Trade War, Jeff Sessions, Cody Wilson |
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Thursday, August 2, 2018
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Asia Edition
[Your Thursday Briefing](
By CHARLES MCDERMID
Good morning. An extraordinary request in Washington, trouble with dams in Southeast Asia and the decade that almost stopped climate change. Hereâs what you need to know:
Doug Mills/The New York Times
⢠âStop this rigged witch hunt right now.â
President Trump called on his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, [to end the special counsel's investigation]( into Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible ties to Trump associates.
Some lawyers immediately questioned whether the extraordinary request, made on Twitter, was an attempt to obstruct justice. Mr. Trumpâs lawyers suggested that he was giving his opinion, not an order. Above, Mr. Trump in a public appearance with Mr. Sessions, second from left, in May.
Mr. Trump also tweeted about his former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, suggesting that he was being treated worse than the notorious mobster Al Capone.
On [the second day of Mr. Manafort's trial]( the first stemming from the special counselâs investigation, prosecutors began building the case that he sought to hide and evade taxes on a portion of $60 million he earned as a political consultant in Ukraine.
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Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
⢠Raising the stakes.
The Trump administration is considering raising tariffs on [$200 billion worth of Chinese products to 25 percent]( â not the 10 percent it had previously indicated â in a bid to bring Beijing back to the bargaining table.
The proposal is being fueled by deep frustration in the White House over its failure to force China to change its trade practices, as well as by a sharp decline in the value of Chinaâs currency. Above, American flags being manufactured in China last month.
And hereâs a look at the public feud between [President Trump and]( Koch]( the billionaire industrialist who has denounced Mr. Trumpâs trade policies.
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Julia Wallace for The New York Times
⢠Downstream from danger.
The deadly deluge caused by the failure of a dam in Laos drew global media attention. But few noticed when the floodwaters [rushed some 50 miles south into Cambodia]( above.
The flooding upended life for thousands of impoverished farmers in the 3S Basin, where the Sekong, Sesan and Srepok rivers flow into the Mekong in a watershed described as âa bread basket for over three million people.â
But it is increasingly dotted with dams, and accidents like the Laos collapse may become more common.
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George Steinmetz for The New York Times
⢠Losing Earth.
The Times Magazine this week [is devoted to the period from 1979 to 1989]( âthe decade we almost stopped climate change.â
The writer Nathaniel Rich traces how humankind first came to a broad understanding of the causes and dangers of climate change. Above, Santa Rosa, Calif., after last yearâs fires.
The expansive narrative covers the efforts of a small group of American scientists, activists and politicians, and explains how thoroughly they grasped the problem and how agonizingly close they came to solving it.
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Don Arnold/Getty Images
⢠âIâm calling this out because it is wrong.â
Senator Sarah Hanson-Young, above, of Australiaâs Greens Party explained her reasons for filing a [defamation suit against a fellow lawmaker]( who told her to âstop shagging menâ during a debate about violence against women.
The suit claims the offending senator defamed her in follow-up news interviews, citing his description of her as a âhypocriteâ and âmisandristâ because she attacked men in public but had sex with them in private.
The acrimony raised yet more questions about a culture of sexual harassment and scandal in Canberra.
Business
Doug Chayka
⢠Big tech: strong as ever. Donât let Facebookâs stock crash fool you, our tech columnist writes, the âfrightful fiveâ â Apple, Google, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft â are still [on their way to dominating the future](.
⢠Beijing pledged trillions of dollars toward the construction of roads, power plants and ports through its Belt and Road initiative. There are [more frivolous projects]( too, like an indoor ski slope in Australia.
⢠Appleâs [report of strong profits for the second quarter]( could soon help make it the first public company worth more than $1 trillion.
⢠Google is working on [a censored search engine]( that will filter websites and search terms blacklisted by the Chinese government, two people told our reporters.
⢠U.S. stocks [were down](. Hereâs a snapshot of [global markets](.
In the News
Associated Press
⢠In Afghanistan, the Taliban won a decisive victory against the Islamic State after a two-day battle. More than 200 Islamic State fighters, like the one above, and two top commanders surrendered to the Afghan government to avoid capture by the Taliban. [[The New York Times]](
⢠An initial forensic analysis found that the boxes handed over by North Korea to the U.S. last week appear to hold human remains from the Korean War and are likely American. Experts added that positively identifying the remains could take anywhere from days to decades. [[Reuters](
⢠The White House is considering another sharp reduction in refugee admissions. Under one proposal, no more than 25,000 refugees could be resettled in the U.S. next year, a cut of more than 40 percent. [[The New York Times](
⢠Chinaâs secret weapon in its race to dominate the Pacific: sand. [[The New York Times Opinion](
⢠Taiwan was chosen as the first Asian host for the Oslo Freedom Forum, a human rights conference. It was a welcome bit of recognition for the island after a series of setbacks blamed on pressure from China. [[The New York Times](
Smarter Living
Tips for a more fulfilling life.
Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
⢠Recipe of the day: If youâre a fan of spicy, bold recipes, try this [cumin lamb stir-fry](.
⢠You should send that [thank you note](.
⢠Stand up [for yourself](.
Noteworthy
Andrew Spear for The New York Times
⢠Donât everybody talk at once. Did the 525 ventriloquists who gathered in Kentucky last month find a convention rewarding? [Youâll have to ask their dummies](.
⢠Cody Wilson, [the Texan]( behind the push to distribute 3-D blueprints for weapons, calls his effort âa pretty mainline American idea.â Our podcast â[The Daily]( looks at the fight over the so-called ghost guns, which are largely undetectable by security systems and untraceable by the authorities.
⢠And plants are now converting more carbon dioxide into organic matter, researchers at U.C. Santa Cruz found. But the so-called [global greening is nothing to celebrate](.
Back Story
Dennis Cook/Associated Press
President Trump has so far made two Supreme Court nominations, [which is about average](. But some presidents didnât get to name anyone to the court.
No vacancies came up while Jimmy Carter was president from 1977 to 1981 (although he reportedly [pressured Justice Thurgood Marshall to resign]( after losing the 1980 election to Ronald Reagan). Critics of the Supreme Court have pointed to Mr. Carterâs lack of nominees as a reason to [impose term limits]( on the nine justices.
But Mr. Carter put his own stamp on the federal bench, [appointing more minority (57) and female (41) judges]( than all presidents before him combined. Others have [followed his example](.
Mr. Carter also holds the record for [most federal judges appointed]( in a single term (262).
The three other presidents with no Supreme Court appointments did not serve full terms. They were William Henry Harrison, who [died of pneumonia]( in 1841, a month after giving a two-hour inaugural address without a coat; Zachary Taylor, who died under [disputed circumstances]( in 1850 after 16 months in office; and Andrew Johnson, who became president in 1865 after Abraham Lincolnâs assassination.
Johnson was so disliked by members of Congress that they passed a bill [reducing the size of the Supreme Court]( rather than confirm his sole nominee.
Jennifer Jett wrote todayâs Back Story.
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