Sunday, May 21, 2017

Sunday's Headlines: At the Pentagon, overpriced fuel sparks allegations — and denials — of a slush fund

Trump touts 'tremendous' deals with Saudis amid splashy debut on world stage; As Trump prepared for visit, Saudis blocked U.S. on terrorist sanctions; A GOP congressman from Kentucky wonders: Is 'this Trump thing' sustainable?; For Democrats, special elections may be preview of 2018 campaigns;
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
At the Pentagon, overpriced fuel sparks allegations — and denials — of a slush fund
The Pentagon has generated almost $6 billion over the past seven years by charging the armed forces excessive prices for fuel and has used the money — called the "bishop's fund" by some critics — to bolster mismanaged or underfunded military programs, documents show.
Trump touts 'tremendous' deals with Saudis amid splashy debut on world stage
In Saudi Arabia, the president signed a joint "strategic vision" that includes $110 billion in American arms sales and other new investments that the administration said would bring hundreds of thousands of jobs.
 
As Trump prepared for visit, Saudis blocked U.S. on terrorist sanctions
The White House was stymied on a plan to add the Saudi ISIS branch to a terrorist list.
 
A GOP congressman from Kentucky wonders: Is 'this Trump thing' sustainable?
Rep. James Comer returned to his district for the first time in a month, worrying that, for Republicans, the "wheels were falling off." Was Trump still popular here? Had he lost this part of Kentucky? As he braved town hall meetings during the congressional recess, he started to hear an answer.
 
@PKCapitol | Analysis
For Democrats, special elections may be preview of 2018 campaigns
Democrats have made a tactical decision not to turn the contests into a referendum on President Trump's alleged scandals and instead are focusing on policy decisions by the president and congressional Republicans.
 
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Opinions
 
I wrote ‘The Art of the Deal’ with Trump. His self-sabotage is rooted in his past.
 
I was in the CIA. We wouldn’t trust a country whose leader did what Trump did.
 
Trump or Congress can still block Robert Mueller. I know. I wrote the rules.
 
Israelis cheered for Trump. But they may miss Obama more than they expected.
 
We’ve gotten better at diversity. Now the challenge is inclusion.
 
It's time to focus — finally — on running the country
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More News
 
North Korea fires ballistic missile, South Korean officials say
In its latest weapons test, North Korea on Sunday launched a ballistic missile that flew more than 300 miles east from an area near Pyongyang, South Korea's military said.
After breach, humanity's 'doomsday' seed vault is still safe for now
Is the fact that some water seeped into the "fail-safe" seed vault no big deal? Or are we as a human race doomed to die, starving and cropless, in the event of global catastrophe? The answer is a bit more measured.
NBA Playoffs
Warriors' rout of Spurs underscores underwhelming quality of this postseason
Game 3 of the Western Conference finals continued what has become a consistent theme of these playoffs: a one-sided spectacle marred by the absence of a star player. 
The Fix | Analysis
The Seth Rich conspiracy shows how fake news still works
This week's reemergence of the conspiracy theory involving the slain Democratic National Committee staffer revealed plenty about the fake news ecosystem.
Baldwin, Johansson lead SNL's White House team in singing 'Hallelujah'
"Saturday Night Live" started its season finale with a callback to its serious post-election cold open.
Anderson Cooper apologizes for conjuring an unsavory image of Donald Trump
"It was unprofessional," the CNN host said of the exchange with conservative pundit Jeffrey Lord that evoked an image of the president, his desk and the call of nature.
The Switch | Perspective
The MP3 may have been abandoned, but your files are going to be just fine
The "death" of the MP3 is really not much of a death at all. Still, some nostalgia is understandable: The MP3 changed the way we listened to music as it liberated people from tapes and compact discs.
News quiz: 10 questions from a busy, turbulent week
A lot happened in the past week. See how well you paid attention to the news, and earn more points for quickly providing the correct answers.
Food
How America ruined breakfast
Virtually all boxed cereals have a sugar problem, and it's not just the sweetener.
Food
Quick and easy recipes for the grill
You don't need hours to grill a great meal. Just use these ideas from the Recipe Finder.
Wellness
Confused about what's healthy?
Despite (or perhaps because of) a flood of information, Americans get a failing grade in nutrition literacy.
 
     
 
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