Chapter 1: What details are known about the recent shooting in Washington, D.C.?
Live from NPR News, I'm Janine Herbst. The CIA says the suspect in yesterday's shooting of two members of the West Virginia National Guard blocks from the White House, identified as a 29-year-old Afghan national, worked with agency-backed units in Afghanistan. The Guard members are in critical condition. Now President Trump says he'll deploy hundreds more National Guard troops to D.C.
NPR's Deepa Shivaram reports.
Trump said the shooter came to the U.S. from Afghanistan in September 2021, in the aftermath of the U.S. pullout from Kabul during the Biden administration. He said now the U.S. needs to reexamine the refugees who came from Afghanistan under the Biden administration. There are roughly 200,000 of them in the U.S.
We must now reexamine every single alien who has entered our country from Afghanistan under Biden administration. And we must take all necessary measures to ensure the removal of any alien from any country who does not belong here or add benefit to our country. Trump did not provide details on how that reexamination would take place or what the timeline would be.
Deepa Shivaram, NPR News. President Trump is defending his chief negotiator after a leaked recording appeared to show him coaching a Russian official on how to get a better deal with Trump. NPR's Franco Ordonez reports.
The controversy has shined a new spotlight on his special envoy, Steve Witkoff, and drawn criticism to the administration's ad hoc approach to securing peace deals. But Aaron David Miller, who served as a negotiator for Republican and Democratic administrations, says even a negotiating giant like Secretary of State Henry Kissinger would have a tough time with Russia.
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Chapter 2: How is President Trump responding to the shooting incident?
My experience in negotiations, they work. That is to say, deals are cut when there is urgency. An urgency is a function of two things. How much pain the parties are under and what are the prospects for gain.
The problem is that Miller just doesn't see the urgency in Moscow. And Russian President Vladimir Putin doesn't seem ready to make the kinds of concessions required to make a deal. Franco, Ordonez, NPR News.
In new court papers, chat GPT maker OpenAI says it's not liable for the death of a teenager saying he misused the chatbot. NPR's Bobbi Allen reports.
Lawyers for OpenAI say a 16-year-old boy from Orange County, California, used the chatbot as a suicide coach. The tech company says the boy's death was the result of the unauthorized use of ChatGPT. It's OpenAI's first legal response to a lawsuit that set off debate about the potential mental health dangers of powerful AI chatbots.
The lawsuit contained chat logs showing ChatGPT discouraged the boy from seeking mental health treatment and even helped him write a suicide note. Since the suit, OpenAI has changed its AI models. so that interactions with the chatbot are less affirming of what a user is asking about, which could include harms. Bobby Allen, NPR News.
You're listening to NPR News from Washington. The death toll from a public housing apartment fire in Hong Kong has risen to at least 65, and many more are trapped as firefighters continue working on extinguishing the blaze that engulfed several towers in the complex that houses around 4,600 people. Scores are injured, hundreds are listed as missing, and thousands of people are now displaced.
The cause of the blaze is under investigation, but the high-rise towers were undergoing renovation and covered in bamboo scaffolding. Three construction company executives are under arrest on suspicion of manslaughter after flammable building materials were found on the exterior of the tower blocks.
Like turkey and pumpkin pie, family-oriented running races have become synonymous with Thanksgiving. Today, turkey trots are being held in all 50 states. Colorado Public Radio's Dena Sig has more.
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Chapter 3: What are the implications of Trump's comments on Afghan refugees?
From Los Angeles to Caribou, Maine, the U.S. is home to hundreds of turkey trots. Many raise money for charity, like the race in the small city of Grand Junction, Colorado. Organizer Wes Engbarth says these events are a fun way to get outside.
Plus... Everybody feels a little bit better when they eat later in the day knowing that they did a 5K in the morning. And so I think it's kind of a combination of those factors, the things that makes them so popular.
More than a million people ran a turkey trot last Thanksgiving, according to the website RunSignUp. For NPR News, I'm Steena Sieg in Grand Junction, Colorado.
Wall Street is closed today for Thanksgiving, and we'll have a shortened trading day tomorrow. I'm Janine Herbst, NPR News in Washington.