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Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corva Coleman. President Trump is threatening Iran again. He wrote online this morning, Iran needs to come to the table for a deal on nuclear weapons.
Chapter 2: What are President Trump's recent threats towards Iran?
He says if Iran doesn't, the next attack will be, quote, worse. French President Emmanuel Macron is hosting the leaders of Denmark and Greenland today. NPR's Eleanor Beardsley reports Paris is their first stop on a European tour.
The purpose of the tour is to strengthen strategic partnerships and protect sovereignty in the Arctic after recent pressure exerted by the Trump administration. The visits to European capitals will also include talks on the geopolitical, diplomatic and environmental challenges facing Greenland.
Danish Prime Minister Meta Fredriksen and Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens Fredrik Nielsen thanked France for its supportive stance against the recent verbal attacks. Paris has taken steps to solidify its support for Greenland. Macron visited the capital, Nuc, six months ago, and France announced it will open a consulate there to strengthen its diplomatic and economic presence.
It will be the first diplomatic representation of a major European country in Greenland in decades. Eleanor Beardsley, NPR News, Paris.
A man is under arrest in Minneapolis. Authorities say he rushed Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar while she was speaking at a town hall event last night.
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Chapter 3: What is the significance of Macron's meeting with Denmark and Greenland leaders?
He then sprayed her with an unknown liquid. From Minnesota Public Radio, Annie Russell reports Omar continued speaking.
The lawmaker told reporters after the confrontation that she wouldn't be intimidated. She had been calling for the ouster of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem at the time. The man was tackled by security and led away. Omar has come under increasing criticism by Republicans, including President Trump.
At a rally hours earlier in Iowa, Trump mocked Omar's love for America amid boos from those in attendance. Omar is a U.S. citizen who was born in Somalia. Omar is in her fourth term in the House and is seeking re-election. For NPR News, I'm Annie Russell in St. Paul.
The National Transportation Safety Board has released its findings about last year's deadly crash at an airport near Washington, D.C. Sixty-seven people died when an Army helicopter collided with a passenger jet. The NTSB said several reasons that led to the crash included the fact that the aircraft were flying far too closely.
NPR's Joel Rose says much of the responsibility has now been pinned on the Federal Aviation Administration.
The chair of the NTSB, Jennifer Homendy, said the FAA should have known that there was a conflict between this helicopter route along the Potomac River and the approach to Runway 33 at the DCA airport, where the American Airlines regional jet flying from Kansas was trying to land. Homendy says those two flight paths were separated by less than 100 feet.
NPR's Joel Rose reporting. On Wall Street, in pre-market trading, Dow futures are lower. You're listening to NPR News. Some politicians in Italy are denouncing plans to have U.S. ICE agents help with security at the Winter Olympic Games. After violence by U.S. agents in Minneapolis, the mayor of Milan, Italy, says ICE agents are not welcome in his city. NPR's Brian Mann reports.
The opening ceremony for the Games is a week from Friday. U.S. Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin says ICE's Homeland Security Investigations Team will support efforts to quote, mitigate risks from transnational criminal organizations, as they've done at past Olympics. According to McLaughlin's statement to NPR, ICE will not conduct immigration-related operations in Italy.
But after the killing of two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis, many Italian politicians want ICE to stay away. Milan's Mayor Giuseppe Sala told local media that ICE, quote, is a militia that kills. On social media, Italy's former Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte calls on Italy's government to block ICE's presence, saying we cannot allow this. Brian Mann, NPR News.
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