Joe Biden says Palestinians need to see ‘political horizon’

Joe Biden

US President Joe Biden says Palestinians must see a path to statehood, even if hopes for a peace process with Israel remain bleak. Biden’s visit to Bethlehem comes ahead of a flight to Saudi Arabia. The pair discussed the recent US decision by President Donald Trump to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. US President Joe … Read more

Biden lands in Saudi Arabia, country he vowed to make ‘pariah’

Biden

Saudi state media showed images of Air Force One at the airport in Jeddah. Biden was expected to meet with 86-year-old Saudi King Salman. The kingdom has refused to join the US-brokered Abraham Accords. US President Joe Biden landed Friday in Saudi Arabia and met Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, sealing a retreat from his … Read more

Saudi Arabia allows airspace to Israeli flights

Saudi Arabia
  • Saudi Arabia opens its airspace to all civilian carriers, including flights to and from Israel.
  • The move is a step toward normalizing relations between the two countries.
  • US Vice President Joe Biden was scheduled to fly directly from Israel to Saudi Arabia on Friday.

Saudi Arabia opened its airspace to all civilian carriers on Friday, including flights to and from Israel, in a step toward normalizing relations between the two countries as US Vice President Joe Biden tours the Middle East.

Biden praised the kingdom’s decision in a statement released hours before he was scheduled to fly directly from Israel to Saudi Arabia, saying it could “help build momentum toward Israel’s further integration into the region.”

For months, the Biden administration has worked to formalize security and economic agreements between Saudi Arabia and Israel in order to lay the groundwork for a bilateral normalization agreement.

A possible normalization between Israel and Saudi Arabia has been hailed as the “crown jewel” of Jewish state-Arab world agreements. As part of a wave of agreements at the end of former President Donald Trump’s term, the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan normalized relations with Israel in 2020.

This is the first time the kingdom has granted Israeli airlines unrestricted access to its airspace to fly to and from the country. Saudi Arabia recently barred Israeli airlines flying from Tel Aviv to the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain from using its airspace.

The decision effectively lifts Israel’s decades-long ban on overflights over Saudi airspace. Previously, Israeli airlines flying to Asian destinations such as India and China had to circumnavigate Saudi Arabia for an hour.

Following Saudi Arabia’s decision, Biden vowed to do everything in his power “through direct diplomacy and leader-to-leader engagement to continue advancing this historic process.”

The Saudi announcement was welcomed by Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid, who described it as the culmination of a “long road of intense and covert diplomacy with Saudi Arabia and the United States.” He stated that the decision was “just the beginning,” and promised that more positive relations would follow.

Lapid also thanked Biden and wished him luck in his upcoming summit in Jeddah on Saturday.

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Iranian military warned US against using force

iranian military

Iranian military warned the United States and Israel against threatening Iran with force. US President Joe Biden stated he would use force as a last resort to prevent Tehran from getting a nuclear weapon. Iranian military spokesman said: “Watch your soldiers’ pants — they might get wet in the Arabian Gulf!”. Iranian military warned the … Read more

Biden plans $443 million in Palestinian aid

biden

President Joe Biden will announce US $316 million (S $443 million) in aid for the Palestinians. The aid package could include up to $100 million for the East Jerusalem Hospital Network. Mr Biden will also announce the collaboration between Israeli and Palestinian teams to construct a 4G cellular network. JERUSALEM: President Joe Biden will announce … Read more

Joe Biden talks joint investment with Israel, India, UAE

Joe Biden

US President Joe Biden holds investment talks with Israel, India, UAE and the United Arab Emirates. Biden says he wants to secure US interests in the Middle East. The president will depart for Saudi Arabia on Friday after a visit to West Bank and the occupied West Bank. US President Joe Biden held joint investment … Read more

Biden will sign security pact with Israel in Jerusalem

last hearing

US President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid will sign a security “declaration” on Thursday. The document will reaffirm “unbreakable ties” between the two countries, US officials stated. Israel is very against the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and other world powers. JERUSALEM: US President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid … Read more

US invites slain Al Jazeera journalist’s family to Washington: official

Al Jazeera

Reporter Shireen Abu Akleh was killed while covering an Israeli army raid. Her family has voiced outrage over the Biden administration. Secretary of State invited the family to Washington. US President Joe Biden’s administration has invited relatives of slain Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh to Washington, an American official said Wednesday, as Biden arrived … Read more

Biden embarks on first tour of Middle East as US President

6 January committee

US President Joe Biden will arrive in Israel on Wednesday for a three-day trip to the Middle East. Israeli officials will call for greater action against Iran, while Palestinian leaders are disappointed by Washington’s failure to stop Israeli aggression. No major piece pronouncements are expected, so the visit may compound Palestinian dissatisfaction. JERUSALEM: US President … Read more

Biden is up against a deadline In the American railroad labour dispute

Biden

 Joe Biden faces a deadline to intervene in U.S. railroad labor.  Covering 115,000 workers. Failure could open the door to a potential strike. It could threaten an already fragile economy. .The PEB has 30 days to make nonbinding settlement recommendations.  The union represents 23,000 affected. The negotiations voted to authorize a strike. Joe Biden, U.S. … Read more

Biden Jerusalem trip: what to anticipate

6 January committee

Joe Biden is visiting Jerusalem as part of a Middle East trip. The American is also meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu who may make a comeback. Dan Shapiro discussed what to expect from Biden’s trip to Israel and the Palestinian territories. Joe Biden is visiting Jerusalem this week as part of a Middle East trip. His … Read more

Pakistani envoy Masood Khan meets US President Biden

WASHINGTON: Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States Masood Khan met President Joe Biden at Oval office, White House in Washington D.C. In a tweet, Masood Khan said Pakistan and the United States express the resolve to strengthen bilateral ties as they celebrate the 75th anniversary of diplomatic relations. “Pakistan and the US resolve to strengthen … Read more

Elon Musk makes fun of Joe Biden for making yet another mistake

Elon Musk

Elon Musk mocked Joe Biden for reading out instructions on his teleprompter in a televised speech. The President was outlining his executive order following the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade ruling. However, Biden is mocked for reading the instructions “end of quote” and “read line again”. After Joe Biden made another mistake during a speech … Read more

Slain Al Jazeera reporter’s kin ask to meet Biden on Mideast trip

Al Jazeera

family of journalist Shireen Abu Akleh have asked Joe Biden to meet them. They say she was “murdered by an Israeli-fired bullet”. A US probe has said it is impossible to determine which gun fired the fatal bullet. The family of prominent Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, shot dead in the occupied West Bank, … Read more

Joe Biden signs order to protect abortion rights

Republicans

Joe Biden signed an executive order guaranteeing the right to an abortion. The President is powerless to reinstate the nation’s right to abortion. Executive order issued on Friday will compel Becerra to take action. In response to the Supreme Court’s historic decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, President Joe Biden signed an executive order on … Read more

Biden deplores Shinzo Abe killing as a ‘tragedy for Japan’

6 January committee

Abe was shot dead while delivering a campaign speech. Joe Biden says he is “stunned, outraged, and deeply saddened” by Abe’s assassination. Barack Obama calls Abe “my friend and longtime partner”. US President Joe Biden on Friday said he was “stunned, outraged, and deeply saddened” by the assassination of Japan’s former prime minister Shinzo Abe, who … Read more

Joe Biden can’t catch a break

Joe Biden

Kate Bedingfield, the White House interchanges chief, wants to leave her post soon. A new Monmouth University study puts his work endorsement rating among Americans at a small 36%. However, the Washington Post reports that Biden is reluctant to answer tough questions. A touch of inside baseball won’t change a solitary brain about Joe Biden … Read more

Biden taps Denver airport chief Phil Washington to head the FAA

Biden

Phil Washington is currently the administrator of Denver International Airport. He was nominated by President Joe Biden to lead the Federal Aviation Administration. The FAA’s reputation was tarnished after two recent incidents involving Boeing 737 Max aircraft. Phil Washington, the administrator of Denver International Airport, was proposed by President Joe Biden on Wednesday to head … Read more

WNBA star Brittney Griner pleads guilty to drug charges in Russia

Brittney Griner

Brittney Griner pleads guilty to drug smuggling charges. US basketball star was detained days before Russia sent troops to Ukraine. She faces up to a decade behind bars for bringing vape cartridges. US basketball star Brittney Griner pleaded guilty Thursday to drug smuggling charges in a Russian court but denied intending to break the law … Read more

Joe Biden to tout economic battle plan in US heartland

6 January committee
  • President Joe Biden will tout his economic vision in the industrial heartland of the United States on Wednesday.
  • Spiralling inflation and a stalled domestic agenda undermine his pledge to blue-collar America.
  • The Democratic leader’s visit to Cleveland, Ohio, comes amid steady job growth and a 3.6 percent unemployment rate.

 

President Joe Biden will tout his economic vision in the industrial heartland of the United States on Wednesday, as spiralling inflation and a stalled domestic agenda undermine his pledge to blue-collar America.

The Democratic leader’s visit to Cleveland, Ohio, comes amid steady job growth and a 3.6 percent unemployment rate – but sky-high living costs threaten his party’s prospects in November’s midterm elections.

Meanwhile, a program of interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve has sparked ominous warnings from economists and investors that the world’s largest economy is headed for a significant slowdown or recession.

White House officials told local media that Biden would discuss the “overall economic challenges” facing the United States, including the Covid-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and global inflation.

But they added that he would also credit the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, a coronavirus relief package passed in March last year, for record job growth and providing “dignity at work and dignity in retirement.”

Biden has made inflation his top priority, though lawmakers among the president’s own Democratic rank-and-file are increasingly voicing frustration over the White House’s struggle for a coherent battle plan.

Others have criticized what they see as Biden’s lack of leadership on a host of progressive touchstones, including climate change, abortion rights and gun violence.

“There’s the administrative part of the job and the political part of the job,” Democratic strategist Joel Payne told political outlet The Hill.

“And it seems like this president is leaning more in the administrative role at a time when his coalition is thirsty for political clarity and leadership.”

At a Cleveland high school, the president will announce a lifeline for troubled pensions that will help up to three million workers and retirees avoid benefit cuts as steep as 70 percent.

The visit will be the sixth of Biden’s presidency to the battleground state, a key midterm target won easily by Republican former president Donald Trump in the last two elections.

Democrat Tim Ryan is running neck and neck with Republican J.D. Vance, the author of the memoir “Hillbilly Elegy” for an open seat that could determine control of the evenly-divided Senate.

Biden’s efforts to appeal to the working class in America’s “Rust Belt” took a hit recently as Intel postponed the groundbreaking for a computer chip plant near the state capital of Columbus.

The decision came with planned investment of more than $50 billion in the semiconductor industry stalled in Congress, undermining Biden’s efforts to showcase his commitment to US manufacturing.

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Somalia will talk to Al-Shabaab when time is right says Hassan Sheikh

Hassan Sheikh
  • Somalia’s new President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud says his government will only negotiate with Al-Shabaab when the time is right.
  • The Al-Qaeda affiliate responsible for deadly attacks across East Africa
  • He said cutting off Al-financial Shabaab’s flows and countering their hateful message must be combined with a military approach.

Somalia’s new President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, putting an end to Al-violent Shabaab’s insurgency will require more than a military approach, and his government will negotiate with the extremist group only when the time is right.

He claimed that the Al-Qaeda affiliate responsible for deadly attacks across East Africa had developed a “coping mechanism” in response to military aggression and could not be defeated militarily.

Al-Shabaab has been seeking to overthrow the foreign-backed government in Mogadishu for over a decade and remains a potent threat despite efforts to defeat them militarily.

Mohamud, who was elected in May after previously serving as president from 2012 to 2017, said past approaches to Al-Shabaab had not worked, and his government was open to alternatives including talks when appropriate.

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Trump’s foe Liz Cheney has not ruled out 2024 US presidential run

Liz Cheney

Liz Cheney says she has not ruled out a US presidential run in 2024. Cheney was one of just 10 Republicans who voted to impeach Donald Trump. 55-year-old is now vice chair of the special House committee investigating. Congresswoman Liz Cheney, a rising Republican star until she refused to accept Donald Trump’s false claims of … Read more

Jeff Bezos slams Biden appeal for lower gasoline prices

Jeff Bezos
  • Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos criticizes President Joe Biden for urging oil companies to reduce gasoline prices.
  • Gasoline prices at the pump are sapping Biden’s approval rating ahead of legislative elections in November.
  • The White House defends the US leader, calling his remarks “misdirection”.

 

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has chastised President Joe Biden for urging oil companies to reduce sky-high gasoline prices, prompting the White House to defend the US leader on Sunday.

“My message to the companies running gas stations and setting prices at the pump is simple: this is a time of war and global peril,” Biden tweeted Saturday.

“Bring down the price you are charging at the pump to reflect the cost you’re paying for the product. And do it now,” Biden added.

Bezos said Biden’s remarks amounted to “either straight ahead misdirection or a deep misunderstanding of basic market dynamics.”

“Ouch. Inflation is far too important a problem for the White House to keep making statements like this,” the US billionaire tweeted Saturday.

Gasoline prices at the pump have become a symbol of broader price rises in the United States, and they are sapping Biden’s approval rating ahead of legislative elections in November.

Biden has regularly attacked oil companies, saying they only care about profits and not the well-being of the average consumer.

The companies say in turn they have increased production to try to tame prices but that these are set on the world market and are subject to dynamics that are not under the control of US oil giants.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Twitter Sunday that oil prices have dropped about $15 a barrel over the past month.

“But prices at the pump have barely come down. That’s not ‘basic market dynamics.’ It’s a market that is failing the American consumer,” she wrote.

Gasoline prices have been above $5 a gallon since early June, which is unprecedented in the car-crazy nation. Prices have fallen slightly since, but remain far from the $3 a gallon level of a year ago.

John Kirby, White House spokesman on national security issues, also defended the president Sunday in an appearance on the renowned channel.

“The president is working very, very hard across many fronts… to try to bring that price down,” Kirby said.

He cited Biden’s proposal to suspend the federal gas tax this summer (which would require congressional approval) and his decision to draw on the United States’ strategic oil reserves to put more product on the market.

“He knows that it is not going to solve all the problems, but it will help if everybody cooperates on this. We could bring the price down at least by about one dollar a gallon,” Kirby said.

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Saudi welcomes 1 million for biggest hajj pilgrimage since pandemic

hajj pilgrimage
  • Islam’s holiest city Mecca preparing for largest hajj pilgrimage since coronavirus pandemic.
  • One million people, including 850,000 from abroad, are allowed at this year’s hajj.
  • Pilgrims will be bathed in 34,000 gallons of disinfectant each time they enter the Grand Mosque.

 

Worshippers in white robes from all over the world have flocked to Mecca as Islam’s holiest city prepares to host the largest hajj pilgrimage since the coronavirus pandemic.

Banners welcomed the faithful, including the first international visitors since 2019, while armed security forces patrolled the ancient city, birthplace of the Prophet Mohammed.

“This is pure joy,” Sudanese pilgrim Abdel Qader Kheder told AFP in Mecca, ahead of the event expected to start on Wednesday. “I almost can’t believe I am here. I am enjoying every moment.”

One million people, including 850,000 from abroad, are allowed at this year’s hajj — a key pillar of Islam that all able-bodied Muslims are required to perform at least once — after two years of drastically curtailed numbers due to the pandemic.

At least 650,000 overseas pilgrims have arrived so far in Saudi Arabia, the authorities said Sunday.

In 2019, about 2.5 million people took part in the rituals, which include circling the Kaaba, the imposing black cube at Mecca’s Grand Mosque, gathering at Mount Arafat and “stoning the devil” in Mina.

The following year, foreigners were barred and worshippers were restricted to just 10,000, rising to 60,000 fully vaccinated Saudi citizens and residents in 2021, to stop the hajj turning into a global super-spreader.

One million vaccinated pilgrims under the age of 65 will attend the hajj under strict sanitary conditions, with the Grand Mosque, the holiest site in Islam, scrubbed and disinfected 10 times a day.

The rituals have seen numerous disasters, including a 2015 stampede that killed up to 2,300 people and a 1979 attack by hundreds of gunmen that left 153 dead, according to the official toll.

The pilgrimage, one of the five pillars of Islam, is a powerful source of prestige for the conservative desert kingdom and its de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is returning from the diplomatic wilderness.

Days after the hajj, Prince Mohammed will welcome US President Joe Biden who, with oil prices sent soaring by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, has reneged on promises to turn Saudi Arabia into a “pariah” over the 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi by Saudi agents.

The hajj, which costs at least $5,000 per person, is a money-spinner for the world’s biggest oil exporter, bringing in about $12 billion a year along with other religious visits.

It is also a chance to showcase a country that is undergoing rapid transformation, while still drawing regular complaints about human rights abuses and limits on personal freedoms.

Saudi Arabia — which has under recent reforms permitted raves in Riyadh and mixed-gender beaches in Jeddah — now also allows women to attend the hajj unaccompanied by a male relative, a requirement that was dropped last year.

Masks are no longer compulsory in most enclosed spaces in Saudi Arabia but they will be mandatory at the Grand Mosque. Pilgrims from abroad will have to submit a negative PCR test result.

The Grand Mosque will be “washed 10 times a day… by more than 4,000 male and female workers”, with more than 130,000 litres (34,000 gallons) of disinfectant used each time, authorities said.

Since the start of the pandemic, Saudi Arabia has registered more than 795,000 coronavirus cases, 9,000 of them fatal, in a population of about 34 million.

Aside from Covid, another challenge is the scorching sun in one of the world’s hottest and driest regions, which is becoming even more extreme through the effects of climate change.

Although summer has only just begun, temperatures have already topped 50 degrees Celsius (122 Fahrenheit) in parts of Saudi Arabia.

But for Iraqi pilgrim Ahmed Abdul-Hassan al-Fatlawi, the heat is the last thing on his mind when he arrives in Mecca.

“I am 60 years old, so it’s normal if I get physically tired because of the hot weather, but I am in a state of serenity, and that’s all that matters to me,” he told AFP.

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Putin will not congratulate Joe Biden on July 4, Kremlin says

Russia

Monday is Independence Day in the United States; Russia’s independence day is August 4. Putin: “The United States’ unfriendly policies are the reason,” Kremlin spokesman says. Russian President Vladimir Putin will not congratulate his U.S. counterpart Joe Biden on Monday, which is Independence Day in the United States, as a result of “unfriendly” actions taken … Read more

Germany among nations ‘doing the most’ for Ukraine says Olaf Scholz

Olaf Scholz
  • Germany is one of the countries providing the most military aid to war-torn Ukraine.
  • The long delays in German weapon deliveries, compared to the quick deliveries of US arms.
  •  He also expressed concern that Russian President Vladimir Putin had the means to continue his offensive in Ukraine for a long time.

 

Germany is one of the countries providing the most military aid to war-torn Ukraine, according to Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who defended his country’s delays in delivering weapons to Kyiv.

The long delays in German weapon deliveries, compared to the quick deliveries of US arms, are due to the need to train Ukrainian soldiers in Germany, Scholz explained on CBS News’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

“We will always see that Germany is one of the countries that is doing the most, because what we are sending now is the most sophisticated technology you can use,” Scholz said in the interview conducted Thursday on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Madrid.

Since Russia invaded its eastern European neighbor on February 24, Berlin has been accused of hesitating — even being reluctant — to send weapons to Ukraine, out of concern for its relations with Moscow.

Certain US weapons were delivered less than 48 hours after President Joe Biden signed off on the transfer, CBS journalist Margaret Brennan noted during her exchange with Scholz.

But Olaf Scholz said comparing that timeframe to Germany’s weeks or months of delay is unreasonable.

“You should understand that there is a difference of a country like the United States, which spends that much for defense, which is a very big investment, and you have a lot of weapons and stocks,” said Scholz.

He explained that the rocket launchers sent by other countries were already in stock, but were not necessarily the most modern, whereas Germany will send “the most modern howitzer… on the world market.”

He also expressed concern that Russian President Vladimir Putin had the means to continue his offensive in Ukraine.

“He is really doing this brutal war, and he prepared for it,” said Scholz, noting he thinks Putin decided to invade a year or more before actually doing so.

“So he will be able to continue with the war really a long time.”

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John Kerry vows US to meet climate goal despite court setback

John Kerry
  • John Kerry vows US will meet UN climate goals despite the Supreme Court ruling.
  • President Biden pledged last year to reduce emissions by up to 52 percent by 2030.
  • Interior Department proposes lifting ban on offshore oil and gas drilling in Gulf of Mexico and Alaska waters.

 

Despite a Supreme Court ruling that limited the government’s powers, US climate envoy John Kerry vowed Friday that the US will meet the goals it submitted to the UN on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

“We are determined to achieve our goals. We can achieve our goals,” Kerry told AFP.

“But obviously it would help if we had a majority of the Supreme Court in the United States of America that actually understood the gravity of the situation and was more willing to try to be helpful rather than present a hurdle of one kind or another,” he said.

President Joe Biden, after defeating the climate-skeptic Donald Trump, in April last year said the United States would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 50 to 52 percent by 2030 from 2005 levels, dramatically increasing the climate ambitions of the world’s largest economy.

He submitted the so-called nationally determined contribution to the UN climate body in line with the 2015 Paris Agreement, the landmark deal brokered by Kerry when he was secretary of state.

China, the world’s largest carbon emitter, called Friday on all nations to live up to Paris commitments, with foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian saying of the United States, “it is not enough to just chant slogans.”

Kerry, who has worked with Chinese officials in his climate role despite soaring tensions between Beijing and Washington, said that he was “not surprised by the messaging” from the Asian power.

“We will show China precisely how we’re going to get the job done,” Kerry said.

Stephane Dujarric, the spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, called the Supreme Court decision “a setback in our fight against climate change.”

Despite Biden’s pledges to wean the United States off fossil fuels, the Interior Department on Friday released a five-year proposal that would authorize offshore oil and gas drilling in federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska, although it would still ban drilling in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

The proposal comes amid soaring gas prices and as Biden seeks to woo Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat from coal-producing West Virginia with the crucial vote, to back a package that would also boost clean energy.

Environmentalists see the legislation as a last hope amid expectations that Trump’s Republican Party will make advances in November congressional elections.

The Supreme Court, finishing a term in which three justices nominated by Trump pushed it sharply to the right, on Thursday cut the wings off a key way in which the government could have tackled climate change without fresh legislation.

In a 6-3 ruling branded “devastating” by Biden, the top court said the Environmental Protection Agency did not have authority to order sweeping cuts on emissions from coal-fired power plants.

“I am convinced — and our legal people are looking at it very carefully — that this decision leaves plenty of latitude for us to be able to do a lot of things that we need to do,” Kerry said.

Asked about calls by some lawmakers from his Democratic Party for Biden to declare a climate emergency, john Kerry said, “I think the president needs to evaluate every option available.”

Coal accounts for around 20 percent of US electricity generation — still roughly on par with renewables. China, despite investing heavily in wind and solar, has also kept building coal production capacity.

But Kerry said that the marketplace showed that coal was not the future.

“Nobody’s going to fund any new coal power in the United States — no bank, no private lender. Coal is the dirtiest fuel in the world,” he said.

Scientists warn that the world is far off track in avoiding the worst ravages of climate change including severe heatwaves, floods, droughts, rising sea levels and storm surges.

The Paris accord set the goal of limiting end-of-century warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels — and preferably not beyond 1.5 degrees — but the planet has already warmed by nearly 1.2 Celsius.

Ruth Greenspan Bell, a climate expert at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, said it was difficult for the United States to show climate leadership while also fighting internally on whether it is a priority.

“It’s kind of putting a pin into a balloon. There’s a little bit less air in the balloon than there was before,” she said of the court decision.

“The times call for a moonshot but imagine trying to pull off a moonshot when you are at the same time in a defensive crouch.”

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