Saturday, November 11, 2017

Saturday's Headlines: U.S. soldier in Niger ambush was bound, apparently executed, villagers say

 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
U.S. soldier in Niger ambush was bound, apparently executed, villagers say
The body of La David Johnson, one of four U.S. soldiers killed by Islamist militants last month, was found with his arms tied behind his back and had a large gaping wound in the back of his head, according to two villagers who saw his body. The new information raises questions about whether he was captured and killed after the attack, and it could help explain why it took two days to find Johnson's body.
2 GOP senators pull support for Roy Moore after he doesn't deny dating teens when in his 30s
The Senate candidate from Alabama said in a radio interview that he never knew the woman who accused him of sexual contact in 1979, when she was 14, but he did not rule out the possibility that he may have dated teen girls when he was in his 30s.
 
Trump says U.S. won't be 'taken advantage of anymore.' Then Pacific Rim nations reach trade deal without U.S.
The deal to move ahead with the Trans-Pacific Partnership free-trade pact, which President Trump threw into question when he withdrew from it earlier this year, represents a rebuke of Trump near the end of his 12-day Asia trip.
 
'Better to die in combat than in hunger': Rescued from war, South Sudan's child soldiers are going back
In 2015, during a lull in the country's civil war, 1,775 boys promised the United Nations that their lives as combatants had ended. Two years later, the boys are returning to the battlefield, and the United Nations' hopes of ending the global problem of underage fighters are fading.
 
EPA is taking more advice from industry — and ignoring its own scientists
On pesticides, chemical solvents and air pollutants, Administrator Scott Pruitt and his deputies are using industry figures to challenge past findings and recommendations of the agency's own researchers.
 
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Opinions
 
Bannon is right: It's no coincidence The Post broke the Moore story
 
Democrats, cut the cheer
 
The GOP tries to trade polar bears for tax cuts
 
Here's an idea, Republicans: Repeal and replace the tax code
 
For the love of God, don't bring guns to church
 
How low will the GOP sink?
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More News
 
FBI database for gun buyers missing millions of records
Agencies responsible for records of criminal convictions, mental illness diagnoses and other flags that would keep guns out of potentially dangerous hands have long failed to forward them to federal databases used for background checks, a gap that contributed to the shooting deaths of 26 people in a Texas church.
 
 
U.S. warns Saudis, Iran of threats to stability in Lebanon
Several recent events have led to growing fear of a war in Lebanon — intended or not — that could engulf the region. Some U.S. and foreign officials worry that strong support for Saudi Arabia by President Trump may have helped motivate Riyadh to overplay its hand.
 
The mosque is Belgium's biggest. Officials say it's a hotbed for extremism.
Parliament wants the country's leaders to take over the sprawling complex that is just steps from the gleaming core of the European Union. It is the latest attempt to tighten security after radicalized Belgians emerged at the heart of terrorist attacks in Paris and Brussels in recent years.
 
'Don't worry, it's over': Why this father hugged the man who helped kill his son
The audience in a Kentucky courtroom watched transfixed as Abdul-Munim Sombat Jitmoud extended his forgiveness to the man complicit in the killing of his son.
 
     
 
 
 
 

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