- Japan records biggest jump in foreign workers
- Asian markets mostly rise but worries over tariffs, AI linger,
- Investigators recover plane black boxes from Washington air collision
- 'No happiness': Misery for Myanmar exiles four years on from coup
- Ghosts of past spies haunt London underground tunnels
- Six Nations teams strengths and weaknesses
- Pressure on Prendergast as Ireland launch Six Nations title defence against England
- Scotland eager to avoid Italy slip-up at start of Six Nations
- Fonseca set for Lyon baptism against Marseille
- Hermoso: Spanish football icon against sexism after forced kiss
- Mbappe-Vinicius connection next goal for Liga leaders Real Madrid
- Leverkusen taking confidence from Champions League into Bundesliga title race
- Man City face Arsenal test as Bournemouth eye Liverpool scalp
- Trump's point man for drilling agenda confirmed by Senate
- Chipmaker Intel beats revenue expectations amidst Q4 loss
- Key nominees for the Grammy Awards
- Beyonce leads Grammys pack at gala backdropped by fires
- Samsung Electronics posts 129.85% jump in Q4 operating profit
- 'Shouldn't have happened:' DC air collision stuns experts
- Donald Trump: air crash investigator-in-chief?
- Nicaragua legislature cements 'absolute power' of president, wife
- McIlroy launches PGA season debut with hole-in-one
- Figure skating in shock as athletes, coaches perish in US crash
- Kim opens up four-stroke lead in LPGA's season opener
- Man Utd progress to Europa last 16 'really important' for Amorim overhaul
- Postecoglou hails Europa League win 'made in Tottenham'
- 'Not interested': Analysts sceptical about US, Russia nuclear talks
- Trump to decide on oil tariffs on Canada, Mexico
- MAHA Moms: Why RFK Jr's health agenda resonates with Americans
- Neymar, eyeing 2026 World Cup, announces return to Brazil's Santos
- 'The region will die': Ukraine's Donbas mines within Russia's grasp
- 'Campaign of terror': Georgia's escalating rights crackdown
- French luxury billionaire sparks tax debate with threat to leave
- Apple profit climbs but sales miss expectations
- Man Utd, Spurs advance to last 16 in Europa League
- Trump blames deadly Washington air collision on 'diversity'
- Itoje says England 'ready' for Six Nations kings Ireland
- Rennes sack Sampaoli, announce Beye as new coach
- Trump insists Egypt, Jordan will take Gazans
- Stones lead tributes to 'beautiful' Marianne Faithfull, dead at 78
- Washington midair crash: What we know so far
- Syria's new leader pledges 'national dialogue conference'
- McIlroy sinks hole-in-one at PGA Pebble Beach Pro-Am
- American skier Shiffrin remembers air crash victims on return from injury
- Sixties icon Marianne Faithfull to be 'dearly missed' after death at 78
- Barca's Bonmati voices opposition to Saudi Arabia hosting Spanish Super Cup
- On first trip, Rubio to wield big stick in Latin America
- Neymar announces return to Brazil's Santos
- Russian drone attack kills nine in east Ukraine
- Marianne Faithfull: from muse to master
Donald Trump: air crash investigator-in-chief?
Faced with the first big test of his new administration, Donald Trump wanted to show he was in control. Not just as America's consoler-in-chief, but as its chief prosecutor and air accident investigator-in-chief too.
Trump started his White House briefing on a midair collision between a passenger jet and a military helicopter in Washington with a traditional presidential tone and a moment of silence in what he called an "hour of anguish for a nation."
But he quickly pivoted to blame -- and culture war politics.
He blamed the helicopter pilots for the crash that killed 67 people. He blamed night-vision goggles. He talked about landing tracks and altitudes.
"We have some very strong opinions," Trump announced.
Above all, the 78-year-old Republican blamed the crash on diversity hires, in an astonishing attack on his Democratic predecessors, Barack Obama and Joe Biden.
"Because I have common sense, OK? " Trump replied when asked how he had reached the conclusion that programs to counter racism and sexism had played a role.
But the underlying message as Trump took the podium, flanked by a parade of tribute-paying officials, was that he had the situation under control -- and the crash wasn't his administration's fault.
The deadliest US plane crash for a decade came as questions swirl about Trump's plans for a radical right-wing reshaping of the federal government -- including its aviation agency.
- 'Not your fault' -
Trump's briefing had echoes of his appearances during the Covid pandemic in his first term when the abiding theme was: only I can fix this.
On one famous occasion Trump mused about injecting disinfectant as a "cleaning" for the disease.
Like then, Trump's first instinct on Thursday was to put himself at the center of the story, and to launch political attacks on his opponents.
And, like then, Trump rolled out people to praise him. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, Secretary of Defense chief Pete Hegseth and Vice President JD Vance were all called up to the famed lectern.
"It's not your fault," Trump said as he summoned a stunned-looking Duffy, who was sworn in less than six hours before the crash.
Duffy duly said the "president's leadership has been remarkable."
Hegseth took his turn, thanking Trump for his "leadership and courage" in what he calls a war on "woke" politics in the military, including a ban on transgender service members.
It was far from the first time Trump had used the traditional presidential role as consoler of the nation in times of tragedy to attack his opponents.
Last week he visited victims in fire-scorched California and hurricane-hit North Carolina -- launching broadsides at Democrats and threatening to shut down the federal disaster agency.
- 'Madness' -
But Trump's preemptive assault on diversity on Thursday allowed him to deflect wider questions about whether his purge of the federal government will strain the agencies he will need to probe the air crash -- and future crises like it.
It came just a day after the White House was forced into a major climbdown, rescinding an order freezing funds for federal aid that caused chaos across the country.
The Federal Aviation Adminstration had no full-time leader at the time of the crash because its leader stepped down on inauguration day after Trump's cost-cutting chief Elon Musk, the world's richest man, demanded that he quit.
Trump announced a replacement during the briefing on Thursday.
The FAA was also one of the first targets for Trump's slew of executive orders after his inauguration, with one targeting diversity "madness" at the agency.
The spotlight also remains on Hegseth, a former Fox TV contributor and military veteran, who is also in his first week in the job.
His campaign against "woke" in the US military was criticized by his predecessor Lloyd Austin, who said that rejecting "qualified patriots" would make the armed forces "weaker."
Hegseth is also under pressure to deliver after squeaking through his confirmation process due to allegations of alcohol abuse, sexual misconduct and concerns over inexperience.
M.Thompson--AMWN