AG Garland appoints special counsel to investigate Biden classified documents

Attorney General Merrick Garland on Thursday appointed a special counsel to investigate President Biden’s handling of classified documents dating back to the Obama administration.

Garland tapped Robert Hur, a former U.S. attorney, to handle the investigation. The Justice Department escalated it to a special counsel investigation from a mere review on Thursday after a second stash of classified documents was found inside the garage of Biden’s Wilmington, Delaware, home. The first documents were found inside the Washington offices of the Penn Biden Center think tank.

“Earlier today, I signed an order appointing Robert Hur a special counsel for the matter I have just described,” Garland said Thursday after outlining the located documents. “The document authorizes him to investigate whether any person or entity violated the law in connection with this matter. The special counsel will not be subject to the day-to-day supervision of any official of the department, but he must comply with the regulations, procedures and policies of the department.”

ROBERT K. HUR, BIDEN SPECIAL COUNSEL, OVERSAW INDICTMENTS OF TOP BALTIMORE OFFICIALS

Hur worked in the DOJ’s criminal division investigating counterterrorism, corporate fraud, and appellate matters, Garland said. Hur served as the U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland until he left the DOJ in 2021.

“I am confident that Mr. Hur will carry out his responsibility in an even-handed and urgent manner and in accordance with the highest traditions of this department,” Garland added.

BIDEN PREPARING FOR POTENTIAL 2024 RE-ELECTION BID BEHIND THE SCENES

U.S. Attorney Robert Hur arrives at U.S. District Court in Baltimore on Nov. 21, 2019.

U.S. Attorney Robert Hur arrives at U.S. District Court in Baltimore on Nov. 21, 2019.
(AP Photo/Steve Ruark, File)

Attorney General Merrick Garland delivers a statement at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., on April 26, 2021.

Attorney General Merrick Garland delivers a statement at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., on April 26, 2021.
(Mandel Ngan-Pool/Getty Images)

The White House Counsel’s Office searched Biden’s two residences in Rehoboth Beach and Wilmington, Delaware, this week after news of the first documents broke. White House lawyers say they immediately contacted the DOJ when they discovered the documents inside the Wilmington garage. There has been no indication of what the documents contain or whether Biden or anyone else read them after he left office as vice president.

“Lawyers discovered among personal and political papers a small number of additional Obama-Biden administration records with classified markings. All but one of these documents were found in storage space in the President’s Wilmington residence garage,” White House lawyers wrote in a Thursday statement. “One document consisting of one page was discovered among stored materials in an adjacent room.”

The White House says no documents were found at Biden’s residence in Rehoboth Beach. Biden’s administration has also arranged to deliver the documents to the DOJ.

PRESIDENT BIDEN IGNORES QUESTION ON WHY CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS WERE FOUND AT HIS THINK TANK

The Wilmington documents are the second stash of Obama-era classified documents to be uncovered. The first collection was found at the Washington offices of the Penn Biden Center, a Biden-aligned think tank.

Joe Biden backs his Corvette into a garage in a campaign video released Aug. 5, 2020.

Joe Biden backs his Corvette into a garage in a campaign video released Aug. 5, 2020.
(Joe Biden for President)

Biden sparred with Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy over the second group of documents on Thursday.

“Classified documents next to your Corvette? What were you thinking?” Doocy asked.

“I’m going to get the chance to speak on all of this, God willing it’ll be soon, but I said earlier this week — and by the way my Corvette is in a locked garage. It’s not like it’s sitting out in the street,” Biden responded.

“So the documents were in a locked garage,” Doocy prompted.

“Yes, as well as my Corvette. But as I said earlier this week, people know I take classified documents and classified material seriously,” Biden said. “I also said we’re cooperating fully and completely with the Justice Department’s review.”

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The discovery echoes revelations last year that former President Donald Trump had housed a trove of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida after leaving office. The FBI ultimately raided his residence to recover some 300 classified documents.

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Why Apple may finally be embracing touchscreen laptops



CNN
 — 

Over the years, Apple has added touchscreens to almost every computing device imaginable, from phones and tablets to smartwatches, but it has refrained from bringing the feature to its Mac product line – even as a long list of rivals did so with their laptops and desktops.

In 2010, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs described the concept of a computer with a touchscreen – then an emerging trend among the company’s competitors – as “ergonomically terrible.” Two years later, CEO Tim Cook reiterated the sentiment during an earnings call. And Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior VP of software engineering, said in 2018 that “lifting your arm up to poke a screen is pretty fatiguing to do.”

But now, Apple may be rethinking its stance. On Wednesday, Bloomberg reported Apple engineers are developing a touchscreen for the MacBook Pro with an expected launch date of 2025, citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

While it’s unclear if the touchscreen laptop will see the light of day, introducing the product could accomplish two important things for Apple: adapting to shifting consumer expectations and supercharging sales for its Mac product line.

Microsoft, HP, Samsung and Dell, have long offered computers with touchscreens, and more consumers have come to expect they can tap on a computer screen just as they do on their phones. (If you have a MacBook, you may have already had the experience of a friend or relative touching your screen reflexively thinking it would do something.)

At the same time, interest in Apple computers is booming, thanks in part to Apple’s inclusion of its new in-house processor that improved battery life and offered better performance. Mac revenue increased 14% in Apple’s 2022 fiscal year to $40.1 billion. Apple’s iPad business, on the other hand, saw sales decline from the prior year.

Apple has previously kept the touchscreen away from its Mac lineup to prevent it from cannibalizing iPad sales. Instead, Apple added a narrow touch bar to its MacBook keyboard to provide easy access to shortcuts, emoji and other features, but ultimately it did away with the tool after it was panned by users and critics.

Now, however, Apple could use a Mac touchscreen to incentivize consumers to upgrade their computers and keep Mac sales momentum growing.

David McQueen, research director at ABI Research, said the lines are increasingly blurred between higher-end iPads and Macs, thanks to new chips, battery life and slim design. He noted that when a 12.9-inch iPad Pro is attached to a Magic Keyboard with use of an Apple Pencil, there is “not much to tell it apart from a laptop experience.”

“The market has embraced 2-in-1 laptop-tablet hybrids and maybe now Apple sees the rationale for also adding one to its armory,” he added.”

Apple, for its part, has softened its stance on Mac touchscreens more recently. When asked at a conference last fall if Apple will add a touchscreen to Macs, Federighi responded: “Who’s to say?”


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Indiana man breaks state fishing record twice in 1 day on Lake Michigan

A man from Indiana broke a state fishing record twice in a single day right before the New Year.

Scott Skafar, 48, of Valparaiso, Indiana, went fishing in Porter County on Dec. 30, 2022, where he caught two record-breaking fish from Lake Michigan, according to a press release issued by the Indiana Department of Natural Resources (Indiana DNR) on Wednesday, Jan. 11.

RECORD-BREAKING FISH: HUGE CATCHES THAT MADE HEADLINES IN 2022

Both of the fish Skafar caught were burbots, a gadiform freshwater fish (AKA cod fish), that’s native to Lake Michigan, according to the Indiana DNR.

Scott Skafar, of Valparaiso, Indiana, broke the state's 32-year-old burbot fishing record twice on Dec. 30, 2022.

Scott Skafar, of Valparaiso, Indiana, broke the state’s 32-year-old burbot fishing record twice on Dec. 30, 2022.
(Scott Skafar via Indiana Department of Natural Resources)

The first burbot Skafar caught weighed 10.2 pounds, which surpassed the state’s previous burbot fishing record from 1990 by 2.5 pounds.

FLORIDA WOMAN, 8 MONTHS PREGNANT, POLESPEARS FISH FOR POTENTIAL WORLD RECORD CATCH 

Skafar then caught a second burbot that beat the old state record by almost two pounds.

Burbots are ray-finned freshwater fish.

Burbots are ray-finned freshwater fish.
(iStock)

Fox News Digital reached out to Skafar for comment.

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“Adult burbot primarily feed on other fish species such as round goby, sculpin, and yellow perch,” the Indiana DNR wrote in its press release. “Burbot are also sometimes called eelpout, lawyer, or poor man’s lobster and have a single chin-barbel or whisker, similar to catfish whiskers.”

The Lake Michigan shoreline in Indiana measures 43 miles, according to the Indiana Department of Natural Resources.

The Lake Michigan shoreline in Indiana measures 43 miles, according to the Indiana Department of Natural Resources.
(iStock)

Burbots are usually bottom dwellers and swim up to Lake Michigan’s surface between the months of November and April when temperatures are cold, the Indiana DNR reported.

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The wildlife agency also noted that burbots are safe to eat and “have firm, white flesh.”

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Who is Robert Hur, the special counsel overseeing the Biden document probe



CNN
 — 

The Justice Department’s probe into classified documents found at President Joe Biden’s home and former private office will be overseen by Robert Hur, a former US attorney in Maryland who has “long and distinguished career as a prosecutor,” Attorney General Merrick Garland announced Thursday.

Hur was nominated to be US attorney in Maryland by then-President Donald Trump in 2017 and he served in the role until his resignation in 2021.

He has most recently been working in private practice in Washington, DC.

“As US attorney, he supervised some of the department’s more important national security, public corruption and other high-profile matters,” Garland said Thursday. “I will ensure that Mr. Hur receives all the resources he needs to conduct his work.”

Hur also served as an assistant US attorney in Maryland before working as the principal associate deputy attorney general with the Justice Department.

Prior to his time with the DOJ, Hur was a law clerk for Chief Justice William Rehnquist and also clerked for a federal appellate judge, Alex Kozinski.

This story is breaking and will be updated.

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Hunter Biden, China, classified documents: Mystery swirls around Penn Biden Center

The Penn Biden Center lies at the heart of the latest Biden controversy but in some ways remains shrouded by mystery.

The White House revealed earlier this week that classified documents were discovered at the Washington, D.C., office for President Biden’s think tank, the Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement, in early November. On Wednesday, news broke that another trove of classified documents from Biden’s time as vice president had been discovered at another location, leading to louder calls for Attorney General Merrick Garland to appoint a special counsel to investigate the president’s handling of such documents. 

The Biden Center has since found itself in the middle of a firestorm, leading to renewed questions on the likes of Chinese donations to the University of Pennsylvania, which houses the think tank. Hunter Biden is also shown to have discussed the center in emails before its launch.

Within weeks of leaving the vice presidency under former President Barack Obama in January 2017, Biden became the “Benjamin Franklin Presidential Practice Professor” at the University of Pennsylvania, an honorary position, and the “Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement” was launched in Washington, D.C., the next year.

However, discussions about the elder Biden’s future involvement with Penn long predated the end of the Obama presidency, according to emails from Hunter Biden’s infamous abandoned laptop, which have been verified by Fox News Digital.

President Biden pictured here in August with Hunter Biden on Johns Island, South Carolina, has faced scrutiny over his handling of classified documents after leaving the vice presidency in 2017. 

President Biden pictured here in August with Hunter Biden on Johns Island, South Carolina, has faced scrutiny over his handling of classified documents after leaving the vice presidency in 2017. 
(NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP via Getty Images)

SEVERAL TOP WHITE HOUSE OFFICIALS WORKED FOR BIDEN AT HIS THINK TANK WHERE CLASSIFIED DOCS DISCOVERED

On April 25, 2016, Creative Artists Agency (CAA) agent Craig Gering emailed Hunter with “confidential notes from our meeting,” in which Gering listed apparent plans that were discussed for the vice president upon leaving office. 

One of those plans included “wealth creation,” with no further explanation, and another included an apparent reference to the Penn Biden Center in Washington, D.C., with a possible job opportunity for Hunter.

“The Biden Institute of Foreign Relations at the University of Pennsylvania,” Gering’s email read. “Focus on foreign policy. In addition to the institute at U of Penn, the school has an existing office in DC that will be expanded to house a DC office for VP Biden (and Mike, Hunter and Steve?). Operates like The Clinton Global Initiative without the money raise.”

Hunter then confirmed Gering’s notes but emphasized that they needed to be “very confidential” because they were not set in stone. 

“Yes,” Hunter replied, “in theory that’s the way I would like to see it shake out— BUT please keep this very confidential between us because nothing has been set in stone and there’s still a lot of sensitivity around all of this both internally and externally. He hasn’t made any decisions and this could all be changed overnight.”

Hunter Biden confirms Craig Gering notes.

Hunter Biden confirms Craig Gering notes.
(Fox News)

Just 10 days earlier, Hunter was scheduled to attend a meeting with his father and then-university President Amy Gutmann, according to an email of Hunter’s schedule from Rosemont Seneca Vice President Joan Mayer. It is not clear if the meeting at the White House actually took place, but it was scheduled almost exactly one year after Hunter and his then-wife Kathleen hosted Gutmann for a private dinner at Cafe Milano, a Georgetown institution in Washington D.C., according to an April 2015 email from a Penn official to Kathleen and Hunter. The guest list “comprised of Academy Members (significant donors), trustees, Overseers, and Penn parents” from UPenn, another email read.

Joan Mayer email to Hunter Biden

Joan Mayer email to Hunter Biden
(Fox News)

Hunter’s lawyer and the White House did not respond to Fox News Digital inquiries on the matter.

Joe Biden left the vice presidency on Jan. 20, 2017, and was hired as a professor at Penn less four weeks after that, where he was paid a total of $776,527 in 2017 and 2018, which was nearly double what full-time Penn professors made during the same time, Philadelphia magazine reported in 2019.

The magazine reported at the time that the former vice president’s professorship was “really more of speaking residency,” and that “[h]e’s been on campus so infrequently that it becomes news when he actually is there,” which was a total of six times.

Former Vice president Joe Biden speaks at the University of Pennsylvania’s Irvine Auditorium February 19, 2019, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Former Vice president Joe Biden speaks at the University of Pennsylvania’s Irvine Auditorium February 19, 2019, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
(Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

The Penn Biden Center had its official opening in February 2018, where Joe signaled he had spoken with Gutmann when he was still vice president about becoming a “professor” and being able to bring his own team with him to UPenn.

“President Gutmann, when you came to me before the [Obama] administration was up and asked me whether I [would] consider to be a professor at Penn, the first thought I had was that it sounded like an intriguing idea, but it became even more intriguing after the outcome of the [2016] election when you said I could bring along with me some serious, serious people,” Biden said during the opening ceremony in February 2018.

“Serious staff people and much more than staff, and they start with Tony Blinken and Steve Ricchetti and others, so thank you for allowing me to bring along some really, really bright people,” he added.

In 2019, Biden took an unpaid leave of absence from Penn after he announced his presidential campaign.

An office building housing the Penn Biden Center, a think tank affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania, is seen in Washington, D.C., January 10, 2023, following reports that classified documents from the time when President Joe Biden was serving as Barack Obama's vice president have been found at the center that Biden sometimes used as office space.

An office building housing the Penn Biden Center, a think tank affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania, is seen in Washington, D.C., January 10, 2023, following reports that classified documents from the time when President Joe Biden was serving as Barack Obama’s vice president have been found at the center that Biden sometimes used as office space.
(Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

As president, Biden selected Gutmann to be the U.S. Ambassador to Germany. David Cohen, the former chairman of Penn’s board of trustees who was also at the Penn Biden Center’s opening, was tapped by the president as the U.S. Ambassador to Canada.

Vice president Joe Biden launches his "Moon Shot" mission to cure cancer with a tour of the University of Pennsylvania's Abramson Cancer Center and a roundtable conversation with researchers there on Friday, Jan. 15, 2016.

Vice president Joe Biden launches his “Moon Shot” mission to cure cancer with a tour of the University of Pennsylvania’s Abramson Cancer Center and a roundtable conversation with researchers there on Friday, Jan. 15, 2016.
(Ed Hille/Philadelphia Inquirer/Tribune News Service via Getty Images.)

On Monday evening, the White House revealed that classified documents dating back to Biden’s time as vice president were discovered at the Penn Biden Center in November. The president’s personal attorneys then handed the documents over to the National Archives and Records Administration.

On Wednesday, Fox News confirmed that aides to Biden discovered at least one more batch of classified documents from his time as vice president in Biden’s possession. The news has prompted calls from Republican lawmakers for Attorney General Merrick Garland to appoint a special counsel to investigate Biden’s handling of classified documents.

During the North American Leaders Summit in Mexico City Tuesday night, Biden said he was “surprised” to learn that classified documents had been found at the Penn Biden Center.

“They did what they should have done. They immediately called the [National Archives] … turned them over to the Archives, and I was briefed about this discovery and surprised to learn that there were any government records that were taken there to that office,” Biden said. “But I don’t know what’s in the documents. My lawyers have not suggested I ask what documents they were.”

10 UNANSWERED QUESTIONS ABOUT BIDEN’S CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS

The Penn Biden Center’s mission statement says it was founded on “the principle that a democratic, open, secure, tolerant, and interconnected world benefits all Americans,” and that it works to continue Biden’s fight “to secure American global leadership by defending and advancing a liberal international order.”

Fox News Digital previously reported that at least 10 senior Biden administration officials have been hired to their current or former positions after stints at the Penn Biden Center, including current Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl and White House counselor Steven Richetti. Blinken and Richetti both served as managing directors while Kahl was a strategic consultant at the center.

Since the Penn Biden Center opened, the University of Pennsylvania has come under a microscope over its influx of foreign donations, particularly from China.

Penn took in roughly $77 million in gifts and contracts from China between 2014 and 2020, The Daily Pennsylvanian previously reported. Further, the Washington Free Beacon noted that foreign donations to the university tripled in the two years following the Biden Center’s opening in 2017, with most of the money coming from China. 

Penn also struggled to explain a $3 million donation from 2019 from a Hong Kong shell company tied to Chinese national and businessman Xu Xeuqing. A university spokesperson previously said the donation came from Chinese national Xin Zhou, but the Free Beacon reported it could not identify a connection between Xin and Nice Famous Corporation Limited, where the gift originated.

The university also received at least $12.8 million in gifts from China between March 2020 and June 2022, according to a review of the Department of Education’s foreign gift reporting database. Additionally, the university reported at least $2.8 million in China contracts between July 2020 and January 2022.

“The Penn Biden Center has never solicited or received any gifts from any Chinese or other foreign entity. In fact, the University has never solicited any gifts for the Center,” Penn’s vice president of communications Stephen MacCarthy told Fox News Digital in a statement. 

MacCarthy said that since its inception, two American donors provided three unsolicited gifts totaling $1,100 for the Biden Center and that “one hundred percent” of the center’s budget is from university funds.

“Penn is fully compliant with federal law regarding the reporting of foreign gifts and contracts, as foreign gifts are all properly reported to the U.S. Department of Education as required by Section 117 of the Higher Education Act,” MacCarthy said.

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Republicans want a special counsel to investigate Biden’s handling of classified information after the two troves of documents were located this week. Garland has appointed John Lausch, the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, to review the matter.

The revelation that classified documents were found in Biden’s possession comes months after a similar situation related to former President Donald Trump’s handling of classified documents. Following a months-long dispute between Trump and the Department of Justice, FBI agents executed a warrant for the search of the former president’s home in Mar-a-Lago to recover some 300 classified documents.

Fox News’ Thomas Catenacci and Cameron Cawthorne contributed to this report.

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Yet another military reshuffle in Russia, as chief of armed forces is handed the 'poisoned chalice'



CNN
 — 

Russia’s Defense Ministry announced yet another realignment of the commanders leading the war in Ukraine on Wednesday, as criticism mounts over its handling of the stalled campaign.

The ministry said that General Valery Gerasimov, chief of the Russian General Staff, would become the overall commander of the campaign, with the current commander, Sergey Surovikin, becoming one of his three deputies.

Surovikin was only appointed as the overall commander of what the Kremlin euphemistically calls the “Special Military Operation” in October.

In terms of the bureaucratic hierarchy, the announcement is hardly an upheaval. Surovikin already reported to Gerasimov.

“Generals are moved, shuffled from the Front to the Headquarters. From Headquarters to the Front,” Russian television commentator Sergey Markov said Wednesday on Telegram.

“Surovikin is not punished and Gerasimov is not punished. It’s all one team. Well, of course with competition, which always happens among the top dogs.”

But the decision puts Gerasimov, who has been chief of the General Staff for more than a decade, closer to direct supervision of the campaign – and to responsibility for it. While Gerasimov was a key figure in planning the invasion, he appears to have been at arm’s length since, with just one reported visit to the command of the campaign inside Ukraine, though the Defense Ministry did not confirm that either.

Mark Galeotti, senior associate fellow with the Royal United Services Institute, said “it is a kind of demotion [for Gerasimov] or at least the most poisoned of chalices. It’s now on him, and I suspect Putin has unrealistic expectations again.”

Surovikin was appointed as the overall commander of what Russia calls the "Special Military Operation" in October.

Gerasimov has sometimes gone weeks without public appearances and was not seen at the Victory Day parade in Moscow last year, which at the time led to speculation about his position.

He now combines direct command of the Ukraine campaign with that of chief interlocutor with the United States on issues such as military “de-confliction.”

He last spoke with the Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, in November after a Ukrainian air defense missile landed in Poland.

Just why the Russian Defense Ministry has made this move at this moment is unclear. It said there was a “need to organize closer interaction between the branches and arms of the Armed Forces” and improve the support and effectiveness of “command and control of groupings of troops.”

Gerasimov will have three deputies – Surovikin, the army commander Oleg Salyukov and the Deputy Chief of the General Staff Colonel-General Aleksey Kim.

The new structure implies that Gerasimov’s seniority will improve coordination in a campaign where different branches of the armed forces have frequently seemed less than synchronized.

Some analysts believe the move may also be an attempt by the ministry to exert tighter control over the campaign ahead of a critical few months in which the remainder of the reserve force mobilized in the autumn of 2022 will be deployed after training.

Russian President Vladimir Putin listens to Valery Gerasimov during the annual meeting of the Defence Ministry board in Moscow on December 21, 2021.

The Ukrainian military has said it expects a fresh Russian offensive in the early spring. The overall military commander in Ukraine, General Valery Zaluzhny, told The Economist in December: “They [Russian forces] are 100% being prepared.”

A major Russian attack could come “in February, at best in March and at worst at the end of January,” he said.

Rob Lee at King’s College London tweeted that Wednesday’s announcement “reasserts the MoD’s position overseeing the war… this may also partially be a response to Wagner’s increasingly influential and public role in the war.”

Wagner’s boss, Yevgeny Prigozhin, has been both vocal and visible on the front lines, as his contract fighters have been prominently involved in the assault on Soledar in the eastern Donetsk region. He has repeatedly said that Wagner mercenaries fighters are exclusively responsible for advances in the Soledar area.

soldiers soledar

Video shows shooting battle between Ukrainian and Russian forces

There’s been a long history of tension between Prigozhin and Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu. But Prigozhin has praised General Surovikin for managing an orderly withdrawal of Russian forces in the southern Kherson region, as their position became less and less tenable.

In November, Prigozhin said on his Telegram channel: “Generals have to win victory after victory every day. To whom can Surovikin be compared? Surovikin is honest and principled, he is trusted by the army.”

Some commentators wonder whether the ministry is “circling the wagons” as criticism persists of its handling of the campaign. Wednesday’s announcement follows news that the man who lost his job as commander of the Central Military District in October, Colonel-General Aleksandr Lapin, had been appointed Chief of the General Staff of the Ground Forces, according to state news agency TASS.

Both Prigozhin and Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov singled out Lapin for criticism. “It’s not just that Lapin is worthless. It’s the fact that he is covered at the top by the leaders in the General Staff,” Kadyrov wrote on his Telegram channel in October last year.

It is inconceivable that Gerasimov’s appointment would have occurred without President Vladimir Putin’s approval and more likely his order. If Gerasimov turns the tide of the war, it will look like a brilliant move. If he fails, then he will take the blame.

A Russian military analyst who blogs under the pseudonym ‘Rybar,’ and has more than a million followers on Telegram, does not expect the shake-up to be successful – suggesting it’s hoping for “a miracle in the 11th month of the special operation.”

“The sum does not change by moving around its parts,” Rybar wrote.

Dara Massicot, a senior researcher at the Rand Corporation, says the Ministry of Defense is “demoting their most competent senior commander and replacing him with an incompetent one. This is a story that has it all: infighting, power struggles, jealousy “

She says that while Surovikin committed no strategic blunders, Shoigu and Gerasimov are to blame for the poor planning of the campaign. “They flunked it. They signed off on a secret plan, multiple bad assumptions, didn’t tell the majority of their troops. [It] led to big casualties and a partially broken force,” Massicot tweeted.

Galeotti says Gerasimov is “hanging by a thread”, tweeting: “I don’t think this is intended to create a pretext to sack him as the war is too important and Putin can sack who he wants. But he needs some kind of win or a career ends in ignominy.”

Gerasimov is 67 years old and was appointed by Putin in 2012. He gained a profile among western analysts after a speech that was reported in the Russian newspaper Military-Industrial Courier.

Gerasimov said the use of propaganda and subversion meant that “a perfectly thriving state can, in a matter of months and even days, be transformed into an arena of fierce armed conflict, become a victim of foreign intervention, and sink into a web of chaos, humanitarian catastrophe, and civil war.”

The arrival of Russia’s “little green men” on the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea in the spring of 2014 was seen as a successful example of this approach, sometimes dubbed “hybrid warfare.”

Galeotti says that “what Gerasimov was talking about was the use of subversion to prepare the battlefield before intervention, precisely the kind of operations used in Ukraine [in 2014]. Breaking the chain of command, stirring up local insurrections, jamming communications — these are all classic moves that hardly began in Crimea.”

But now General Gerasimov has to run a real war.

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Students who study abroad show more civic engagement

A recent study found that students who study abroad are more civically engaged than those who don’t.

Though formal classroom learning is an essential part of higher education, researchers at University of Chicago recognized that college is about more than what goes on in the lecture hall.

“It’s interesting to think about ways in which students’ college experiences outside the classroom prepare them for the world out there,” says Anne Henly, director of undergraduate studies in psychology and principal investigator of the study.

What impact do “cocurricular activities,” like joining a club or playing a sport, have on a student’s psychological development? As part of a grant awarded by the Self, Virtue, and Public Life Initiative, the Center for Practical Wisdom’s Jeannie Ngoc Boulware, Yena Kim, Howard Nusbaum, and Henly conducted a study focused on one specific co-curricular activity—studying abroad.

Though programs differ in location and level of immersion, students traveling overseas usually find themselves navigating different socio-cultural norms. Being in a new place allows students to acquire language skills, meet new people from other cultures and encounter different ideas.

“Our hypothesis was that because study abroad removes you from what you’re familiar with and introduces you to ways in which other people live, that might encourage you to see things from their perspective,” Henly says. “This might change basic perspective-taking abilities and empathic processes that affect social attitudes and engagement.”

To test this theory, researchers surveyed nearly 200 college students: those who had studied abroad, those hadn’t studied abroad but planned to, and students who weren’t interested in studying abroad.

Participants in each group completed several scales that measured not only civic attitudes and behaviors, but also psychological qualities that support those behaviors, such as empathy, epistemic humility, and cultural competency.

All groups scored similarly on the “Need for Cognition” scale, which measures enjoyment of thinking. In fact, apart from a difference in overall cultural competency, students who planned to study abroad and students who weren’t planning to were not fundamentally different.

Likewise, civic attitudes were high for all groups—most people believe they should participate in their community. However, students who had studied abroad were more likely to act on those beliefs—for example actually taking a volunteer position instead of simply believing volunteering is important.

“Those students who go abroad report more often actually taking the actions to participate as opposed to just believing that they should participate,” says Ngoc Boulware, first author and assistant director of communications and research for the Center for Practical Wisdom.

In addition, students who had studied abroad showed higher levels of empathy for others and greater epistemic humility, meaning they were more aware of the limits of their own knowledge. The researchers hypothesize that living abroad may alter one’s sense of self in relation to others in a way that spurs civic engagement. They plan to investigate further by tracking students’ civic engagement before and after they go abroad. The Center also plans to dig into other cocurricular activities and how they affect student development.

“If you get out of your typical experiences, force yourself to be a little bit uncomfortable and just have a little bit of perspective change, that can greatly benefit who you are as a member of society,” Boulware says. “We have this tendency to be in this echo chamber in our lives; to be able to step outside of that can really benefit us.”

The research appears in the Journal of Moral Education.

Source: Tori Lee for University of Chicago

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'Avengers' star Jeremy Renner's recovery after devastating injury

Jeremy Renner is “crushing all the progress goals” on his road to recovery after suffering traumatic injuries during a freak snowplow accident on New Year’s Day.

The 52-year-old actor’s sister, Kym Renner, shared a positive health update on the “Hawkeye” star as he remains hospitalized in the intensive care unit of Renown Regional Medical Center in Reno, Nevada.

“We are so thrilled with his progress,” Kym told People magazine. “If anyone knows Jeremy, he is a fighter and doesn’t mess around.”

Jeremy Renner is "crushing all the progress goals" after suffering serious injuries during a horrific snowplow accident.

Jeremy Renner is “crushing all the progress goals” after suffering serious injuries during a horrific snowplow accident.
(@jeremyrenner Instagram/Getty Images)

She continued, “He is crushing all the progress goals. We couldn’t feel more positive about the road ahead.”

JEREMY RENNER’S FAMILY SHARES HEALTH UPDATE: ‘HE IS A FIGHTER’ AND IS ‘CRUSHING ALL THE PROGRESS GOALS’

Dr. Robert Glatter, assistant professor of emergency medicine at New York City’s Lenox Hill Hospital, told Fox News Digital the accident could have been fatal, and while Renner’s recovery is going well, he will likely face a difficult road, extensive rehab and potential chronic pain.

The accident occurred on Jan. 1 when Renner was attempting to assist a family member after the vehicle that his relative was driving became stuck in the snow, per statements made by authorities. An estimated three feet of snow had fallen during a storm the night before in Reno, where Renner owns a home near Lake Tahoe.

Using his PistenBully, a 14,000-pound snowcat, Renner was able to successfully extricate the vehicle from his driveway. Afterward, he exited the Pistenbully and was speaking to the family member when the snowplow began to roll unexpectedly.

When “The Hurt Locker” actor attempted to get back into the Pistenbully to stop it from moving, he was “run over” by the massive snow groomer.

According to a 911 call log obtained by Fox News Digital, Renner was “completely crushed” underneath the snowcat and had difficulty “breathing” after the accident. The call log also stated that the Marvel star was “bleeding heavily from his head and other unknown injuries.” In addition, it was noted that the caller believed that Renner’s “right side of his chest is collapsed” and “upper torso is crushed.”

Dr. Robert Glatter told Fox News Digital that the "Hawkeye" star likely has a long road to recovery ahead of him.

Dr. Robert Glatter told Fox News Digital that the “Hawkeye” star likely has a long road to recovery ahead of him.
(Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/File)

Several of Renner’s neighbors quickly came to his aid and he was airlifted to the hospital in Reno where he underwent surgery the following day, per his representative.

“We can confirm that Jeremy has suffered blunt chest trauma and orthopedic injuries and has undergone surgery today, Jan. 2, 2023,” a statement from Renner’s rep said, according to People. “He has returned from surgery and remains in the intensive care unit in critical but stable condition.”

On Jan 3, the “Avengers” star shared a selfie to Instagram in which he was seen in a hospital bed in the ICU. Renner’s face appeared heavily bruised, and he was using a breathing tube.

“Thank you all for your kind words,” he wrote in the caption. “I’m too messed up now to type. But I send love to you all.”

Renner has regularly shared updates on social media as he recovers in the ICU.

Renner has regularly shared updates on social media as he recovers in the ICU.
(Jeremy Renner/ Instagram)

Since his first post, the actor has regularly shared updates as he recovers in the ICU. On Jan. 5, Renner posted a video on his Instagram Story of an “ICU spa moment” with his mother and sister.

“ICU Spa moment to lift my spirits,” he wrote. “Thank you mama, thank you sister, thank all for you, for your love.”

In the clip, Renner was seen wearing a hairnet, oxygen mask and lying down on the hospital bed as his sister, Kym, massaged his head.

JEREMY RENNER SHARES ‘ICU SPA MOMENT’ AFTER SNOWPLOWING ACCIDENT: ’THANK YOU MAMA’

“You so sexy,” Kim said jokingly.

“Mmm, check it out,” Renner said weakly with his eyes barely open.

“Literally look at all that blood,” his sibling teased with a smile.

“That was the first show in definitely a week or so. Gross!” Renner added.

He also shared the video on Twitter, writing, “amazing spa day with my sis and mama.”

On Jan. 5, Renner posted a video on his Instagram Story of an "ICU spa moment" with his mother and sister.

On Jan. 5, Renner posted a video on his Instagram Story of an “ICU spa moment” with his mother and sister.
(Instagram)

On Jan 6, Renner showed his appreciation for the care he had received from the staff at the hospital in a post that he shared to his Instagram Story.

“Thank you renowned medical ICU team for beginning this journey,” he wrote, accompanied by a photograph of himself lying in a hospital bed surrounded by medical staff.

Glatter told Fox News Digital that the progress that Renner has made after sustaining such severe injuries is “encouraging,” especially considering that the accident could easily have been fatal.

“Getting run over by a nearly 15,000-pound piece of heavy machinery may not only be life-threatening, but life ending,” Glatter said. “The very fact that Renner has survived and is making good progress thus far is certainly encouraging.”

He continued, “Injuries resulting from such a mechanism of injury could include long bone fractures [femur, tibia], multiple rib fractures, a flail chest, a pulmonary contusion, a pneumothorax, [collapsed lung], and cardiac contusion with a possible sternal fracture.”

“A hemothorax [blood in the chest wall cavity] is often a concern as well, which typically requires drainage by a chest tube or pigtail catheter. The bruises seen under Renner’s eyes in some photos — known as “raccoon eyes” — could potentially indicate an injury such as a basilar skull fracture resulting from head trauma from the incident. One cannot also rule out facial fractures as the source of facial bruising and noted swelling.”

Renner showed his appreciation for the care that he had received from the staff at the hospital in a post that he shared to his Instagram Story on Jan. 6.

Renner showed his appreciation for the care that he had received from the staff at the hospital in a post that he shared to his Instagram Story on Jan. 6.
(Instagram/Jeremy Renner)

Glatter shared his insight on the future treatments that Renner could undergo as he recovers and rehabilitates, as well as potential long-term effects from his injuries.

“Recovery from a fracture to the femur [thigh bone] or tibia [lower leg] with an external fixation device with pins can be prolonged and require physical therapy for several months,” he told Fox News Digital.

JEREMY RENNER POSTS HOSPITAL PHOTO, THANKS MEDICAL STAFF IN RECOVERY UPDATE

Glatter continued, “Recovery post fixation and surgery for his lower extremity fracture may result in chronic pain that could lead to a complex regional pain syndrome [CRPS] affecting his recovery. Renner’s doctors and other providers will be monitoring his progress in this regard, evaluating his recovery of function, especially his degree of pain and requirements for pain medication.”

The physician, who treated athletes during the 2016 Rio Olympics, also weighed in on whether Renner will ever be able to return to the big screen as an action star.

“The risk of long-term or chronic pain resulting from all of his injuries [such as possible rib fractures, a potential sternal fracture and cardiac contusion] presents ongoing challenges for rehabilitation,” he said.

“That said, his ability to return to acting will be determined by how his rehabilitation progresses.”

“Older age in and of itself often makes recovery prolonged and problematic,” Glatter added. “Lung injury or contusion can also affect oxygenation and breathing but is typically more pronounced in those patients with a history of smoking or chronic lung disease.”

“It’s possible, with aggressive rehabilitation and physical therapy, for Renner to make a reasonable recovery to allow him to engage in onscreen activities again. The greatest predictor of recovery is often how healthy and active you are prior sustaining the injuries themselves. Greater muscle mass and a healthy heart are always a good predictor of a better chance for a successful recovery.”

“Loss of muscle mass is expected during hospitalization, so a diet rich in protein and complex carbohydrates is essential to help accelerate recovery. A cardiac conditioning rehabilitation program emphasizing strength training is also essential to regain muscle mass in order to achieve pre-injury level of physical conditioning and function,” he said.

Many of Renner's co-stars sent him warm wishes for a speedy recovery, including "Avengers" actor Mark Ruffalo, right.

Many of Renner’s co-stars sent him warm wishes for a speedy recovery, including “Avengers” actor Mark Ruffalo, right.
(Getty Images/File)

As Renner continues on his journey to recovery, his family, friends, fans and co-stars have rallied around him. “Hawkeye” star Hailee Steinfeld commented on his first Instagram post from the hospital, writing, ‘Come on partner!!! Thank God you’re healing. We are sending you love and prayers for a speedy recovery.”

“Avengers” star Mark Ruffalo shared a screenshot of a news story about Renner’s accident, writing, “Prayers up for our brother @jeremyrenner on a full and speedy recovery.”

Ruffalo, 55, added, “Please send healing goodness his way.”

After Renner's accident, Ruffalo asked fans to send their thoughts and prayers to his co-star.

After Renner’s accident, Ruffalo asked fans to send their thoughts and prayers to his co-star.
(Instagram)

Evangeline Lilly shared a photo of herself with Renner from their 2010 movie, “The Hurt Locker,” to Instagram on Jan. 4.

“I am not surprised, in the least, that @jeremyrenner was hurt rescuing someone in the snow,” Lilly, 43, wrote in the caption.

She continued, “Jeremy has always been one of the most grounded and real people I ever met in Hollywood. From the first time we worked together on #thehurtlocker I recognized his full-hearted, blue-collar goodness.”

“A beautiful man who I adore. I send you my most honest well-wishes, Jeremy. You are so strong. I pray a quick and comforted recovery.”

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On Jan 7, the actor celebrated his 52nd birthday while hospitalized in the ICU. “Captain America” star Chris Evans paid tribute to his co-star on his Instagram Story, sharing a black-and-white photo of himself with Renner as they posed together at a movie premiere.

“Happy Birthday to one of the toughest guys I know! Sending so much love your way,” Evans, 41, wrote, adding a heart emoji.

The youth academics and athletics organization The Base Chicago shared a sweet video on its Instagram page in which the program’s children were seen holding up “Renner” signs and singing the lyrics “Go shawty, it’s your birthday. We gon’ party like it’s your birthday,” from 50 Cent’s hit song “In Da Club.”

“I love you all sooooo much!!!! Thank you,” Renner, who has previously volunteered with the group, commented along with a prayer hands emoji. “You’ve made my spirits sing!!!!”

Renner’s “S.W.A.T.” co-star Colin Farrell told Entertainment Tonight that he had “been in touch” with the injured actor.

“He’s doing good, I believe,” Farrell, 46, told the outlet.

“All prayers are with him,” he added.

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Fox News Digital’s Tracy Wright contributed to this report.

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