Trump, Amazon, Syria |
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[The New York Times](
Friday, July 27, 2018
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Europe Edition
[Your Friday Briefing](
By MATTHEW SEDACCA
Good morning. Details emerge on E.U.-U.S. trade talks, Amazon releases earnings and Syria acknowledges prisoner deaths.
Hereâs the latest:
Alex Brandon/Associated Press
⢠A trade crisis has been averted, for now.
President Trump and the European Commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, above, have reached a truce defusing Washingtonâs trade war with Europe, for the moment. Now [broader negotiations will begin](.
Mr. Trump said the two sides would work to lower tariffs and other trade barriers, and try to reduce roadblocks to industrial goods [like American liquefied natural gas]( flowing across the Atlantic â which sounds much like the approach pursued [under President Barack Obama]( which Mr. Trump had shelved.
The big question is whether this cease-fire will amount to a meaningful improvement in strained trans-Atlantic relations, or just the latest change in course by an unpredictable president.
_____
Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times
⢠Hundreds of Syrian families have suddenly learned that their missing relatives, many of them arrested years ago, were registered as dead by the government. Officials have not said how many detainees died or what happened to them.
It appears to be the [first public acknowledgment]( by the government of President Bashar al-Assad, depicted in the poster above, that hundreds if not thousands of prisoners had died in custody. They included rebels as well as political protesters.
âThe regime is closing one chapter and starting a new one,â one analyst said. âIt is telling the rebels and the activists that this chapter is gone, that whatever hope in some surviving revolutionary spirit has been crushed.â
_____
Emre Tazegul/Associated Press
⢠President Trump threatens Turkey with sanctions.
Mr. Trump announced on Twitter that the U.S. [would impose sanctions on Turkey]( for its âlong time detainmentâ of Andrew Brunson, an American pastor, above center, and called for his release.
The case of Mr. Brunson, who has been accused of aiding the failed coup in Turkey in 2016, has become a flash point in the two countriesâ relationship.
Former U.S. officials said it was highly unlikely that the Trump administration would impose broad sanctions on Turkey, a NATO ally. But it could target individuals involved in Mr. Brunsonâs case.
_____
Doug Mills/The New York Times
⢠President Trump may have tweeted himself into legal trouble.
The special counsel, Robert Mueller, is [scrutinizing tweets and]( from the president attacking Attorney General Jeff Sessions and the former F.B.I. director James B. Comey, our Washington team reports.
Mr. Mueller is examining whether the actions add up to attempts to obstruct the investigation by both intimidating witnesses and pressuring law enforcement officials to tamp down the inquiry. Mr. Trumpâs lawyers said that none of the evidence Mr. Mueller is looking at constitutes obstruction.
Hereâs how [Mr. Trumpâs private and public statements]( line up in a possible obstruction case.
_____
Yoan Valat/EPA, via Shutterstock
⢠Checking in on the Tour de France.
âTour hostesses,â better known as podium girls, [have been a key part]( of a daily Tour de France ritual, helping winners slip into their leadersâ jerseys and giving them trinkets â as well as chaste kisses. To many women, the routine seems out of touch, if not offensive, our correspondent writes.
Arnaud Demare of France, who had been accused of holding on to his team car in Wednesdayâs mountain stage, [scored a win in the bunch sprint]( the first victory this year for a French team in the Tour. Meanwhile, American racers, once dominant forces at the Tour, [are becoming a rarity](. This year, they make up just five of the 176 riders.
Business
Kyle Johnson for The New York Times
⢠Amazon [released its second-quarter earnings](. While profit was strong, revenue was not quite what analysts had anticipated. And strikes on Prime Day last week highlighted tensions between Amazon and its European employees.
⢠President Trump complained about the E.U.âs $5.1 billion penalty against Google, and [our columnist says he has a point](. Itâs hard to find an antitrust expert who endorses the caseâs logic or outcome, he writes.
⢠Facebookâs stock price plunge on Thursday, which [erased more than $1]( billion]( value]( shattered the myth that the biggest tech companies were essentially invulnerable. It came on the heels of a disappointing earnings report.
⢠Hereâs a snapshot of [global markets](.
In the News
Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images
⢠In Britain, three Jewish newspapers published identical front-page commentaries that said a Labour Party government led by Jeremy Corbyn, above, would be an âexistential threatâ to their community. [[The New York Times](
⢠Hundreds of migrants charged border fences separating Ceuta, Spainâs North African enclave, from Morocco. [[Associated Press](
⢠Russian officials promised to prosecute anyone involved in a prisoner-abuse scandal, but human rights experts at a United Nations hearing were skeptical. [[The New York Times](
⢠The builders of the dam that failed in Laos this week, killing at least 27 people and displacing thousands, knew beforehand that it was in trouble. [[The New York Times](
⢠Imran Khan, a former cricket star and fierce critic of Americaâs war on terror, is on the verge of becoming Pakistanâs next prime minister. [[The New York Times](
⢠In Greece, officials said there were âserious indicationsâ that the wildfires that killed at least 83 people this week was started intentionally. [[BBC](
Smarter Living
Tips for a more fulfilling life.
Meredith Heuer for The New York Times
⢠Recipe of the day: Looking for a weekend project? [Make lemon gelato at home](.
⢠More sleep means [better metabolic health]( for teenagers.
⢠Want to make your partnerâs parents [more woke]( [Hereâs some advice](.
Noteworthy
Roger Kisby for The New York Times
⢠Iceland Airwaves has become the first music festival to ensure [that half its acts are women]( putting pressure on bigger festivals to do the same. Above, the band Soccer Mommy at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas.
⢠Hereâs a guide to watching [Mars in opposition]( on Friday (and a long lunar eclipse with a âblood moonâ if youâre in Europe).
⢠In memoriam: Mary Ellis, [who overcame public disapproval]( to fly hundreds of Spitfires and heavy bombers to the front lines for Britain in World War II, died at 101.
Back Story
Associated Press
Last weekâs Back Story about [the anniversary of the 1848 womenâs convention]( in Seneca Falls, N.Y., mentioned that women won the national right to vote in the U.S. in 1920.
Not all women, several readers pointed out.
Voting rights have been broadened throughout U.S. history; in 1870, [the Constitutionâs 15th Amendment]( granted all male citizens the right to vote regardless of race, but left out women.
For this reason, some suffragists [opposed its passage](.
In 1920, the 19th Amendment extended suffrage to women, but a variety of tactics were used at the state level to limit nonwhite citizensâ right to vote, including poll taxes, literacy tests, violence and whites-only primaries. ([Our video examines that history](
Native Americans were not [granted citizenship until 1924]( and were [denied the right to vote by some states]( well into the 20th century.
It wasnât until President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, above, that many of these barriers were dismantled. The Supreme Court ruled in 2013 that part of the act, which has been updated several times by Congress, [was unconstitutional](.
Emma McAleavy wrote todayâs Back Story.
_____
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