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6.12.25

Survivors of Sept. 2 boat strike were waving before second attack, sources say

3:42:00 AM
Survivors of Sept. 2 boat strike were waving before second attack, sources say

Two people who survived an early September U.S. attack on an alleged drug boat in the Caribbean were waving overhead before they were killed in a now-controversial second strike, according to two sources familiar with a video that wasshown to lawmakers this week.

One of the sources said the action could be interpreted as the survivors either calling for help or trying to wave off another strike.

The additional details were first reported byThe New York Times.

The Sept. 2 operation was the first ofmore than 20 attackson alleged drug-carrying vessels by the Trump administration in recent months — a campaign that officials argue is necessary to stem narcotics trafficking, but critics believe is legally unjustified. More than 80 people have been killed in the strikes, including 11 people on Sept. 2, the military has said.

The operation has drawn fresh scrutiny since areport last weekthat the U.S. military carried out a follow-up strike on the vessel, killing two people who survived the initial attack. Some Democrats and legal experts have argued a strike to kill shipwrecked survivors could constitute a war crime. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitthas confirmedthere was a second strike, but argued it was lawful and warranted to "ensure the boat was destroyed."

Members of Congress watched a video of the strikes — including the strike that killed the two survivors — duringclosed-door testimonyon Thursday with the operation's commander, Adm. Mitch Bradley, and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Dan Caine.

But lawmakersoffered starkly differing interpretationsof the video after the hearing.

Democratic Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut told reporters the survivors appeared to be "in clear distress without any means of locomotion," calling it "one of the most troubling things I've seen in my time in public service." Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas said the survivors were "trying to flip a boat loaded with drugs bound for the United States back over so they could stay in the fight," concluding the four strikes on Sept. 2 were "entirely lawful and needful."

Multiple lawmakers said Bradley testified that there was no order from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to kill everybody onboard.

President Trump said Wednesday he would supportreleasing a videoof the strikes to the public. When asked by a reporter if he would support killing survivors, the president responded: "No, I support the decision to knock out the boats."

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Overnight exchange of fire along the Afghan-Pakistan border kills 5 and wounds 8, officials say

3:42:00 AM
Overnight exchange of fire along the Afghan-Pakistan border kills 5 and wounds 8, officials say

JALALABAD, Afghanistan (AP) — Anovernight exchange of firebetween Afghan forces and Pakistani troops along the two countries' tense border killed five Afghan civilians and wounded five others, while three civilians were also wounded on the Pakistani side, officials from the two countries said Saturday.

Each side has blamed the other for triggering the clash in violation ofa tenuous two-month ceasefire.

Those killed in the border area near the Afghan city of Spin Boldak, in southern Afghanistan's Kandahar province, included three children and one woman, said Ali Mohammad Haqmal, the head of information of Spin Boldak District.

Pakistani police and a hospital official in the Pakistani city of Chaman, Mohammad Awais, said three people, including a woman, were wounded in the shooting and shelling that came from the Afghan side. The clashes lasted until dawn Saturday, police said.

Tension between the two countries has been high since October, when deadly border clashes killed dozens of soldiers, civilians and suspected militants, and wounded hundreds on both sides. The violence erupted afterexplosions in Kabul,the Afghan capital, on Oct. 9 that the Taliban government blamed on Pakistan and vowed to avenge.

The fighting has been the worst between the neighbors in recent years. AQatar-mediated ceasefirebegan in October and has largely held, but peace talks have so far failed to produce an agreement.

Pakistan has suffered several militant attacks inside its country, and has blamed most of them on the Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP. Though separate from the Afghan Taliban, the TTP is closely allied with it, and many of its fighters are believed to have taken refuge in Afghanistan since the Taliban seized power there in 2021, further straining relations.

Pakistan and Afghanistan have both blamed each other for the cross-border exchange of fire that broke out Friday night.

Haqmal said the Afghan side didn't respond for 10-15 minutes after Pakistani forces began shooting, and that once the Afghan side responded, it stopped firing "within an hour." The shooting by the Pakistani side continued until Saturday morning, he said.

However, Mohammad Sadiq, a local Pakistani police official, claimed the shooting started from the Afghan side and that Pakistani troops returned fire near the Chaman border crossing, a key transit route.

The exchange came a day afterPakistan said it would allow the United Nationsto send relief supplies into Afghanistan through the Chaman and Torkham border crossings, which have been mostly closed for nearly two months amid escalating tensions.

Abidullah Farooqi, a spokesman for the Afghan border police, said Friday night that Pakistani forces first threw a hand grenade into the Spin Boldak border area on the Afghan side, prompting a response. He said Afghanistan remains committed to the ceasefire.

Mosharraf Zaidi, a spokesman for Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, said on X that earlier in the evening, the "Afghan Taliban regime resorted to unprovoked firing along the Chaman border." He added that Pakistani forces remain fully alert and committed to ensuring the country's territorial integrity and the safety of its citizens.

Separately, Pakistan's military said Saturday that its security forces had killed nine Pakistani Taliban militants during two intelligence-based operations Friday in Pakistan's northwestern districts of Tank and Lakki Marwat in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which borders Afghanistan.

Ahmed reported from Islamabad, Pakistan. Elena Becatoros in Athens, Greece, contributed to this report.

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Russia unleashes massive drone and missile attack on Ukraine as diplomatic talks continue

3:42:00 AM
Russia unleashes massive drone and missile attack on Ukraine as diplomatic talks continue

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia unleashed a major missile and drone barrage on Ukraine overnight into Saturday, after U.S. and Ukrainian officials said they'll meet on Saturday for a third day of talks aimed at endingthe nearly 4-year-old war,

Following talks that made progress on a security framework for postwar Ukraine, the two sides also offered the sober assessment that any "real progress toward any agreement" ultimately will depend "on Russia's readiness to show serious commitment to long-term peace."

The statement from U.S. special envoySteve Witkoff, Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner as well as Ukrainian negotiators Rustem Umerov and Andriy Hnatov came after they met for a second day in Florida on Friday. They offered only broad brushstrokes about the progress they say has been made as Trump pushes Kyiv and Moscow to agree to a U.S.-mediated proposal to end the war.

Russia used 653 drones and 51 missiles in the wide-reaching overnight attack on Ukraine, which triggered air raid alerts across the country and came as Ukraine marked Armed Forces Day, the country's air force said Saturday morning.

Ukrainian forces shot down and neutralized 585 drones and 30 missiles, the air force said, adding that 29 locations were struck.

At least eight people were wounded in the attacks, Ukrainian Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko said.

Among these, at least three people were wounded in the Kyiv region, according to local officials. Drone sightings were reported as far west as Ukraine's Lviv region.

Nuclear plant temporarily cut off from power

Russia carried out a "massive missile-drone attack" on power stations and other energy infrastructure in several Ukrainian regions, Ukraine's national energy operator, Ukrenergo, wrote on Telegram.

Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant temporarily lost all off-site power overnight, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Saturday, citing its Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi.

The plant is in an area that has been under Russian control since early in Moscow's invasion of Ukraine and isnot in service, but it needs reliable power to cool its six shut-down reactors and spent fuel, to avoid any catastrophic nuclear incidents.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that energy facilities were the main targets of the attacks, also noting that a drone strike had "burned down" the train station in the city of Fastiv, located in the Kyiv region.

Russia's Ministry of Defense said its air defenses had shot down 116 Ukrainian drones over Russian territory overnight into Saturday.

Russian Telegram news channel Astra said Ukraine struck Russia's Ryazan Oil Refinery, sharing footage appearing to show a fire breaking out and plumes of smoke rising above the refinery. The Associated Press could not independently verify the video.

The General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces later said Ukrainian forces had struck the refinery. Ryazan regional Gov. Pavel Malkov said a residential building had been damaged in a drone attack and that drone debris had fallen on the grounds of an "industrial facility," but did not mention the refinery.

Months ofUkrainian long-range drone strikeson Russian refineries have aimed to deprive Moscow of theoil export revenueit needs to pursue the war. Meanwhile, Kyiv and its western allies say Russia is trying tocripple the Ukrainian power gridand deny civilians access to heat, light and running water for a fourth consecutive winter, in what Ukrainian officials call "weaponizing" the cold.

Slow progress on agreeing security framework

The latest round of attacks came as U.S.President Donald Trump'sadvisers and Ukrainian officials said they'll meet for a third day of talks on Saturday, after making progress on finding agreement on a security framework for postwar Ukraine.

Following Friday's talks, the two sides also offered the sober assessment that any "real progress toward any agreement" ultimately will depend "on Russia's readiness to show serious commitment to long-term peace."

The statement from U.S. special envoySteve Witkoff, Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner as well as Ukrainian negotiators Rustem Umerov and Andriy Hnatov came after they met for a second day in Florida on Friday. They offered only broad brushstrokes about the progress they say has been made as Trump pushes Kyiv and Moscow to agree to a U.S.-mediated proposal to endnearly four years of war.

Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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How BYU can ruin Alabama, Notre Dame CFP hopes

2:22:00 AM
How BYU can ruin Alabama, Notre Dame CFP hopes

BYUfootball looks to play its way into theCollege Football Playoffwhen it faces Texas Tech in the Big 12 championship on Saturday, Dec. 6, and can potentially cause some chaos in the process.

TheNo. 11Cougars (No. 11 CFP) are currently the first team out of the 12-team CFP bracket. However, BYU could earn an automatic bid for the playoff should it defeat Texas Tech.

REQUIRED READING:How CFP will be impacted by every conference championship game scenario

BYU is looking to avenge its road loss to theRed Raidersa few weeks ago. The Cougars fell 29-7 and struggled to generate offense in the game, failing to score until midway through the fourth quarter.

No. 10Alabama(No. 9 CFP) and No. 9 Notre Dame (No. 10 CFP) are both rooting against BYU during conference championship weekend, although the Crimson Tide control their own destiny should they defeat Georgia in the SEC title game.

Here's how BYU can shake up the College Football Playoff bracket if it upsets Texas Tech.

How BYU can ruin Alabama, Notre Dame CFP chances

BYU, currently on the outside of the CFP, could move into the 12-team bracket with a win over Texas Tech in the Big 12 championship game. The Cougars would earn an automatic bid as one of the five highest-ranked conference champions.

The issue is that Texas Tech, which is currently No. 4 in the CFP rankings, would likely stay in the field as it owns a 29-7 win over BYU from a few weeks ago. A BYU win would most likely force Alabama or Notre Dame out of the CFP.

Alabama has a chance to earn its own automatic bid, though, if it can beat Georgia for the second time this season in the SEC championship game. If BYU wins and Alabama wins, Notre Dame would likely find itself out of the CFP picture.

Things could get even murkier if BYU wins and Alabama loses on Dec. 6. That would mean the CFP committee would have to choose between Alabama with a 10-3 record and Notre Dame with a 10-2 record. The committee moved the Crimson Tide over Notre Dame in the latest CFP rankings update, which could come into play with the committee's decision.

A three-loss team has never made the CFP, but the committee also has shown a precedent of not punishing teams for losing their conference title game. SMU still made the CFP over Alabama last season despite falling to Clemson in the ACC championship game, and TCU still made the four-team CFP in 2022 despite losing to Kansas State in the Big 12 championship.

Either way, a BYU win puts the committee in quite the bind.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How BYU can ruin Alabama, Notre Dame College Football Playoff hopes

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Ivy League to NFL? How a kid can look at the big picture as a recruit

2:22:00 AM
Ivy League to NFL? How a kid can look at the big picture as a recruit

Getting recruited:This is Part 3 of a series that looks behind the curtain of college recruiting. USA TODAY Sports was granted behind-the-scenes access by the football staff at the University of Pennsylvania, a Division I program that offers a high academic profile but no Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) money or scholarships. We also conducted a phone interview with Jerheme Urban, aformer NFL wide receiverwho is now the head football coach at Trinity University, a high athletic and academic Division III liberal arts school in San Antonio.

This week:Using sports to find a life path for success.

Read Part I:How college recruiting can be like the dating game

Read Part II:A 'broken' system? Negotiating constant change in college sports

PHILADELPHIA — Are you a late bloomer?

Maybe you weren't a Little League All-Star, or didn't make the A squad on the town soccer, lacrosse or basketball team.

You might be exactly what your future college coach wants.

"Think about that cup being half full," says Ray Priore, 62, who spent more than half his life on Penn football's coaching staff. "That's when you want to get somebody. Because when you get them here, you can get them bigger, stronger, faster, and that's development.

"If there's an art to recruiting, and there is, (it's) how do you see who those kids are?"

Penn's four best players this past season, according to Priore, were guys who distinguished themselves in their senior years of high school, two of them in an extra year at a college preparatory school.

Star wide receiver Jared Richardson was a quarterback, but Penn's coaches loved the athleticism he showed with the ball in his hands. Bisi Owens, the team's second-leading receiver, could have played QB in college but wound up at Penn because Priore loved how he played above the rim in basketball.

Priore saw how Liam O'Brien, the 2025 starting QB, and Alex Haight, another wide receiver, matured during a fifth year at the Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts.

"My angle on it is you go out early, fill your class, but are you taking just to take to fill the class? Or are you taking the best players?" Priore says.

"And I do believe there is such a huge development part that's missing and why there are still good players out there right now to go recruit."

Virginia Tech hired James Franklin as its next head coach. Franklin was fired earlier this season at Penn State. He replaces Brent Pry, who was fired midseason by the Hokies. Oklahoma State hired Eric Morris from North Texas to be the Cowboys next head coach. Morris replaces longtime OSU coach Mike Gundy, who was fired earlier this season. Colorado State hired Jim Mora Jr. as its new head coach. Mora led UConn to back-to-back nine-win seasons and replaces Jay Norvell, who was fired midseason. Oregon State hired Alabama co-offensive coordinator JaMarcus Shephard as its head coach, replacing Trent Bray who was fired after an 0-7 start this season.

These college football coaches are on the move. See who found new home

Priore spoke a few days before hestepped down on Nov. 24 following 11 seasons as head coach. He left with this parting shot: Coaches, even at the Division I level, will keep their eyes open for players who show late bursts of maturity.

If a D-I coach doesn't find you, maybe it will be someone in Division III like Jerheme Urban of Trinity University, who seeks a similar profile of freshmen who shoot for the Ivy League.

Urban wants kids he can develop, of course, into winners on the football field but also ones who take a long view of what they can get out of a collegiate sports experience.

What's the purpose of college sports? Really, at any level you achieve, you can look at it as your transition into the real world.

YOUTH SPORTS SURVIVAL GUIDE:Pre-order Coach Steve's upcoming book for young athletes and their parents

Kids, even late in high school, get better with age. Give them time to develop.

To Priore, the lesson was the same, whether you were the player scouted by the NFL or the walk-on who became captain:Can you get knocked down and get back up?

Urban wasn't heavily recruited out of high school in Texas. When he reached the NFL, he bled tenacity and loyalty, qualities he credits, in part, for playing and being a student at Trinity.

He thinks about how, indirectly, it prepared him for an NFL journey: He had to figure out how to study, to ask hard questions and do hard things, to stand up to situations that seemed stacked up against him.

As he watches your video, or you in person at his camp during the summer between your junior and senior year, Urban looks for something that distinguishes you beyond your metrics – maybe your intensity level or how you work your hands during game situations.

When he brings you in for a visit, he is still recruiting you. He likes kids who advocate for themselves and learn and grow through tough academic situations and on a football team that competes for championships.

Trinity faces Berry College in Georgia Saturday, Dec. 6 in the third round of the Division III playoffs.

"I recruit a lot of parents because I want to be able to talk with them and try to figure out where's the room for growth for this kid, from his ability to handle adversity, what's the support system gonna be like, are they gonna be in it for the long haul?" he says. "Are the parents gonna allow him to grow through hard things or are they gonna try to come in and do it for him or solve the problem for him, like maybe they've done their whole life when he's been underneath their roof.

"The kids who thrive here the most are those who know that they can tell their parents that they failed but their parents are gonna continue to hold them to a high standard, but encourage them to figure it out on their own."

More Coach Steve:Raiders QB had 'worst sports father,' changes game for his own kids

'NIL for life': Sports help you make connections, especially if you stay somewhere for the long haul

According to the NFL, about 1.6% of NCAA football players make it to the professional level.

Urban always felt he was on borrowed time in the league, traveling from team to team, trying annually to make the roster. His most valuable experience might have been his time on the Dallas Cowboys practice squad in 2006 and 2007.

"Hey, Urban," then-Cowboys coach Bill Parcells shouted one day. "When we're done, come talk to me about horses."

Parcells found ways to relate to his players to get them to play harder for him. The coach had learned his receiver had grown up on a working cattle ranch.

At his previous stop under the Seattle Seahawks' Mike Holmgren, Urban discovered precision routes and observed how another Hall of Fame coach delegated heavily to his assistant coaches,empowering them while maintaining ultimate say on decisions.

As he got older and closer to retirement as a player, he began to look at things through a coach's lens, going over the decisions of first-time head coaches – Ken Whisenhunt with Arizona and Todd Haley with Kansas City – and cross-referencing with how they might do it if they were older like Holmgren.

"I was on the wrong side of 30 for an NFL receiver and while I thought that I could keep playing, I knew that somebody would tell me really quick that they didn't think I could anymore," Urban says, "and so I really needed to try to learn from these guys.

"I had great advice from so many people, from leaders and mentors who were teammates to coaches about really talking about the value of being myself and making sure that for me to come to work every day for the program to be what we need it to be, I've gotta make sure that I'm consistent with that and our expectations and everything. I think that's what I learned in the NFL, and what I've applied here, it's really available to everybody else in all other industries if you're willing to look at those above you and learn from 'em."

We can look at our choice of college experience in a similar way. Priore called what Penn offers "NIL for life."

The university has what it calls thePenn-I-L Marketplace & Local Exchange, which connects athletes to alumni and local businesses for internships and employment chances. Penn much more heavily sells itself as a 40-year investment, an opportunity to attend its prestigious Wharton School of Business and seek other long-term opportunities.

Priore draws a distinction with what he sees going on at top FBS programs, where teams woo players with direct financial payments. It's how, he says, running back Malachi Hosley, the 2024 Ivy League Offensive Player of the Year, ended up atGeorgia Techin 2025.

"How can you tell a kid what he was getting, which I've been told, not to take on that opportunity? And it's Georgia Tech, it's ACC," Priore says. "We're not seeing mass exoduses of that stuff, because they understand football lasts four years, maybe a fifth.

"How do you build culture, how do you build anything if it's a revolving door?"

Don't bethatparent: You have to be honest about your kid's chances

A current Penn football player who is enrolled in the university's College of Arts and Sciences could have played at Rice or San Diego State. Penn's need-based system got his tuition to less than $10,000 a year.

"That is what the Ivy League is," says Bob Benson, Penn's associate head coach who has worked at a fellow FCS football school (Georgetown) and a Division III school (Johns Hopkins) with similar approaches to the sport. "And I am the ultimate believer in that investment and yet the difficulty is, not every family can afford the investment or believes in the investment.

"You're gonna get a return on the investment if you can afford the initial investment."

As parents of athletes, really at whatever level, we're buying into the entire experience.

"Football is that tool to help these young guys have a network and a future circle," Urban says. "The guys that they're gonna go on vacations with, the guys are gonna be the godfathers to their kids. How can we put just a super tight collection of people together? Use football to grow together to be an outlet to compete while getting this, what I would say, life-changing degree for down the road."

Go to college with an understanding, perhaps, that your priorities might change when you are there. Your role may shift or you may get injured. But you have to get on a team first.

"Whether it's NFL, college or high school, middle school, there's different seasons of life for everybody, but you either have it or don't, right?" Urban says. "I feel for kids and parents who just don't understand that their kid just doesn't have the physical skill set to play at a certain level.

"You have to have honest conversations with your kids, high school coaches have to be trusted by the parents. If your kid's 5-9, 162 pounds, runs a 4.9 (40-yard dash), you may want to go to Texas A&M and play in the worst way but he's just not gonna get that opportunity. It's not the high school coach's fault."

We can, though, have realistic talks with our kids about where they might fit. Try to pick prospect camps at schools where, Urban says, there aren't hundreds of kids. You want to have the opportunity to interact with and be coached by the staff, where they can get a sense of who you are.

Instead of flooding a number of schools with your interest, or following through with every coach who reaches out to you or even offers you a campus visit, Urban suggests you make a concise list based on your priorities for a college.

"You're not burning a bridge," he says, "you're simply giving yourself filters."

Find riches in other ways than making money

Benson, also Penn's defensive coordinator, and his colleagues have learned to fish for recruits with nets. They could have 10 potential names for their team, and those players could be out the window in a split-second because theydon't meet the athletic or academic requirementsor they cut Penn from their own list.

Penn's tuition without aid for room and board next yearis about $96,000. Trinity'sannual freight is more than $74,000, but, like other Division III schools, it offers need-based aid and academic merit that can reduce the cost.

Division I schools have afootball roster limit of 105. Urban says he keeps his around 115, but you'll find Division III teams, he says, with more than 200.

Division II and III schools wait for thedust to settle from Division I recruiting. When I spoke to Urban in mid-November, he said half his class of 2026 had committed, and another quarter of the class should be done by early December.

It's around the time, during their senior years, Penn signed its late-blooming wide receivers, Richardson and Owens, and quarterback O'Brien. If you play four or fewer games as a freshman at an Ivy League school, or take a medical redshirt, you can take another year of eligibility elsewhere.

It's a recruiting tool Priore says he used: Stay four years and get a master's somewhere else for which you can potentially get the school to pay. And continue to play football.

Last month, Richardson, Owens and O'Brien announced they're entering the transfer portal, but they're doing it after staying at Penn four years and earning Ivy League degrees.

"You name it, our kids have done it," Priore said. "Follow your passion, follow your love. And I think part of college is learning how to do that.

"Riches don't come with making money. You can be rich and doing a lot of other things than make money. And our kids through my 38 years (as a Penn coach) and you times it by 30, over 900 kids (who) have come through here are very, very wealthy in life right now."

Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons' baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly.For his past columns, click here.

Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him atsborelli@usatoday.com

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Ivy League to NFL? How to look at the big picture as a college recruit

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