News Wrap: Trump warns he may cancel GM subsidies
Judy Woodruff:
To the day's other news now.
President Trump
warning that he is considering eliminating
all federal subsidies
for General Motors.
The threat, on Twitter,
followed
GM's plans
to close plants
in three states
and stop building
its hybrid electric Volt model.
At the White House,
economic adviser Larry Kudlow
said
the president
feels betrayed.
Larry Kudlow:
There's disappointment
that it seems like
GM would rather build
its electric cars
in China,
rather than
in the United States.
We are going to be looking
at certain subsidies
regarding electric cars and others
and whether they should apply or not.
I can't say
anything final
about that,
but we're looking into
it.
Judy Woodruff:
GM
defended
itself
in a statement,
saying
that it acted to ensure
long-term success.
The company
also said
that it will give
affected workers
a chance to move to jobs
at other plants.
There are new questions tonight
about a federal detention center [구금]
for migrant teenagers
in West Texas.
It was established
in June
and quickly expanded
to more than 2,300 children.
The Associated Press reports
that, in a bid to keep up,
officials
dropped
the use of strict FBI background checks
for staffers, [직원]
including screenings
for child abuse.
The nonprofit group managing the shelter
says
it is exceptionally well-run.
In Afghanistan,
three American soldiers
were killed today,
the deadliest such attack
in 17 months.
Officials said
a roadside bomb
went off
near the eastern city of Ghazni
as the troops were carrying out
raids [습격]
with Afghan soldiers.
The Taliban
claimed
responsibility.
Tensions
stayed high
today
between Russia and Ukraine
over a naval confrontation
on Sunday.
Moscow
issued
new warnings
to Kiev,
and it refused
to return
three Ukrainian naval vessels
and two dozen crewmen.
Foreign affairs correspondent Nick Schifrin
reports.
Nick Schifrin:
In Russian-annexed Crimea,
masked soldiers
paraded
Ukrainian sailors in,
and then quickly out,
of a Russian-controlled court.
And those same Ukrainian sailors
were paraded
on Russian TV,
seemingly confessing
to entering Russian territorial waters
illegally,
a "crime" for which they
will be detained [구금하다]
for two months.
It's only been two days
since their boats were fired on
by Russian ships
as they sailed south away
from the Crimean Peninsula's Kerch Strait,
which both countries are legally allowed
to use under a 2003 agreement.
For four-and-a-half years,
Ukraine and Russia
have been fighting.
A Moscow-backed insurgency [반란]
in Eastern Ukraine
has killed
at least 10,000 people
and kept Ukraine's government off-balance.
But this is
the first attack
Russia hasn't denied.
Now Ukraine's firing back
with intercepted Russian communications
it says prove
the crisis was manufactured
by Russian leaders.
A Russian captain
says to another Russian captain
— quote —
"We should assault them.
We have to destroy them.
Medvedev is
in panic.
It seems that
the president is controlling
all that."
Medvedev
likely refers
to Gennady Medvedev,
head of the Russian intelligence service's
border service office
in Crimea.
But, today,
Moscow
stood firm
in blaming Ukraine.
It warned
that Kiev's decision yesterday
to impose martial law
would lead to a surge
in fighting in the pro-Russian rebel-held areas
of Eastern Ukraine.
And Russia
accused
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko
of playing politics
ahead of a March 2019 election.
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev:
Dmitry Medvedev (through translator):
This martial law
allows for the authorities
to flex their muscles
a little bit
and boost their support
amongst the population.
Nick Schifrin:
But much of the world today
supported
Ukraine.
Poland's president
called for retaliatory sanctions [retaliatory 보복적인]
against Moscow.
Andrzej Duda (through translator):
There is no doubt
that Russia is an aggressor
and it is not the first time
there is a violation of the agreements
between Russia and Ukraine
regarding navigation.
Nick Schifrin:
European countries
are now considering
helping the Ukrainian navy,
an effort State Department spokesperson
Heather Nauert
encouraged.
Heather Nauert:
One of the things
that we would like
to see take place
is our European allies
doing more to assist Ukraine.
Nick Schifrin:
But the U.S.
has to help lead
that response.
And, tonight,
President Trump
threatened to cancel
his planned meeting
later this week
with Russian President Vladimir Putin,
saying — quote —
"I don't like
that aggression at all."
For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Nick Schifrin.
Judy Woodruff:
In Northeastern Australia,
firefighters today
fought
a major wildfire,
fueled by record November heat,
in the triple digits.
Crews in Queensland state
have battled 40-mile-an hour winds
that fanned flames
across nearly 50,000 acres
since Saturday.
Tomorrow
could be worse still,
with temperatures of 104 degrees.
Katarina Carroll:
The end of the week
is looking pretty horrendous,
from our point of view.
It is a heat wave
across most of the state,
particularly from the central
to the northern part of the state,
unprecedented temperatures,
unprecedented weather.
We
talked earlier
about really this is uncharted waters.
We
don't expect
this
at this time of the year.
Judy Woodruff:
The fire
has destroyed
four homes,
and hundreds of people
have been forced
to flee its advance.
Trial opened
in Chicago today
for three current and former policemen
accused of a cover-up
after a white officer
killed a black teenager.
Laquan McDonald
was shot
16 times
in October of 2014.
Last month,
another former officer,
Jason Van Dyke,
was convicted
of second-degree murder
in the killing.
NASA
has gotten
more good news
from its InSight probe
on the surface of Mars.
Overnight,
the spacecraft
opened
its solar wings
and began
charging batteries,
a vital step
in starting its mission.
InSight
also sent
a new photograph,
showing part of the probe
and the landscape around it.
It
will spend
the next two years digging
into the Martian surface
to study the planet's interior.
On Wall Street today,
stocks
made up
a bit more ground.
The Dow Jones industrial average
gained
108 points to close at 24748.
The Nasdaq
rose
a fraction of a point,
and the S&P 500 added eight.
And the man who created
the wildly popular "SpongeBob SquarePants" cartoon series
has died.
Stephen Hillenburg
suffered from the muscle-wasting disease ALS.
SpongeBob and his oceanic friends
debuted
in 1999
and have run
for nearly 250 episodes.
Along the way,
the series also
spun off
a Broadway musical
and two movies.
Stephen Hillenburg was 57 years old.
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