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Steve Bannon guilty of criminal contempt of Congress

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Washington — Steve Bannon, Donald Trump’s one-time top campaign aide and chief White House strategist, has been found guilty of two counts of criminal contempt of Congress for refusing to comply with a subpoena for documents and testimony issued by the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

A jury of 12 Washington, D.C., residents convicted Bannon after less than three hours of deliberation. 

Bannon did not testify in his own defense and faces a maximum of one year in prison for each of the two counts. 

The Justice Department charged Bannon with contempt after the House of Representatives voted to send a criminal referral for his non-compliance for prosecution last year. 

Bannon pleaded not guilty, and what followed was a tumultuous legal battle between the defense and prosecutors over which evidence was admissible, Bannon’s efforts to postpone the proceedings, and the ongoing televised hearings showcasing the House Jan. 6 select committee’s evidence, which has referenced Bannon multiple times. 

The House committee, which wrapped up its final summer hearing on Thursday night, issued the subpoena in September 2021. The panel sought information from Bannon in 17 key areas, ranging from his communications with former President Trump to his knowledge of coordination between right-wing extremist groups in carrying out the Capitol attack.

Prosecutors told the jury that Bannon thought he was “above the law” and “thumbed his nose” at congressional demands, while Bannon himself did not testify and his legal team called no witnesses. 

The chief counsel for the Jan. 6 committee told jurors that it’s “very unusual” for witnesses who receive a congressional subpoena to outright fail to comply, as Bannon did. Kristin Amerling, one of two witnesses called by prosectors,  said the committee viewed its referral of Bannon to the Justice Department for criminal contempt of Congress as a “very serious step.” They warned Bannon that he could be charged with a crime, she said, but he did not comply. 

Bannon maintained at the time of his refusal that he could not testify because of executive privilege concerns raised by the former president. Amerling, however, said the committee never received notice from Trump about this obstacle to deposing Bannon, and the committee would not have recognized such a claim anyway.

In a surprising about-face days before the trial began, Bannon told the Jan. 6 committee that he would be willing to testify — publicly – after his attorney, Robert Costello, said Trump had reversed course on those executive privilege claims. 

The jury was allowed to hear about the reversal both in witness questioning and closing statements, but jurors were instructed by the judge that it had no bearing on Bannon’s earlier alleged refusal to comply. 

“Whether or not Mr. Bannon in the future complies with the subpoena is not relevant to whether or not he was in default in October,” Judge Carl Nichols told them. 

Prosecutors also called the FBI agent assigned to the case, who testified that Bannon had allegedly made multiple online posts indicating his decision not to comply with the subpoena, in order to “stand with Trump.”  

“Our government only works if people show up. It only works if people play by the rules. And it only works if people are held accountable with they do not,” prosecutor Molly Gaston said in closing arguments.

“The defendant choose allegiance to Donald Trump over compliance with the law,” she said.

But the defense team argued Bannon was innocent, that he thought conversations regarding the validity of Trump’s executive privilege claim were ongoing and flexible and that he had not willfully defied the congressional request. They told the jury he had possibly been “singled out” by the committee and Amerling because of politics.

“Even if you think in hindsight that path that Mr. Bannon took and the path that his lawyer took…turned out to be mistake,” attorney Evan Corcoran told the jury in his  closing statements, “it was not a crime.” 

“The entire foundation of the government’s case rests on Ms. Amerling,” the attorney added, accusing her of inaccuracies and later highlighting that Amerling and Gaston were former colleagues and part of the same book club. Amerling said they had no personal relationship, and the book club had no bearing on her testimony.  

Throughout the trial, but outside the presence of the jury, Bannon’s attorneys took issue with the judge’s pretrial rulings, among them, one that would prevent Bannon from saying he was just following the advice of counsel and that he believed executive privilege applied to his decision not to testify before the committee. The defense was also not allowed to call members of the House Jan. 6 committee as witnesses, which they said put them at a disadvantage because they were unable to probe the reasoning behind the subpoena and its deadlines. 

Bannon is the first of two Trump allies accused of criminally defying the Jan. 6 committee’s demands to stand trial. Former trade adviser Peter Navarro also faces two counts of criminal contempt of Congress. He pleaded not guilty and is set to stand trial in November.

Prosecutors declined to bring charges against two other former Trump White House officials who the House referred for contempt. Former White House chief of Staff Mark Meadows and adviser Dan Scavino were not charged with any crimes after the Jan. 6 committee said they did not adequately comply with a subpoena. 

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Russian Special Services: From Political to Mass Repressions

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So far repressions in Russia have only affected people who somehow stood out as citizens and individuals — people who were engaged in political activities or activism, or had the courage to express their opinion on Facebook. People who were not political, who did not express their position, who went to work, got a salary and kept silent were generally not affected.

But the war is not unfolding according to the scenario planned by the Russian president and his cronies. The reckless scheme to take Kyiv, put Zelensky in a cage, drive him through the streets to be tried by the international court of justice in the Donetsk People’s Republic Now failed.

So, I think that in the near future the security services will gradually turn from individual acts of political repression to mass totalitarian repression.

Maybe the scale will not at the level it was under Stalin, but it certainly will not be the same as in the 1960s and 1970s when only the dissident movement was suppressed.

Something happened recently that truly reminded me of the 1930s, and not metaphorically. At a meeting with Putin, the head of Rosfinmonitoring discussed possible reprisals against doctors who are recommending foreign-made drugs to their patients. There is information, he said, that in thirty regions of Russia doctors operate these schemes. He promised that the FSB will be brought in to work on the case. After people take Western-made drugs, their minds will apparently change and they will become a fifth column.

All of this tells us that there will be a new “doctors’ plot” like the one brought against hundreds of mostly Jewish physicians in Moscow under Stalin. This time it would affect at least thirty regions.

There are a lot of parallels. In the 1940s, after the war, Jewish doctors were not only accused of poisoning and killing Soviet leaders, they were accused of doing it on order from and in close cooperation with Joint, a charitable organization that has helped Jews all over the world throughout the 20th century. The only difference is that it was a Jewish conspiracy then and is a conspiracy of Western pharmaceutical companies now. You hear someone prescribing Bayer aspirin — what more proof do you need?

There is already unprecedented pressure on lawyers. Ivan Pavlov and his entire team, who specialized in espionage and treason cases, were forced to emigrate about a year ago. Now they’ve arrested Dmitry Talantov, who continued to work on these cases, including for the defense of journalist Ivan Safronov. This looks like the beginning of a mass secret services campaign against lawyers. Unfortunately, the legal community has yet to show unity.

The security services continue their repressions against the elites. Until 2012, the punishment for disloyalty or massive corruption was usually just loss of a job. But then this unspoken pact was broken, and in recent years repression has intensified. Even people who are at arm’s length from Putin and who serve him loyally are being subjected to unprecedented pressure. Central Bank head Elvira Nabiullina was targeted with a compromising video of her husband, Yaroslav Kuzminov. Oleg Mitvol was recently detained in Vnukovo, just as he seemed to be about to fly to his happy European future. He was not just some faceless official. He was the prefect of one of Moscow’s districts and did any public relations task requested by the Kremlin. Now he’s in jail.

Even if the war ends, there are no good scenarios in store for Putin and Russia. Sanctions will not be lifted, and international isolation will not end. Under these conditions, it is clear that repressions against their own elites will intensify in order to keep them in a state of submission and fear.

Unfortunately, nothing good awaits those who have left Russia either. The Russian diaspora is in the center of attention of the Russian security services. And this attention will not abate.

There will be more foreign agents and more criminal cases. And if someone has property or money in their accounts, they will come for that too. Everyone who emigrated for political reasons should register their property with another person; you can get a general power of attorney from the consulate.

That said, we know that there have recently been major expulsions from almost all Russian embassies in Western and Southern Europe. This means that the professional staffs of the intelligence services are now greatly reduced. But the Russian state still has enormous resources and means of intimidation. For example, they can collect information through their other organizations, such as Rossotrudnichestvo (the Federal Agency for CIS Affairs, Compatriots Living Abroad and International Humanitarian Cooperation). Everyone should be prepared for this.

In the emigrant community there may be agents recruited and informants. It is not clear what to do about it; we had very bad experience with this in the past. Russian emigrants saw everyone as agents and suffered from “spy mania.” As a result there was constant infighting. No one trusted anyone, and it was impossible to establish normal, healthy cooperation. We are between a rock and a hard place, and we must learn how to navigate through the situation: on the one hand, to be vigilant, and on the other, not to let an obsession with spies and suspicion overwhelm us.

We have all read books about the future where wars are fought in cyberspace, drones  destroy other enemy drones, and one side’s missiles destroy the other side’s missiles in outer space. But what we are faced with is old and unsophisticated but very effective physical methods of suppressing people. No virtual realities, no cyber-worlds. Just fear, attempts at intimidation, pressure on families, confiscation of property and imprisonment.

This article was originally published in Russian in Sapere Aude.

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Why the Saudis took no steps toward normalizing relations with Israel

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In this image released by the Saudi Royal Palace, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman greets President Biden with a fist bump after his arrival in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on July 15, 2022.

Joe Biden’s visit to Saudi Arabia did not exactly work out as the president perhaps had anticipated. His fist bump with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman won him no plaudits and much criticism back in Washington.

The Saudis challenged Biden’s assertion that he had raised the issue of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi with Mohammed bin Salman, who is widely regarded to have ordered Khashoggi’s  execution. Moreover, the Saudis made no promises regarding any increase in oil production.  And King Salman dashed any hope that Biden — and especially his Israeli interlocutors — may have nourished regarding the Saudis taking steps toward normalization with the Jewish state.

The Saudi king made it clear that there would be no normalization with Israel prior to its reaching an agreement with the Palestinians along the lines of the Saudi-inspired 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, which the Arab League endorsed that year and again in 2007 and 2017. The initiative calls for Israel to withdraw behind the lines that existed prior to 1967, as well as resolution of the Palestinian refugee issue, in exchange for a peace treaty.

The initiative would result in the displacement of hundreds of thousands of West Bank settlers, however. It also would result in Israeli withdrawal from East Jerusalem, which Israel considers to be an integral part of its capital. Biden rightly recognized it is unlikely that any variant of such an agreement could be reached in the foreseeable future. Instead he chose to focus on providing financial aid to the Palestinians. That was not enough for Salman to take even the most limited steps toward formal normalization of relations.

Salman’s hard-line stance appears to have surprised many Israelis, especially given the longstanding, though unacknowledged, security cooperation between the two countries. Indeed, the Saudi announcement that the kingdom would open its airspace to all comers, including Israeli aircraft, had further reinforced the notion among many Israelis, and Biden himself, that his trip would result in a significant step forward toward normalization. Nothing of the sort took place, however. The Saudis even asserted that their new open-skies policy had nothing to do with Israel at all.

It is nevertheless arguable that King Salman was not simply adopting a negative and obstructionist position. Had he been truly opposed to any Arab state having ties to Israel, he certainly could have prevented Bahrain, which is exceedingly sensitive to Saudi concerns, from joining the Abraham Accords. Manama recognizes that Saudi forces could once again cross the causeway that links the island to the kingdom’s eastern province, as Saudi armored vehicles did in 2011 to help quell riots that threatened the ruling Al Khalifa family. That Salman took no action in response to Bahrain’s joining the Abraham Accords is, therefore, a clear indication that he had no problem with other Arab states normalizing their relations with Israel.

Saudi Arabia is a special case, however. To begin with, Salman hardly is in a position to walk away from his own country’s peace initiative without any forward progress on the two-state front. Moreover, the Saudis could not be seen to be more accommodating toward Israel than Iraq, whose parliament, under the influence of Sh’ia politicians and their Iranian allies, passed legislation calling for the death penalty for anyone having any contacts with Israel.

There is yet another reason why the Saudi king may have felt constrained to deny any formal links with Israel. He could not be more forthcoming than Iran, Israel’s arch enemy and a vocal supporter of Hamas and other extremist Palestinian groups. Tehran poses not only a security challenge to Riyadh, as it does to Jerusalem, but also a religious challenge to Saudi control of the mosque in Medina, which is one of the two holy mosques for which Salman is custodian.

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Sh’ia ruled Medina for about 700 years, beginning in the 10th century and continuing into the 17th century. The Saudis have controlled Medina only since the 1920s. Were Saudi Arabia to move toward normalization without achieving a settlement of the Palestinian question, Iran, as putative leader of Sh’ia Islam, could challenge the legitimacy of Saudi custodianship of Medina — and perhaps of Mecca, as well.

Some in Israel speculate that once Mohammed bin Salman succeeds to the throne he will feel less reluctant than his father to move toward open relations with Israel. Whether he actually would do so, given the very real constraints that would confront any Saudi ruler, remains an open question. Moreover, Mohammed bin Salman has made many important enemies during his rise to power. While he likely will succeed his father, that is not a foregone conclusion. And a different ruler of the desert kingdom might prove as reluctant, or even more so, than King Salman to make peace with the Jewish state.

Dov S. Zakheim is a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and vice chairman of the board for the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He was under secretary of Defense (comptroller) and chief financial officer for the Department of Defense from 2001 to 2004 and a deputy under secretary of Defense from 1985 to 1987.

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AP Top News at 8:47 a.m. EDT

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Published Thursday, July 21, 2022 | 9 p.m.

Updated 31 minutes ago

Jan. 6: Trump spurned aides’ pleas to call off Capitol mob

WASHINGTON (AP) — Despite desperate pleas from aides, allies, a Republican congressional leader and even his family, Donald Trump refused to call off the Jan. 6 mob attack on the Capitol, instead “pouring gasoline on the fire” by aggressively tweeting his false claims of a stolen election and celebrating his crowd of supporters as “very special,” the House investigating committee showed Thursday night. The next day, he declared anew, “I don’t want to say the election is over.” That was in a previously unaired outtake of an address to the nation he was to give, shown at the prime-time hearing of the committee.

Jan. 6 takeaways: White House in chaos, unmovable Trump

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Jan. 6 committee closed out its set of summer hearings with its most detailed focus yet on the investigation’s main target: former President Donald Trump. The panel on Thursday examined Trump’s actions on Jan. 6, 2021, as hundreds of his supporters broke into the U.S. Capitol, guiding viewers minute-by-minute through the deadly afternoon to show how long it took for the former president to call off the rioters. The panel focused on 187 minutes that day, between the end of Trump’s speech calling for supporters to march to the Capitol at 1:10 p.m. and a video he released at 4:17 p.m.

White House tries to make Biden’s COVID a ‘teachable moment’

WASHINGTON (AP) — For more than a year, President Joe Biden’s ability to avoid the coronavirus seemed to defy the odds. When he finally did test positive, the White House was ready. It set out to turn the diagnosis into a “teachable moment” and dispel any notion of a crisis. “The president does what every other person in America does every day, which is he takes reasonable precautions against COVID but does his job,” White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain told MSNBC late in the afternoon on Thursday. It was a day that began with Biden’s COVID-19 results and included repeated assurances over the coming hours that the president was hard at work while isolating in the residential areas of the White House with “very mild symptoms” including a runny nose, dry cough and fatigue.

Ukraine, Russia set to sign deal on resuming grain exports

ISTANBUL (AP) — Russia and Ukraine were expected to sign separate agreements with Turkey and the United Nations on Friday that would allow Ukraine to resume grain shipments to world markets and Russia to export grain and fertilizers, ending a standoff that threatened world food security amid the war in Ukraine. Ukrainian and Russian military delegations reached a tentative agreement last week on a U.N. plan that would enable Ukraine to export 22 million tons of desperately needed grain and other agricultural products that have been stuck in Black Sea ports due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan planned to take part in the grain export signing ceremony in Istanbul.

School in east Ukraine hit by Russian strike, bodies found

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian emergency workers recovered three bodies from a school hit by a Russian strike in the east of the country, officials said Friday, as attacks continued in several parts of the nation. The reported casualties follow a barrage Thursday on a densely populated area of Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv, that killed at least three people and wounded 23 others. In a rare sign of light, the signing was expected Friday of an accord that would allow Ukraine to resume its shipments of grain across the Black Sea and Russia to export grain and fertilizers. Beyond that, however, there was no indication of relief from the grinding war.

Sri Lanka president gets long-sought win, steep challenges

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Six-times Sri Lanka’s prime minister, President Ranil Wickremesinghe had long aspired to the pinnacle of power, enduring setback after setback but always managing to recover from seemingly impossible defeats. He has moved quickly to consolidate his position since lawmakers elected him this week to finish the term of his predecessor, ousted President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. In the wee hours Friday, army troops and police forcefully cleared the capital’s main protest site of demonstrators who had occupied it for months, angry over the country’s economic collapse. On Friday, he appointed a classmate and ally of Rajapaksa, Dinesh Gunawardena, to be his prime minister and partner in rescuing the country from its predicament.

Lee Zeldin, GOP nominee for NY governor, attacked at rally

NEW YORK (AP) — A man accused of attacking U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin, the Republican candidate for New York governor, at an upstate event by apparently trying to stab the congressman was arrested and charged with attempted assault. “I’m OK,” Zeldin said in a statement after the assault Thursday. “Fortunately, I was able to grab his wrist and stop him for a few moments until others tackled him.” A Monroe County sheriff’s spokesperson said David Jakubonis, 43, was arrested after trying to attack Zeldin and was later arraigned on a charge of attempted assault in the second degree. He has been released without bail.

SKorea to lift ban on NKorea TV, newspapers despite tensions

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea plans to lift its decadeslong ban on public access to North Korean television, newspapers and other media as part of its efforts to promote mutual understanding between the rivals, officials said Friday, despite animosities over the North’s recent missile tests. Divided along the world’s most heavily fortified border since 1948, the two Koreas prohibit their citizens from visiting each other’s territory and exchanging phone calls, emails and letters, and they block access to each other’s websites and TV stations. In a policy report to new President Yoon Suk Yeol on Friday, South Korea’s Unification Ministry said it will gradually open the door for North Korean broadcasts, media and publications to try to boost mutual understanding, restore the Korean national identity and prepare for a future unification.

Monkeypox virus could become entrenched as new STD in the US

NEW YORK (AP) — The spread of monkeypox in the U.S. could represent the dawn of a new sexually transmitted disease, though some health officials say the virus that causes pimple-like bumps might yet be contained before it gets firmly established. Experts don’t agree on the likely path of the disease, with some fearing that it is becoming so widespread that it is on the verge of becoming an entrenched STD — like gonorrhea, herpes and HIV. But no one’s really sure, and some say testing and vaccines can still stop the outbreak from taking root. So far, more than 2,400 U.S.

Tomorrow’s ‘Top Gun’ might have drone wingman, use AI

FARNBOROUGH, England (AP) — Maverick’s next wingman could be a drone. In the movies, fighter pilots are depicted as highly trained military aviators with the skills and experience to defeat adversaries in thrilling aerial dogfights. New technologies, though, are set to redefine what it means to be a “Top Gun,” as algorithms, data and machines take on a bigger role in the cockpit — changes hinted at in “Top Gun: Maverick.” “A lot of people talk about, you know, the way of the future, possibly taking the pilot out of the aircraft,” said 1st Lt. Walker Gall, an F-35 pilot with the U.S.

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Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot hearings lay blame at Trump’s feet

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WASHINGTON, July 22 (Reuters) – After losing the 2020 election, Donald Trump ignored close allies who told him that his claims of widespread election fraud were untrue, and when the followers who believed his false accusations stormed the U.S. Capitol, he sat back and watched.

That was the narrative the U.S. House of Representatives’ select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack laid out in eight hearings over six weeks, which wrapped up with a study of the former president’s actions during the 187-minute assault on Congress by thousands of his supporters.

“President Trump sat at his dining table and watched the attack on television while his senior-most staff, closest advisors and family members begged him to do what is expected of any American president,” U.S. Representative Elaine Luria said. “President Trump refused to act because of his selfish desire to stay in power.”

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Some 18 months after the deadly assault, the hearings replayed video of rioters smashing their way into the Capitol, screaming “Hang Mike Pence” as they hunted the vice president who Trump had called on to overturn his election defeat.

They featured hours of testimony, some live and some recorded, from close Trump allies including former Attorney General Bill Barr, who dismissed Trump’s fraud claims as “bullshit,” and former White House staff including one who recalled an enraged president hurling plates, leaving ketchup running down a wall.

The hearings were intended to lay out a case that the Republican Trump violated the law as he tried, for the first time in U.S. history, to stop the peaceful transfer of power from one president to the next.

It is not yet clear if the Justice Department will bring charges against Trump, but the hearings appear to have somewhat hurt his standing with Republican voters. A Reuters/Ipsos poll completed on Thursday found that 32% of Republicans say Trump should not run for president in 2024 — a possibility he continues to flirt with publicly — up from 26% who said that at the start of the hearings. read more

Attorney General Merrick Garland this week declined to say whether the Justice Department would charge Trump. But he did not rule it out.

“No person is above the law in this country. I can’t say it any more clearly than that,” Garland told reporters on Wednesday.

Trump and his allies — including some Republicans in Congress — deny he did anything wrong and dismiss the committee of seven Democrats and two Republicans as politically motivated.

Congressional Republicans last year blocked a proposal by Democrats for a bipartisan commission on Jan. 6, similar to the one convened after the 9/11 attacks, leaving the power to pick members in the hands of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Republican Representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger joined the panel, which presented a scripted case without the verbal combat common in congressional hearings.

RIOT TRIALS CONTINUE

More than 850 people have been charged with joining in the riot, on a wide range of charges ranging from illegally entering restricted federal property to seditious conspiracy. More than 325 have pleaded guilty so far and the Justice Department has also scored multiple guilty verdicts in the cases of defendants who chose trial by jury.

In another high-profile case, prosecutors have charged Trump adviser Steve Bannon with contempt of Congress for refusing to answer a subpoena from the committee. Closing arguments in that case are expected on Friday. read more

The leaders and more than a dozen members of the right-wing Proud Boys and Oath Keepers have been charged with seditious conspiracy for their alleged role in organizing the attack, charges that carry sentences of up to 20 years in prison.

Still, critics have accused the Justice Department of not doing enough to investigate Trump or his inner circle for their efforts to overturn his election defeat.

But there are signs that the investigation appears to be broadening beyond the riot itself.

Under the leadership of the Matthew Graves, the U.S. Attorney in D.C. who was sworn in last fall, the department has started issuing grand jury subpoenas to electors in key battleground states, including some electors who signed bogus certificates certifying the election for Trump.

According to one May 5 subpoena seen by Reuters, prosecutors are seeking communications between electors and federal employees, “any member, employee or agent of Donald J. Trump.”

Kristy Parker, a former federal prosecutor now with the non-profit group Protect Democracy, said she believes there is enough evidence to warrant a criminal probe into Trump’s conduct.

“If DOJ ultimately decides that it isn’t going to pursue charges against Trump, someone is going to have to explain to the public,” Parker said in an interview. “Too much has come out now.”

Kinzinger said the committee would urge changes to laws and policies intended to head off future attempts to overturn election results. A bipartisan Senate group this week introduced new legislation that would make clear that the vice president does not have the authority to throw out election results.

Such reforms were vital to guard against a repeat of the chaos and bloodshed of Jan. 6, Kinzinger said.

“The forces Donald Trump ignited that day have not gone away. The militant, intolerant ideologies. The militias. The alienation and the disaffection. The weird fantasies and disinformation,” Kinzinger added. “They’re all still out there, ready to go. That’s the elephant in the room.”

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Reporting by Patricia Zengerle and Richard Cowan; Additional reporting by Sarah N. Lynch, Doina Chiacu, Moira Warburton and Rose Horowitch; Editing by Scott Malone and Daniel Wallis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Шойгу прилетел в Стамбул для подписания соглашения по украинскому зерну

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Министр обороны России Сергей Шойгу прибыл в Стамбул, сообщил турецкий телеканал Haberturk. В 16:30 мск там планируется подписание соглашения между Россией, Украиной, Турцией и ООН по вывозу украинского зерна из черноморских портов. От Украины в Стамбул приехал министр инфраструктуры Александр Кубраков, передает телекомпания TRT.

Церемония подписания соглашения пройдет во дворце Долмабахче. В ней также примут участие президент Реджеп Тайип Эрдоган и генеральный секретарь ООН Антониу Гутерриш. По данным Haberturk, документ подпишут министр обороны России и министр обороны Турции Хулуси Акар.

ТАСС со ссылкой на источники пишет, что в начале церемонии турецкий президент и генсек ООН вместе войдут в зал и сядут рядом друг с другом. Сначала с заявлением выступит господин Гутерриш, затем господин Эрдоган. После в зал пригласят Сергея Шойгу, Хулуси Акара и Александра Кубракова. Собеседник агентства отметил, что российский и украинский министры не будут находиться рядом.

Документ, который подпишет «четверка», будет регламентировать обязанности каждой стороны в отношении прохода сухогрузов из Черного моря в международные воды. «РИА Новости» писали, что контролировать проход судов по безопасным коридорам будет мониторинговая группа ООН. Турецкая Cumhuriyet сообщала, что этим займется координационный центр в Стамбуле.

Также представителям России, Украины, Турции и ООН необходимо решить, кто будет досматривать суда — в частности, для того, чтобы на них не провозили оружие. Украина не хочет, чтобы российские корабли заходили в ее территориальные воды, поэтому, ожидается, что досмотром будет заниматься Анкара.

Переговоры, предшествующие подписанию договора по украинскому зерну, прошли 13 июля. Тогда делегации от России, Украины, Турции и ООН также встретились в Стамбуле.

Об итогах прошедших переговоров — в материале «Ъ» «Что посеяли, то и в Стамбуле».


Еще больше новостей — в Telegram-канале «Коммерсантъ».

Дарья Эрозбек

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