Thursday 6 May 2021

Austin tice, an American ab ducked in Syria in 2012.

Case of journalist whom Trump tactics failed to free. The Trump administration  pushed hard to free Austin tice, an American ab ducked in Syria in 2012. The  central In telligence Agency formed a special cell to gather inteligenc, a powerful  persian Gulf Ally was enlisted to help and senior officials traveled to Damascus  to plead their voices to other highly unusual personal entratise.          None of it worked.    The kidnapping of Mr.Tice ,a journalist covering the Syrian wasr  who  was abducted in a Damascus suburb and is one of the longest -held American hostagea\s  abroad, has been an enduring  frustrating for government officials. They had found glimpse of hope over the years. Mr. Tice briefly escaped captivity shortly after he was kidnapped, according to two people familir with the episode -but he was recaptured. And during the Obama administration the C.I.A obtained a tantalizing piece of information :a Syrian documents indicating that it's government  had been holding Mr. Tice. Former officials  described it as a type  of judicial from, possibly showing a Prisoner or arrest number. It is not clear whether the United States or it's proxise ever confronted  Syrian officials with the document. Now the disappearance of  Mr. Tice presents a test for Biden administration  officials, whose willingness to resolve the Cas could run up against their reluctance to wade into the sort of unorthodox  diplomacy conducted  by Trump national security officials. Former president Donald J. Trump was so focused on Mr. Tice's safe return that the Syrian government had an in  centive to cut a generous deal to free him before Mr. Trump left office.With Mr. Trump's exit from office, hopes for Mr. Tice's release have begum to fade. "If the Syrians had Tice during the Trump administration, that was the time to give him up and get a lot in return, "said Andrew Tabrer, who served as the director for Syria  on the National Security Council  and later as a senior adviser to the U. S. Special envoy for  Syria. Mr. Tabler declined  to discuss the specifics or Mr. Tices case. Biden administration officials said they were committed to finding and rescuing Mr. Tice. The state Department disclosed this month that secretary of state Antony J. Blinken had spoken with the Tice family and made clear that the department had "no higher priority "than seeking his release, a department  official said. "I think that llinois Department of public health. In Arkansas about 84,000 people have missed their second shots, reaper senting 11 percent of those eligible for those shots, said .Dr Jennifer Dilahha the state epidemiologist. Workers recently begen calling people who are due or overdue for their second shots. Collage students pose a particular challenge. Many recently because eligible to be vaccinated and are getting their first shots, but they will have left campus by the time they are due for their second doses. In Pennsylvania health officials have instructions vaccine providers to give second doses to college student's even if they did not receive their first doses from those location.same vaccine providers have put on special clinics for people who need second doses. In South Carolina, the health started a program specifically for people who had receive their first Pfizer doses more than 23 days earlier but hadn't been able to find second shots. The state health department sent the health system 2,340 doses for the effort. Demand has been story. And tideland has only a few hundred  doses left. The majority of takers have been people who "ware having difficulty navigating Al the various  scheduling systems and providers ",said Gayle reseter, the health system chief  operation officer .In many cases, vaccine providers had canceled second -dose.

 appointments because of bad winter weather. "It was up to the individual to rechead them selves an a web portal or web platform, and that just became difficult for people, "Ms. Resetar said. There are rare cases in which people are supposed to forgo the second shot .'such as if they had an  allergic reaction  after their first shot.Zvi Ish-shalom, a religious studies professor from boulder, Colo., had planned to get fully vaccinated .Then, an hour after his shot of the Moderana  vaccine, he developed a headache that hasn't gone away more than a month later. There is no way to know for sure whether the vaccine triggered the headache.But after weighing what he saw as  the risks and benefits of a second dose,  Dr Ias shalom reached a decision about how to proceed. "At this point in time, I feel very clear and very comfortable, given all the various elements of this equation, to forgo the second shot, "he said. 

And balive and that it is our job to bring him home to his family ", said Roger D. Carstens, the state Department  hostage envoy who also  served in the post under Mr. Trump Mr. Carstens said the Biden administration  would remain focused on hostages -as well as to their families -that they.

Found reasons to hope over the years that Austin Tice may still be alive.

 Found reasons to hope over the years that Austin Tice may still be alive. In February 2017, Mike pompeo, then the C. I. A. Director, called Mr.Mamlouk to discuss the Tice case. The call was the highest -level contact between the government in years, but the Effort went nowhere. In August 2018, a senior C. I. A. official traveled to Damascus and met with Mr. Mamlock, raising the subject of Mr. Tice. Christopher C. Miller, the acting defense secretary under Mr. Trump, said he had director additional resources to finding Mr. Tice, though he would not describe those efforts in detail.

We were operation on the assumption that he was still alive",Mr. Miller said. American partners in the region took notice of the high -level interest. Tors learnd that he had initially been taken to a prison in Damascus and had been seen by a doctor,according to two people fimiler with the matter.Mr tice managed to escape for about a week but was recaptured, the people said. In 2016, thet intelligence community conducted an assessment on Mr. Tice ,conclusion that strong circumstance evidence suggest he was still alive only the Defense Intelligence Agency objected, on the grounds that the possibility of yearlong survival in a syrian prison was unlikely. The agency revised it's conclusion after other intelligence officials challenge it's analysis. After Mr.Turmp took office ,efforts to find and free Mr. Tice intensified.

The Trump administration made hostage rescues a top national security priority and successfully freed, by its count more than 50 Americans. An opportunity arose to try to learn about Mr.Tice in early 2017. An American consultant living in Beirut with ties to the Syrian government traveled to Damascus carrying a message from the U.S. Government asking for information about him, former American officials said. The consultant met with Ali Mamlouk the head of Syrian's National security Bureau intelligence service.former officials said they were hoping the meeting would result in the Syrian,s sharing proof that Mr. Tice was still alive and perhaps ultimately to a deal to release him. Though diplomatic relations between the United States and Syrian have been minimal since the United States closed it's embassy in Damascus in 2012 and and ordered the closure of the Syrian embassy in Washington in 2014, the Trump administration was also wiling to use senior officials to work directly for Mr. Tice,s release.

Thursday 29 April 2021

Hours visitors of our stage " Promised in its first strains however not often venerated in performance.

 Whats written in haste may also  bear paired in haste. Or so the nice and fleet new "Romeo & juliet" from Britain's National Theater, to be had on Sky TV and on PBSs "Great Performances" withinside the United States, convinces me. At ninety minutes, it's miles even shorter than the" hours visitors of our stage " Promised in its first strains however not often venerated in performance. (The complete play usually takes approximately 3 hours.) but as directed with the aid of using Simon God- win, this emotinally pleasing and distinctly theatrical filmed model rankings factor after factor even as whizzing beyond, or outright reducing, the factors that could make you believe you studied it became written now no longer with the aid of using Shakespeare however with the aid of using O, Henry on a bender. If the reducing simply left what re- manis with a miles better share of penetrating perception and effective feeling, that could be enough; " Romemeo and Juliet; at its best, anticipates the first-rate later works wherein complexity and ambivalence are made actual and terrifi in language. But the rate serves some other feature here: telling a tale thats normally approximately young adults with a teenage depth and reckless--ness. Not that the celebs are everywhere close to their adolescence. Though Romeo is 17 or so and Juliet, 13,Josh Oconnor, who performed mopey younger Prince Charles in"The Crown." is 30 and Jessie Buckley, the mysterious supermegacelebrity of" Im Thinking of Ending Things. "31. Still, there, s a motive theyre known as actors: They can carry out the acts a play calls for of them.Onstage at any rate, that could be sufficient. On flim, we want an additional push, Which Godwin and Emily Burs, who tailored the text, offer with the aid of using grounding us in a theatrical global earlier than escort- ingus right into a filmic one. The producting starts unceremoniously with the forged in Street clothes, coming into a theater, unmasked and vulnerable, none greater so than O Connor, with the low- slung, "sticky-out" aears he says earned him his position on " The Crown." Sitting on 3 facets of a small, square, scuffed gambling space, the actors are slightly beyond the greeting phase-O Connor and Buckley smile shyly at one an - different, as though throughout a Veronese piazza- while the play leaps out of the gate. Purists now no longer already angry will quickly have lots to set them off. The masked ball at which the fans meet isn't precisely courtly; its greater like a rave, and Romeo is given simply strains (rather than 10) to fall for Juliet, who's moaning on the mic like Lana Del Rey. But limpurists might be happy that the erotica depth among them is so Palpalble, even if Godwin dissi- Pates it with the aid of using reducing farfar from the theatrical second to a filmed montage in a few different dimension. Similarly, the advent of a passionate homosexual pair- ING many of the assisting roles makes up in thematic coherence--the plot activates forbidden love- what it lacks in cextual fidelity. The trade-offs. hold throughout. The maximum charming one unearths Julies mother and father inverted, Lady Capulet (Tam- sin Gerig) getting maximum of the strains Shakespeare wrote for her Lord (Lloyd Hutchinson). Greig, so humorous at the Showtime series "Episodes," is spes- tacularly entertain as she explores what except the routine declaration of male strength may encourage a Parent to threaten a daughter with expulsion. Her interpretation, underlined with the aid of using "evil" music, however denatured one key characteristic of the Play, which now indicates that the Capulet are mon- sters while the absolutely terrifying component is that theyre now no longer. They are upstanding residents doing whats expected. It is that environment of immutable custom and inherited hatred that the fans are determined to escape. But Godwins staging makes clean see with the aid of using Phys- ical Proximity and with the aid of using really appropriate inter.