Tuesday, 3 March 2015

FAA Is Trying To Keep Hackers Out Of Air Traffic Control, Official Says


FAA Administrator Michael Huerta told Congress Tuesday his agency is implementing changes to ensure the nation's air traffic control system is protected against computer hackers. Huerta told a House panel "the system is safe," despite a Government Accountability Office report that found "significant security control weaknesses."


Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore, one of the lawmakers who requested the GAO report, said at a House Transportation subcommittee hearing that he is concerned the system could be vulnerable to breach by terrorists. "We know there is an enduring interest in terrorist groups in aviation; they've used our aviation system as weapons. One can imagine they might be interested in hacking the system and perhaps could facilitate a midair collision."


The GAO report found the FAA has taken steps to protect air traffic control systems, but that weaknesses remain in, among other things:



  • controlling, preventing, and detecting unauthorized access to computer resources



  • identifying and authenticating users



  • encrypting sensitive data


Huerta told the panel that "first and foremost, the system is safe." He said a significant number of the GAO report's recommendations have been "remediated already."


The air traffic control system is operated by more than 46,000 FAA personnel and handles as many as 2,850 flights in a given moment. The GAO report found the FAA has "not fully established an integrated, organization-wide approach to managing information security risk that is aligned with its mission."


Therefore, the report says, air traffic control systems are at "increased and unnecessary risk of unauthorized access, use or modification" that could disrupt air traffic control operations.


Most of the report's findings are classified.


Huerta said the FAA had previously established a cybersecurity steering committee and said he is "very actively focused" on the GAO's recommendations.



France to appoint new ambassador to Lebanon: report


Too few women in business: experts


The percentage of women in startup companies in Lebanon is very low despite several initiatives to encourage females...



Clinton Foundation Funding Woes Touch Hillary, Too



The Clinton Foundation has taken contributions, of $1 million to $10 million, from the governments of Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. The Saudi Arabian government has given as much as $25 million.i



The Clinton Foundation has taken contributions, of $1 million to $10 million, from the governments of Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. The Saudi Arabian government has given as much as $25 million. Julie Jacobson/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Julie Jacobson/AP

The Clinton Foundation has taken contributions, of $1 million to $10 million, from the governments of Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. The Saudi Arabian government has given as much as $25 million.



The Clinton Foundation has taken contributions, of $1 million to $10 million, from the governments of Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. The Saudi Arabian government has given as much as $25 million.


Julie Jacobson/AP


With assets approaching $226 million, the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation plays a prominent role in international development. It has battled HIV/AIDS, provided relief after tsunamis and earthquakes and helped farmers and entrepreneurs in developing countries.


"And we believe that together we can find solutions to the most daunting human challenges," says the narrator in a promotional video for the foundation. "This is what we do. This is who we are. This is the Clinton Foundation."


But another passage in the video oddly foreshadows a current controversy.


"We are entrepreneurs in human potential," the video says. "We reject artificial boundaries between business, government and nonprofits."


The Clinton Foundation eased those boundaries and has taken contributions, of $1 million to $10 million, from the governments of Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. The Saudi Arabian government has given as much as $25 million.


Those funds, and other huge gifts, have drawn scrutiny of Hillary Clinton and the foundation, as she moves closer to declaring — or perhaps declining — a bid for the White House. A second controversy followed promptly: whether Clinton improperly used a private email account when she was secretary of state. The Clinton organization has been put on the defensive.


Would-be Republican presidential candidates rushed to bash Clinton. At the recent Conservative Political Action Conference near Washington, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, told a crowd, "We could've had Hillary here, but we couldn't find a foreign nation to foot the bill."


Also at CPAC, former businesswoman Carly Fiorina said the big foreign money creates a conflict of interest for Clinton. Fiorina continued: "She tweets about women's rights in this country, and takes money from governments that deny women the most basic human rights."


On CNN's "State Of The Union," former Texas Gov. Rick Perry went for the sinister. "Are you going to trust an individual who has taken that much money from a foreign source?" he rhetorically asked voters. Then, referring to Clinton: "Where's your loyalty?"


The Clinton Foundation pushed back. Spokesmen said the suspicions are unfounded, and donors can't buy access to Clinton. They also argued Clinton can't have a conflict of interest because she isn't a candidate or an officeholder.


They pointed out that the foundation voluntarily discloses its donors. By law, it could keep them confidential.


Still, it's not uncommon for special interests to seek access by giving generously to nonprofits with links to politicians. It's an especially alluring choice for foreign interests, which are barred by federal law from contributing to candidates or political committees.


"We don't allow foreign governments to make gifts to political campaigns," says Lucy Bernholz, a visiting scholar at Stanford University who specializes in nonprofit organizations. Referring to the foundation's foreign contributions, she says, "So if this looks like it's a roundabout way to doing that, that tarnishes the reputation of everyone involved."


Bernholz said the foundation needs to consider its donors' motives: "If a national government is in the position to be making million-dollar-plus gifts to do good work, why do they need to do it through a foundation? What are they either getting or hope to get from their affiliation?"


Michael Johnston, a political scientist at Colgate University who focuses on ethics and corruption issues, says the foundation's problem also touches Clinton herself.


"There's no allegation of a specific quid pro quo," he said. "But if you think of the idea of a conflict of interest, it isn't really an action, it's a situation."


Johnston says it could seem "particularly cynical" for a special-interest donor to approach a politician through a foundation with a humanitarian mission.


And if that's how voters come to perceive the Clinton Foundation, Johnston says, "I suspect what we will see is a lot more campaigning in which the candidate spends time having a shot and a beer in Scranton."



Round Two: Health Care Law Faces The Supreme Court Again



Supporters of the Affordable Care Act celebrate outside the Supreme Court in 2012, after a divided court upheld the law as constitutional by a 5-to-4 vote. The latest battle, which the Supreme Court hears Wednesday, is over whether federally run exchanges should be permitted.i



Supporters of the Affordable Care Act celebrate outside the Supreme Court in 2012, after a divided court upheld the law as constitutional by a 5-to-4 vote. The latest battle, which the Supreme Court hears Wednesday, is over whether federally run exchanges should be permitted. David Goldman/AP hide caption



itoggle caption David Goldman/AP

Supporters of the Affordable Care Act celebrate outside the Supreme Court in 2012, after a divided court upheld the law as constitutional by a 5-to-4 vote. The latest battle, which the Supreme Court hears Wednesday, is over whether federally run exchanges should be permitted.



Supporters of the Affordable Care Act celebrate outside the Supreme Court in 2012, after a divided court upheld the law as constitutional by a 5-to-4 vote. The latest battle, which the Supreme Court hears Wednesday, is over whether federally run exchanges should be permitted.


David Goldman/AP


Round two in the legal battle over Obamacare hits the Supreme Court's intellectual boxing ring Wednesday.


In one corner is the Obama administration, backed by the nation's hospitals, insurance companies, physician associations, and other groups like Catholic Charities and the American Cancer Society.


In the other corner are conservative groups, backed by politicians who fought in Congress to prevent the bill from being adopted.


In 2012, a bitterly-divided high court upheld the law as constitutional by a 5-to-4 vote. Now opponents of the law are challenging it again, this time contending that the text of the law does not authorize subsidies to make mandated insurance affordable in 34 states. It's a technical argument about the wording of the law but, if it prevails, most experts say the result would be a chaotic unraveling of a system that in the last year has extended health insurance to more than 11 million Americans.


The fight is about six pesky words in one section of the law. Those words stipulate that for people who cannot afford health coverage, subsidies are available through "an exchange established by the state."


The government contends that those words refer to any exchange, whether it is set up by the state itself, or an exchange run for the state by the federal government in accordance with individual state insurance laws and regulations. The challengers say the statute means what it says and no more.


If the Supreme Court agrees with the challengers' interpretation, millions of people would quickly lose their health insurance and the individual insurance market could collapse in 34 states.


Those 34 are the states, mainly Republican run, that declined to set up an exchange themselves. A few other states also found the system they created on their own didn't work well and so opted instead to use the federally run system.


Every major regulatory law like the Affordable Care Act is carried out according to regulations issued by appropriate agencies. And the Internal Revenue Service issued this regulation, saying that subsidies would be available to people who signed up on exchanges in every state, whether state-run or federally run.




"We don't treat members of Congress like teenage adolescents who don't know what they're saying."





That was the whole design of the law, the IRS says, noting that Congress never even discussed limiting subsidies to state-run exchanges.


"Ridiculous," says the lawyer for the challengers, Michael Carvin. "The text says precisely the opposite of what these English-speaking people purportedly intended."


Carvin maintains that the law is "very clear."


"It says, you get subsidies if you make a purchase on an exchange established by the state," says Carvin, but the IRS wrote a rule authorizing subsidies for federally run exchanges as well.


Former Obama administration Solicitor General Neal Katyal, who filed a brief in the case on behalf of the nation's major hospital groups, disagrees.


"You can take a phrase out of any statute and twist it to mean something else," he says.


Katyal emphasizes that a basic maxim of interpreting statutes is to look at the overall structure and purpose of the act.


"It's notable," he says, "that in all the thousands of pages of briefing that the Affordable Care Act challengers have put together, they can't find a single member of Congress at any point in the many debates of the Affordable Care Act who believes what these lawyers are saying. Not one."


Indeed, even Republicans did seem to assume that the subsidies went to everyone who needed them, regardless of where they lived.


Rep. Paul Ryan, the top Republican on the House Budget Committee said in 2010, "It's a new and open-ended entitlement that basically says, to just about everybody in this country: If your health care expenses exceed anywhere from 2 to 9.8 percent of your adjusted gross income ... don't worry about it ... the government's going to subsidize the rest."


Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a leading Republican, also seemed to assume that the subsidies would go to everyone.


"In the end, there's no real substantive difference between a federal exchange or a state exchange," Walker once said.


Although some of the challengers initially portrayed their case as involving a drafting error or "glitch," Carvin says the language restricting subsidies to state-run exchanges was deliberate.


"We don't treat members of Congress like teenage adolescents who don't know what they're saying," says Carvin. "The only people who ever said it was a drafting glitch were liberal polemicists who are trying to deny the force of the statute, not us."


Carvin notes that those words limiting subsidies to "an exchange established by the state" actually appear in the statute 11 times. Congress was acting rationally and intentionally when it used those words, he maintains, because the whole idea was to provide incentives for states to set up exchanges themselves.


"They wanted subsidies and they wanted state-run exchanges," Carvin contends. "If you condition the subsidies, you get both. If you give unconditional subsidies, you don't get state-run exchanges."


Not so, says former Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, who argues the conditional subsidy idea would lead to "absurd results."


"You would have in place a national rule that says no company could ban people with a pre-existing condition; you would have a national rule that says everybody has to have coverage; and then you would have millions of people who would have no affordable way to get that coverage," she says.


What's more, Sebelius contends that a conditional plan such as the one Carvin outlines would amount to bait-and-switch for the states.


"As one who was not only at the table when the law was being designed and at the front end of a lot of conversations with states," she says, "I can tell you that there was never a design that suggested to governors or state leaders that somehow, if they did not have a state-based marketplace, they would lose tax subsidies for their constituents."


But what would happen if the Supreme Court doesn't buy that argument and instead knocks a huge hole in the law? Estimates are that 9.3 million people who get subsidies now through Obamacare in those 34 states would lose about $29 billion in subsidies and would not be able to afford coverage.


In addition, experts say that disallowing the subsidies in the states with federal exchanges would destabilize the individual insurance market in those states, meaning that rates would skyrocket for individuals and many small businesses that currently buy policies independent of the federal exchange.


Karen Ignagni, who heads the association that represents the nation's health insurers, notes that without subsidies, those 34 states would be in the same position as states in the 1990s that passed laws banning discrimination based on previous medical conditions, but did nothing else.


"If you look at each and every state where they tried to do that, the markets blew up," Ignagni observes.


Without a mandate and subsidies to make coverage affordable, rates skyrocketed, people dropped out, and then rates skyrocketed even more to cover the older, sicker people who were left. So thoroughly did the individual market collapse in some states that insurers simply refused to do business there.


The prospect of such chaos in the health industry, which accounts for almost 18 percent of the U.S. economy, is perhaps the reason that business groups, which aggressively backed round one of the legal attack on Obamacare, are conspicuously missing in action on round two.


Certainly Congress could fix the problem with a quick-drafting change to make subsidies available on federal as well as state-run exchanges. But everyone knows that isn't going to happen.


Congressional Republicans seem united on the idea of getting rid of Obamacare — indeed the GOP-controlled House has voted to repeal the law, in whole or in part, more than 50 times. But there is no agreement at all on what to replace it with. And in the states, some Republican governors and state legislatures are already vowing not to sign on to exchanges to save subsidies for their constituents.


There is, of course, always political danger in such brinkmanship. Real people suffer the consequences.



House Passes No-Strings-Attached Bill To Fund Homeland Security



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.






An effort by some congressional Republicans to block President Obama's executive actions on immigration by tying it to a Homeland Security spending bill officially failed on Tuesday. House Speaker John Boehner yet again bucked the most conservative wing of his party and brought a "clean" funding bill to the floor. It passed easily, thanks to unanimous backing by Democrats.



Should Hotel Owners Be Forced To Hand Over Guest Records To Police?



When lawyer Thomas Goldstein contended that innkeepers keep guest information anyway to stay in touch with their customers, Justice Scalia cut in: "Motel 6 does this? Jeez, I've never received anything from them!"i



When lawyer Thomas Goldstein contended that innkeepers keep guest information anyway to stay in touch with their customers, Justice Scalia cut in: "Motel 6 does this? Jeez, I've never received anything from them!" iStockPhoto hide caption



itoggle caption iStockPhoto

When lawyer Thomas Goldstein contended that innkeepers keep guest information anyway to stay in touch with their customers, Justice Scalia cut in: "Motel 6 does this? Jeez, I've never received anything from them!"



When lawyer Thomas Goldstein contended that innkeepers keep guest information anyway to stay in touch with their customers, Justice Scalia cut in: "Motel 6 does this? Jeez, I've never received anything from them!"


iStockPhoto


Hypotheticals about hunting lodges and Motel 6 saved the oral argument at the U.S. Supreme Court today from being strangled by legal weeds.


At issue was a Los Angeles ordinance that requires hotel and motel owners to record various pieces of information about their guests — drivers license, credit card, and automobile tag numbers, for instance. The hotel owners don't dispute they have to do that; what they do dispute is the part of the law that requires proprietors to make this information available to any member of the Los Angeles Police Department, upon demand.


The city contends the law is a necessary and important tool for fighting prostitution, drug trafficking and other crimes. The hotel and motel owners, some of them mom-and-pop operations, contend they are harassed by police, who sometimes show up for inspections of their records in the middle of the night. They contend that police should at least have a subpoena in hand, allowing the proprietors to challenge the inspection in court if they think they are being harassed.


The justices were animated at the argument, though spectators seemed on occasion to get an acute case of MEGO — my eyes glaze over.


What saved the day was, first, a hypothetical from Justice Elena Kagan. A New York City native, Kagan has become something of a hunter under the tutelage of her colleague Justice Antonin Scalia, who has mounted on his wall in chambers the giant head of an elk he shot.


Suppose, Kagan asked, that a law like the Los Angeles ordinance were enacted for hunting lodges, requiring record-keeping about "how much people shoot and when they shoot ... and what they shoot" and the state fish and wildlife service wants to make "spot inspections, surprise inspections all the time" to verify the accuracy of the lodges' record-keeping.


Scalia perked up, asking, "Is this a public hunting lodge?" No, replied Kagan, "It's a private hunting lodge," noting that the case before the court involved a private hotel.


"That's a big difference," mused Scalia, looking to the government's counsel, Michael Dreeben for an answer.


Dreeben, a longtime Supreme Court advocate, knew better than to bite. "I will have to defer to members of the court on hunting lodges," he said.


Harrumphed Scalia: "I do think there would be a big dispute, with regard to private hunting lodges, whether you could require them to keep the records."


The protective instinct for the hunting lodges, however, didn't seem to extend to Motel 6 when lawyer Thomas Goldstein argued that some court supervision is required for inspections at hotels and motels in Los Angeles.


Goldstein conceded that the city's hotels and motels have to keep the records required by law.


Justice Anthony Kennedy pounced on that concession, saying that law enforcement is the obvious reason that hotels know they must record such information.


Goldstein disagreed, arguing that innkeepers have long held onto such information because they they use the information to keep in touch with their customers. "Every business does," said Goldstein. "It's quite proprietary information."


"Motel 6 does this?" cut in Scalia. "Jeez, I've never received anything from them!"


Well, replied Goldstein, as laughter bubbled up in the courtroom, "You may not be on their frequent guest" list.



4 Reasons Both Parties Should Be Sweating Bullets Over King V. Burwell



Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner pauses at a news conference announcing the House's latest vote to repeal Obamacare in February.i



Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner pauses at a news conference announcing the House's latest vote to repeal Obamacare in February. J. Scott Applewhite/AP hide caption



itoggle caption J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner pauses at a news conference announcing the House's latest vote to repeal Obamacare in February.



Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner pauses at a news conference announcing the House's latest vote to repeal Obamacare in February.


J. Scott Applewhite/AP


The Supreme Court will hear arguments on Wednesday in another case that threatens the survival of Obamacare. This one doesn't challenge the constitutionality of the law itself, it merely challenges the legality of one of the most important parts of the system — subsidies so that everyone can afford health care. If the court strikes down the subsidies for people who live in states that chose not to set up their own exchanges, and who get their health coverage from the federal marketplace — healthcare.gov — it would begin to unravel the entire Obamacare project. Here's why that could be politically damaging to both Democrats and Republicans:


1. The biggest political threat is to the president.


A ruling for the plaintiffs would be a mortal blow to the president's signature legislative achievement. Up to 8 million people could lose their subsidies in 34 states, leaving them unable to afford coverage. Premiums would spike, because presumably only the sickest people would be willing to pay the full cost of coverage. Insurers would leave the market. It would delegitimize the law. Democrats had been been touting its success — around 11 million people are now signed up — and enjoying a momentary lull in the intensity of the arguments over the law would have to scramble to preserve what they could. The political slugfest over the Affordable Care Act would begin again.


2. Republicans might not be the winners.


Democrats would go on the offensive, blaming Republicans for every case of a person who lost coverage just before giving birth, or having another round of chemo.


There would be a "good-riddance caucus" inside the GOP to be sure — Republicans who argue that the best strategy is to sit back and watch the whole edifice of Obamacare collapse in a heap.


These Republicans think that chaos in the marketplace would punish Obama, and that Americans would rise up even more than they have and demand an end of the law.


But that view is not universally shared inside the GOP.


Many Republicans including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell see an opening for Republicans to switch their tactics — finally — from repeal to replace if the court ruled against the government.


McConnell, speaking to the Wall Street Journal, called it an opportunity for a mulligan — a major do-over of the whole health care law. Something he believes is more achievable than total repeal.


3. It will be hard for Republicans to unify around a replacement for Obamacare.


The GOP has been trying for six years to come up with an alternative to Obamacare and they haven't been able to. But now a group of lawmakers led by Paul Ryan in the House and Orrin Hatch in the Senate have come up with what they call an "Offramp from Obamacare" — legislation that would temporarily restore the lost subsidies and then replace them with other forms of financial aid like tax credits. They'd also do away with the law's minimum coverage requirements and the individual mandate.


But why would a party that can't agree on how to fund the Department of Homeland Security agree on a strategy to take advantage of a win in King v. Burwell?


And would President Obama agree to the kind of changes in the health care law that Republicans would demand?


4. Republican governors will be under tremendous pressure.


Without a major fix by Congress, governors in states that chose not to set up exchanges would be under pressure to do so in order to prevent hundreds of thousands of their citizens from losing coverage.


Conservatives who are arguing for a legislative fix say these Republican governors, who held out against Obamacare, should not be left high and dry.


But fixing the damage to the ACA that the court might impose will require not just cooperation, but timely cooperation, something that is in very short supply in Washington these days.



No need to panic about swine flu: Health Ministry


BEIRUT: The Health Ministry released a statement Tuesday stressing that contrary to recent media reports, the A (H1N1) virus, commonly known as swine flu, is not a cause for public alarm in Lebanon.


The statement said that H1N1 “doesn’t constitute a health emergency, hence, there is no need for fear and panic.”


This week, one case of the flu was discovered in south Lebanon. The patient is currently being treated at the Italian hospital in Tyre.


The ministry statement described H1N1 as a yearly seasonal virus, transferred by respiratory secretions. Droplets can be spread through coughing and sneezing, particularly in crowded places.


Drawing from scientific sources, the ministry stressed that H1N1 is a virus to be expected at this time of year. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), flu season occurs during winter months, but can stretch into May. The World Health Organization has found that some MENA countries, such as Jordan, Morocco and Tunisia, have seen a rise in H1N1 cases during flu season.


The Health Ministry added that the yearly flu season is now in swing on a global scale, and it remains ongoing in Lebanon.


Information from the WHO explained that the flu virus comes in strains A, B and C. Strain A has several subtypes, including H1N1 and the newer H3N2, both of which are variants of viruses that are endemic in pigs.


Symptoms listed by the WHO and the CDC include high fever, sore throat, coughing and sneezing. Children, the elderly and those with weakened immune symptoms are prone to more severe complications, which can result in pneumonia and death.


The ministry statement said that type A flu is active in Lebanon. It attributed this information to the Influenza Hospital Surveillance Network, which was created in 2014, in cooperation with the WHO. “Since January 2015 until March 3, 80 samples have been examined, 11 percent of them have tested positive for type A,” the statement said.


According to the Health Ministry, as of late January and early February 2015, “Flu virus A (H3N2) represented 87 percent of type A flu cases.” The remainder of type A cases were H1N1.


Swine flu spread to global pandemic levels in 2009. Since that time, the virus has not been eradicated, but incidence levels on a global scale have settled.


The statement advised that seasonal flu vaccinations should include protection against H1N1.


It also reminded the public of the need to practice healthy behavior to prevent flu virus transmission, advising that “when coughing and sneezing one needs to wash hands, and keep distance from those who show signs of illness.”



Government maintains stability while turmoil roils region


BEIRUT: The year-old government of Prime Minister Tammam Salam has succeeded in maintaining a semblance of stability in Lebanon amid mounting security threats posed by Syria-based jihadis as well as turmoil and popular upheavals roiling the Middle East region, political analysts said Tuesday.


But the government, riven by deep differences among its 24 ministers, has failed miserably on the political and economic fronts, having been unable in the past months to hold parliamentary polls, facilitate the election of a new president or come up with a plan to revitalize the struggling economy, burdened by a public debt estimated at more than $65 billion, they said.


“The government has succeeded only in one area: standing in the face of the Islamic extremist movement,” Sami Nader, a professor of economics and international relations at Universite St. Joseph, told The Daily Star.


“The government has drawn up a security plan that has been partially implemented in the north and the northern Bekaa region. But the political platform, on whose basis the government was formed, is insufficient to achieve sustainable political stability,” said Nader, also the director of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs, a Beirut-based think tank.


“The government’s political platform is insufficient to regain the state’s role and consolidate the foundations of the political system. The country’s modus operandi is in jeopardy,” he said. “We cannot say that this government has succeeded in holding parliamentary elections or facilitating the election of a president. This government has no defense policy or an economic policy, nor does it have a foreign policy agreed upon over Iran and the war in Syria.”


“The government has adopted a quick fix approach because it ignores the fundamentals of political stability,” Nader said.


“It has failed to adopt inclusive politics and inclusive economics.”


The Interior Ministry, citing security concerns, mainly from Islamist militants entrenched near the border with Syria, last year recommended against holding parliamentary elections. This prompted lawmakers to extend Parliament’s mandate in November for two years and seven months. It was the second extension after Parliament voted to extend its term in May 2013 by 17 months, arguing at the time that elections would constitute a major security risk given the fragile situation.


Parliament last month failed for the 19th time since April to elect a president over a lack of quorum, plunging the country into a prolonged vacuum in the country’s top Christian post.


Samir Frangieh, a political writer and a former March 14 lawmaker, said the government has had its pros and cons during the one year it has been in office.


“Thanks to the government, it has maintained a sort of stability amid the volcanoes raging around Lebanon,” Frangieh, a member of the March 14 coalition, told The Daily Star. “It has secured the continuity of the state at a time when democratic means to revive state institutions have been disrupted.”


“But these achievements are insufficient to protect Lebanon permanently,” he said.


Frangieh said Lebanon faced three threats: A threat from the 4-year-old war in Syria, a threat of the sectarian strife currently raging in the region spreading to Lebanon, and the threat of Israel igniting the south Lebanon front in an attempt to derail any possible deal between Iran and Western powers over its nuclear program.


In order to stave off the threat of sectarian strife, Frangieh said Hezbollah should withdraw from the war in Syria and Lebanon should be neutralized from the bloody conflict next door.


“The repercussions of the Syrian conflict will hit Lebanon in two ways. One is through frequent clashes between the Lebanese Army and militants in areas near the border with Syria, and the other is by shifting the sectarian conflict in the region to Lebanon,” he said.


The government last month celebrated the first anniversary of its formation amid a mixed feeling of popular satisfaction and frustration, even by Salam, who has frequently complained that his Cabinet has been unable to make decisions on crucial issues because of disagreement among its 24 ministers.


Following the formation of his 24-member Cabinet on Feb. 15 last year, Salam declared that the main goals of the government were to maintain stability and set the stage for parliamentary elections. After the country fell into a presidential vacuum on May 25 at the end of President Michel Sleiman’s six-year tenure, the government was obliged under the Constitution to temporarily fill the vacuum until a new president is elected.


But in exercising the president’s prerogatives, the Cabinet found itself bogged down over a mechanism to govern its decisions, an issue that has paralyzed the government’s work and led to the suspension of its meetings for two weeks.


Salam, backed by most ministers, is demanding a change in the current mechanism, which requires unanimous support from all 24 ministers on the Cabinet decisions. But the three Kataeb ministers and three ministers loyal to Sleiman and Telecommunications Minister Butros Harb oppose the change, saying the Cabinet should serve in a caretaker capacity until a new president is elected.


Salam, who Tuesday called for a Cabinet session for Thursday, stressed that addressing the crisis should be based on Article 65 in the Constitution which calls for consensus on Cabinet decisions.


Shafik Masri, a professor of international law at the Lebanese University and the American University of Beirut, said while the government has ensured a sort of stability in the country, it has violated the Constitution with its decision-making formula, which eventually led to Cabinet paralysis.


“The government has maintained a temporary state of stability,” Masri told The Daily Star.


He said the government has succeeded in three areas. “It has stood fast under the current difficult circumstances and this is in itself is a success. It has implemented a security plan in the north and the Bekaa region,” Masri said.


He added that the government has also succeeded in approving some appointments in the military and security corps and in issuing last month’s Eurobond of $2.2 billion to meet the state’s short-term needs.


Aside from this, Masri said Salam and his team had committed “a big sin” in the adoption of a decision-making mechanism that runs contrary to the Constitution.


“This mechanism, which requires unanimous backing from all the ministers, has paralyzed the government’s activity,” he said.


“Salam should not have allowed the use of an unconstitutional mechanism which granted each minister the right to veto. This violation of the Constitution has led the government to a dead end and it is now trying to disown it,” Masri said.


He added that the current stability is threatened by internal and external menaces. “The wanted people who fled before the implementation of the security plan in the northern Bekaa region pose an internal security threat,” Masri said.


“Similarly, the gunmen [ISIS and the Nusra Front] holed up on the border with Syria pose an external threat to Lebanon,” he said. “In addition, there are gangs in Lebanon that are ready to carry out subversive acts if financed and incited from abroad.”


Nader, the USJ professor, concurred, saying the government has partially confronted the ISIS threat. “There has been no comprehensive security plan to face the threat of Islamic extremism, such as ISIS and other militant groups,” he said.


Despite deep differences among its ministers, Nader said the government is here to stay.


“The government is on the bench waiting for a final settlement in Syria which appears to be far off,” he said. “It is forbidden for this government to resign because it will be impossible to form a new one amid the presidential void.”


“This government has prevented a total constitutional void,” the USJ professor said.


Frangieh agreed. “This government has prevented a power vacuum, but it has not solved the vacuum problem,” he said.


“This government has two contradictory functions. Its presence is essential to prevent a vacuum, but its stay in power is delaying filling the vacuum,” Frangieh said. He added that MP Michel Aoun and Hezbollah are using this government to prolong the vacuum in the presidency and Parliament paralysis.


“Still, the absence of this government would be catastrophic because the country would then be left without a recognized authority,” he said.



Salam calls Cabinet session for Thursday


BEIRUT: Prime Minister Tammam Salam called Tuesday for a Cabinet session for Thursday, urging ministers to give utmost priority to ensuring a smooth and effective productivity of the government.


Salam’s decision indicated that the row over the government’s decision-making system that has led to the suspension of the Cabinet meetings for two weeks has been solved.


Salam signaled a change in the current mechanism, which requires unanimous support from all 24 ministers on the Cabinet decisions, when he stressed that approving decisions during the 9-month-old presidential vacuum should be based on consensus.


Salam said he made the decision to call for Thursday’s session after contacting all political parties that are members of the Cabinet.


“The current political crisis makes everyone responsible for safeguarding the Cabinet situation, strengthening its unity to prevent jeopardizing national immunity, and the need to run the country’s pressing affairs in a spirit of consensus that has been adopted in addressing all issues,” Salam said in a statement issued by his office.


He added that it was his duty as well as that of the Cabinet members to give utmost priority now to “setting the state’s wheel into motion smoothly and effectively.”


“But this goal can only be achieved by avoiding partisan interests on the basis of consensus which constitutes the core of our National Pact, which accepts disagreement without being a tool for paralysis, or an excuse for obstruction and disruption,” Salam said.


The premier voiced hope that “good intentions” expressed by all the parties would provide “a new and fruitful opportunity” for the government’s productivity.


Salam renewed his call for a quick election of a new president in order “to restore balance to constitutional institutions and normalcy to political life in Lebanon.”


Salam, backed by most ministers, has demanded a change in the current mechanism, which requires unanimous support from all 24 ministers on the Cabinet decisions. He argued that the mechanism has hampered the government’s productivity due to disagreement among ministers on decisions taken by the Cabinet.


Meanwhile, the parliamentary Future bloc called for a clear compliance with the rules of the Constitution concerning the Cabinet’s decision-making system during the presidential vacuum.


In a statement issued after its weekly meeting chaired by former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, the bloc warned against “devising precedents or norms that ran contrary to the Constitution and would also further complicate the government’s work and political life in Lebanon.”


The statement renewed the bloc’s call on all lawmakers to go to Parliament and attend sessions to elect a president rather than thwarting them by a lack of quorum.


The bloc accused Hezbollah of blocking the presidential election, citing remarks made by a senior Hezbollah official the day before.


Speaking to reporters after talks with MP Hagop Pakradonian and other officials from the Tashnag Party Monday, Sayyed Ibrahim Amin al-Sayyed, head of Hezbollah’s Political Council, said serious discussions to break the presidential deadlock required reaching understanding with MP Michel Aoun. Hezbollah has supported Aoun as its sole candidate for the country’s top Christian post.


“The Future bloc sees that these remarks clearly show who is obstructing the election of a new president and is keeping the presidential vacancy in the country, and consequently exposing the Lebanese state to various kinds of dangers,” the statement said.


It added that Sayyed’s comments suggested that Hezbollah was trying to impose its own candidate on all of Lebanon.


“The bloc sees that Hezbollah’s declared stance contributes toward the continued vacancy in the presidency seat, aggravates political instability in the country and hinders a return to the regular functioning of constitutional institutions,” the statement said.


“With its stance, Hezbollah becomes responsible for pushing the country into a higher level of risks.”



Draft civil marriage law submitted to Parliament


BEIRUT: Future bloc MP Serge Torsarkissian submitted a civil marriage draft law to Parliament Tuesday, saying he hopes it will bring an end to ongoing debate on the issue. Instead, the bill has already provoked criticism from activists.


Civil marriage proponents maintain there is no need for a new law, as there is already a law permitting civil marriage in the country dating back to 1936.


“First of all Lebanon does not need a new law,” Talal Husseini, a civil marriage activist, told The Daily Star. “This [new draft] law has no future in its current form. The concerned MPs should have done their research before presenting it.”


Torsarkissian, a lawyer and Future bloc lawmaker, explained that he put the bill forward with the intention of settling the debate surrounding the practice.


Civil marriage in Lebanon is a source of controversy, as almost all marriages are carried out through religious bodies.


The government recognizes civil marriages carried out abroad, but there is no official mechanism to recognize civil marriages in Lebanon. The situation has forced many couples to wed in Cyprus.


Recently, some couples have managed to marry under the 1936 law – installed when Lebanon was a French colony – which legalizes civil marriages. But just last month, the Interior Ministry issued a statement saying that it would no longer recognize these marriages, as the law also requires an official process for regulating the practice, which is currently absent.


“But you can’t cut something that has been going on for so long in Lebanon,” Torsarkissian explained to The Daily Star.


“[But] I think I had a breakthrough on it.”


Torsarkissian said he focused on trying to bridge the gap between secular and religious marriages by having the legislation require that neither person be committed to another marriage prior to a civil wedding.


The law also contains several other provisions. Both partners must be over the age of 18, and must provide documentation proving that one of the parties has lived in a certain municipality for at least a year. Curiously, they must also provide judicial records that prove neither has been convicted of a penal offense.


“If someone has committed a crime, how can he lose his right to marry?” Husseini asked.


“I’d ask Torsarkissian to study the issue in more depth before presenting this law.”


Torsarkissian’s draft law explicitly differs from the civil marriage legislation already in the books in that couples are registered in their municipality, as opposed to the union needing simply to be witnessed by a public notary.


Marriages would also take place at the Civil Court of First Instance, a court which currently handles inheritance cases for Christians.


A law further stipulates that each party must be in good health for the wedding to be performed. The draft law would also reaffirm the controversial personal status law, which prevents women from passing their nationality to their non-Lebanese husbands and their children.


“You have to keep [the population] as it is. I can’t, with a law, change the whole demography of the country,” Torsarkissian said in defense of the clause, adding that he hoped the draft law would facilitate more interfaith marriages and improve relations between sects.


Kholoud Succariyeh, whose civil marriage was the first of its kind in Lebanon, decried the proposed law as an attempt to enforce an unacceptable status quo.


“They are scared of disrupting the sectarian balance in the country,” she told The Daily Star. “We want to end sectarianism in Lebanon.”


The controversial issue of civil marriage is often viewed as a symptom of the larger problem of sectarianism in the country.


Succariyeh also blamed influential high-ranking religious figures for the government’s inability to pass a civil marriage law.


“[Politicians] work as followers of sects and of [certain] people,” she said.


Succariyeh married her husband, Nidal Darwish, in a civil marriage in January 2013. They had their first child, Ghadi – the first to be born in a civil marriage – later that year. Their marriage was recognized by the Higher Committee for Consultations in the Justice Ministry in 2014.


Since then, over 50 couples have been wed in civil marriages, but many are still struggling for recognition from the government.


Succariyeh believes the issue won’t be resolved until there is reform within the political class.


“The politicians in our country are not legitimate,” Succariyeh said, referring to Parliament’s extension of its mandate without holding an election. “They are illegal and they know nothing about law.”


“If they really [knew] about law then they would’ve [fixed] this a long time ago.”



TV stations ask for help amid financial crises


BEIRUT: Information Minister Ramzi Joreige promised to protect Lebanese television channels from illegal competition Tuesday, saying the government would help them overcome their financial difficulties. “I promised the heads of Lebanese stations [to support] their efforts to preserve their legitimate rights from stations that are [illegally] competing with them,” Joreige told reporters after meeting with a delegation representing eight Lebanese TV stations.


“The meeting was positive and serious. We discussed the current situation of the stations, and their suffering as a result of the economic crisis and the effects of illegal competition.”


Joreige met with the chairmen of the boards of directors of Tele Liban, LBCI, MTV, Future TV, Al-Manar, NBN, OTV and Al-Jadeed.


Lebanese television stations have complained of severe financial difficulties over the past five years due to a drop in advertising revenues, partly resulting from the country’s political situation and economic crisis.


They are seeking support and protection from the information and telecoms ministries as they battle competition from foreign stations in Lebanon, and want help preserving their syndication rights. They are also seeking fees from cable providers in return for access to their channels.


Talal Makdessi, chair of Tele Liban’s board of directors, said that Joreige was “positive, rational and objective” during the meeting.


“There was a serious discussion on how Lebanese stations can win back rights from the cable providers,” Makdessi said.


“Television stations provide the content and cable providers get their money from [their subscriptions]. But the stations end up getting nothing.”


“The meetings will continue and will address all areas of concern in order to secure the survival of Lebanese television stations.”


The delegation also held a meeting with legal advisers in order to establish their specific rights before they raise the issue with cable providers.


The meeting with Joreige comes four days after the same delegation held talks with Telecoms Minister Butros Harb.


During the meeting with Harb, the delegation called on the minister to cancel taxes on satellite news gathering equipment, and dues levied on the transmission of broadcast images to satellites stationed in Lebanon. It also called for decreasing the costs incurred by the use of landline phones, cellphones and the Internet.


Other changes are underway in Lebanese television. LBCI announced in a statement that it had begun steps to shift from analogue to digital broadcasting, in line with a Geneva treaty approved by the Lebanese government in 2012. The treaty stipulates that analogue broadcasting should stop before June 2015.


The channel said that as of Thursday, Lebanese would no longer be able to watch LBCI through antennae. The station will be available through cable, dish networks, on NileSat or through LBCI’s website, which will provide live streaming of its broadcasts.


The switchover from analogue to digital broadcasting has already been implemented in a number of countries, including the US. Aside from a better picture, the move allows for the establishment of new distribution networks and expands the potential for wireless innovation and services.



Lebanon deports French researcher over ‘terror links’


BEIRUT: A French expert on Islamist extremism has been deported from Lebanon over “terrorist links,” a General Security source told The Daily Star.


A senior General Security officer said Tuesday that French Scholar Romain Caillet was deported Sunday for “having links to terrorist organizations,” without providing more details.


Caillet, who had been residing in Lebanon for the last five years, was prevented from re-entering the country after a trip to Morocco, a diplomat at the French Embassy in Beirut told The Daily Star.


The embassy was not informed about the reasons for his deportation, he added, speaking on the condition of anonymity.


The researcher posted on his Twitter account two tweets in French accusing Hezbollah of being behind the decision to deport him.


“What do they accuse me of? Daring to speak of the influence of Hezbollah and its pro-Iranian allies on all of Lebanon’s institutions,” Caillet wrote.


“The murderers of researcher Michel Seurat and Rafik Hariri wanted me to leave Lebanon so my work will continue elsewhere.”


Seurat was a French sociologist who was kidnapped by the Islamic Jihad Organization, the precursor to Hezbollah, in 1985 along with another hostage. He was announced dead in March 1986 while still in custody.


Hezbollah has also been accused of being behind the 2005 assassination of Hariri, a former premier.


The party vehemently denies those charges.


Caillet is a contemporary historian who has worked for seven years with the Middle East French Institute, according to the think tank’s website.


His profile page says the researcher is based in Beirut, and has worked on a Ph.D. thesis titled “The new Muhajirun: The emigration of French Salafists to the ‘Land of Islam.’”



Soldier killed in Akkar raid, Army steps up border shelling


BAALBEK/TRIPOLI, Lebanon: The Lebanese Army expanded shelling along the northeastern border with Syria Tuesday, as a soldier and a fugitive were killed in a military raid in the northern region of Akkar.


Speaking to The Daily Star, security sources said the shelling began late Monday night, as artillery barrages targeted ISIS and Nusra Front positions around Wadi Hmeid and Wadi Hosn on the outskirts of Arsal.


The Army has also shelled militant positions on the outskirts of Ras Baalbek, on the barren mountainsides lining the Bekaa Valley, for 10-15 minutes every few hours, in a bid to discourage attacks. A strategy of pre-emptive shelling was implemented in January, after eight soldiers, including an officer, were killed and 22 others wounded in clashes with ISIS militants on the edge of Ras Baalbek.


The attack was the most serious since ISIS and Nusra Front militants fought a five-day battle with the Army in the northeastern town of Arsal in August. The two militant groups still hold 25 soldiers and policemen hostage in the outskirts of the town, after capturing more than 37 during the fighting. Four have been killed and eight others released.


Further north, a Lebanese Army soldier and a suspected militant were killed in an exchange of fire during a raid in the Akkar town of Bhenin, a security source told The Daily Star.


The source said Abdul-Rahman Tamer, a wanted fugitive, exchanged gunfire with the Army early Tuesday, killing him and a soldier.


A Lebanese Army statement said that Tamer opened fire on a military patrol, killing a soldier and prompting troops to shoot him. The statement added that Tamer belonged to “Sheikh Khaled Hablas’ terrorist group,” which is accused of gunning down four soldiers in an October ambush in the Minyeh-Dinnieh area of Mhamra. Hablas remains at large.


The statement identified the fallen soldier as Pvt. Mohammad Hussein Shabake. He has been laid to rest in the northern city of Tripoli.



Efforts underway to separate presidency from regional woes


Lebanese groups are currently in wait-and-see mode as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif meet for another round of nuclear talks in the Swiss town of Montreux. Various groups in Lebanon are betting that a deal would directly impact the situation in Lebanon by breaking the deadlock over the presidency that has crippled the country.Since the prospects of a deal being inked remain high, political sources in Lebanon spoke about the probability of forming a unified Arab front to counter Iran’s growing influence in the region.


Talks between major powers and Iran to restrict Tehran’s nuclear capabilities in exchange for an easing of sanctions have reached a critical stage ahead of an end-of-March deadline for a framework deal and a June 30 date for a final agreement.


The sources explained that Arab capitals are increasinglyconvinced that Iran will take advantage of the nuclear deal to extend its presence and influence in the region from Yemen to Iraq, Syria and Syria’s Golan Heights. Those Arab capitals have reason to believe that Iran might resort to stirring up troublein those areas so as to prove to Arab countries and the international community that it is a key player in the Middle East and that it is fully capable of orchestrating events in the region for its own benefit, the sources said.


In light of those developments, diplomatic sources said the international community was worried about stability in Lebanon and called for supporting efforts to fortify state institutions, primarily by electing a president as soon as possible.


According to the sources, the international community also fears that that the presidential void will eventually have a devastating impact on the country’s economy, financial institutions and public administrations, thus threatening the livelihoods of the Lebanese.


Those worries are further intensified bearing in mind reports by Western security agencies about the plans of jihadi militants to wage a series of concentrated attacks on northeast Lebanon after the major losses ISIS incurred in the battle waged by the Iraqi government to recapture the city of Tikrit.


The diplomatic sources divulged that their concerns stem from the fact that the situation in Lebanon is currently not a priority on the agendas of world powers. They added that conditions have not matured enough to allow for the election of a new president, especially that the stances of some local groups are “directly tied to the decisions of their regional patrons.”


The sources hoped that intra-Christian dialogue between the Lebanese Forces and the Free Patriotic Movement would break the deadlock. A decision by the Maronite to throw its weight behind those talks and press Lebanon’s four Maronite leaders – FPM leader Michel Aoun, LF head Samir Geagea, Kataeb Party leader Amin Gemayel and Marada Movement head Sleiman Frangieh – to come up with a solution and pick a name for the presidency from outside of their exclusive circle would greatly help in resolving the presidential crisis, the sources maintained.


As for France’s bid to break Lebanon’s presidential impasse, the diplomatic sources said Western powers have asked Paris to freeze its efforts for the time being. But this does not mean that talks on the international level to resolve the presidential crisis are halted, the sources said.


The sources added that deliberations were currently concentrated on isolating the Lebanese presidential file from the region’s other problematic files in order to ensure the swift election of a new head of state.


In fact, some Lebanon-based diplomats argue that it is unacceptable for Lebanon to suffer from a presidential void in times of peace, knowing that the country was able to elect five presidents during the 1975-90 Civil War.


Currently, undisclosed discussions in international circles are not tackling the name of the president but rather the profile of the president, the diplomatic sources said. For Western powers, Lebanon’s next president should have considerable representation within the Christian community in order to be able to preserve the presence of Christians in Lebanon and safeguard their interests.


Additionally, the new president should respect the Lebanese Constitution, have integrity and a high level of transparency, and be fully capable of facing future threats and challenges.



Hariri paid Syrian officials to ‘buy’ Lebanon back: STL witness


BEIRUT: Rafik Hariri felt that he had to “buy” Lebanon back from Syrian officials and their allies who levied influence in the country prior to his assassination, his friend and adviser Ghaleb al-Shamaa testified at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon Tuesday.


“He would tell me we were buying the country from those ‘bastards,’” Shamaa told U.N.-backed investigators in 2006, one year after the former prime minister was killed. Excerpts of Shamaa’s 2006 testimony were read aloud in court Tuesday as the defense continued to cross-examine him.


“He would say that he knew that the price of the country was very high, but that he was willing to pay the price for the sake of the country,” the 2006 testimony stated.


Last month, Shamaa told the court that he had been personally responsible for overseeing monthly payments Hariri made to Rustom Ghazaleh, Syria’s chief intelligence officer in Lebanon at the time. Hariri likely paid other pro-Syrian politicians and public figures, Shamaa testified, but he did not know precise details or figures. “They really used him and abused him knowing that this was the way he thought,” Shamaa told investigators in 2006.


Shamaa was taciturn and at times even indignant during the cross-examination by defense counsel Jad Khalil Tuesday. Appearing before the court via video link, Shamaa showed offense when Khalil suggested that he had avoided riding in Hariri’s motorcade the day of the assassination.


“You are asking a question to a person who would have preferred to become a martyr with the late PM,” Shamaa responded. “I do not think you have the right to ask me such a question and that’s why I will not give you an answer.”


Khalil, who represents the interests of Hezbollah member Hassan Merhi, questioned Shamaa at length regarding evidence he gave to U.N. investigators in 2006 about possible roadworks near the Saint Georges Hotel prior to Hariri’s assassination. The defense has suggested that an underground bomb could have been responsible for the explosion which killed Hariri and 21 others, while expert witnesses for the prosecution have insisted that an above-ground bomb was responsible.


Khalil showed the court a picture of Hariri gifting Ghazi Kannan, then the head of Syria’s security apparatus in Lebanon, a key to Beirut and suggested that the former premier had pandered to Syrian officials in order to secure his own political fortunes.


“Sometimes an individual would smile in the face of his torturers ... That did not mean that Mr. Hariri was happy and comfortable with the Syrian attitude and behavior toward him,” Shamaa said. “He was trying to do what was best for the country.”



Affordable Care Act To Face Critical Test At Supreme Court



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





The president's signature accomplishment — the Affordable Care Act — faces yet another critical test. On Wednesday the Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether Congress intended for the federal health insurance exchange to offer the same subsidies available to those in state exchanges.




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NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.



In Using Personal Email, Aide Says Clinton Didn't Break Law



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As Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton used a personal email address when conducting official business rather than using a government address. What impact will the disclosure have on Clinton's reputation as she considers a presidential bid?




Copyright © 2015 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.


NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.



Netanyahu's Suggestions Could Drive Iran In The Opposite Direction



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As U.S.-Iran nuclear talks took place in Switzerland, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticized the negotiations in a controversial address to Congress.




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Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.


NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.