Report: LeBron James expected to remain with Lakers

<p>-

  • Report: LeBron James expected to remain with Lakers</p>

<p>Field Level MediaJuly 17, 2025 at 1:32 AM</p>

<p>Apr 30, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) reacts during the first half in game five of first round for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images (Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images)</p>

<p>Despite an offseason of rumors and speculation, LeBron James is expected to remain with the Los Angeles Lakers in the 2025-26 season, The Athletic reported Wednesday.</p>

<p>The Lakers and James have not engaged in talks about a trade or buyout, and the NBA's all-time leading scorer is expected to report to camp with the Lakers this fall, per the report. There haven't been any signs, either, that James wants out.</p>

<p>James picked up his $52.6 million option last month to return for an eighth season with the Lakers.</p>

<p>He will be returning to a team this time around on which, for the first time in his career, he is the second option. Luka Doncic, acquired in a stunning trade from the Dallas Mavericks in February, is expected to be the centerpiece for Los Angeles in the upcoming season.</p>

<p>Apparently fueling the trade or buyout rumors is a statement made by James' longtime agent, Rich Paul, last month that included this line, "We do want to evaluate what's best for LeBron at this stage in his life and career."</p>

<p>Trading James, given his salary, would be difficult since NBA trades must be for players with contracts of similar value due to the salary cap.</p>

<p>The Lakers, according to The Athletic, also are reluctant to take on a player earning in the $50 million range if he has additional years on the contract. The Lakers will be free of James $52.6 million once his contract expires at the end of the upcoming season.</p>

<p>James, 40, is entering his record-setting 23rd NBA season. He has played in 1,562 regular-season games and is 50 shy of breaking Hall of Fame member Robert Parish's NBA record.</p>

<p>James averaged 24.4 points, 7.8 rebounds and 8.2 assists in 70 games in 2024-25 to rank in the top 22 in each category.</p>

<p>He is a 21-time All-Star, four-time league MVP and four-time NBA champion. He has scored a record 42,184 regular-season points, and 50,473 in the regular season and playoffs combined.</p>

<p>James entered the NBA as an 18-year-old after being selected No. 1 in the 2003 NBA Draft by the Cleveland Cavaliers. He turns 41 in December.</p>

<p>--Field Level Media</p>

<a href="https://ift.tt/ZXgdfF3" class="dirlink-1">Original Article on Source</a>

Source: "AOL Sports"

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Report: LeBron James expected to remain with Lakers

<p>- Report: LeBron James expected to remain with Lakers</p> <p>Field Level MediaJuly 17, 2025 at 1:...

Deadly Massachusetts fire highlights the minimal regulations that govern assisted-living facilities

<p>-

  • Deadly Massachusetts fire highlights the minimal regulations that govern assisted-living facilities</p>

<p>MICHAEL CASEY and MICHELLE R. SMITH July 17, 2025 at 1:30 AM</p>

<p>1 / 5Massachusetts Fatal Fire Fall RiverFlowers sit at a makeshift memorial in front of the Gabriel House assisted living facility, where a fire on Sunday killed several people, Wednesday, July 16, 2025 in Fall River, Mass. (AP Photo/Rodrique Ngowi)</p>

<p>The Massachusetts assisted-living facility where a fatal fire killed nine people was caring for dozens of aging residents reliant on wheelchairs and oxygen tanks, but it lacked the safety measures and most of the staffing requirements that are commonplace in nursing homes.</p>

<p>As an assisted-living center, Gabriel House in Fall River, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Boston, offered a type of housing for older residents that has expanded nationally in recent decades. But advocates argue that the absence of any federal regulations and spotty state rules mean the sector is largely left to police itself.</p>

<p>"The real issue is that assisted livings operate in an environment like the Wild West," said Richard Mollot, executive director of the Long Term Care Community Coalition, a nonprofit that advocates for improved care in nursing and assisted-living facilities. "They can pretty much do what they want with impunity, and that results in a lot of, I would say, mini-catastrophes every day, frankly."</p>

<p>The fire that tore through the three-story, 100-unit structure late Sunday raised a host of questions about conditions at the dilapidated facility and put the spotlight on the growing number of assisted-living centers in the state and nationwide.</p>

<p>Created in the 1980s, assisted living has been marketed as an option for older adults who need some assistance but not as much help as a nursing home. Advocates argue that regulations for the facilities have not kept up as more locations have opened. They also worry that the outlook could get worse with expected Medicaid cuts and the challenge of finding enough staff during an immigration crackdown.</p>

<p>"Unlike nursing homes, assisted living has no federal state requirements, no requirement for staffing, no requirements for staff training, no requirements for safety protocols, no requirements for inspections," Mollot said. "That falls to the states, and the states have overall very weak rules."</p>

<p>Nursing homes are subject to federal regulations</p>

<p>Nursing homes, for example, are governed by federal regulations because they receive Medicare and Medicaid. There are no federal regulations for assisted-living facilities. Nursing homes must have a minimum number of staffers and trained medical professionals such as doctors and nurses, but assisted-living facilities have no such requirements. In Massachusetts, both are required to have emergency plans, but assisted-living facilities are not required to update them annually.</p>

<p>"The regulations are minimal," said Liane Zeitz, an attorney who is also a member of the state Assisted Living Residences Commission, a body created to make recommendations about the sector. She has advocated for more regulations for assisted-living facilities.</p>

<p>The facilities were lightly regulated because initially they were regarded as residential housing, with lower levels of care and less oversight, she said. But now those facilities are caring for a population "that is much frailer, and the population is growing."</p>

<p>Not only are the regulations weaker for assisted-living facilities, but advocates argue that the enforcement of the existing rules is often lax.</p>

<p>Paul Lanzikos, a former Massachusetts secretary of elder affairs and co-founder of the advocacy group Dignity Alliance, described a "patchwork" of regulations across the country, with different agencies involved depending on the state.</p>

<p>"Some of the states are much more regulated. Some are regulated as a health care entity. Others, as we do here in Massachusetts, are considered a residential housing model," he said.</p>

<p>U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Massachusetts Democrat, has been advocating for increased oversight for years, particularly after the release of reports about health and safety problems in 2018.</p>

<p>"These are serious problems that have been going on for years," she said at a hearing last year. "But we hear so much less about what's going in assisted-living facilities than we do in other facilities, like nursing homes."</p>

<p>Massachusetts commission weighs reforms</p>

<p>In Massachusetts, lawmakers last year passed a package of bills aimed at improving long-term care and assisted-living facilities. A commission created by the legislation faces an Aug. 1 deadline to recommend policies to ensure facilities meet health and safety needs. But members said Tuesday that they may seek more time given the fire.</p>

<p>"We need to do a deep dive based on the investigation results with this facility, but also the facilities like this one," said state Rep. Thomas Stanley, who leads the Joint Committee on Elder Affairs.</p>

<p>In an interview, Stanley said he was concerned because Gabriel House was among the only 20 or so facilities serving a mostly low-income population — what he called affordable assisted-living facilities.</p>

<p>Unlike traditional assisted-living facilities that have any array of amenities and mostly rely on residents to pay around $15,000 a month, three-quarters of the residents at Gabriel House were on MassHealth, the state's Medicaid program. They paid $1,850 to $2,400 monthly for a studio apartment in a facility that was a motel decades ago.</p>

<p>"This fire would not have happened in one of the modern facilities," said Stanley, adding that one option would be to provide state funding to help lower-cost facilities upgrade or to create more housing options for the populations they serve.</p>

<p>Staffing was an issue before fatal fire</p>

<p>At Gabriel House, a former worker said staffing was always an issue, as was the pay that never rose above $10 an hour. At the time, one certified nursing assistant typically handled two of the six wings at the home, with each wing having about 15 residents Often, there would be three assistants on a shift and a fourth managing them.</p>

<p>"It was an issue for years before I worked there," said Wyntter Munroe-Myers, who worked at the home as a certified nursing assistant from 2014 to 2016. "The building is huge. To have four people that are supposed to be managing a whole building is almost irrational."</p>

<p>Jarren Oldrid, whose 67-year-old father, Steven, lived at Gabriel House for three years and is still hospitalized, said he often would not see staff members when he went to visit his father's third-floor room. He recalled that the building's elevator was recently out for as long as nine months, a major inconvenience for many residents who, like his father, were not mobile.</p>

<p>"The whole time the elevator was out, he was stuck in his room," Oldrid said. The only other option was carrying him down the stairs. If he did it himself, he would do it a few steps at a time, and it would take ages. So that never really happened."</p>

<p>The night of the fire, Oldrid recalled his father saying he never saw a staffer and that the first person he saw was a firefighter when he was rescued.</p>

<p>"The staff never made it upstairs to him from what he told me," he said. "No one banged on the door. No one said anything."</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>writers Holly Ramer in Concord, New Hampshire, and Matt O'Brien in Providence, Rhode Island, contributed to this report.</p>

<a href="https://ift.tt/ZXgdfF3" class="dirlink-1">Original Article on Source</a>

Source: "AOL General News"

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Deadly Massachusetts fire highlights the minimal regulations that govern assisted-living facilities

<p>- Deadly Massachusetts fire highlights the minimal regulations that govern assisted-living facilities</p> ...

D.C. United name Rene Weiler as head coach

<p>-

  • D.C. United name Rene Weiler as head coach</p>

<p>Field Level MediaJuly 17, 2025 at 2:12 AM</p>

<p>Sep 4, 2022; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; A general view of the MLS ball before the match between D.C. United and the Colorado Rapids at Audi Field. Mandatory Credit: Scott Taetsch-Imagn Images (Scott Taetsch-Imagn Images)</p>

<p>D.C. United named Rene Weiler as their new head coach on Wednesday, six days after firing Troy Lesesne.</p>

<p>Weiler, 51, has been managing clubs in his native Switzerland as well as Germany, Belgium, Egypt and Japan since 2009.</p>

<p>Most recently, he guided Swiss Super League side Servette FC to the Swiss Cup title in 2024. He took over as the club's sporting director in June 2024.</p>

<p>"Rene is a tactician with a proven ability to implement a clear and disciplined playing style, and to adapt that system to bring the best out of his players," D.C. general manager and chief soccer officer Ally Mackay said in a news release. "He builds teams that are organized, aggressive out of possession, and purposeful in attack. That style reflects the identity we're working to establish at D.C. United.</p>

<p>"His experience developing talent and demanding high standards makes him the ideal leader to guide this project. We're excited to welcome him to the club and fully support his vision for what this team can become."</p>

<p>Weiler's teams have won six titles, including the 2016-17 Belgian Pro League with Anderlecht and the 2019-20 Egyptian Premier League with Al Ahly.</p>

<p>"This is a club with a proud history and a passionate fanbase, and I believe strongly in the project taking shape here," Weiler said. "The foundation that has been put in place gives me real confidence in what we can build.</p>

<p>"There is important work ahead, but I'm excited to help lead D.C. United back to where it belongs, competing for championships."</p>

<p>Currently 13th in the Eastern Conference, the Black-and-Red are in danger of missing the MLS Cup Playoffs for a sixth straight season.</p>

<p>Lesesne compiled a record of 18-26-17 across all competitions before being sacked on July 10. Academy director Kevin Flanagan served as interim coach.</p>

<p>--Field Level Media</p>

<a href="https://ift.tt/ZXgdfF3" class="dirlink-1">Original Article on Source</a>

Source: "AOL Sports"

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

D.C. United name Rene Weiler as head coach

<p>- D.C. United name Rene Weiler as head coach</p> <p>Field Level MediaJuly 17, 2025 at 2:12 AM<...

Three current and former Louisiana police chiefs are federally charged in alleged visa fraud scheme

<p>-

  • Three current and former Louisiana police chiefs are federally charged in alleged visa fraud scheme</p>

<p>Marlene LenthangJuly 17, 2025 at 3:23 AM</p>

<p>Three current and former Louisiana police chiefs, a U.S. marshal and a businessman have been federally charged with participating in an immigrant visa fraud scheme, prosecutors announced Wednesday.</p>

<p>A federal grand jury in Shreveport returned a 62-count indictment against the five people on July 2, Acting U.S. Attorney Alexander Van Hook for the Western District of Louisiana said in a news conference Wednesday.</p>

<p>The police chiefs took bribes in exchange for filing false police reports that would allow noncitizens to seek a visa that lets certain crime victims stay in the U.S., Van Hook said.</p>

<p>The five defendants are: Chad Doyle, the chief of police in Oakdale; Michael Slaney, a marshal from the Ward 5 Marshal's office in Oakdale; Glynn Dixon, the chief of police in Forest Hill; Tebo Onishea, the former chief of police in Glenmora; and Chandrakant Patel, a businessman from Oakdale. They were each charged with conspiracy to commit visa fraud and other charges, prosecutors said in a news release.</p>

<p>Patel was further charged with one count of bribery, 24 counts of mail fraud and eight counts of money laundering.</p>

<p>Doyle and Dixon were further charged with six counts of visa fraud, six counts of mail fraud and one count of money laundering. Slaney was also charged with six counts of visa fraud, six counts of mail fraud, and two counts of money laundering. Onishea was additionally charged with six counts of visa fraud and six counts of mail fraud.</p>

<p>For a decade, from December 2015 to at least this month, prosecutors alleged Patel was a fixer who unlawfully procured nonimmigrant U-visas with the help of law enforcement officials.</p>

<p>The U nonimmigrant status visa is for victims of certain crimes who help law enforcement or government officials investigate those crimes. Part of the application process includes a signature of an authorized official or law enforcement agency confirming the individual was the victim of a qualifying crime, prosecutors said.</p>

<p>Individuals seeking U-visas would contact Patel to be named as "victims" in police reports of an armed robbery, so they could submit applications for U-visas, the indictment alleged.</p>

<p>Those individuals allegedly paid Patel thousands of dollars to participate in the scheme, and Patel would ask alleged co-conspirators Doyle, Slaney, Dixon and Onishea to write false police reports naming the individuals as victims of armed robberies, and provide certification and supporting documents, prosecutors said.</p>

<p>Together they "authored, facilitated, produced and authenticated false police reports" in several central Louisiana parishes, the news release said.</p>

<p>"There was an unusual concentration of armed robberies, a large number of armed robberies of people that were not from Louisiana," Van Hook said. "Well, in fact, the armed robberies never took place, and those listed in the applications were never victims."</p>

<p>Patel allegedly offered to pay an agent of the Rapides Parish Sheriff's Office $5,000 on Feb. 18, "intending to influence and reward said agent in exchange for a fraudulent police report," prosecutors said.</p>

<p>Van Hook said Patel allegedly paid the law enforcement officers $5,000 for each foreign national placed on police reports, and that were hundreds of such reports.</p>

<p>From Sept. 27, 2023 to Dec. 26, 2024, Doyle Slaney, Dixon and Onishea allegedly submitted false statements in immigration applications by signing I-918B forms despite knowing the individuals were never victims of crimes.</p>

<p>The investigation opened following a tip last July from Citizenship and Immigration Services, and was investigated by Homeland Security Investigations, the FBI and IRS, along with the U.S. Attorney's Office.</p>

<p>Van Hook said the men were arrested Tuesday by federal law enforcement agents and search warrants were executed at multiple locations including the Oakdale and Forest Hill police departments and a Subway sandwich shop in Oakdale operated by Patel. Officials said Wednesday all were released except Patel.</p>

<p>No attorneys were listed for the defendants in the online court docket. NBC News has reached out to the five men for comment.</p>

<p>The mail fraud charge stems from the five men sending out documents by the U.S. Postal Service.</p>

<p>If convicted the defendants each face up to five years in prison on the conspiracy charge, up to 10 years on the visa fraud charge, up to 20 years on the mail fraud charge, and Patel up to 10 years the bribery charge. They also could be ordered to pay a fine of $250,000 on each count.</p>

<p>The contributed reporting.</p>

<a href="https://ift.tt/ZXgdfF3" class="dirlink-1">Original Article on Source</a>

Source: "AOL General News"

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Three current and former Louisiana police chiefs are federally charged in alleged visa fraud scheme

<p>- Three current and former Louisiana police chiefs are federally charged in alleged visa fraud scheme</p> ...

After earlier defiance, House GOP aligns with Trump to move forward with crypto bills

<p>-

  • After earlier defiance, House GOP aligns with Trump to move forward with crypto bills</p>

<p>JAY O'BRIEN, JOHN PARKINSON, LAUREN PELLER and LALEE IBSSAJuly 17, 2025 at 1:56 AM</p>

<p>House Republicans on Wednesday followed directions from President Donald Trump to move forward with a package of legislation that includes three cryptocurrency measures -- a day after hard-liners defied the president and tanked it.</p>

<p>The House passed the procedural motion, 215-211 -- a day after the hard-liners failed to advance the measure. Still there was some drama as several Republicans voted against it before changing their votes.</p>

<p>The legislation has several other procedural hurdles before it advances out of the House.</p>

<p>On Tuesday, Trump said he made a deal with the Republicans who voted against the crypto bills -- CLARITY, GENIUS and Anti CBDC Surveillance Act.</p>

<p>Trump -- who has said crypto is a top priority for his administration -- said in a social media post on Tuesday that he met in the Oval Office with 11 of the 12 GOP members needed to pass the package and that they "all agreed to vote tomorrow morning in favor of the Rule." Trump did not provide specifics about the deal.</p>

<p>That conservatives who voted against the rule on Tuesday wanted the crypto bills combined into one big package, rather than take separate standalone votes on each measure.</p>

<p>Johnson on Tuesday thanked Trump for helping lock down the necessary votes to advance the crypto legislation.</p>

<p>"I'm thankful for President Trump getting involved tonight to ensure that we can pass the GENIUS Act tomorrow and agreeing again to help us advance additional crypto legislation in the coming days," Johnson said, referencing the name of one of the bills.</p>

<p>Earlier Tuesday, a dozen House Republicans bucked Trump and Johnson to prevent the legislation from advancing on the floor -- joining the entire Democratic caucus -- and, at least temporarily, freezing activity in the House. The final tally was 196-223.</p>

<p>Johnson had said earlier that while he anticipated that there may be enough opposition to defeat the effort, he felt that it was "important" to try to advance the bills. Republicans have a narrow majority in the House -- with 220 Republicans compared to 212 Democrats.</p>

<p>MORE: What to know about the GENIUS Act, a crypto regulation bill</p>

<p>Nathan Howard/Reuters - PHOTO: President Donald Trump raises his fist while boarding Air Force One, as he departs for Pennsylvania, at Joint Base Andrews, Md., July 15, 2025.</p>

<p>"This is the legislative process. We have some members who really, really want to emphasize the House's product," Johnson said. "They want to, want to push that and merge them together. We're trying to work with the White House and with our Senate partners on this. I think everybody is insistent that we're going to do all three, but some of these guys insist that it needs to be all in one package."</p>

<p>Trump touted the legislation on Tuesday, urging Republicans to advance the bills.</p>

<p>"The GENIUS Act is going to put our Great Nation lightyears ahead of China, Europe, and all others, who are trying endlessly to catch up, but they just can't do it," Trump posted on Truth Social Tuesday. "Digital Assets are the FUTURE, and we are leading by a lot! Get the first Vote done this afternoon (ALL REPUBLICANS SHOULD VOTE YES!)."</p>

<p>Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images - PHOTO: Speaker of the House Mike Johnson celebrates the passage of President Trump's spending and tax bill in the U.S. Capitol, July 3, 2025 in Washington.</p>

<p>MORE: Trump's sons distance themselves from new Trump-branded crypto venture</p>

<p>The vote came during what the White House is calling "Crypto Week" and marks a rare instance when House Republicans have defied Trump's direction.</p>

<p>Trump, who launched his own crypto meme coin earlier this year, recently said he is a "fan of crypto" and called it a "very powerful industry" that the U.S. has "dominated."</p>

<p>"I'm president. And what I did do there is build an industry that's very important," Trump said last month. "If we didn't have it, China would."</p>

<p>Once a crypto skeptic, Trump and his family have fully immersed themselves in the cryptocurrency marketplace, developing not only the $TRUMP meme coin, but also a bitcoin mining firm, a stablecoin firm and a crypto reserve.</p>

<p>ABC News' Sarah Beth Hensley contributed to this report.</p>

<a href="https://ift.tt/ZXgdfF3" class="dirlink-1">Original Article on Source</a>

Source: "AOL Politics"

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

After earlier defiance, House GOP aligns with Trump to move forward with crypto bills

<p>- After earlier defiance, House GOP aligns with Trump to move forward with crypto bills</p> <p>JA...

Russia launches 'massive' drone bombardment on Zelensky's hometown, Ukrainian officials say

<p>-

  • Russia launches 'massive' drone bombardment on Zelensky's hometown, Ukrainian officials say</p>

<p>Kathleen Magramo and Svitlana Vlasova, CNNJuly 16, 2025 at 11:39 PM</p>

<p>Smoke and flame rises following the Russian drone attack on the Vinnytsia region of Ukraine on July 16, 2025. Some of drones struck facilities of civilian industrial infrastructure. At least eight people were injured. - Vinnytsia Military Admin/Anadolu/Getty Images</p>

<p>Moscow barreled hundreds of drones toward four key regions in Ukraine overnight, just as lawmakers in Kyiv scrambled to approve additional defense spending against the backdrop of intensified Russian attacks over the past few days.</p>

<p>The Kremlin unleashed 400 long-range drones and one missile late Tuesday, according to Ukraine's Air Force – in what marked largest onslaught so far this week. Kyiv's forces intercepted or disabled at least 345 of those drones.</p>

<p>Russia's strikes pelted multiple cities late Tuesday – including parts of the Odesa region, Kharkiv, Vinnytsia, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's hometown of Kryvyi Rih.</p>

<p>Ukrainian troops have struggled to contend with one of the fiercest escalations by Russian forces since the full-scale 2022 invasion, with lawmakers in Kyiv supporting an initial amendment to boost army and defense spending. At the same time, Zelensky enacted a seismic cabinet reshuffle on Monday – after the US announced a fresh package of weaponry for the war-ravaged country.</p>

<p>'Most massive attack'</p>

<p>Kryvyi Rih, in central Ukraine, faced "the most massive attack … since the beginning of the war," said the head of the city's military administration, Oleksandr Vilkul, adding that it involved a ballistic missile and 28 drones. The onslaught sparked several fires and left parts of the city without electricity and water, he added.</p>

<p>Zelensky said Russia had targeted energy infrastructure in the city and that 15 people had been wounded there.</p>

<p>"Russia is not changing its strategy – and to counter this terror effectively, we need to systematically strengthen our defenses: more air defense systems, more interceptors, and more determination," Zelensky said in a post on X.</p>

<p>Ihor Terekhov, the mayor of the eastern city of Kharkiv, said his city was struck 16 times in just 14 minutes during the assault.</p>

<p>In Vinnytsia, southwest of Kyiv, eight people were injured and two infrastructure facilities caught fire during attacks.</p>

<p>Zelensky said response efforts are still underway in some of the regions targeted overnight.</p>

<p>Three deaths were recorded in Ukraine – one from shelling in the Sumy region and two in Kharkiv – over the previous 24 hours, with 38 people wounded, according to officials.</p>

<p>The next day, members of parliament voted to spend an additional 400 billion Ukrainian hryvnia ($9.6 million) on security forces, according to the former Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal. Separately, politicians also approved increased funding for defense equipment and machinery.</p>

<p>US changes tact</p>

<p>Russia's latest large-scale wave of attacks on Ukraine comes days after a policy shift from the US administration, and as President Donald Trump grows increasingly frustrated with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin.</p>

<p>Trump announced on Monday that Ukraine will receive Patriot missile systems via NATO as part of a new package of US weaponry, and threatened "secondary tariffs" on other countries that buy Russian oil, signaling an economically punitive stance towards Moscow.</p>

<p>Moscow is monitoring those Western long-range missile deliveries "very closely," according to Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov. He had warned earlier that Trump's threat of sanctions was "very serious," claiming that the US president addressed his Russian counterpart "personally" in his announcement.</p>

<p>Asked about the decision of US President Donald Trump to sell NATO weapons for further shipment to Ukraine, Peskov said: "This is business. There were deliveries before. No one stopped them. It's just a question of who pays for them. Now, some Europeans will pay for them."</p>

<p>Just on Tuesday, he warned that "such decisions, which are made in Washington, and in NATO countries, and directly in Brussels, are perceived by the Ukrainian side not as a signal for peace, but as a signal to continue the conflict."</p>

<p>Smoke and orange flames rise after a Russian drone attack on civilian infrastructure in the Vinnytsia region of Ukraine on Wednesday, as Moscow launched one of the most ferocious assaults this week. - Vinnytsia Military Admin/Anadolu/Getty Images</p>

<p>Once complimentary of Putin, Trump appeared angry that his overtures on ending the war have been mostly ignored in Moscow.</p>

<p>"My conversations with him are very pleasant, and then the missiles go off at night," Trump said, even as he denied falling into a trap set for his predecessors: "He fooled Clinton, Bush, Obama, Biden – he didn't fool me."</p>

<p>Meanwhile, a number of European foreign ministers welcomed Trump's Monday announcement.</p>

<p>"In order to have peace, we need to support Ukraine, and we need to put the pressure on Russia," Kaja Kallas, the EU's foreign affairs chief, said as she arrived at a meeting of European Union foreign ministers in Brussels on Tuesday.</p>

<p>"I also hope that Americans will move also with their sanctions package or tariffs, so that pressure is on Russia to really stop this war," Kallas added.</p>

<p>This story has been with additional developments.</p>

<p>CNN's Kevin Liptak, James Frater, Anna Chernova and Catherine Nicholls contributed to this report.</p>

<p>For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com</p>

<a href="https://ift.tt/ZXgdfF3" class="dirlink-1">Original Article on Source</a>

Source: "AOL General News"

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Read More >> Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Russia launches ‘massive’ drone bombardment on Zelensky’s hometown, Ukrainian officials say

<p>- Russia launches 'massive' drone bombardment on Zelensky's hometown, Ukrainian officials say</p>...

 

NOVA CELEBS © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com