US judge blocks Trump administration's use of troops in CaliforniaNew Foto - US judge blocks Trump administration's use of troops in California

By Dietrich Knauth and Tom Hals (Reuters) -A federal judge on Tuesday blocked U.S. President Donald Trump's administration from using the military to fight crime in California, as the Republican president threatens to send troops to more U.S. cities including Chicago. San Francisco-based U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer found that the Trump administration violated a law known as the Posse Comitatus Act with its June deployment of 4,000 National Guard and 700 active duty U.S. Marines to Los Angeles. The law sharply limits the use of federal troops for domestic enforcement. The decision dealt a setback to Trump's push to expand the role of the military on U.S. soil, which critics say is a dangerous expansion of executive authority that could spark tensions between troops and ordinary citizens. Breyer put the ruling on hold until September 12. The Trump administration is likely to appeal. White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly called Breyer a "rogue judge" and said the military deployment had saved Los Angeles from "mass chaos." "The president is committed to protecting law-abiding citizens, and this will not be the final say on the issue," Kelly said in an emailed statement. The injunction applies only to the military in California, not nationally. But the judge said that Trump's stated desire to send troops to Chicago and other cities provided support for his ruling, noting that the president said at an August 27 cabinet meeting that he had the right to "do anything I want to do ... if I think our country is in danger." Trump has said the troops were needed in Los Angeles to protect federal agents carrying out immigration enforcement, after large-scale immigration raids triggered protests. "There is no question that federal personnel should be able to perform their jobs without fearing for their safety," wrote Breyer, who was nominated to the bench by Democratic President Bill Clinton and is the brother of former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer. "But to use this as a hook to send military troops alongside federal agents wherever they go proves too much and would frustrate the very purpose of the Posse Comitatus Act." The Los Angeles deployment drew wide condemnation from Democrats, who said Trump was using the military to stifle opposition to his hardline immigration policies. "The people of California won much needed accountability against Trump's ILLEGAL militarization of an American city!" California Governor Gavin Newsom, a prominent Democrat who brought the lawsuit, wrote on X on Tuesday. Trump has since deployed the National Guard to Washington, D.C., a federal district where Trump wields exceptional power, and said he may send troops to Chicago, the nation's third-largest city. The Republican president has cited crime rates to justify the need for federal troops. Washington and Chicago, like many places across the U.S., experienced crime spikes in the wake of the pandemic, but crime is on a declining trend in both cities. 'UNPRECEDENTED SHIFT' At a three-day trial last month, lawyers from the California attorney general's office tried to show that the troops had performed police functions -- including setting up security perimeters and detaining two people -- and were not needed in the first place. They warned that a ruling for the Trump administration would "usher in a vast and unprecedented shift in the role of the military in our society." The Trump administration countered that the U.S. Constitution permits presidents to use troops to protect federal personnel and property as an exception to the Posse Comitatus Act. The administration's lawyers tried to show that the troops only acted to protect federal agents from perceived threats and stayed within their legal limits. The administration still had several hundred soldiers in Los Angeles when the trial took place, although the protests had long died down. The troops were used for security during raids on marijuana farms outside the city and as a show of force to deter protests at a popular park during an operation by immigration agents, according to evidence shown at trial. About 300 National Guard troops remain deployed to Los Angeles, and the Trump administration has said they would stay there at least until November. (Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware and Dietrich Knauth in New York; Additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel and Jack Queen in New York; writing by Susan Heavey and Luc Cohen, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien and Noeleen Walder)

US judge blocks Trump administration's use of troops in California

US judge blocks Trump administration's use of troops in California By Dietrich Knauth and Tom Hals (Reuters) -A federal judge on Tuesday...
Wave of respiratory infections sickens thousands in GazaNew Foto - Wave of respiratory infections sickens thousands in Gaza

Thousands of people have been sickened by a wave of serious respiratory infections in Gaza, health officials have said. Doctors say the outbreak – thought to be Covid-19 or flu – is spreading fastest among displaced families, with poor sanitation turning overcrowded displacement camps into breeding grounds for disease. There has also been a surge of infections among children and people with chronic health conditions. Acute respiratory infections accounted for 58 per cent of all recorded illnesses in the first week of August, according to the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha). Severe shortages of medicine and medical equipment, such as oxygen machines to help with respiratory distress, are complicating the response effort, the Gazan health ministry said on Sunday. High levels of malnutrition in the enclave,where famine has been confirmed, have left people vulnerable to recurrent infections which can increase the risk of illness and death,especially in young children, doctors say. "Infants will die from respiratory distress and untreated illnesses. Even a simple fever in a state of hunger can be fatal," said Dr Michal Feldon, a senior paediatrician at the Shamir Medical Center in Israel. "If hundreds of children needing oxygen arrive, they simply won't survive … the winter will be a catastrophe," he told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz. Last month, Israel's health ministry reported a 30 per cent increase in cases of Covid-19 compared with the previous week, bringing the total up to 430 cases. Diagnostic capacity for respiratory diseases is very limited in Gaza, a WHO spokesperson told The Telegraph, adding that there have been some suspected deaths caused by Covid-19. Medical professionals have also reported an outbreak of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), a rare and acute autoimmune disorder that causes muscle function to deteriorate and can cause paralysis. There have now been94 reported casesin Gaza, with around 25 per cent requiring ICU treatment and ten associated deaths, according to Ocha. Dr Ahmad al-Farra, Head of Paediatrics of Nasser Hospital, said cases that would normally take months to become acute are now progressing in just a few days. "Patients are fatigued, unable to stand or sit. Then as the paralysis increases it affects patients' respiratory muscles and can lead to respiratory failure. This can, in some cases, result in cardiac arrest," he told The Telegraph. Medicines used to treat the illness are completely depleted, making it even more difficult to manage the outbreak, he added. Stocks of intravenous immunoglobulin and plasma filters – used to treat the illness – are completely depleted, making it even more difficult to manage the outbreak, he added. Dr al-Farra said he expects to see an increase in cases, adding that they are facing difficulties in diagnosis due to a lack of MRI machines. Protect yourself and your family by learning more aboutGlobal Health Security Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Wave of respiratory infections sickens thousands in Gaza

Wave of respiratory infections sickens thousands in Gaza Thousands of people have been sickened by a wave of serious respiratory infections ...
R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe Reveals 'It's the End of the World as We Know It' Lyrics Are Wrong After 38 YearsNew Foto - R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe Reveals 'It's the End of the World as We Know It' Lyrics Are Wrong After 38 Years

L. Busacca/Getty Michael Stipe revealed that the lyrics to R.E.M.'s "It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine)" are wrong The musician shared the correct lyrics on Sunday, Aug. 31 on Bluesky after several websites had incorrect ones over the years "It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine)" was released in 1987 R.E.M. frontmanMichael Stipeis clearing up confusion around the lyrics to "It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine)" after 38 years. On Sunday, Aug. 31, the "Losing My Religion" musician, 65, decided to clarify some of the mistaken lyrics of the 1987 classic, which features a slew of pop culture references and non sequiturs — on Bluesky. Stipe initially shared a meme fromThe Simpsonswith Homer saying, "I can sing all the lyrics to "It's the End of the World" by R.E.M." Another character replies, "No you can't, Mr. Simpson. No one can!" Later in the day, he shared another Bluesky post revealing the line "Left her and wasn't coming in a hurry with the Furies / Breathing down your neck,"per Geniusis actually "Left of west and coming in a hurry with the Furies / Breathing down your neck." Stipe also clarified another line in the song. On Genius, the lyrics read, "Team by team, reporters baffled, trump, tethered, crop / Look at that low plane, fine, then." However, the "Everybody Hurts" performer noted on Bluesky that the lyrics are actually "Team by team reporters, baffled, trumped, tethered, cropped / Look at that low playing,fine, then." "It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine)" was the second single from R.E.M.'s 1987 album,Document. In a 2011 interview withInterview Magazine, Stipe opened up about how he came up with some of the lyrics to the track, which involved a dream about a party where everyone had "names that started with the initials L.B. except for me." Cindy Ord/GA/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty "It was Lester Bangs, Lenny Bruce, Leonard Bernstein," he said. "That's how one verse of the song came about: 'Cheesecake, jelly bean, boom . . .' It was fun, that party." In recent years, Stipe has reminded the world of the significance of "It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine)." In a March 2020 videoshared toStipe's official website, he sang a few lines of the tune, "It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine)" amid thecoronaviruspandemic. After singing a few lines, he spoke directly to viewers. "I do feel fine. I feel okay," said Stipe at the time. "The important part of that lyric, that song title, is 'as we know it.' We're about to go through, we are going through something that none of us have ever encountered before and that is, of course, the coronavirus. And it's real and it's serious and it's here." Read the original article onPeople

R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe Reveals 'It's the End of the World as We Know It' Lyrics Are Wrong After 38 Years

R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe Reveals 'It's the End of the World as We Know It' Lyrics Are Wrong After 38 Years L. Busacca/Getty Mi...
Engelbert Humperdinck: 'I'm not jealous of Tom Jones'New Foto - Engelbert Humperdinck: 'I'm not jealous of Tom Jones'

Visitors toHouse of Kong, the current East London exhibition that takes fans on a magical mystery tour of 25 years ofGorillaz, will see and hear many things. But one thing is sadly missing from the multi-media extravaganza: the creamy, crushed-velvet, supper-club tones ofEngelbert Humperdinck. "I wrote this really big, epic string ballad," Gorillaz figurehead Damon Albarn told an Australian radio station as he promoted the 2010 albumPlastic Beach. "I thought Engelbert Humperdinck would be fantastic on it. Well, he got the tune, and we thought he was going to do it… In the end it just didn't work out, because he only comes to England once a year, and that's fair enough. He didn't want to be faffing around in the studio with somebody he wasn't entirely [sure of]." "Absolutely not true!" retorts Humperdinck, his indignation palpableall the way from Los Angeles, when I read this quote to him. "At that time, I had signed with another manager, and this manager knewnothingabout music. So when the Gorillaz approached him to do the duet with me, he turned it down without even speaking to me," the singer insists, eyebrows rising towards a cloud of chestnut brown hair, the outrage crinkling those still lustrous, Seventies-style mutton-chops. "Never even spoke to me about it. And when I heard about it, you know how long he lasted? Five minutes.Gone. I kicked him out. That prompted me to get rid of him." Well, I tell Humperdinck, when he couldn't land his first-choice singer, Albarn decided to abandon that song. But the Blur man has recently been talking up a new Gorillaz album, so maybe the collaboration could ride again? "Oh, please God, yeah. Could you talk to them?" Humperdinck laughs. Not that the 89-year-old is sitting around, waiting for offers. He's an old-fashioned, big-lunged crooner who came up at the same time asthe Beatles– he halted their run of number one singles when, in 1967's Summer of Love, his signature easy listening anthemRelease MeoutsoldStrawberry Fields Forever/Penny Lane. But he never took the easy option, with dozens of album releases and decades slogging through Las Vegas residencies and international tours. He even took a punt, in 2012, on the poisoned chalice that is representing the UK at theEurovision Song Contest. In Baku he came 25th out of 26th, scoringnul points. But with 150 million records sold in 60 years, who's counting? The Sixties sex bomb, born Arnold Dorsey in Empire-era India and raised in Leicester, is currently in the midst of yet another world tour. This one is named after his 1967 chart-topperThe Last Waltz, although he's now regretting calling it that. "I tell you what happened," begins the singer, a sprightly, summery vision in white-spotted pink shirt. "The first part of the year was a little quiet, and I was climbing the walls. I called my manager and said: 'This is definitely not going to be the last waltz for me. I'm capable of travelling. I'm still fit and well – I'm touching wood when I say that – and I'd like to continue doing the thing that I love to do. And that's sing around the world.'" Next month, he's performing in Birmingham, which is not too far away from his house in Leicester: "I'm excited about that. I can't wait to get home again, have a pint and a bag of crisps." Humperdinck is beaming in from a wood-panelled room in his Bel Air property. It's a smaller home than the one he lived in between 1975 and 2004. That LA house, known as the Pink Palace – the most conspicuous incarnation of a wealth, at one time estimated at $100m – once belonged to the actressJayne Mansfield. Humperdinck bought the 40-room mansion – previously owned by George Harrison and featuring a heart-shaped swimming pool – in 1976 and lived there for 28 years. "It was a beautiful house. Very Hollywood. My children grew up in that house, and they loved it." In fact, Humperdinck's association with the Hollywood starlet ran even longer than those 29 years. When he went to see her perform one night in the summer of 1967, the pair's eyes met across a crowded LA nightclub. "She even sat on my lap during the show. I thought: my God, I've got this amazing sex symbol sitting on my lap." They then had dinner after her show, with Mansfield inviting the Englishman to come visit her at home the next time he was in town. Two weeks later she was dead, killed in a car crash. Fast-forward six decades: the recent documentaryMy Mom Jayne, directed by her daughter Mariska Hargitay, also an actress, told the story of the return to the family, courtesy of Humperdinck, of a piano that once belonged to Mansfield. As he explains it, he had bought the piano from her estate. "And it was a Gershwin piano – I believe Gershwin composedRhapsody in Blueon it. I had the piano for 29 years. But Mariska's husband got in touch and wanted to buy it off me. So I sold it to them, and it's gone back to the owners, back to the original family." Did he make some money on that? "Actually, I sold it for the same price as I bought it [for], although it was quite expensive when I bought it: 80 grand." As for his current home: he downsized here after the death, four years ago, of his wife, Patricia. They married in 1964, and she lived with Alzheimer's for 10 years before contracting Covid in early 2021. Little wonder the man wants to keep busy. "[The loss] changed my whole way of thinking, my whole way of reading a lyric. Because each song that I do seems to apply to the situation," says the singer, whose repertoire includes the songsA Man Without Love,The Way It Used to BeandForever and Ever (And Ever). "It's more real now than it's ever been. The reason why I want to work, I want to carry on doing this until God calls me, is because I love to do it. It's my way of life. I enjoy writing poetry. But I don't think I'll be satisfied in my life just sitting at home doing nothing." Humperdinck first started performing in America 1968, relocating there full-time not long afterwards. "Although I don't consider it my home; my home is definitely Leicester." His move was one of financial necessity, not artistic choice. "In those days, when I first got successful, there was a super-tax – 90 per cent or something. It was ridiculous, people couldn't survive on that. I wanted to be successful and keep what I was earning. I did 300 concerts a year when I first started. And most of [the earnings] would have gone in taxes. So it was a management move. Gordon Mills said: 'We better go somewhere where we can keep the money a bit more.'" Mills was the friend and impresario who started managing the singer, then going by the stage name Gerry Dorsey, in 1965. Their partnership was tested early on when Humperdinck heard a new song co-written by German songwriter Bert Kaempfert. He was convinced thatStrangers in the Nightwas a smash, but Mills told him it had already beenclaimed by another singer. "I think there's a lot more to that than meets the eye," says Humperdinck carefully of that long-ago switcheroo. First, "I'd already recorded it, but they can't find the tape… But when Gordon Mills said to me, 'You can't have it,' I said: 'But Gordon, it's a definite number one.' He says: 'Well, Sinatra wants it.' I think there was a little cash involved in that – Sinatra paid for it." Did he ever come across Frank Sinatra during his time in Vegas? "Oh, yeah. I came across him a lot. I used to play in his golf tournaments. Sinatra was a very unusual person. I can't believe how much power this man had. He just dominated the business." Was Humperdinck intimidated by him? "I wasn't afraid of him. I just put up with, ah, what you have to put up with," he says with a shrug. There were much better relations with Sinatra's fellow Rat Packers, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr. "In all the people of the past, Dean was probably my favourite. I used to dine with him quite a lot over here, at La Famiglia, a restaurant in LA. Because his agent was my agent. My agent used to say: 'I'm having dinner with Dean tonight. You want to come?'Do I want to come?Course I do!" Humperdinck and Mills's relationship was a fruitful partnership, until it wasn't. The saga of its unravelling emerges when our conversation turns to his friendship withElvis Presley– another "lovely, lovely guy". Humperdinck says: "I learnt a lot from watching Elvis. I always took notes. He was probably the best performer I ever saw on stage. He was good at what he did, and confident, but not conceited." He adds: "When somebody asked him, 'Who are your friends in showbusiness?', he always mentioned me. He said the reason for that was that I reminded him of the twin brother he lost at birth. But I think it's the sideburns," he adds with a twinkle. "I saw some of his movies," he continues. "When I first became successful in [America], Gordon Mills was getting a lot of scriptsfor me. But he used to dump them. He didn't want me to be six months, eight months in the [film] studio – because then you're making money for them." So, for all his successes on the small screen – in the fashion of the early 1970s, Humperdinck hosted his own all-star variety shows on American and British television – "that's how it finished up: I didn't do any movies. I would have loved that part of my life to be in movies". Does the singer ever regret heeding Mills's suggestion that he should call himself Engelbert Humperdinck (the name pinched from the 19th-century German operatic composer)? Billy Fury it wasn't. "No. He was a genius in that respect. He started with me very well. We were best buddies. He was my best man, I was his best man. But I think he got so powerful with having this stable of me,Tom Jonesand Gilbert O'Sullivan. But it was a big company, money went to his head, and he got too big for his boots." Jones, pointedly, is not another lovely, lovely guy. Which brings up another reason for Humperdinck's split from Mills. "He had different ideas about [my career]. He was very partial to Tom – they were both Welsh – and I guess there was a closeness there. I felt a little bit left out, that both the reins weren't together – one was here and one is here. Therefore, I got a bit upset, and I left the organisation." (Humperdinck split from his manager in 1977 and, he says, "lost a fortune"; Mills died nine years later.) So Mills was favouring Jones over you? "Oh yeah, without a doubt. Mind you, I thinkTom Jones is a great performer, great singer, great everything. Although we're not friends, I still think he's probably one of the best singers the world has ever known. And I always will say that. I'm not jealous of him, in fact." Humperdinck has changed his tune. Early in 2024 he was quoted as saying of Sir Tom: "I think he's lost his voice. I don't think he's got it anymore." It was the latest salvo in – as the tabloid headline had it – an "ageing sex bombs at war" saga that has rumbled on for decades, long after they were labelmates onDecca Records. As for that that "sex bomb" appellation: that's a harder one for Humperdinck to defuse. His 2011 memoir contained details of his "string of affairs and one-night stands". As he later put it, he'd had "more paternity suits than casual suits", and had some serious "making up" to do with his wife over his womanising. Last year an ex-girlfriend of Jones's claimed that, around 1980, Humperdinck made a pass at her – adding fuel to the feud. Jones, clearly still furious, recently told a a newspaper: "There's nothing friendly about him and I. He's a p----, quote me on that." Today, though, Humperdinck takes the high road, saying it's Jones's "choice" to refuse his olive branch. "I wish it wasn't the way, but it is what it is. I don't like to hold grudges. Life is too short for that sort of the thing." The Last Waltz Tour starts on September 7. Ticketshere Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Engelbert Humperdinck: ‘I’m not jealous of Tom Jones’

Engelbert Humperdinck: 'I'm not jealous of Tom Jones' Visitors toHouse of Kong, the current East London exhibition that takes fa...
8-Year-Old Boy in 'Severe' Condition After Shark Bite While Snorkeling in Florida: 'Significant Amount of Blood Loss'New Foto - 8-Year-Old Boy in 'Severe' Condition After Shark Bite While Snorkeling in Florida: 'Significant Amount of Blood Loss'

Alamy An 8-year-old boy is recovering from a shark bite after being attacked while snorkeling in Florida on Monday, Sept. 1 Local media outlet 7 News Miami reported that the child suffered a "significant amount of blood loss," citing emergency dispatch audio Police confirmed the 8-year-old was airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami following the incident An 8-year-old boy is recovering in the hospital after being attacked by a shark in Florida. On Monday, Sept. 1, the Monroe County Sheriff's Office confirmed in apost on Facebookthat the boy had been bitten off the coast of Key Largo, Florida, and had subsequently been airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. "An 8-year-old male was reportedly snorkeling when he was bitten by shark at approximately 3:24 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, off Key Largo, Florida on the oceanside," the post read in part. "The U.S. Coast Guard and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission were notified of the incident." Monroe Sheriff Rick Ramsay said the child was snorkeling on Horseshoe Reef when the incident occurred, according to theMiami Herald. He was in surgery Monday evening, Ramsay added. According to emergency dispatch audio obtained by7 News Miami, authorities said the 8-year-old patient was "pale" and had suffered a" significant amount of blood loss." Getty Authorities told the outlet and theMiami Heraldthat the child was bitten above the knee before a dive vessel nearby stopped to help him. "He's been applied two tourniquets, we also put [inaudible] bandage to control the bleeding," the emergency dispatch said, per 7 News Miami. "We're on the process of getting some vital signs." The emergency scanner traffic recorded first responders saying the boy's "injury is significant," per theMiami Herald. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The boy's condition is described as severe, according to 7 News Miami. PEOPLE has contacted the Monroe County Sheriff's Office and the U.S. Coast Guard for further comment. Alamy The news comes afterPEOPLE previouslyreported about an 8-year-old girl who received 13 staples after being bitten by a shark in Texas over Labor Day weekend. On Saturday, Aug. 30, Harper Ochoa was in shallow waters off of Galveston when something grabbed the back of her leg, according to CBS affiliateKWTX. After screaming and pushing the shark away, her relatives were alerted to the incident. She was then helped out of the water by her family, who noticed a large chunk of flesh missing from her leg. "It was just so much blood it was hard to tell what was going on," Harper's mom, Christa Ochoa, told KWTX. "Then when they were able to kind of get it to stop bleeding, the doctor was able to confirm that it looked like something from a shark." Despite the incident, the little girl appeared to be unfazed as she requested to return to the beach the next day, according to the outlet. Read the original article onPeople

8-Year-Old Boy in 'Severe' Condition After Shark Bite While Snorkeling in Florida: 'Significant Amount of Blood Loss'

8-Year-Old Boy in 'Severe' Condition After Shark Bite While Snorkeling in Florida: 'Significant Amount of Blood Loss' Alamy ...
NATO says it is working to counter Russia's GPS jamming after interference with EU leader's planeNew Foto - NATO says it is working to counter Russia's GPS jamming after interference with EU leader's plane

LUXEMBOURG (AP) — NATO is working to thwart Russian jamming of civilian flights, said the alliance's chief on Tuesday, two days after a jet carrying European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen lost its ability to use GPS navigation midair in Bulgarian airspace. The plane landed safely on Sunday, but Bulgarian authorities said theysuspected Russia was behind the interference. "It is taken very seriously," said NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte during a news conference in Luxembourg with the duchy's prime minister and defense minister. "I can assure you that we are working day and night to counter this, to prevent it, and to make sure that they will not do it again." He did not elaborate. Neither Russia nor von der Leyen has commented publicly on the incident. The EU and NATO are separate entities with different sets of member countries, but Europe's security is a vital issue for both. Rutte said the jamming was part of a complex campaign by Russia of "hybrid threats" likecutting of undersea cables in the Baltic Sea,a plot to assassinate a German industrialist, anda cyberattack on the National Heath Servicein the United Kingdom. "I have always hated the words hybrid because it sounds so cuddly, but hybrid is exactly this jamming of commercial airplanes, with potentially disastrous effects," he said. The Associated Press has plotted almost 80 incidents ona map tracking a campaign of disruption across Europe blamed on Russia,which the head of Britain's foreign intelligence service has described as "staggeringly reckless." Since Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Western officials have accused Russia and its proxies of stagingdozens of attacks and other incidents, ranging from vandalism to arson and attempted assassination. The interference from Russia includes jamming and spoofing. Jamming means a strong radio signal overwhelms communications, whereas spoofing misleads a receiver into thinking it is in a different location or in a past or future time period. "The threat from the Russians is increasing every day. Let's not be naive about it: this might also involve one day Luxembourg, it might come to the Netherlands," Rutte said. "With the latest Russian missile technology for example, the difference now between Lithuania on the front line and Luxembourg, The Hague or Madrid is five to 10 minutes. That's the time it takes this missile to reach these parts of Europe." The whole continent was under "direct threat from the Russians," he warned. "We are all on the eastern flank now, whether you live in London or Tallinn." Bulgaria will not investigate the jamming of von der Leyen's plane because "such things happen every day," Bulgarian Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov said Tuesday. He said it was one of the side effects of Russia's war in Ukraine and had occurred across Europe. - Associated Press writer Veselin Toshkov in Sofia, Bulgaria contributed to this report.

NATO says it is working to counter Russia's GPS jamming after interference with EU leader's plane

NATO says it is working to counter Russia's GPS jamming after interference with EU leader's plane LUXEMBOURG (AP) — NATO is working ...
Charlie Sheen on His Wild Past, Embracing Sobriety, and Learning to Forgive Himself: 'I Still Get the 'Shame Shivers' (Exclusive)New Foto - Charlie Sheen on His Wild Past, Embracing Sobriety, and Learning to Forgive Himself: 'I Still Get the 'Shame Shivers' (Exclusive)

Charlie Sheen has a new book,The Book of Sheenand a Netflix documentary,aka Charlie Sheencoming out Sept. 9 and 10, respectively The actor spoke with PEOPLE for a story in this week's print issue It's just me, finally telling the stories in the way they actually happened." the actor says. "The stories I can remember, anyway." On Sept. 3, Charlie Sheen turns 60—a milestone he wasn't sure he'd ever see. "I have more days behind me than in front of me, and that's fine," he says in this week's cover story forPeople, after abeach photo shoot in Malibu, not far from where he grew up. "But I'm feeling pretty good! Most guys my age, they usually have a bad back or knees. Somehow I dodged that." The former high school baseball pitcher, who stays fit on his rowing machine and does his best to eat healthily ("most of the time"), adds, "I just have a bad shoulder that I have to take Advil for." If it seems like life has slowed way (way!) down for the actor who spiraled into the depths of addiction in his 40s, faced countless tabloid scandals and endured two very public and ugly divorces, he says eight years of sobriety will do that to you. Cliff Watts These days, instead of benders with cocaine and call girls, he spends time meeting friends for coffee, visiting his parents and, until recently, wrapping up his debut memoirThe Book of Sheen(out Sept. 9) and the two-part Netflix documentaryaka Charlie Sheen(Sept. 10). Cliff Watts "It's not about me setting the record straight or righting all the wrongs of my past," Sheen says of releasing both projects at once — something he says just happened coincidentally. "Most of my 50s were spent apologizing to the people I hurt. I also didn't want to write from the place of being a victim. I wasn't, and I own everything I did. It's just me, finally telling the stories in the way they actually happened." He jokes, "The stories I can remember, anyway." Courtesy Charlie Sheen Sheen's memoir starts at the very beginning of his life, and covers his childhood, when he and his three siblings would tag along with dadMartin Sheenon the set of his movies, including spending months in the Philippines while he shotApocalypse Now. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. After high school, Sheen decided to join his dad and brother into the family business. A small role in 1986'sFerris Bueller's Day Offand bigger ones inPlatoonandWall Streetshot him to superstardom in just a few short years. But with success came the age-old trappings of fame: booze, and easy access to cocaine, fast cars and sex. SAMOHI Looking back, he thinks a lot of his early partying came from fear that the fame and money was all temporary. "There was always that voice of doubt, that it was only a matter of time before it all went away, so to enjoy it as heartily as you can," he says. In the documentary, hisTwo and a Half MencostarJon Cryernotes that he sensed Sheen never felt he deserved his success. "That was pretty insightful," Sheen says, adding that he personally asked everyone featured in the doc (including Cryer, his former bossChuck Lorre, his two ex-wives,Denise RichardsandBrooke Mueller, and even his former drug dealer Marco) to participate. Sami Sheen/instagram Unfortunately, as his success continued, so did his love of booze and drugs, and when he tried crack for the first time, he was hooked. The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! He went to rehab several times, and knows it's a miracle that he only had one overdose and one close brush with death. "At my parties, I always said, 'Park your judgement at the door. No pain in the bedroom. And no one can die,'" he says. "Those were good rules." Sheen hit a new low when he was fired from his hit sitcomTwo and a Half Menin March 2011. He then gave his infamous20/20interview where he claimed to have "tiger blood" in his veins. (He explains in the memoir that on top of drugs, he got addicted to using a testosterone cream that made him a "raving lunatic.") In 2017, Sheen finally got clean for good, and he says now he had to be ready for sobriety. "You have to be willing," he says, noting that only you can save your own life. In his case, it was deciding he wanted to be the kind of dad his kids (Cassandra, 41, Sami, 21, Lola, 20, and twins Max and Bob, 16) could rely on. He hasn't had a drop of alcohol since. "I keep a [mental list] of the worst, most shameful things I've done, and I can look at that in my head if I feel like having a drink," he says. Cliff Watts As for drugs, he quit them before he got off the booze, and says he's not interested in going back. "Whether it's true or not, I like to think the next hit would kill me." While he's made amends with almost everyone from his past, forgiving himself for his actions has been harder. Take PEOPLE with you!Subscribe to PEOPLE magazineto get the latest details on celebrity news, exclusive royal updates, how-it-happened true crime stories and more — right to your mailbox. "Forgiveness is still an evolving thing," he says. "I still get what I call the 'shame shivers.' These are the moments that hit me, of the heinous memories and choices and consequences. They're getting farther in between, so I guess that's progress. What has been interesting about making amends is that most people have been like, 'Hey yeah, we're good man, but we hope you've also forgiven yourself.'" Gallery Books As for what's next? He'd love to return to acting, but says he's taking things one day at a time, instead of outwardly chasing anything. "I'm not calling all of this a comeback," he says of returning to the spotlight. "I'm calling it a reset. I'm just living for the next moment, whatever that turns out to be." The Book of Sheenhits shelves on Sept. 9 and is available for preorder now, wherever books are sold.aka Charlie Sheenstreams on Netflix starting Sept. 10. Read the original article onPeople

Charlie Sheen on His Wild Past, Embracing Sobriety, and Learning to Forgive Himself: 'I Still Get the 'Shame Shivers' (Exclusive)

Charlie Sheen on His Wild Past, Embracing Sobriety, and Learning to Forgive Himself: 'I Still Get the 'Shame Shivers' (Exclusive...

 

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