high-level officials at the White House and State Department worked with a network of conservative activists to conduct a “cleaning” of employees they believed were not sufficiently “supportive” of President Trump’s agenda.’”
— Emails reveal administration officials and conservative agitators, including former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, specifically tried to oust Sahar Nowrouzzadeh from State over her role in negotiating the Iran nuclear deal. Politico’s Nahal Toosi reports: “A conservative website had published an article depicting Nowrouzzadeh as a Barack Obama loyalist who had ‘burrowed into the government’ under Trump and even had ties to the hated Iranian regime itself. … The emails show that State Department and White House officials repeatedly shared such misleading information about Nowrouzzadeh, deriding her as an Obama cheerleader and strong advocate for the nuclear deal with Iran … Later, after Nowrouzzadeh was reassigned to another job, some [State] officials tried to mislead a POLITICO reporter about whether she’d completed her full tenure [on the Policy Planning Staff].”
— The White House has refused to comply with all three Republican-led House committees seeking information on top Trump top aides — including Cabinet leaders and Jared Kushner. McClatchyDC’s Anita Kumar reports: Republicans on the House Oversight Committee “are being criticized for accepting no for an answer rather than subpoena the documents. The investigations involve three of the biggest controversies at the White House since Trump took office — aides using private email for government business, spending taxpayer money on costly private airplane travel and holding interim security clearances for long periods of time … Now, the highest-ranking Democrat on the committee, [Rep. Elijah Cummings], wants to go further, [and is urging Gowdy to issue subpoenas].”
— Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) wants to declassify documents from the Senate report on the CIA’s use of “enhanced interrogation” related to Gina Haspel, Trump’s pick to take over the agency. From Karoun Demirjian: “[Feinstein] wrote in a letter Thursday that senators need ‘the complete picture’ of Haspel’s involvement to ‘fully and fairly’ review her fitness for the job. … ‘The American people deserve to know the actual role the person nominated to the director of the CIA played in what I consider to be one of the darkest chapters in American history.’”
THE REST OF TRUMP’S AGENDA:
— The Trump administration is finalizing a plan urging stronger law-enforcement measures for drug dealers — including the death penalty. The plan has alarmed health advocates and some GOP lawmakers, who warned that capital punishment will only worsen efforts to reduce the drug crisis. Politico’s Dan Diamond reports: “The ambitious plan … could be announced as soon as Monday when [Trump] visits New Hampshire, a state hard hit by the epidemic … According to language circulating this week, the Trump administration will call for the death penalty as an option in ‘certain cases where opioid, including Fentanyl-related, drug dealing and trafficking are directly responsible for death.’ However, the plan could cost billions of dollars more than Trump budgeted — and likely far more than any funding package that Congress would approve — raising questions about how much of it can actually be put into practice.”
— The White House defended Trump’s false claim the United States has a trade deficit with Canada. Josh Dawsey and Damian Paletta report: “‘The president was accurate because there is a trade deficit and that was the point he was making,’ said [Sarah Huckabee Sanders], who later referred to a figure that includes only goods and not services. ‘He didn’t have to look at the specific figures.’ … Canadian government spokesmen repeated U.S. government statistics pointing out that Canada has a trade surplus with their American neighbor. ‘Canada and the United States have a balanced and mutually beneficial trading relationship,’ said Adam Austen, a spokesman for Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland, pointing to official U.S. statistics.”
— The International Wildlife Conservation Council, a new Interior Department advisory board entrusted to help rewrite regulations on importing hunting trophies, includes several trophy hunters. The AP’s Michael Biesecker, Jake Pearson and Jeff Horwitz report: “One appointee co-owns a private New York hunting preserve with Trump’s adult sons. … Appointees [also] include celebrity hunting guides, representatives from rifle and bow manufacturers, and wealthy sportspeople who boast of bagging the coveted ‘Big Five’ — elephant, rhino, lion, leopard and Cape buffalo. Most are high-profile members of Safari Club International and the National Rifle Association, groups that have sued the Fish and Wildlife Service to expand the list of countries from which trophy kills can be legally imported.”
— The Bureau of Land Management distributed cards for its employees to wear depicting an oil rig and cattle ranching. Dino Grandoni and Juliet Eilperin report: “The cards, which feature artwork then-acting director Mike Nedd commissioned after President Trump took office, reflect the bureau’s renewed focus on energy and agricultural development on public lands … In an email Thursday, bureau spokeswoman Michelle Barret said ‘employees have been given vision cards, which the BLM has had off and on over the years.’ Wearing the cards, Barret said, is voluntary.”
— Congress has one week to pass a government spending bill, with funds set to expire on March 23. From Mike DeBonis: “The crucial flash points are border security, immigration policy and abortion rights, with a few other issues at play — including health care and one major infrastructure project.”
— Senior immigration officials are moving to create a new internal division overseeing its own caseworkers. Nick Miroff reports: “Plans for the new oversight division have not been widely disclosed to the 19,000 employees and contractors of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), but the agency has been quietly reassigning personnel to staff it[.]”
— The ACLU and other groups filed a class-action lawsuit against the Trump administration for allegedly jailing asylum seekers with credible cases. From Maria Sacchetti: “[The groups] filed the class-action lawsuit on behalf of nine detained asylum seekers from Haiti, Venezuela and other countries. They are asking a judge to order the administration to follow a 2009 policy that allows officials to release foreigners while they await their immigration court hearings, a process that can take years. … Lawyers argue the Trump administration’s approach is endangering lives by forcing people to choose between staying and risking danger or fleeing and enduring severe conditions while jailed in the United States.”
THE MIDTERMS:
— Republicans may seek a recount in this week’s Pennsylvania special election. Dave Weigel and Mike DeBonis report: “Attorneys for [Republican Rick Saccone] have asked for ‘immediate injunctive relief’ in federal court after a campaign lawyer was not allowed to observe the counting of ballots in Allegheny County, where Democrat Conor Lamb won massively. They sent letters to election offices in Allegheny and the district’s other counties requesting that ballots and voting machines be preserved, a step often taken before a recount or challenge.”
— Weigel, who spent time on the ground in the 18th District says Lamb didn’t run “like a Republican,” as the GOP claims. “Lamb did not run as a Trump supporter. He ran against the tax cuts, not for them. His abortion stance was a lot like that of Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) — while personally opposing abortion, he was against new restrictions on the procedure, a position that inspired a Family Research Council ad comparing him to Kim Jong Un. But even on the left, Lamb’s victory has been viewed warily, with plenty of worry that Democrats would shove aside more left-wing candidates in favor of moderates, and some hasty adoption of the ‘Republican lite’ myth.”
— The Illinois governor’s race has been the costliest campaign of 2018 in terms of ad spending so far, according to the Wesleyan Media Project. “[In Illinois,] an estimated $30 million has been spent on over 46,000 [commercials] … Democratic candidates have aired over 28,000 ads in their attempt to earn their party’s nomination on March 20, while Republicans have aired over 17,000 ads. … Six Senate races have seen more than 500 ad airings in 2018[.] … The list is topped by the Senate race in Indiana where about 6,700 ads have aired at an estimated cost of $1.9 million.”
SOCIAL MEDIA SPEED READ:
Meghan McCain hit back against Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who accused John McCain of committing “slander” against those who carried out “enhanced interrogation”:
Mitt Romney visited Utah State:
A former deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia criticized the latest sanctions:
Furthermore, such narrowly targeted sanctions have little to no impact on the operations of Russia’s intelligence services or its proxies, since these organizations don’t transact (at least overtly) through the U.S. financial system. 2 of 3
— Michael Carpenter (@mikercarpenter) March 15, 2018
The White House press secretary sought to push back on The Post’s McMaster scoop, even as other news outlets — including the Wall Street Journal — confirmed it:
A Wall Street Journal reporter noted this of McMaster’s expected departure:
A New York Times reporter replied:
From an NBC News editor:
A Times reporter lampooned the rotating door of administration officials:
Could MadLibs help?
Pres. Trump may fire ____ on _____ as his staff is consumed by chaos in the wake of ____. Officials said the replacement is ___ but said frustration with ___ could lead him to change his mind. The ouster was orchestrated by ____. https://t.co/tAx2Oq5W7S
— Michael D. Shear (@shearm) March 15, 2018
From a Post reporter:
Four people could be ousted tomorrow. Or zero. And I would not be shocked at this point either way.
— Josh Dawsey (@jdawsey1) March 15, 2018
A pro-Trump super PAC hired a former administration staffer, per a reporter for Mic:
Canada’s ambassador to the United States pushed back on Trump’s claims on trade between the two countries:
Chelsea Clinton asked her followers to respect Trump’s younger relatives:
Please respect the privacy of President Trump’s grandchildren. They’re kids and deserve to not be your clickbait. Thank you.
— Chelsea Clinton (@ChelseaClinton) March 15, 2018
From a Daily Beast reporter:
Really weird and upsetting to see folks acting gleeful at the Don Jr. divorce news. It’s his private life and he has five kids. Leave it alone.
I don’t care how bad my ratio ends up.
— Sam Stein (@samstein) March 15, 2018
A Weekly Standard editor marked a historic anniversary:
50 years ago tomorrow, March 16, 1968: Bobby Kennedy enters the presidential race. 1968 will go down in history as the last time until 2020 that a president was in effect denied renomination by his own party.
— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) March 15, 2018
A familiar face returned to the White House for the Irish prime minister’s visit:
The former governor of Virginia swam with the sharks, literally:
And a sports writer for the Green Bay Press-Gazette summed up March Madness:
I picked Arizona for the Final 4.
My 3 children each picked Buffalo. Because they thought buffalos were cool.
I hate March.
— Ryan Wood (@ByRyanWood) March 16, 2018
GOOD READS:
— “‘I’m constantly asking: Why?’ When mass shootings end, the painful wait for answers begins,” by The Post’s William Wan and Mark Berman: “Long after the sirens, vigils and cable news debates, the question remains. It nags at survivors and their families. It haunts investigators as they comb through the gunman’s belongings, text messages and the scattered pieces of his life. … Even as our attention as a society fades, the mystery of motive lingers like an open, forgotten wound until the next shooting, the next cycle of grief … In the wake of such killings, there is often a rush to point to mental illness as an explanation, but [almost all psychiatrists] say that knee-jerk reaction is wrong[:] In a 2015 study that examined 235 people who committed or tried to commit mass killings, only 22 percent of them could be considered mentally ill. ‘We like to think that anyone who kills others as somehow mentally ill,’ [said forensic psychiatrist Phillip Resnick, who served on the cases of Timothy McVeigh and Ted Kaczynski.]. … In the absence of definitive answers, experts who research mass shootings talk instead in terms of patterns.”
— Politico Magazine, “‘God Made Me Black on Purpose,’” by Tim Alberta: “Concerned about narrowing his brand, [Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.)] long has tried to downplay his ethnic exceptionalism and avoid the role of race-relations ambassador for the GOP. And yet Scott, now more than ever, cannot seem to escape being perceived as such. He is not just a generic black Republican in a generic period of history; he is the most powerful and prominent black elected official in America, serving at a time of heightened racial tension and widespread accusations of xenophobia against his own party and the president who leads it. This ensures that Scott wears a target on his back regardless of the issue or crisis at hand.”
— Vox, “Ryan Seacrest was accused of sexual misconduct. Hollywood shrugged,” by Caroline Framke: “[I]n an age when everyone in Hollywood and beyond is grappling with the ramifications of coming forward about sexual violence and what to do with those accused, it’s worth taking a step back to understand why Seacrest managed to sidestep his own controversy.”
DAYBOOK:
Trump will have lunch with Pence, Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis and Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen.
In the morning, Pence will sit down with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, who is openly gay. The vice president and the second lady will then host a St. Patrick’s Day breakfast with Varadkar. Pence also has an afternoon meeting with the Japanese foreign minister.
NEWS YOU CAN USE IF YOU LIVE IN D.C.:
— Another cold, windy day in Washington, but temperatures may perk up a bit starting Sunday. The Capital Weather Gang forecasts: “Wind. That’s the day’s story. A familiar story. It’s wintry behind our cold front, but thank goodness for some sunshine. High temperatures near 40 to mid-40s are likely. And, yes, with northwesterly winds around 20 mph at times gusting toward 30 mph, bundle up a bit. An isolated sprinkle or flurry can’t be ruled out!”
— The Capitals beat the Islanders 7-3. (Isabelle Khurshudyan)
— As 30,000 city employees undergo training to prevent sexual harassment, D.C. taxpayers have recently paid at least $735,000 to settle complaints (and that’s not the total bottom line). Fenit Nirappil reports: “[T]he city has spent $295,000 since 2015 to resolve three lawsuits — two against the D.C. police force and one involving female Department of Corrections employees alleging that male co-workers exposed themselves, offered promotions for sex and mistreated women who complained about harassment. The list did not include one of the most high-profile sexual harassment cases against the city, a 27-year complaint that the city settled last year for $90,000. It also did not include several cases disclosed by city agencies to the D.C. Council, including a $350,000 settlement in October involving the D.C. police department.”
— D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) promised “reinforced” oversight of the school system. From Peter Jamison and Fenit: “Bowser’s remarks during her annual address were perhaps her most candid and wide-reaching acknowledgment of problems that over the past three months have shaken the public schools in the nation’s capital and tarnished the city’s national image as a leading laboratory of education reform.”
— A group of D.C. council members backed away from their opposition to Virginia’s dedicated funding plan for Metro. The move clears the way for the District to contribute $178.5 million a million to the transit system. (Robert McCartney)
— A longtime admirer of the Kennedy clan bought the home on Q Street NW where JFK first met Jacqueline Bouvier at a 1951 garden party. “I like to think that the first couple … talked longingly about their first date and the house,” Scott Stewart said. “It’s neat to be woven into that fabric.” (Sarah Polus)
VIDEOS OF THE DAY:
Seth Meyers encouraged Robert Mueller to speed up his investigation:
The Post fact-checked Trump’s claim that a border wall would pay for itself:
The Irish prime minister visited the White House and said Irish Americans, including those who are undocumented, “love this country dearly”:
A civil servant proposed in Britain’s House of Commons:
And a Florida man hopped a fence to steal a dog after responding to a Craigslist ad about buying it:
Stormy Daniels’ lawyer: 6 more women claim sexual relationships with Trump
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At least 6 dead after Florida bridge collapse; officials searching for more victims in the rubble
MIAMI — As federal officials began investigating the catastrophic collapse of a pedestrian bridge at Florida International University, authorities here made a grim announcement: The death toll has climbed to six — and more victims may be buried in the rubble.
“Our first priority is getting to those victims,” Juan Perez, director of the Miami-Dade Police Department, said Friday morning. But, he added, it is a slow and painstaking process to break the debris into smaller pieces for removal, and to reach the vehicles that were crushed when the 960-ton span collapsed Thursday afternoon.
The pedestrian bridge was designed to connect the city of Sweetwater with the sprawling campus of Florida International University, and Sweetwater Mayor Orlando Lopez said Friday that one of the victims in the accident was an FIU student. “We are truly saddened to hear that,” Lopez told reporters at a news conference.
The student wasn’t publicly identified (“it’s up to the medical examiner to release the names,” FIU President Mark B. Rosenberg told Fox affiliate WSVN), and authorities haven’t named any of the other victims, either.
Perez, the police director, said officials would not speculate about the likely number of fatalities until the recovery process is complete.
“Our primary focus is to remove all of the cars and all of the victims in a dignified manner and not compromise the investigation in the process,” Miami-Dade County Deputy Mayor Maurice Kemp said Friday. “The investigation is vital, because we want to ensure that this type of accident doesn’t happen again locally, or anywhere in this country.”
The National Transportation Safety Board, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Federal Highway Administration are investigating, as well as the county police department’s homicide detectives.
[ The deadliest bridge collapses in U.S. history ]
The pedestrian bridge, which had been hailed for its innovative construction method, collapsed over a busy road west of Miami, crushing numerous vehicles and leaving rescue workers racing to free victims from chunks of concrete and snapped metal. It had just been put in place across Southwest Eighth Street, on Saturday, and had not opened to pedestrians.
Vehicles were stopped at a red light when the bridge crashed down about 1:30 p.m. It had been designed to make it safer for students to cross the frenetic roadway.
“It was going to be a significant project,” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said Thursday night. “To see it on the ground and underneath it those who died and who were injured is a tragedy.”
The cause of the collapse will be fully investigated, he promised: “The victims and their families deserve to know what went wrong. There will be an extraordinary review into what the errors were and what led to this catastrophic collapse.”
The NTSB had been told construction workers were on the bridge at the time of the collapse, said Robert Sumwalt, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.
“There’s a lot we don’t know,” he said Thursday night, and much investigators intend to find out.
By Friday, the rescue operation had become a recovery effort, because, Miami-Dade Fire Chief Dave Downey said, “we’ve determined that there’s no longer any survivors.”
President Trump responded to “the heartbreaking bridge collapse” Thursday evening with prayers, plus praise for the first responders.
Alexander Concha, 36, and Ivy Polanco, 23, were about to have lunch Thursday at Panther’s Boulevard Cafe, about a block away from the bridge. Suddenly, they heard wailing sirens and helicopters buzzing overhead.
“Our first reaction was, we hope it’s not the bridge,” Concha said. “On the side where it collapsed, it didn’t seem very secure. It seemed very unsafe.”
The bridge collapsed during Florida International’s spring break.
“It’s very lucky that we are on spring break and that this didn’t happen during rush hour,” said Polanco, an FIU student. “It could have been so much worse.”
Some students brought food and water for emergency workers at the scene as rescue efforts wore on.
Florida International University on Saturday had touted the bridge’s “first-of-its kind” construction method, and hailed the permanent installation of the bridge’s main span. It stretched 174 feet and weighed 960 tons, according to an FIU news release, and was built using “accelerated bridge construction” methods that were being worked on at the university.
“This method of construction reduces potential risks to workers, commuters and pedestrians and minimizes traffic interruptions,” the release said.
When the bridge was installed, crews using an automated process lifted the span from its supports, turned it 90 degrees across eight lanes and lowered it in place, the release said. The university said it was the largest pedestrian bridge moved by that method, known as self-propelled modular transportation, in U.S. history.
“This project is an outstanding example of the ABC method,” Atorod Azizinamini, chairman of FIU’s Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, said at the time. “Building the major element of the bridge — its main span superstructure — outside of the traveled way and away from busy Eighth Street is a milestone.”
Last year, the Miami Herald reported that an FIU student was killed while crossing Southwest Eighth Street.
The university, a major state school that has experienced burgeoning enrollment in recent years, had announced Wednesday it would begin issuing fines as part of a pedestrian safety campaign to help protect students walking to campus from Sweetwater and nearby Westchester. The new bridge was scheduled to be completed in early 2019.
“Just last week we were celebrating the expanse being completed — and now we are here dealing with a tragedy,” Sweetwater Mayor Orlando Lopez said Thursday.
The main builder of the bridge, Munilla Construction Management (MCM), is a major South Florida construction firm that has been hired to rebuild expressways; update part of Miami International Airport; and construct a new test track for Miami’s Metrorail system.
Increasingly, MCM has also successfully bid on federal contracts, winning almost $130 million in work since 2013. The largest contract is for building a school at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station.
MCM is a major contributor to politicians in Miami-Dade County and has been involved in dozens of lawsuits over the last decade, but often for much smaller issues. This month, the firm was sued for damages when a “makeshift bridge” collapsed under the weight of a security worker using it to access a restroom at Miami airport. The man suffered injuries to his elbow, shoulder and wrist, according to court records.
MCM has up-to-date business licenses and no recent code-enforcement violations reported to state authorities. Recent inspection reports for the site of Thursday’s collapse were not immediately available.
The company could not immediately be reached for comment.
In a statement on its Facebook page, MCM said: “Our family’s thoughts and prayers go out to everyone affected by this terrible tragedy. The new UniversityCity Bridge, which was under construction, experienced a catastrophic collapse causing injuries and loss of life. MCM is a family business and we are all devastated and doing everything we can to assist. We will conduct a full investigation to determine exactly what went wrong and will cooperate with investigators on scene in every way.”
According to the university, FIGG Bridge Engineers, a division of Tallahassee-based FIGG Engineering Group, designed the walkway.
The firm is behind dozens of iconic suspension, arch and beam bridges across the United States, including the Penobscot Narrows Bridge in Maine and the Bob Graham Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Tampa.
FIGG said in a statement Thursday that it was “stunned by today’s tragic collapse of a pedestrian bridge that was under construction over Southwest Eighth Street in Miami. Our deepest sympathies are with all those affected by this accident.
“We will fully cooperate with every appropriate authority in reviewing what happened and why. In our 40-year history, nothing like this has ever happened before. Our entire team mourns the loss of life and injuries associated with this devastating tragedy, and our prayers go out to all involved.”
Asked if the construction methods might have factored into the collapse, Ron Sachs, a spokesman for FIGG Engineering, said he could not provide any details beyond a statement issued by the company.
“They’re in a fact-finding mode,” he said of the company. “They’re stunned and certainly in mourning.”
Sachs said he believed there would be a comprehensive investigation involving authorities, including the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration. “We’re going to cooperate with any and all of those,” he said.
Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.) had touted the bridge as a “creative solution” for challenges to the area’s transportation network in the FIU news release over the weekend. On Thursday, a statement issued through his office reflected the sudden turn of events.
“I am shocked and horrified by the FIU Pedestrian Bridge collapse. I am praying for the victims and families of this tragedy,” he said. “As the NTSB has announced they will be conducting an investigation, I will fully review their findings so we can address how this happened and how to prevent it from ever happening again.”
Experts say the Accelerated Bridge Construction method involves an integrated system of pieces designed to stand as a complete structure, but that have to be supported during construction.
Amjad Aref, a researcher at the University at Buffalo’s Institute of Bridge Engineering, said failures can be catastrophic.
“The loss of stability is a sudden thing, it doesn’t give a warning,” said Aref, whose work involves designing Accelerated Bridge Construction projects.
Aref said the construction method has become popular over the past decade. He would not speculate about the cause of the collapse. In general he said, the process works this way:
“You bring three pieces, three blocks, each block is really strong and [does] their job but if they are not connected properly, they might not stand,” he said. “The idea is in every design you want to take the load from the superstructure, the bridge surface, all the way to the ground safely.”
A collapse, he said, would indicate “the system was not completely connected or supported.”
Before the structure is finished, Aref said, crews should ensure that each of its components is secured by cabling or other supporting mechanisms.
He said self-propelled modular transportation, the method of installing the bridge section, is common in Europe. The mechanism would typically involve loading the span onto wheeled heavy machinery that places the main span between the supports, turns and hydraulically lifts it into place.
The bridge was funded through a federal TIGER grant, according to the university, a recession-era program created under the Obama administration that pays for road, rail and other projects.
The role of FIU’s Accelerated Bridge Construction University Transportation Center in its construction was unclear. The lab says on its website that it received federal funding in September 2013 after the U.S. Department of Transportation recognized a joint funding proposal submitted by FIU, Iowa State University and the University of Nevada at Reno. The funding enabled the schools to “dive further into their mission of” researching Accelerated Bridge construction, the site says. The center received a second round of U.S. DOT funding in December 2016, the side says.
The center lays out its mission on the site: “The mission of the ABC-UTC is to reduce the societal costs of bridge construction by reducing the duration of work zones, focusing special attention on preservation, service life, construction costs, education of the profession, and development of a next-generation workforce fully equipped with ABC knowledge,” it says.
Calls to a university number and an email to Azizinamini, director of the bridge center, were not returned Thursday.
Svrluga, du Lac and Siddiqui reported from Washington. Aaron C. Davis, Mark Berman, Alice Crites and Michael Laris in Washington contributed to this report.
Saudi Crown Prince Likens Iran’s Supreme Leader to Hitler
His comments on Iran also suggested that he would seek further cooperation with the United States in combating Iranian influence in the Middle East, a goal he shares with the Trump administration.
In the interview, Prince Mohammed, 32, played down Iran’s power, saying its army was not well ranked in the Muslim world and that Saudi Arabia had a larger economy.
“Iran is far from being equal to Saudi Arabia,” he said, speaking through a translator.
When asked about his previous comments comparing Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran, to Hitler, he replied, “Absolutely.”
“He wants to create his own project in the Middle East very much like Hitler, who wanted to expand at the time,” Prince Mohammed said. “Many countries around the world and in Europe did not realize how dangerous Hitler was until what happened, happened. I don’t want to see the same events happening in the Middle East.”
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He was then asked whether Saudi Arabia sought nuclear weapons to counter Iran.
“Saudi Arabia does not want to acquire any nuclear bomb, but without a doubt if Iran developed a nuclear bomb, we will follow suit as soon as possible,” he said.
Saudi officials grew furious with the Obama administration for its push with other world powers to reach an agreement placing limits on Iran’s nuclear capabilities.
Like Israeli leaders and many Republicans in the United States, they claimed that the agreement would merely delay Iran’s quest for nuclear weapons, while ignoring Iran’s other activities, like supporting Shiite militias.
Iran has insisted that its nuclear program was peaceful and intended to produce only energy and research, not weapons.
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Saudi Arabia has not been known to seek nuclear weapons, but its cabinet this week approved a policy for a new atomic energy program.
The new policy stated that “all nuclear activities will be restricted to peaceful purposes, within the framework defined by international legislations, treaties and conventions,” according to a statement released by the government on Wednesday. It remained unclear when work on the new program would begin.
The “60 Minutes” interview with Prince Mohammed will be broadcast on Sunday.
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Why Trump’s admission that he made stuff up to Justin Trudeau is particularly bad
Analysis Interpretation of the news based on evidence, including data, as well as anticipating how events might unfold based on past events
US, France and Germany join Britain in saying Russia likely responsible for chemical attack against former spy
LONDON — The United States and two major European allies on Thursday formally backed Britain’s claims that Russia was likely responsible for a chemical toxin attack against a former spy living in England, calling it the “first offensive use of a nerve agent” in Europe since World War II.
The joint statement from the leaders of France, Germany, the United States and Britain signaled another step in mounting international pressure on Russia over apparent ties to the assault.
The statement said the four nations shared the view of British investigators of Russian ties to last week’s attack against a former double agent and his daughter.
There was no “plausible alternative explanation,” the statement added, noting that Russia’s “failure to address the legitimate request by the U.K. government further underlines its responsibility.”
“It is an assault on U.K. sovereignty and any such use by a state party is a clear violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention and a breach of international law,” said the statement, released by the office of the British prime minister.
“It threatens the security of us all,” it added, without spelling out any possible further reprisals by the United Kingdom and its allies.
The next move in the deepening standoff could come from Moscow.
Russia promised Thursday to respond “very soon” to Britain’s decision to expel 23 Russian diplomats, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said. Britain made the move in response to the use of an alleged Russian nerve agent against a former Russian spy last week in the quiet town of Salisbury in southern England.
“The answer will come very soon, I assure you,” Lavrov said. “You know that we as polite people will first communicate this response to our British colleagues.”
On Thursday afternoon, British Prime Minister Theresa May made her first appearance in Salisbury since the attack, speaking there with officials and local residents.
“We do hold Russia culpable for this brazen, brazen act and despicable act that’s taken place on the streets of what is such a remarkable city,” she told the BBC.
Russia has been relatively slow to react to May’s announcement Wednesday that Britain would take action against Russia after Moscow ignored an ultimatum to explain how an alleged Russian nerve agent came to be used on British soil.
Moscow responded to the ultimatum with scorn and sarcasm, ultimately blowing off May’s demands. Meanwhile, officials and pundits in Moscow have issued a steady stream of denials and counterclaims, a tactic that has continued through Thursday.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that President Vladimir Putin met with members of his national security council Thursday for a “detailed discussion” on the situation with Britain. “Extreme concern was expressed in connection with the destructive and provocative position taken by the British side,” he said.
Lavrov reiterated earlier comments that the allegations were “boorish and unfounded.” The actions taken by the British “go beyond the limits of elementary rules of decency,” he said, while asserting that Russia has attempted to handle the situation in a civilized manner.
[Britain has few good options to hit back against Russia]
When asked how Britain might respond to any retaliation, British Defense Secretary Gavin Williamson said that Russia “should go away; it should shut up.”
He was taking questions after a speech announcing a $67 million investment in a new chemical weapons defense center.
In Brussels, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg condemned what he said was a “reckless pattern of Russian behavior over many years.” He added the alleged chemical weapons attack to the Kremlin’s ongoing nuclear buildup, military action in Georgia and Ukraine, and the targeting of Western political systems for influence operations.
“We do not want a new Cold War, and we do not want to be dragged into an arms race. An arms race has no winners. It is expensive. It is risky. It is in nobody’s interest,” Stoltenberg said. He said that any response to the chemical attack ought to be “proportionate, measured and defensive.”
Russia has also asked for access to the poison and its victims, 66-year-old Sergei Skripal and his daughter, 33-year-old Yulia Skripal.
They are both reported to be in comas after being found slumped on a park bench in the quiet town of Salisbury, near Stonehenge, on March 4. Skripal, a former Russian double agent, was jailed in Russia in 2006 for selling state secrets to British intelligence for 10 years, but he was released in 2010 as part of a high-profile spy swap.
Despite Russia’s constant and rigorous denials, the United States and France have fallen in behind Britain in support its conclusion that Russia was involved the use of the nerve agent on the Skripals.
“France agrees with the U.K. that there is no other plausible explanation,” President Emmanuel Macron’s office said in a statement following a phone call between Macron and the May.
Macron said France would take measures of its own in coming days against Russia.
British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson called on Britain’s allies to stand united against the nerve-agent attack.
Writing in The Washington Post, he said that “all responsible nations share an obligation to take a principled stance against this behavior,” which he characterized as part of a larger pattern of “reckless behavior” by Putin. The nerve agent, Novichok, was selected for a reason, he said.
“In its blatant Russian-ness, the nerve agent sends a signal to all who may be thinking of dissent in the intensifying repression of Putin’s Russia,” Johnson said. “The message is clear: We will find you, we will catch you, we will kill you — and though we will deny it with lip-curling scorn, the world will know beyond doubt that Russia did it.”
Analysts said that Britain was bracing for a tit-for-tat response from Russia.
“They are not going to take this lying down, and we should expect that. If you’re not prepared to take a few blows, you shouldn’t make any punches. The question is, where does it stop?” said James Nixey, head of the Russia and Eurasia Program at Chatham House, a London-based think tank.
Bodner reported from Moscow. James McAuley in Paris contributed to this report.
Read more:
Britain’s expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats marks a return to Cold War ejections
Britain to expel 23 Russian diplomats after poisoning of ex-spy
Russia demands access to British probe of nerve agent attacks
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UK to expel 23 Russian diplomats over spy poisoning
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A generation shaped by gun violence will make itself heard today
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