
US Treasury's Bessent warns countries face higher tariff rates after July 9 deadline
Bessent, who earlier floated the idea of negotiating extensions, told Bloomberg Television that he expects there to be "a flurry" of trade deals leading up to the July 9 deadline, after which 10% U.S. tariff rates on goods from many countries are set to snap back to Trump's April 2 announced rates of 11% to 50%.
"We have countries that are negotiating in good faith, but they should be aware that if we can't get across the line because they are being recalcitrant, then we could spring back to the April 2 levels. I hope that won't have to happen," Bessent said.
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The Independent
11 minutes ago
- The Independent
‘We'll have to arrest him': Trump threatens jail for Mamdani in NYC and calls Biden a ‘son of a b****' in wild ‘Alligator Alcatraz' visit
Imagine going back in time 10 years or more and explaining to someone that second-term President Donald Trump was visiting somewhere called 'Alligator Alcatraz' — a hastily built mass deportation facility. Then imagine trying to explain some of the things he and his traveling companion, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, discussed with members of the press during the trip. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis joined Trump and Noem for a tour of the migrant detention center, built in just eight days at a disused airstrip in the Florida Everglades, as the president looks to ramp up deportations of people in the U.S. illegally. With his signature domestic policy bill making its way through the Senate back on Capitol Hill, and the reemergence of his feud with former DOGE leader Elon Musk simmering in the background, the president had plenty to say to the pool reporters accompanying him on the trip. Here are some of the wilder moments. Alligator cops (and crocodiles and sharks?) Trump seems particularly taken with the idea of using wildlife and natural barriers to keep detainees from escaping. Asked Tuesday if the new detention center was the model going forward, the president responded: 'It can be. You don't always have land so beautiful and so secure. We have a lot of bodyguards and a lot of cops in the form of alligators... I wouldn't want to run through the Everglades for long.' He went further when reminded that in 2018, he suggested putting alligators in the Rio Grande to prevent migrants from crossing into Texas. Asked if today was a dream come true for him, the president said: 'Well, I was thinking about that. It was meant more as a joke, but the more I thought of it, the more I liked it.' He added: 'And they were serious. They were actually crocodiles. They were crocodiles from Africa. They are a step beyond.' In addition, on the flight home, Trump restated on Truth Social his desire to reopen the original 'foreboding' Alcatraz federal prison in San Francisco Bay as a detention center, noting its island location and claiming it is 'surrounded by sharks.' Arresting NYC mayoral candidate Mamdani and Biden DHS chief Mayorkas During a press conference after touring the site, Trump said he was open to arresting both presumptive Democratic New York City mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani and Joe Biden's Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. Concerning Democratic socialist Mamdani, Trump was asked what he would do if he won his election and followed through on a promise to defy raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in the city that would aid in Trump's mass deportations program. 'Well, then we'll have to arrest him,' Trump said bluntly. For Mayorkas, he said that he is open to his arrest for his handling of the migrant crisis at the southern border during President Joe Biden 's administration. The president was also interested that Biden had not issued a pardon to Mayorkas. 'Well, I'd take a look at that one because what he did is it's beyond incompetence. Something had to be done. Now, with that being said, he took orders from other people, and he was really doing the orders,' Trump said. 'And you could say he was very loyal to them because it must have been very hard for him to stand up and sit up and, you know, talk about what he allowed to happen to this country and be serious about it. So he was given orders. If he wasn't given a pardon, I could see looking at that.' 'Son of a bitch' Biden Speaking of the former president, during the tour of the detention facility, in a room with bunk beds behind wire-fenced cages, Trump joked that Biden had wanted to lock him away, too. 'Hey, Biden wanted me in here,' the president quipped as Noem and DeSantis laughed. He then added under his breath: 'That son of a bitch.' A 'system' of detention camps and National Guard immigration judges Noem was especially pleased with the rapid work of the DeSantis administration in building a detention camp of this scale at such speed. 'This facility is exactly what I want every single governor in the country to consider doing with us,' she told reporters during the on-site press conference. Trump went further, darkly saying: 'We'd like to see them in many states. And at some point, they might morph into a system.' A system of detention camps. Let that sink in. At one point, the president said he approved of a plan by DeSantis to use National Guard soldiers as immigration judges. 'He didn't even have to ask me. He has my approval,' Trump said. DeSantis is attempting to deputize Florida National Guard Judge Advocate General Corps officers to serve as immigration judges, aiming to expedite deportations. Deporting U.S. citizens Trump also floated the idea of deporting criminal U.S. citizens. The president stated at the press conference that not only had criminals entered the country under the previous administration, but that the problem extended beyond that and was homegrown. He said: 'We also have a lot of bad people that have been here for a long time ... many of them were born in our country. I think we ought to get them the hell out of here, too, if you want to know the truth. So maybe they'll be the next job that we work on.' And finally, did Noem find Trump's Hannibal Lecter? Anyone who followed the 2024 election would be familiar with Trump's frequent riffs on fictional cannibal serial killer Hannibal Lecter. To this day, it remains unclear why he began mentioning the role played by Anthony Hopkins in 1991's Silence of the Lambs, but he frequently brought it up. During the press conference, Noem told the following anecdote, which is yet to be fact-checked: 'The other day, I was talking to some marshals that have been partnering with ICE. They said that they had detained a cannibal and put him on a plane to take him home, and while they had him in his seat, he started to eat himself, and they had to get him off and get him medical attention. These are the kind of deranged individuals that are on our streets in America that we're trying to target.'


The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
Trump ditches plans to move FBI out of DC and is instead ready to house them in old USAID headquarters
President Donald Trump had ditched his plans to move the FBI out of Washington, D.C., and is instead ready to house the agency in the former U.S. Agency for International Development headquarters. The first Trump administration suggested keeping about 8,300 FBI staffers in D.C. and moving 2,300 to Alabama, Idaho and West Virginia, The Washington Post reported in 2018. The FBI and General Services Administration have since picked the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center which is around three blocks over from its current headquarters. The center was the headquarters of the USAID before Trump and his Department of Government Efficiency, then led by tech billionaire Elon Musk, gutted the agency. It currently houses Customs and Border Protection employees and other tenants. FBI Director Kash Patel said in an announcement of the new location on Tuesday, 'This is a historic moment for the FBI.' "Moving to the Ronald Reagan Building is the most cost effective and resource efficient way to carry out our mission to protect the American people and uphold the Constitution,' he said. The FBI is currently headquartered in the J. Edgar Hoover building. Plans to relocate the agency have been ongoing for 15 years, as the current headquarters is old and crumbling. 'FBI's existing headquarters at the Hoover building is a great example of a government building that has accumulated years of deferred maintenance, suffering from an aging water system to concrete falling off the structure,' GSA Acting Administrator Stephen Ehikian said in the FBI's announcement. GSA Public Buildings Service Commissioner Michael Peters said the new headquarters 'not only provides a world-class location for the FBI's public servants, but it also saves Americans billions of dollars on new construction and avoids more than $300 million in deferred maintenance costs at the J. Edgar Hoover facility.' In 2023, the Biden administration had picked a suburb in Maryland to build the new headquarters. The GSA said at the time that Greenbelt was chosen because it would, in part, cost taxpayers the least amount of money and provide the best transportation access for employees. But top FBI officials favored a site in Springfield, Virginia, seeing it as better for agency needs, according to a report by The Washington Post. Trump ripped into the Biden administration's decision during a speech at the Justice Department this past March. 'They were going to build an FBI headquarters three hours away in Maryland, a liberal state,' he said, per Maryland Matters. 'But that has no bearing on what I'm about to say. We're going to stop it.'


The Guardian
22 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Shattered Lands by Sam Dalrymple review – the many partitions of southern Asia
Earlier this summer, amid renewed tensions between India and Pakistan following a terrorist attack in Indian-administered Kashmir, Donald Trump remarked that the two countries had been fighting over Kashmir for 'a thousand years'. It was a glib, ahistorical comment, and was widely ridiculed. Shattered Lands, Sam Dalrymple's urgent and ambitious debut, offers a more comprehensive rebuttal. Far from being a region riven by ancient hatreds, the lands that comprise modern India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar – as well as parts of the Gulf – were divided up within living memory from an empire in retreat. 'You can't actually see the Great Wall of China from space,' Dalrymple begins, 'but the border wall dividing India from Pakistan is unmistakable.' Stretching more than 3,000km and flanked by floodlights, thermal vision sensors and landmines, this is more a physical scar left by the hurried dismantling of British India than a traditional geopolitical divide. What might now seem like natural frontiers were shaped by five key events: Burma's exit from the empire in 1937; the separation of Aden that same year, and of the Gulf protectorates in 1947; the division of India and Pakistan, also in 1947; the absorption of more than 550 princely states; and, in 1971, the secession of East Pakistan. Neither ancient nor inevitable, these lines were hastily drawn in committee rooms, colonial offices and war cabinets. What makes Shattered Lands remarkable is not just the breadth of its archival reach or the linguistic range of its interviews (from Bengali to Burmese, Urdu to Konyak), but the way it reframes south Asia's history through the lens of disintegration. The son of acclaimed historian William Dalrymple, Sam nevertheless writes with a distinct sensibility. His work is shaped by a generational awareness of fractured identities, contested borders and the violence of nation-making. Where the elder Dalrymple has often chronicled the grandeur and decline of empires, the younger is more interested in how they splinter. And so, rather than treat the 1947 Partition as the singular rupture, Shattered Lands shows it to be one of many. The imperial map frayed gradually, and each unravelling left its own legacy of dispossession, nationalism and insurgency. Take Burma (now Mynamar), whose reconstitution as a crown colony in 1937 represented the first major partition of the Raj. Dismissed by many Indian elites as peripheral, Burma's separation was both strategic and symbolic. Gandhi, often invoked as a unifier, was among its supporters. 'I have no doubt in my mind that Burma cannot form part of India under swaraj [self rule],' he once wrote, aligning with the view of many Indian leaders who viewed India as Bharat, the sacred geography referred to in the epic Mahabharata, which excluded Burma and Arabia. Speaking to Rangoon's Gujarati community, Gandhi told them they were 'guests in a foreign country' despite many Burmese seeing themselves as Indian. That same year, as Burma and Aden were severed from the Indian Empire, the Congress party adopted Vande Mataram as India's national song. In equating the nation with the Hindu goddess Durga, it alienated Muslims such as Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who increasingly saw Congress as a vehicle for Hindu majoritarianism. The ideological groundwork for the creation of Pakistan was already being laid. Among the most poignant moments in the book is a brief account of a Bible salesman from the Naga hills who volunteers to fight in the second world war. The Nagas are ethnically Tibeto-Burman peoples native to the borderlands of north-east India and north-west Myanmar, with distinct cultural traditions and a strong sense of nationhood that long predates these modern states. When asked if he is Indian or Burmese, the man replies, 'I am a Naga first, a Naga second, and a Naga last.' The British system, designed to sort subjects into clear administrative categories, had no space for an affiliation that transcended colonial borders, and he was turned away. If there's a critique to be made, it's that Dalrymple's account remains largely anchored to the great men of history: viceroys, premiers, politicians, princely elites. While there are flickers of grassroots perspective – such as the Naga would-be soldier and Rohingya families from the borderlands – they often play a supporting role in a narrative shaped by those drawing the maps. Yet perhaps that is the point: these were top-down decisions, made in grand offices, whose human cost has still not fully been reckoned with. More significantly, Shattered Lands speaks powerfully to our present moment. At a time of widespread historical amnesia – when revisionist governments across south Asia are remaking textbooks and erasing inconvenient truths – this book reminds us how recent, contested and fragile these dividing lines are. The prose is vivid, the storytelling cinematic, and Dalrymple draws together forgotten archives from Aden to Assam. Above all, there is a refusal to mythologise, and instead a clear-eyed history that lays bare the possibilities foreclosed by the region's fragmentation. Shattered Lands: Five Partitions and the Making of Modern Asia by Sam Dalrymple is published by William Collins (£25). To support the Guardian, order your copy at Delivery charges may apply.