Hegseth defends use of troops to protect immigration raids in Los AngelesNew Foto - Hegseth defends use of troops to protect immigration raids in Los Angeles

WASHINGTON (AP) —Defense Secretary Pete Hegsethdefended his decision to ordertroops to provide securityduring federal immigration raids in Los Angeles, telling senators on Wednesday it's about "maintaining law and order." Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., condemned the move as illegal, saying it erodes military readiness and questioning how it is being funded. It was the second day of harsh congressional questioning for Hegseth on the deployment of troops over the objections of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, continued military aid to Ukraine, a deal on a gifted Qatari jet and more. "The mission in Los Angeles, as you know well, sir, is not about lethality," Hegseth said in response to questions. "It's about maintaining law and order on behalf of law enforcement agents who deserve to do their job without being attacked by mobs of people." The exchange underscored confusion about the deployment ofmore than 4,000 National Guard troopsand 700 Marines to provide security at the immigration protests and operations in Los Angeles. Photos have shown Guard troops setting a security perimeter around agents as they make arrests in the city, moving them closer to law enforcement functions, which by law they are not allowed to do. About 2,000 of the Guard soldiers are in place in Los Angeles, initially sent to provide security. The Marines are at a nearby base and have not yet been used. Democrats press Hegseth on use of troops in US cities Speaking at a Senate defense appropriations subcommittee hearing, Reed said law and order is a civil function, not a job for the U.S. military. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., added that the California deployment, along with President Donald Trump's threat to use force against protesters at the Army's 250th anniversary parade on Saturday, "should stop every one of us cold." She added that "threatening to use our own troops on our own citizens at such scale is unprecedented. It is unconstitutional. And it is downright un-American." Asked later what constitutional authority the department is using to deploy active duty Marines to the protests, Hegseth said he didn't know the specific provision but would provide it. Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who was testifying alongside Hegseth, was asked whether he sees evidence of "rebellion" in the U.S. That could be used to invoke the Insurrection Act to use the military for law enforcement functions. "There are definitely some frustrated folks out there," Caine said in response. Answering the same question, Hegseth repeated Trump's argument that "there has been an invasion" of migrants entering the country without legal permission, and he said the protests in Los Angeles could spread to other areas. Caine, asked if he believes the U.S. is being invaded by a foreign power, said, "I don't see any foreign, state-sponsored folks invading, but I'll be mindful of the fact that there have been some border issues." Lawmakers raise concerns about continuing US support for Ukraine Hegseth also faced bipartisan criticism for failing to provide details about theadministration's first proposed defense budgetand over an array of other decisions he's made during his tenure. The panel's chairman, Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other senators expressed frustration that Congress has not yet gotten a full defense budget from the Trump administration and that the current level does not have the U.S. spending enough on defense. McConnell also noted that the limited budget request that lawmakers have received has no funding for Ukraine security assistance, questioning whether that makes "lasting peace" more or less likely. Hegseth, in his opening remarks, said the department needed more time to pull a spending plan together but that he has moved quickly to kill wasteful programs and redirect funding to Trump's priorities. Hegseth said a negotiated peace in Ukraine makes America look strong, even though Russia is the aggressor. He said the budget includes hard choices and "reflects the reality that Europe needs to step up more for the defense of its own continent. And President Trump deserves the credit for that." Hegseth said some U.S. security spending for Ukraine is still in the pipeline, but he provided no details. Hegseth confirms no deal has been signed for the Qatari jet Hegseth repeatedly refused to provide details on plans for the Defense Department to accept a 747 jet offered by Qatar for use as Air Force One. He said budgeting and schedules forsecurity upgrades to turn the planeinto the president's aircraft are classified. Hegseth confirmed reports that the Qataris have not come to an agreement with the Trump administration over a memo that would allow the military to take possession of the aircraft. That also means no contracts have been signed to move forward on overhauling the Qatari jet. He refused to answer questions on the cost or potential timeframe of that upgrade — even though data on two other 747s being reconditioned by Boeing to serve as Air Force One is public. "A memorandum of understanding remains to be signed," Hegseth said. ___ AP writer David Klepper in Washington contributed to this report.

Hegseth defends use of troops to protect immigration raids in Los Angeles

Hegseth defends use of troops to protect immigration raids in Los Angeles WASHINGTON (AP) —Defense Secretary Pete Hegsethdefended his decisi...
Trump's EPA wants to repeal regulations on carbon emissions from power plantsNew Foto - Trump's EPA wants to repeal regulations on carbon emissions from power plants

The Environmental Protection Agency announced Wednesday that it will aim to eliminate existing limits on greenhouse gas emissions from coal- and gas-fired power plants, a move that would curb the agency's ability to combat climate change under the Clean Air Act. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said in a news conference that Biden-era carbon pollution standards for power plants "suffocate" the economy in order to protect the environment. Zeldin, who was appointed by President Donald Trump in January, stated that the agency's announcement was a huge step forward in energy dominance for the U.S., while promising that no power plants would emit more than they already do. Currently, the power sector accounts for a quarter of all U.S. emissions, according to thelatest EPA emissions data. Zeldin also said the EPA plans to weaken Biden-era regulations on mercury emissions from power plants. Environmental advocates say the EPA's proposal is an escalation in the Trump administration's ongoing push against climate action across federal agencies, including at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Department of Energy and the National Weather Service. In 2024, the Biden administrationfinalizedthe most stringent carbon pollution standards for power plants to date in an effort to tackle the climate crisis — but now, those rules face an uncertain future. Gina McCarthy, a former EPA Administrator under President Joe Biden, called Zeldin's announcement a "political play" that defies "decades of science and policy review" in a statement on Wednesday. "By giving a green light to more pollution, his legacy will forever be someone who does the bidding of the fossil fuel industry at the expense of our health," McCarthy said. Jill Tauber, the vice president of litigation for climate and energy at Earthjustice, a nonprofit currently suing the Trump administration over several environmental rollbacks said: "Eliminating pollution standards from the largest industrial source of greenhouse gas pollution in the United States flies in the face of what the law requires, what the science tells us, and what we're seeing every day." Power plants in the U.S. are a huge contributor to global carbon emissions. Areportpublished by the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law found that if the U.S. power sector were its own country, it would be the sixth-largest emitter in the world. Under the first Trump administration, the EPA rolled back several Obama-era greenhouse gas standards on power plants, but this recent announcement marks the first time the agency has suggested outright repeals. Zeldin's move on power plants followshis promise in Marchto tackle the "climate change religion" by reconsidering or repealing 31 regulations surrounding tailpipe emissions, coal ash regulations and oil and gas wastewater management. The proposed rule, which will now move into its comment period, will face scrutiny from legal advocates and environmental nonprofits like Earthjustice and the Natural Resources Defense Council, which say the EPA is obligated to regulate greenhouse gas emissions by law — citing seminal cases like the 2007 Massachusetts v. EPA lawsuit, which determined that greenhouse gases must be regulated by the EPA under the Clean Air Act. "We'll be watching closely to see if the EPA proceeds with repealing these life-saving standards based on a legal theory that doesn't pass the laugh test," said Meredith Hawkins, the federal climate legal director at the Natural Resources Defense Council. "The NRDC stands ready to defend the public's right to breathe in court if needed." Cutting historic limits on greenhouse gas emissions from power plants would impact global climate change, but it could also cause ripple effects on human health and the economy. Harvey Reiter, an energy and utilities lawyer and a law professor at George Washington University, says that if the EPA moves forward with its planned repeals, he expects some energy companies and utilities that have retooled operations and made long-term investments in renewable energy to sue the Trump administration. "The biggest impacts of the proposed rules are uncertainty and instability," he said. "Nobody knows what to do next. It makes investment decisions harder. It makes decisions about hiring, staff and employees harder. It creates a lot of uncertainty in the market." Greenhouse gas emissions from power plants are not just a climate issue. Burning fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide as well as other air pollutants, including nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, mercury and fine particulate matter, which are linked to increased risk of respiratory issues and cardiovascular disease. Regulating carbon emissions from power plants broadly reduces other air pollution for communities living near power plants, said Laura Kate Bender, the vice president of nationwide advocacy and public policy at the American Lung Association. "It works both ways. On the one hand, power plants burning fossil fuels contribute to climate change and cause health problems at the same time," said Bender. "And then climate change, in many cases, contributes to extreme heat, or more wildfire smoke, or more ozone smogs. Climate change is a health emergency, and cutting carbon in the power sector is a critical tool in the toolbox for fighting climate change."

Trump’s EPA wants to repeal regulations on carbon emissions from power plants

Trump's EPA wants to repeal regulations on carbon emissions from power plants The Environmental Protection Agency announced Wednesday th...
NCAA will allow coaches' challenges in men's and women's basketballNew Foto - NCAA will allow coaches' challenges in men's and women's basketball

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — College basketball coaches will be able to challenge officials' calls next season for the first time, and the NCAA also said there is "positive momentum" toward switching the men's game from halves to quarters. The NCAA announced several minor rule changes Tuesday that affect both men's and women's basketball. Men's coaches will be able to challenge out-of-bounds calls, basket interference or goaltending, and whether a secondary defender was in the restricted area. Coaches will get at least one challenge per game but must have a timeout to use one. A successful challenge means a coach gets another one; if the challenge is unsuccessful, the coach may not challenge another call. On the women's side, coaches will be able to challenge out-of-bounds calls, backcourt violations, whether the correct player was called for a foul and whether a change in possession occurred before the ruling of a foul that leads to free throws. Women's coaches won't need a timeout to challenge a call, but an unsuccessful challenge would lead to a technical foul for the excessive timeout. The women's game already is played in quarters instead of halves, while the men's game with its 20-minute halves remains an outlier in basketball. An NCAA rules committee "recommended NCAA Division I conferences create a joint working group to provide feedback on the potential change from halves to quarters." On the men's side, the NCAA also implemented several points of emphasis for officials that it said would "improve the flow of the game." Those include telling officials "to address delay-of-game tactics, limit time spent at the monitor, improve game administration efficiency and reduce physicality." Officials also will have the option to call a Flagrant 1 foul for contact to the groin area. Previously, such contact could only be called a common foul or a Flagrant 2 foul, which triggers an ejection of the offending player. ___ AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

NCAA will allow coaches' challenges in men's and women's basketball

NCAA will allow coaches' challenges in men's and women's basketball INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — College basketball coaches will be able ...
Colorado Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar wins Norris Trophy after 30-goal seasonNew Foto - Colorado Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar wins Norris Trophy after 30-goal season

Colorado AvalanchedefensemanCale Makaris the winner of the Norris Trophy for the second time in his career after setting franchise records in goals and points by a blueliner. He topped theColumbus Blue Jackets' Zach Werenski andVancouver Canucks' Quinn Hughes in voting by the Professional Hockey Writers Association. Makar won his first award in 2021-22. He opened the season with a 13-game point streak, second-longest by a defenseman in NHL history behind Bobby Orr's 15, and went on to lead defensemen in goals (30), assists (62) and points (92). He became the first defenseman to reach the 30-goal mark since Mike Green in 2008-09. Makar received 176 first-place votes and 1,861 total points. Weresnki had 13 first-place votes and 1,266 points, and Hughes, last year's winner, had two and 918. Makar was surprised with the award during a golf outing. Halfway to fore. 🏌A golf outing with friends turned into a surprise party to celebrate Cale Makar's second James Norris Memorial Trophy! 👏Watch the 2025#NHLAwardsbefore Game 4 of the#StanleyCupFinal on June 12 at 6p ET on@NHL_On_TNTand@Sportsnet!pic.twitter.com/UVKkLsLObQ — NHL (@NHL)June 11, 2025 The NHL will announce the winners of the Hart Trophy (MVP to his team) and Vezina Trophy (goaltender) during an hourlong televised show on June 12 (6 p.m. ET, TNT) before Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final. Hart Trophy finalistsare Leon Draisaitl, Edmonton Oilers;Connor Hellebuyck, Winnipeg Jets; andNikita Kucherov, Tampa Bay Lightning Vezina Trophy finalistsare Hellebuyck;Darcy Kuemper, Los Angeles Kings; andAndrei Vasilevskiy, Lightning Ted Lindsay Award (most outstanding player):Nikita Kucherov,Tampa Bay Lightning Jack Adams Award (coach):Spencer Carbery,Washington Capitals. Calder Trophy (rookie):Lane Hutson, Montreal Canadiens Selke Trophy (defensive forward):Aleksander Barkov, Florida Panthers Masterton Trophy (perseverance):Sean Monahan,Columbus Blue Jackets King Clancy Trophy (humanitarian contribution):Barkov Mark Messier Leadership Award: Alex Ovechkin, Washington Capitals This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar wins second Norris Trophy

Colorado Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar wins Norris Trophy after 30-goal season

Colorado Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar wins Norris Trophy after 30-goal season Colorado AvalanchedefensemanCale Makaris the winner of the ...
Trump administration launches review of Biden-era defense pact with Australia, UKNew Foto - Trump administration launches review of Biden-era defense pact with Australia, UK

By Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump's administration has launched a formal review of a defense pact that former President Joe Biden made with Australia and the United Kingdom allowing Australia to acquire conventionally armed nuclear submarines, a U.S. defense official told Reuters. The launch of the formal, Pentagon-led review is likely to alarm Australia, which sees the submarines as critical to its own defense as tensions grow over China's expansive military buildup. It could also throw a wrench in Britain's defense planning. AUKUS is at the center of a planned expansion of its submarine fleet. "We are reviewing AUKUS as part of ensuring that this initiative of the previous administration is aligned with the President's America First agenda," the official said of the review, which was first reported by Financial Times. "Any changes to the administration's approach for AUKUS will be communicated through official channels, when appropriate." AUKUS, formed in 2021 to address shared worries about China's growing power, is designed to allow Australia to acquire nuclear-powered attack submarines and other advanced weapons such as hypersonic missiles. Vocal skeptics of the AUKUS deal among Trump's senior policy officials include Elbridge Colby, the Pentagon's top policy advisor. In a 2024 talk with Britain's Policy Exchange think-tank, Colby cautioned that U.S. military submarines were a scarce, critical commodity, and that U.S. industry could not produce enough of them to meet American demand. They would also be central to U.S. military strategy in any confrontation with China centered in the First Island Chain, an area that runs from Japan through Taiwan, the Philippines and on to Borneo, enclosing China's coastal seas. "My concern is why are we giving away this crown jewel asset when we most need it," Colby said. The Australian and UK embassies in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The U.S. National Security Council also did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Only six countries operate nuclear submarines: the U.S., the UK, Russia, China, France and India. AUKUS would add Australia to that club starting in 2032 with the U.S. sale of Virginia-class submarines. Before that, the U.S. and Britain would start forward rotations of their submarines in 2027 out of an Australian naval base in Western Australia. Later, Britain and Australia would design and build a new class of submarines, with U.S. assistance, with the first delivery to the UK in the late 2030s and to Australia in the early 2040s. Although Australia has declined to say ahead of time whether it would send the submarines to join U.S. forces in any conflict between the U.S. and China, Colby noted Australia's historic alliance with Washington, including sending troops to Vietnam. "I think we can make a decent bet that Australia would be there with us in the event of a conflict," Colby said last year. Speaking in Congress on Tuesday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said "we're having honest conversations with our allies." On Australia, Hegseth said: "We want to make sure those capabilities are part of how they use them with their submarines, but also how they integrate with us as allies." (Reporting by Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali, Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom in Washington and Mrinmay Dey in Bengaluru; Editing by Don Durfee and David Gregorio)

Trump administration launches review of Biden-era defense pact with Australia, UK

Trump administration launches review of Biden-era defense pact with Australia, UK By Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Pres...
US prepares to order departure of all nonessential staff from Baghdad embassy, officials sayNew Foto - US prepares to order departure of all nonessential staff from Baghdad embassy, officials say

WASHINGTON (AP) —The State Departmentis preparing to order the departure of all nonessential personnel from the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad due to the potential for regional unrest, two U.S. officials said Wednesday. The Baghdad embassy has already been on limited staffing, and the order will not affect a large number of personnel, but the department also is authorizing the departure of nonessential personnel and family members from Bahrain and Kuwait. That gives them an option on whether to leave the country. The Pentagon is standing by to support a potential evacuation of U.S. personnel from U.S. Embassy Baghdad, another U.S. official said. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to detail plans that had not been made public. ___ Follow the AP's coverage of the U.S. Department of State athttps://apnews.com/hub/us-department-of-state.

US prepares to order departure of all nonessential staff from Baghdad embassy, officials say

US prepares to order departure of all nonessential staff from Baghdad embassy, officials say WASHINGTON (AP) —The State Departmentis prepari...
With World Cup looming, these scientists are trying to create the perfect grassNew Foto - With World Cup looming, these scientists are trying to create the perfect grass

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — From thrilling goals to devastating knockout defeats, every four years the FIFA World Cup electrifies the globe. And in one year, 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off with the United States, Canada and Mexico co-hosting an unprecedented event. The tournament, which could feature the likes of superstars Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, will mark the first time three countries co-host across 16 different cities, making for what FIFA sees as the most complex World Cup in history. "Whether they're playing Seattle or Guadalajara, I need these pitches to behave absolutely the same. I want the same bounce. I want the same volleyball action from the players into the grass," said FIFA senior pitch management manager Alan Ferguson, who wants every team to play on a consistent surface, whether it's keeping cool in the Pacific Northwest, at altitude in Mexico City or sweating it out in Miami. "The safety aspect is everything. It's paramount. That has to be my first thought," Ferguson said in an interview at the facility at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, where UT researchers, working with Michigan State University, have been helping FIFA finalize how each venue will prepare its pitch for tournament play. "They need to have confidence if they turn right sharply, left sharply, they have to know that the ground is going to stay where it is," he said. That's not so simple when you're dealing with over a dozen venues that host the NFL to concerts to monster trucks. U.S. venues are likely to face extra scrutiny after last summer's Copa América tournament, in which pitch conditions drew public criticism from players such as Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez, who called the temporary grass field at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta a "disaster." "It's definitely upped the stakes, there's no doubt about that," Ferguson said about the fallout from last year's tournament featuring the 16 best teams from North, Central and South America, as well as the Caribbean. "The research was already happening. What we were able to observe at Copa was more traditional, provisional for international soccer pitches. Because your stadiums are so busy here, they are a multi-event business plan, and they flip in and out from event to event. It's not possible to put a traditional soccer field in there," said Ferguson, adding that with the research leading up to this summer's Club World Cup and next year's marquee event, "I'm quietly confident we're heading in the right direction." U.S. stadiums have been at the heart of theartificialturf-natural grassdebateover safety for years. Next summer, all venues will use a natural grass-artificial stitching blend with a focus on what's beneath the turf in addition to the playing surface itself. In April, NBC News was granted exclusive access to the Knoxville facility where researchers led by Professor John Sorochan have been solving for that issue. The team has studied artificial stitching, layering below the grass, root growth, grow light use and other details to ensure each pitch's consistency, whether outdoors or inside. Sorochan, professor of turfgrass science and management, said the secret sauce will include Bermuda grass for the warm season venues and perennial rye mixed with Kentucky blue grass for the cool season venues, as well as the indoor venues. There are also drainage layer recommendations for the indoor venues, which Sorochan said will also help with the pitches' firmness. "A lot of these in here are failures," Sorochan said as he showed us around a grid filled with dozens of grass plots marked by a variety of variables. Some had stitched fibers, making the playing surface firmer. Some sat on top layers simulating what may already be inside a World Cup venue, such as aluminum concert flooring or artificial turf. The team has a facility simulating an indoor stadium's growing conditions. There's even the fLEX machine, which tests the impact on a player's ankle by pushing a soccer shoe into the turf. Seemingly, no piece of data is irrelevant. "We can see how fast the ball comes in and out. We can break down all the film and know exactly the speed and angle and coefficient restitution that comes off of that ball," said Sorochan, standing over a machine that looks like it could be used to launch American footballs for punt return practice. Ferguson said: "It's a science behind the game. And that's what makes the game."

With World Cup looming, these scientists are trying to create the perfect grass

With World Cup looming, these scientists are trying to create the perfect grass KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — From thrilling goals to devastating knock...

 

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