Missteps, Confusion and ‘Viral Waste’: The 14 Days That . . . Within two weeks of President Trump’s return to the White House, U S A I D was on the cusp of oblivion On Inauguration Day, Mr Trump signed an order pausing foreign aid But its instructions
Missteps, Confusion and ‘Viral Waste’: The 14 Days That . . . But U S A I D had come through the first Trump administration largely unscathed, and Marco Rubio, the incoming secretary of state, was a longtime supporter A little after 4 p m , Mr Gray issued an upbeat memo to the agency’s more than 10,000 employees, telling them to expect a focus on innovation and new partnerships
The rapid dismantling of USAID. . . - The New York Times - Facebook A day after President Trump declared that Iran’s nuclear program had been “completely and totally obliterated” by American bunker-busting bombs and a barrage of missiles, the actual state of the program seemed far more murky, with senior officials conceding they did not know the whereabouts of Iran’s stockpile of near-bomb-grade uranium
Playbook: Trump, Iran and the known unknown - POLITICO BANNED AID: “Missteps, Confusion and ‘Viral Waste’: The 14 Days That Doomed U S A I D ,” by NYT’s Christopher Flavelle and colleagues: “A New York Times examination found that Trump
Confused Trump Forgets Names Again And Again In Supercut . . . Here are 3 minutes straight of Donald Trump confusing and forgetting people's names, the names of cities he is in and more pic twitter com OJSixOIBR9 The former president's cognition is under the microscope after a series of alarming reports
Missteps, Confusion and ‘Viral Waste’: The 14 Days That . . . U S Deploys B-2 Bombers as Trump Plans to Meet National Security Team — President Trump announced the United States had struck Fordo, Iran's heavily fortified nuclear facilities, as well as two other sites — Here are the latest developments — The United States has entered Israel's war against Iran +
A Letter Prompted Talk of AI Doomsday. Many Who . . . - WIRED In March a viral letter called for a pause on AI development, warning that algorithms could outsmart humanity—but many experts who signed on did not believe the technology poses an existential