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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Thursday, February 28, 2019
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Asia Edition
[Your Thursday Briefing](
By ALISHA HARIDASANI GUPTA AND MELINA DELKIC
Good morning.
Michael Cohen reveals a dark picture of President Trump, Pakistan shoots down Indian jets and the Vatican investigates Cardinal Pell. Hereâs the latest:
[Michael Cohen, the presidentâs former personal lawyer, testifying before the House Oversight and Reform Committee.]Michael Cohen, the presidentâs former personal lawyer, testifying before the House Oversight and Reform Committee.
Erin Schaff/The New York Times
âHe is a racist. He is a con man. And he is a cheat.â
That was Michael Cohen, President Trumpâs former personal lawyer and fixer, describing the president during his testimony before a House committee that painted [a scathing picture of the presidentâs motivations and inner workings](. Read his [full opening statement here](.
Republican lawmakers spent much of their time in the hearing assailing Mr. Cohenâs credibility, noting that he is going to prison for previously lying to Congress.
Mr. Cohen said that Mr. Trump lied about the Trump Tower project in Moscow, saying that he personally monitored and directed negotiations to build the tower.
Mr. Cohen said he also suspected that Mr. Trump knew of the June 2016 meeting in which his son, son-in-law and campaign chairman met with Russians who said they had âdirtâ on Hillary Clinton.
Evidence: Mr. Cohen provided [documents to back up parts of his testimony,]( including copies of checks to pay Stormy Daniels for her silence and financial statements that he said showed how Mr. Trump inflated and deflated his worth.
Case studies: We broke down [two episodes]( that have drawn the scrutiny of investigators, in which Mr. Cohen has undermined Mr. Trumpâs narrative.
History: Mr. Cohen and Mr. Trump [shared a unique, 10-year long relationship]( a mix of the bond between a father and son, the professional distance of an attorney and client, and the blind loyalty of a mafia henchmen to a crime boss.
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[President Trump and Kim Jong-un in Hanoi, Vietnam.]President Trump and Kim Jong-un in Hanoi, Vietnam.
Doug Mills/The New York Times
Cohen testimony casts shadow on Trump-Kim talks in Hanoi
The political drama on Capitol Hill was in President Trumpâs thoughts as he arrived in Vietnam for [meetings with the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un](.
Michael Cohen, the president tweeted, was âlying in order to reduce his prison time!â
Mr. Trump then had a one-on-one exchange with Mr. Kim in downtown Hanoi before sitting down for dinner with top aides from both sides. Formal talks between the two sides take place today, with Mr. Cohenâs excoriating characterizations of Mr. Trump echoing from the other side of the world.
One goal: For decades, the U.S. has been monitoring a remote site in North Korea called [Yongbyon]( where it is believed the country produces nuclear fuel. If Mr. Trump can stop fuel production there, he would effectively have âfrozenâ the Northâs nuclear program. If not, North Korea could keep up its weapons program while talks drag on.
Media: [Four American journalists were barred]( from covering Mr. Trumpâs dinner with Mr. Kim after two of them called out questions in an earlier appearance of the two leaders â a highly unusual retaliatory move at a closely watched foreign event.
Go deeper: Thae Yong-ho, a member of North Koreaâs political elite who in 2016 became the highest-ranking diplomat to defect in years, said [in an interview with our Beijing bureau chief]( that Mr. Kim has no intention of giving up his weapons and is just buying time.
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[Indian soldiers near the remains of an Indian aircraft after it crashed on Wednesday.]Indian soldiers near the remains of an Indian aircraft after it crashed on Wednesday.
Tauseef Mustafa/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
Pakistan retaliates against India on a second day of airstrikes
Pakistanâs military said it [shot down two Indian fighter jets]( that had entered its airspace and captured a pilot, escalating the conflict between the two nuclear-armed neighbors and raising concerns that they could be veering toward another war.
Indian officials confirmed that one Air Force pilot was in Pakistani custody. Three videos of the pilot emerged on social media. One showed him struggling to fend off a mob in plainclothes in the middle of a forest, another showed him answering questions from Pakistani security forces. He was identified as Wing Commander Abhi Nandan.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is now faced with a political crisis ahead of coming elections. Lawmakers from 21 opposition parties issued a statement condemning how he handled the current âPakistani misadventure.â
On the ground: In the Kashmir region, hundreds of residents fled and volunteers painted red crosses on the roofs of hospitals to protect them in any future airstrikes. In Pakistan, dozens of tanks were deployed to the border in broad daylight.
Background: A day earlier, Indian warplanes crossed the disputed Kashmir region for the first time since 1971 to strike a target inside Pakistan, a response to a suicide attack on Feb. 14 by Jaish-e-Mohammed, a terrorist organization that American and Indian officials say operates in Pakistan.
Perspective: In an Op-Ed essay, a Pakistani novelist argues that warmongers in the nuclear-armed neighbors are using social media to fan hostilities. âMy generation of Pakistanis have fought for the right to speak,â [she writes](. âWe are not afraid to lend our voices to that most righteous cause: peace.â
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[Cardinal George Pell, arriving in court in Melbourne after his sexual abuse conviction.]Cardinal George Pell, arriving in court in Melbourne after his sexual abuse conviction.
Con Chronis/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
Jailed, Cardinal George Pell awaits his sentence
The judge presiding over the cardinalâs sexual abuse case [set the sentencing on March 13](. The crimes, which include sexual penetration of a minor, could technically draw up to 50 years in prison.
Judge Peter Kidd told the Melbourne courtroom that Cardinal Pellâs âbrazen, callous offendingâ deserved commensurate punishment.
âHe engaged in some shocking conduct against two boys,â the judge said, âand he had the capacity to reason and did it in such brazen circumstances that he obviously felt some degree of impunity.â
The Vatican: Church authorities demoted the 77-year-old Roman Catholic cleric, a former adviser to the pope, and opened an investigation that could lead to the second defrocking of a cardinal over sexual abuse, after that of Theodore McCarrick.
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Hereâs what else is happening
Indonesia: A landslide at an illegal gold mine on the island of Sulawesi [killed at least two people and may have buried dozens more]( officials said. An estimated one million miners work at illegal gold mines where safety standards are barely enforced and collapses are common.
Egypt: A speeding train crashed into a platform at Cairoâs main railway station, setting off a fireball that swept through the crowds, [killing 25 people and injuring dozens more](. It was the latest in a series of accidents on the countryâs dilapidated rail network.
Saudi Arabia: President Trumpâs son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner, [met with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman]( for the first time since Saudi agents killed the dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi in October. A White House statement of the meeting didnât mention Mr. Khashoggi and instead focused on Mr. Kushnerâs peace plan for Israel and Palestine.
[A fire burning near the town of Diggle, Britain.]A fire burning near the town of Diggle, Britain.
Jon Super/Reuters
Britain: On the warmest February day since 1910, [wildfires broke out]( at some of the countryâs beloved nature spots, including a forest made famous by A.A. Milneâs âWinnie the Poohâ books.
Northern Ireland: More than two dozen women dragged suitcases across Westminster bridge in London this week to [protest Belfastâs restrictive abortion rights and demand reform](. âNorthern Ireland is now isolated as the only part of the U.K. and Ireland with a near total abortion ban,â said one activist.
China: American automakers, including Ford, General Motors and Fiat, that set up vast production facilities across China to capitalize on local demand and cheaper labor are the latest companies to [feel the pinch of its slowing economy]( and Beijingâs trade stand-off with Washington.
Tiny love stories: In the [Australia edition of our popular series]( readers told us about airport proposals, adventures on a farm and the significance of a white dress. Up next, weâre looking for miniature, personal love stories from India. [Submit your entry here](.
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Smarter Living
Tips for a more fulfilling life.
Craig Lee for The New York Times
Recipe of the day: Bake a [Nutella banana bread]( for a friend, and one for yourself.
Snoring at night and tired all day? [Hereâs a guide]( to the common symptoms of sleep apnea, and what you can do if you have it.
If youâre planning a wedding, include [a hashtag]( to enable your guests to share their photos of your special day in real time.
Back Story
This week is the start of the [Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo]( one of the largest such events in the world. It draws 2.4 million visitors, [hundreds of competitors]( and big-name musicians like Kacey Musgraves and Cardi B.
But what is a rodeo? [A sometimes dangerous showcase]( based on skills traditionally used by cattle herders in Spain, Latin America, the U.S. and elsewhere.
[A bareback rider competing at the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas in 2015.]A competitor at this year's Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
Karen Warrem/Houston Chronicle
In Wyoming, South Dakota and Texas, itâs the official state sport, and students in Tucson, Ariz., where your Back Story writer grew up, get a two-day ârodeo vacationâ each year. Other places, like Britain and the Netherlands, have banned rodeos over animal cruelty concerns.
[Professional American rodeo]( has timed events like steer roping and barrel racing, and âroughstockâ events â bareback riding, saddle bronc riding and, perhaps best known, bull riding. That requires staying on an [intensively bred bucking bull]( for an exhausting eight seconds.
âItâs like the 100-meter race in the Olympics,â [one rider said](.
Jennifer Jett, an editor based in Hong Kong, wrote todayâs Back Story.
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