Tuesday, November 14, 2023

A BIG DEAL
Biden, Xi to Announce China’s Crackdown on Fentanyl Trade

Jenny Leonard
Tue, November 14, 2023



(Bloomberg) -- Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, are set to announce an agreement that would see Beijing crack down on the manufacture and export of fentanyl, according to people familiar with the matter, potentially delivering the US president a major victory.

Under the deal — which is still being finalized — China would go after chemical companies to stem the flow of both fentanyl and the source material used to make the deadly synthetic opioid, according to the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the agreement.

In return, the Biden administration would lift restrictions on China’s forensic police institute, the people said, an entity the US alleges is responsible for human-rights abuses.

The agreement, set to be announced Wednesday when Biden and Xi meet in San Francisco on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, would mark a win for the White House on an issue voters say is a priority for the 2024 election.

How Fentanyl Made the US Opioid Crisis So Much Worse: QuickTake

Republicans have assailed the administration over its handling of fentanyl trafficking, turning it into a liability for Biden’s chances of winning a second term.

A White House National Security Council spokeswoman declined to comment. China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the country is willing to carry out anti-drug cooperation with the US on the basis of “equality and mutual respect.”

“The US should work with China in two directions to remove obstacles on the road to cooperation between the two sides,” the Chinese foreign ministry said in a response to questions.

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan told reporters Monday that the US hopes to see some progress on the fentanyl issue this week. “That could then open the door to further cooperation on other issues where we aren’t just managing things but we’re actually delivering tangible results.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Xi “seemed receptive to our concerns” in October when lawmakers raised the issue with the leader during a visit to China.

US officials consider the deal a potential breakthrough but caution stringent enforcement is necessary to produce results. Officials said it will take time to assess whether Beijing follows through.

Any deal could be vulnerable to collapse if fragile ties between Beijing and Washington deteriorate over critical comments from the Biden administration, some China experts warned.

“China’s agreements have an unstated condition: Void if you criticize Xi and the Communist Party,” said Derek Scissors, senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. “If the Biden administration isn’t pro-China in 2024, enforcement of a fentanyl deal will fade away.”

Health Crisis

Mexican cartels are largely responsible for the export of fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 times more powerful than heroin and 100 times more powerful than morphine. The cartels often use Chinese components to make the drug.

The problem has dogged multiple US presidents, as overdose deaths have spiked across the country. Former President Donald Trump in 2018 announced an agreement with Xi, under which Beijing vowed to designate fentanyl as a controlled substance.

The public-health crisis fueled by the drug has only intensified since then.

More than 150 people in the US die each day from overdoses related to synthetic opioids like fentanyl, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Such overdoses increased more than seven-fold between 2015 and 2021, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.

San Francisco, the host for this week’s APEC summit, is one of many municipalities grappling with the fallout from a surge in addiction and overdose deaths.

“Fentanyl has really devastated our city, like no other drug we’ve ever experienced within my lifetime,” San Francisco Mayor London Breed said Monday in a Bloomberg News roundtable.

Breed urged Xi to cooperate to stop the flow of fentanyl, saying it had strained US-China ties.

“I would ask him to work with the US and to ensure that the resources that are being sent out of China, that come into either the US or Mexico, are cut off to the fullest extent possible,” she said during a separate interview with Bloomberg TV.

Lifting Sanctions

China has for months pressured the US to take the Institution of Forensic Science of the Ministry of Public Security off its blacklist. The Commerce Department in 2020 restricted those agencies from accessing US technology over allegations they are involved in repression of ethnic Uyghurs in China’s Xinjiang region.

“The US sanctions against Chinese companies and citizens will add more obstacles to China-US counter-narcotics cooperation,” a Chinese embassy spokesperson in Washington said in May.

The Biden administration this year took steps to stem the crisis but is limited in what it can achieve without Beijing’s help.

The Justice Department has investigated and prosecuted companies in China that ship precursor chemicals to Mexico. The Treasury Department has designated more than two dozen people and entities allegedly involved in the fentanyl trade. The White House has asked Congress for roughly $1.2 billion to target drug traffickers.

Republican presidential hopefuls have vowed to take even more drastic measures.

Trump, the 2024 GOP frontrunner, has threatened a full naval embargo on drug cartels and said he would deploy the US military to fight them. He has also called for drug dealers to get the death penalty.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has also said he would use the US military against Mexican drug operations. Former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley said the US should end normal trade relations with China until “they stop murdering Americans.”

--With assistance from Riley Griffin, Chris Strohm, Hadriana Lowenkron, Colum Murphy, Annmarie Hordern and James Mayger.

 Bloomberg Businessweek

US set to take action to win China's cooperation on fentanyl

MICHAEL MARTINA
November 14, 2023 



SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden's administration is set to remove restrictions on China's Institute of Forensic Science in a bid to step up cooperation with Beijing to halt the flow of the synthetic opioid fentanyl in the United States.

Blocking fentanyl "precursor" chemicals has been a priority for Washington as the rate of overdose deaths involving the drug more than tripled from 2016 through 2021, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Biden will discuss the issue with China's President Xi Jinping on Wednesday in San Francisco on the margins of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum.

U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said on Tuesday that Washington hoped the summit would result in action to help combat the fentanyl trade. A source familiar with plans said the U.S. was ready to remove restrictions on the Institute of Forensic Science, part of China's Ministry of Public Security.

Washington put the institute on the Commerce Department's "entity list" in 2020 over alleged abuses toward Uyghurs and other minority groups - effectively barring it from receiving U.S. exports. China has long questioned why the U.S. would expect cooperation on fentanyl while targeting the institute.

China's embassy in Washington did not respond immediately to a request for comment on the fentanyl issue.

Fentanyl is up to 50 times stronger than heroin and is increasingly mixed with other illicit drugs, often with lethal results. U.S. drug-related overdose deaths surpassed 100,000 in 2021, according to government estimates.

(Reporting by Michael Martina; Writing by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)

PSA

You can't overdose on fentanyl just by touching it. Experts explain why.

KERRY BREEN
Updated November 11, 2023 


Fentanyl, a strong opioid about 50 times more powerful than heroin, has become increasingly present in the U.S. drug supply and has caused a wave of overdose deaths among people who consume it or use drugs they didn't realize were tainted with the substance.

On Nov. 8, 2023, several county elections offices in Washington state were evacuated after they received envelopes containing suspicious powder — including two that field-tested positive for fentanyl — while workers were processing ballots from the election the day before. A senior U.S. official familiar with the investigation told CBS News that roughly a dozen letters were sent to addresses in California, Georgia, Nevada and Oregon as well as Washington state.

The substance found on an unspecified number of the letters — not all of them, just some — included traces of fentanyl, the official said, adding that the substance overall was described as "nonharmful." The substance was identified using preliminary field tests, not more rigorous lab tests at FBI facilities, the official said.

The FBI warned all people to exercise care in handling mail, especially from senders they don't recognize.

However, experts in the fields of toxicology and public health have told CBS News that just touching or being near fentanyl won't cause an overdose. Here's what to know about fentanyl contact overdoses.

Can you overdose by touching fentanyl?

Experts told CBS News that touching fentanyl powder will not cause an overdose. In powder form, the way it's almost always found in the illicit drug supply, the drug cannot absorb through the skin, said Ryan Marino, a medical toxicologist, emergency physician and addiction medicine specialist at the Cleveland Medical Center. Just being near the substance also won't cause an overdose.

"Fentanyl as a dry powder is not going to cross through your skin. It's the same reason you can touch sugar without your blood sugar going up," said Marino. "Solids don't cross through your skin."

Fentanyl can resemble a white powder. / Credit: Bill Oxford / Getty Images

Major medical groups have also issued statements about the risk — or lack thereof — from touching fentanyl. In 2017, the American College of Medical Toxicology and the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology issued a joint position statement stating that "incidental dermal absorption is unlikely to cause opioid toxicity." One video, created by harm reductionist Chad Sabora, shows Sabora holding fentanyl and not having any adverse effects as he tests the substance.

If you do get fentanyl powder on your skin, Dr. Andrew Stolbach, a toxicologist and emergency medicine physician at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, said the treatment is simple: Just wash it off.

"If you see some powder on you, just wash it off, brush it off," said Stolbach. "After that, I wouldn't worry about it at all."

It's important to note that fentanyl found in the illicit drug supply is different from medical-grade fentanyl patches. These do adhere to the skin, but are formulated differently, are slow-releasing, and are primarily used in medical settings. Stolbach described the patches as "specially engineered medical devices" that "just barely delivers some clinically relevant amount of fentanyl." The patch includes fentanyl hydrochloride, a kind of salt that allows the medication in the patch to dissolve through the skin and enter the bloodstream.

A woman holds a fentanyl patch. / Credit: / Getty Images

"Even at peak absorption, if you covered both palms with fentanyl patches, it would take about 15 minutes to deliver just a standard dose," said Stolbach, who is also on the board of directors at the American College of Medical Toxicology. With powder fentanyl, "it's not fentanyl hydrochloride. It's not being held against your skin. It's just going to brush away when someone touches it. Everything's working against it. It's just a totally different scenario than the fentanyl patch."

Brandon del Pozo, a former police officer turned public health researcher who focuses on public health and substance use, compared it to a nicotine patch and a cigarette: "You can't just tape a cigarette to your arm instead of using a nicotine patch."

Can you overdose by ingesting or breathing in fentanyl?

Stolbach said that powder fentanyl can be absorbed by inhaling it, but it doesn't "spontaneously go up into the air," or volatilize, easily.

"Even if powder gets blown into the air, it quickly settles down," he said.

If you have fentanyl on your hands and then touch your eyes, nose or mouth, it could be possible to ingest the substance and bring it into your bloodstream, Marino and Stolbach said. To prevent accidentally ingesting fentanyl, Stolbach recommended taking reasonable precautions like "wearing gloves" and "washing powder off hands" if you come in contact with the substance.

"I always say that if fentanyl was so easily absorbed by other routes, why would people choose to use it by injection?" Stolbach said. "Why don't the dealers and transport people drop dead left and right from breathing or touching it?"

Where did the myth of fentanyl touch overdoses start?

It's hard to tell when exactly people started worrying about overdosing from touching fentanyl, but Dr. Jennifer Carroll, a medical anthropologist and research scientist who studies substance use and public health, told CBS News that fears grew after the Drug Enforcement Administration issued a news release and video warning law enforcement about the "dangers of handling fentanyl and its deadly consequences." In a news release from the Department of Justice, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein warned that "any fentanyl exposure can kill innocent law enforcement, first responders and the public." The press release and video have since been removed.

At the time, Carroll was a contractor at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the agency immediately began researching the claims made in the video, taking it "very seriously." However, Carroll said they sound found the claims "totally bogus."

Experts question video of deputy who purportedly "almost died" from substance said to be fentanyl

"I'm deeply frustrated that this myth is still out there, like, just in general," Carroll said. "I'm very angry that we have people who are still encouraging officers to believe this, because I think that's just a horrible thing to do to someone, to make them believe that their life is genuinely in the balance, but it's absolutely not."

In most instances, it's police officers reporting these contact overdoses. Del Pozo said that fentanyl is not "cop kryptonite."

The DEA video was later taken down, and guidelines from the CDC and the position statements from the American College of Medical Toxicology and the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology aimed to set the record straight. However, the myth continues to circulate.

Sheila Vakharia, the deputy director of the department of research and academic engagement at the Drug Policy Alliance, said that there are several reasons why the myth of contact overdoses continues to circulate. Partly, it's because fentanyl is a dangerous drug and people have limited information on how it works. It's also because the people spreading the myth are "people without the appropriate medical training" who are sharing what Vakharia called "well-intentioned" but incorrect information.

Why do people who touch fentanyl have symptoms?

In many cases where touch fentanyl overdoses are reported, the people who believe they are overdosing do report symptoms. A video of a San Diego deputy passing out after he was told the drugs he was seizing were "super dangerous" went viral in 2021. The deputy also reported gasping for air. In 2022, a Kentucky woman said she started feeling her arms tingle and lost the ability to speak before passing out after picking up a dollar bill that she said was tainted with fentanyl. Officers did not test the bill. However, these symptoms and others reported in similar incidents aren't usually associated with opioid toxicity.

"I can say very definitively and confidently that these are not fentanyl overdoses. My best guess would be that these are an anxiety or fear reaction," said Marino. "The symptoms that are always reported are very consistent with that, and that makes sense ... If people tell you every day that if you encounter fentanyl, you could overdose just from being near it, you believe it so strongly that you will have real symptoms."

Del Pozo said that when first responders blame every sudden symptom on fentanyl, it can cause them to miss the signs of what's actually going on.

"One of my officers in Burlington fainted at the scene of a drug arrest, and he assumed — everybody assumed — it was fentanyl," said Del Pozo, who was the chief of police in Burlington, Vermont, at the time. "I did not put it in the news, I did not write a press release, because back then (in 2019), I did not think that was true, and it turns out, it wasn't. It was an unrelated health issue."

What does it mean when officials say a seizure of fentanyl is "enough to kill a million people"?

When officers announce a seizure of fentanyl, it's not unusual for the drug to be quantified as enough to kill a large number of people.

Experts scoffed at this way of measuring how much was found for two reasons. There's no set lethal dose for how much fentanyl is going to kill a person: People who use it regularly will have a much higher tolerance than people who have never taken an opiate. Quantifying fentanyl this way also makes it seem like just by existing, it's dangerous — but in its inert form, that's not the case. Someone would have to consume the fentanyl to make it have an impact, Vakharia said.

Multiple experts compared this phrasing to saying that a body of water holds enough water to drown a state's worth of people.

"When you say there's enough water in the ocean to kill everybody in the world 10 times ... what does that mean? To me, it doesn't seem like a helpful statistic," Stolbach said. "It seems like an intentionally alarmist statistic."


'The US can't transform China': Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily calls on Washington to fix trust deficit


South China Morning Post
Sun, November 12, 2023 at 2:30 AM MST·4 min read

"China will not become another United States, and the US can't transform China according to its likes and dislikes," the Communist Party mouthpiece said on Sunday, as it called on Washington to take concrete measures to fix the "action deficit" and increase mutual trust.

Differences between the two countries should not prevent them from "agreeing to disagree and cooperating", the People's Daily commentary published days ahead of a much-anticipated US-China summit said.

President Xi Jinping is expected to travel to the US this week for a meeting with counterpart Joe Biden on the margins of the Apec summit, following a flurry of diplomatic activity to set up their first in-person talks in a year.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The article also called on the US to "abide by the basic norms of international relations and the three US-China joint communiques", describing them as key to managing bilateral conflicts.

"The US should abandon its aggressive Cold War and aggressive mindset, fix the 'action deficit' with practical actions and concrete policies, and increase strategic mutual trust," the piece read.

Beijing has confirmed that the Xi-Biden talks will take place on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit to be held in San Francisco on November 14-17.

Bilateral dialogue on economic and diplomatic affairs have been stepped up in the run-up to the meeting as both sides try to prevent relations from derailing after a spike in tensions.

The post-pandemic global economic recovery, climate change battle and need to address geopolitical conflicts demanded cooperation between the world's top two economies, said the People's Daily commentary by Zhong Sheng - a homonym in Chinese for the "voice of China".

"Positioning China as 'the most important competitor' and 'the most significant geopolitical challenge' is irresponsible and cannot address problems," it added.

The Post reported earlier that Xi and Biden were expected to announce a ban on the use of artificial intelligence in autonomous weaponry and in the control and deployment of nuclear warheads.

Further increases in daily two-way flights and a crackdown on fentanyl production were also likely, although differences remained over the war in Ukraine and the South China Sea, the earlier report said.

The US sent its largest ever delegation to a key import exhibition in Shanghai last week, with American exhibitors signing deals worth US$505 million in food and agriculture.

However, the hi-tech sector and Taiwan remain key thorny issues that have largely determined the trajectory of bilateral ties.

Taiwan in particular has been a flashpoint, with Beijing holding to its non-negotiable position on what it considers breakaway territory to be reunified by force if necessary. While the US does not regard Taiwan as independent, it has kept up arms sales and government-to-government contact with the self-ruled island, sparking fury from Beijing.

Last week, Chinese ambassador to the US Xie Feng urged Washington to stop "playing with fire" on Taiwan and take "concrete actions" to manage differences with Beijing.

US warships also regularly make "freedom of navigation" voyages through the Taiwan Strait and in the South China Sea.

Further, despite the US declaring that it would not seek decoupling from China, it has continued to squeeze Chinese access to advanced hi-tech products and restrict American investment in Chinese technology sectors, citing national security concerns.

While in San Francisco for the Apec meetings, Biden is also expected to host a summit of the US-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF). The 14-member economic cooperation mechanism, which includes South Korea, Japan and India, is widely seen as an effort to exclude China from key supply chains.

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol will attend the IPEF summit in San Francisco, Yonhap News Agency reported on Sunday.

Copyright (c) 2023. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
Israel shows alleged Hamas ‘armory’ under children’s hospital in Gaza. Local health officials dismiss the claims

Nic Robertson, Rebecca Wright, John Torigoe and David Shortell, CNN
Tue, November 14, 2023 d

Editor’s Note: CNN reported from Gaza under IDF escort at all times, but did not submit the material for this report to the IDF and retained editorial control over the final report.

The Israeli military’s focus on hospitals in Gaza is growing more intense with a spokesperson inviting news media to visit a medical center for children on Monday, where he alleged parts of the basement had been a Hamas “command and control center” and may have been used to hold hostages.

A CNN team embedded with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and was shown guns and explosives in one room located beneath Al-Rantisi children’s hospital on Monday, which IDF spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari termed as an “armory.”

He also pointed to a chair with a rope next to it and a piece of women’s clothing, which he said would be tested for DNA, and a makeshift toilet.

Hamas has repeatedly denied that its fighters hide under hospitals, as have Gazan health officials and hospital directors.

Speaking by phone to CNN on Tuesday, Mohammed Zarqout, who has responsibility for all of Gaza’s hospitals, said the basement at Al Rantisi had been used as a shelter for women and children – not to store Hamas weaponry and hold hostages – as well as being the location of the pharmacy and some of the hospital’s administrative offices before rainwater made it “impossible” to use.

Zarqout also told CNN that medical staff had been forced to leave the hospital by Israeli soldiers, and had been unable to take all the patients with them when they left.


CNN embedded with Israel's military inside Gaza but did not submit the material for this report to the IDF and retained editorial control over the final report. - CNN

In a statement on Sunday, the IDF said it was enabling passage by foot and ambulance to evacuate from three hospitals: Al-Shifa, Al-Rantisi and Nasser hospitals.

But concerns are mounting that hospitals are now being targeted for military action, as searing images and accounts from civilians inside continue to emerge and as doctors warn they cannot evacuate their most vulnerable patients.

Israeli troops had been conducting operations inside Al-Rantisi only a few hours before CNN’s visit, according to Hagari. He added that a forensic team would soon test the material left behind in the basement rooms to confirm any potential connection to the more than 200 hostages taken by Hamas during its rampage in Israel on October 7.

The IDF is also working to determine if there is a connection between an apparent nearby tunnel entrance and the rooms under the hospital.

CNN was shown a shaft, about 200 meters away from Al-Rantisi, which Hagari claimed was located next to a Hamas commander’s house and also a school.

Wires leading into the shaft provided power to the tunnel from solar panels fixed onto the roof of the Hamas commander’s house, he also said.

“We [put] a robot inside the tunnel and the robot saw a massive door, a door that is in the direction of the hospital,” Hagari said.

Zarquot said “the tunnel they claim to be a Hamas tunnel is actually an electrical wire assembly point. We raised the wires to prevent any electrical shocks caused by floods.”


IDF spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari inside Gaza - CNN

Vast destruction


CNN’s team witnessed huge amounts of destruction on their way through Gaza with the Israeli military as they were taken to Al-Rantisi hospital.

Countless houses, tall apartment blocks, hotels and villas had been destroyed. Bullet and shell holes were visible everywhere and firefights were ongoing.

Days of intensive fighting near hospitals in the enclave in recent days have lead to what medical personnel still working there describe as siege-like conditions.

While hospitals are protected in times of war under international humanitarian law, that protection may be compromised if they are believed to be sites of military activity. The World Health Organization has recorded at least 137 attacks on health facilities in Gaza, which it said resulted in 521 deaths and 686 injuries.

Other protected sites, like schools, civilian shelters, and United Nations facilities have already been damaged or destroyed in over a month of Israeli airstrikes. On Monday, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugee announced that over 100 UN staffers had been killed in Gaza since fighting began – the most in the United Nation’s history.


Men walk along the border of Gaza in southern Israel on November 13, 2023. Swathes of the heavily populated enclave has come under relentless Israeli bombardment 
- Fadel Senna/AFP/Getty Images

Israeli forces’ orders for hospitals to evacuate or risk danger from fighting as troops try to root out Hamas have sparked criticism from global health organizations and aid groups. A joint statement by the regional directors of UNFPA, UNICEF and the World Health Organization on Sunday called for “urgent international action to end the ongoing attacks on hospitals in Gaza.”

“We are horrified at the latest reports of attacks on and in the vicinity of Al-Shifa Hospital, Al-Rantissi Naser Paediatric Hospital, Al-Quds Hospital, and others in Gaza city and northern Gaza, killing many, including children. Intense hostilities surrounding several hospitals in northern Gaza are preventing safe access for health staff, the injured, and other patients” the statement reads.

Doctors continue to refuse to leave Al-Shifa – the biggest in Gaza – as of Monday, , because they say they fear hundreds of patients will die if they are left behind. Israel has alleged a Hamas center is hidden in the basement there, a claim which the hospital staff and Hamas have denied.

Thousands of civilians are believed to be sheltering at the hospital, and approximately 700 at-risk patients are receiving treatment there, according to Dr. Munir Al-Bursh, Director-General of the Hamas-controlled Health Ministry in Gaza.

“The problem is not the doctors, it’s the patients,” Al-Burish told CNN on Monday. “If they are left behind, they will die, and if they are transferred, they will die on the way, this is the problem.”
Brazil's Lula welcomes citizens rescued from Gaza, condemns 'inhumane violence'

Reuters
Mon, November 13, 2023 

Brazil's president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva attends a press conference in Brasilia


SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Monday welcomed 32 nationals that his government managed to rescue from the Gaza Strip this week following a month of negotiations, receiving them at the Brasilia Air Base after a nearly day-long flight.

The Brazilians crossed the Rafah border between Gaza and Egypt on Sunday and were taken to Cairo, where this morning they boarded an Embraer presidential airplane loaned by Lula and traveled to Brazil via Las Palmas, Spain.

Lula greeted passengers with hugs and kisses after their arrival late on Monday evening, offering his support to Brazilians still in or arriving from the Gaza Strip and condemning the killing of civilians in Gaza.

"I have never seen such brutal, inhumane violence against innocent people," Lula said in a short speech on the tarmac.

The flight was the tenth in an operation launched by the South American country last month to repatriate citizens in Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip after a war broke out in the region last month.

Monday's flight brings the total of those rescued to 1,477 people, including three Bolivians, 11 Palestinians and one Jordanian citizen, as well as 53 pets.

The Gaza Strip has been under bombardment by Israel, which aims to annihilate Hamas, the militant group which runs the Gaza Strip and which attacked Israel from Gaza on Oct. 7, killing around 1,200 people.

Gaza medical authorities say more than 11,000 people there have been confirmed killed, with about 40% of them being children.

Lula echoed earlier criticisms of both Hamas for its attack against Israel and Israel for its reaction.

"If Hamas committed an act of terrorism and did what it did, the state of Israel is also committing several acts of terrorism by not taking into account that children are not at war, that women are not at war," he said.

(Reporting by Peter Siqueira and Gabriel Araujo; Additional reporting by Kylie Madry; Writing by Gabriel Araujo and Brendan O'Boyle; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Australia to apologise half a century after 'Thalidomide tragedy'

Renju Jose
Sun, November 12, 2023 

U.S. President Biden hosts Australia’s Prime Minister Albanese for official State visit at the White House in Washington

By Renju Jose

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia will issue a national apology to all citizens affected by the "Thalidomide tragedy", Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Monday, more than half a century after babies were born with birth defects when mothers took the morning sickness pill.

Thalidomide was the active ingredient in a sedative widely distributed to many mothers in Australia and around the world in the early 1960s. It was found to cause malformation of limbs, facial features and internal organs in unborn children.

"The thalidomide tragedy is a dark chapter in the history of our nation and the world," Albanese said in a statement. "The survivors, their families, friends and carers have advocated for this apology with courage and conviction for many years. This moment is a long overdue national acknowledgement of all they have endured and all they have fought for."

The thalidomide scandal triggered a worldwide overhaul of drug-testing regimes and boosted the reputation of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which proved a lone voice in refusing to approve the drug, although it was distributed in the United States for testing. The British government in 2010 apologised to the victims.

Thalidomide, developed by the German firm Gruenenthal, killed an estimated 80,000 children around the world before they were born, and 20,000 more were born with defects.

An Australian woman, who was born without arms and legs after her mother took Thalidomide, in 2012 won a multi-million dollar settlement from Diageo Plc, the local distributor. In 2010, Diageo agreed to make an A$50 million ($32 million) payment to 45 victims in Australia and New Zealand.

Albanese will deliver the apology in the Parliament on Nov. 29. There are 146 Thalidomide survivors registered with the government, though the exact number of affected is unknown.

"In giving this apology, we will acknowledge all those babies who died and the families who mourn them, as well as those who survived but whose lives were made so much harder by the effects of this terrible drug," Albanese said.

($1 = 1.5716 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by Tom Hogue and Gerry Doyle)

SpaceX launches Falcon 9 rocket Sunday from Florida’s Space Coast

James Tutten
Sun, November 12, 2023 

SpaceX successfully launched its Falcon 9 rocket carrying communication satellites in the SES O3b mPOWER mission.

SpaceX is set to launch another Falcon 9 rocket from Florida’s Space Coast on Sunday.

The rocket is set to launch at 4:08 p.m. from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

This mission aims to send broadband communication satellites into orbit for a foreign internet company.

Watch: SpaceX and NASA looking to launch prototype Starship, awaits second test flight

SpaceX said this launch will be the ninth flight of the rocket’s first-stage booster, which previously launched CRS-26, OneWeb Launch 16, Intelsat IS-40e, and five Starlink missions.

Following the launch, SpaceX is planning to land the first stage of the rocket on its A Shortfall of Gravitas droneship in the Atlantic Ocean.

SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket launches with telecommunications satellites aboard

Amy R. Connolly
Sun, November 12, 2023 

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches 22 Starlink satellites on mission "6-23" at 8:39 PM from Launch Complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida on Oct. 17. File Photo by Joe Marino/UPI

Nov. 12 (UPI) -- SpaceX launched its Falcon 9 rocket successfully Sunday afternoon carrying communication satellites for a Luxembourg-based internet company.

The Falcon 9 rocket lifted off at 4:08 p.m. from Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Florida's east coast, taking Boeing-built O3b mPOWER satellites to medium-Earth orbit for SES.



About 8-1/2 minutes after lift-off, Falcon 9's first-stage booster landed aboard a barge, known as "A Shortfall of Gravitas," in the Atlantic Ocean. The mission marked the ninth flight of the first-stage boosters, which previously launched CRS-26, Starlink and others. The rocket's upper stage will not be recovered, which is normal for Falcon 9 flights, Space.com reported.



Time exposure of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket as it launches Starlink satellites on mission "6-25" from Launch Complex 40 at 7:20 PM from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida on Oct. 30. Photo by Joe Marino/UPI


The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches 21 Starlink satellites at 10:47 PM on mission 6-12 from Launch Complex 39 at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida on Sept. 3. This was the 62nd orbital launch for SpaceX in 2023, breaking last year's total of 61. Photo by Joe Marino/UPI

SpaceX knocks out Sunday launch while targeting 2nd try for massive Starship this week

Richard Tribou, Orlando Sentinel
Updated Sun, November 12, 2023 

Orlando Sentinel/TNS


SpaceX added to the Space Coast’s growing tally of launches for the year with a Sunday night liftoff while gearing up potentially for another attempt of sending its new Starship and Super Heavy rocket up on an orbital test flight later this week.

A Falcon 9 launched from Cape Canaveral Space Force Base’s Space Launch Complex 40 at 4:08 p.m., sending up a pair of satellites for Luxembourg-based SES.

This is the third time SpaceX has sent up a pair of SES’s O3b mPOWER satellites, which are headed for medium-Earth orbit. They are part of SES’s goal of sending up 11 such satellites to increase connectivity to remote places.

The “O3b” is in reference to the “other 3 billion” referring to the Earth’s population without access to the infrastructure found in more metropolitan areas. The mPOWER satellites are the next generation of an existing constellation of MEO satellites for SES already used by companies such as Princess Cruises.

This was the ninth flight for the first-stage booster, which landed downrange in the Atlantic on the droneship A Shortfall of Gravitas.

It marked the 63rd rocket launch in 2023 on the Space Coast, with SpaceX flying all but four of those. SpaceX has also flown 24 missions from California for the year, and has now had 83 successful orbital launches for the year.

In April, it attempted to fly to orbit its Starship and Super Heavy from its Boca Chica, Texas site Starbase for the first time, but problems with stage separation before reaching orbital altitude forced SpaceX to have the rocket self destruct over the Gulf of Mexico.

SpaceX still awaits final approval to fly from the Federal Aviation Administration, but its second attempt for the orbital test flight has a target to launch on Friday, according to the company’s website.

SpaceX will stream the test about 30 minutes before liftoff.

“As is the case with all developmental testing, the schedule is dynamic and likely to change,” the company stated.

Starship is the replacement rocket for SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy, and despite not making it to orbit, became the most powerful rocket to make it off the launch pad with more than 17 million pounds of thrust at liftoff during the April 20 attempt.

If it makes it orbit on this second attempt, it would surpass the record-holding power generated by NASA’s Space Launch System during its November 2022 launch on the Artemis I mission, which topped 8.8. million pounds of thrust.

“There are really a tremendous number of changes between the last Starship flight and this one, well over 1,000,” Musk said in a June interview. “I think the probability of this next flight working, you know getting to orbit, is much higher than the last one.”

Plans for this attempt still look to have Starship to climb to between 93 and 155 miles during a trip that will take it two-thirds of the way around the Earth for a hard splashdown near Hawaii.

The April attempt saw the rocket, using a combined propellant of liquid methane and liquid oxygen, make it through what’s called Max Q, the area where the craft endures maximum dynamic pressure, and it did achieve speeds up to 1,340 mph.

Had all gone well, both the booster and Starship were to have separated and each made their own hard water landings, with the booster splashing down in the Gulf of Mexico and Starship in the Pacific Ocean after its flight.

The launch system in Texas, and one that will eventually be built at Kennedy Space Center, is designed so that eventually the Super Heavy booster would return to the 469-foot-tall launch integration tower often referred to as “Mechazilla,” with a landing achieved with the aid of two pivoting metal arms called the “chopsticks.”

The Starship spacecraft would make a vertical landing at its destination as well, which would make the combination the first fully reusable rocket in the industry.

NASA has been waiting on SpaceX’s Starship as it has contracted with Musk’s company to provide a working version for its astronauts in the Artemis program to use it as their ride down to the surface of the moon.

That mission is currently slotted for the Artemis III flight, no earlier than December 2025, but that would require for SpaceX to get its Starship up and running and perform a successful uncrewed landing on the moon before NASA would let its astronauts on board.

For SpaceX, plans are to fly dozens if not more than 100 operational launches of Starship before it lets any humans on board, but it has at least three commercial human spaceflight missions already lined up in addition to the NASA mission.


Updates: SpaceX SES O3b mPOWER mission from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida

Rick Neale, Florida Today
Updated Sun, November 12, 2023 

Updates: Following is live coverage of Sunday's 4:08 p.m. EST liftoff of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on the SES O3b mPOWER 5 and 6 mission from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.

Welcome to FLORIDA TODAY's Space Team live coverage of SpaceX's Falcon 9 launch this afternoon from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

SpaceX is targeting an 89-minute window from 4:08 to 5:37 p.m. EST to launch a rocket carrying a pair of communications satellites from Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

The Falcon 9 is flying under contract with SES, a Luxembourg-based company that will place two more of its Boeing-built O3b mPOWER satellites into medium-Earth orbit.

After soaring skyward from Launch Complex 40, the Falcon 9's first-stage booster will target landing aboard a drone ship out at sea 8 minutes, 43 seconds after liftoff. No local sonic booms are expected during today's mission.

Countdown Timer



SpaceX Falcon 9 booster lands

Update 4:16 p.m. EST: The Falcon 9 first-stage booster just landed aboard SpaceX's drone ship A Shortfall of Gravitas out on the Atlantic Ocean, wrapping up its ninth flight.



Liftoff!

Update 4:08 p.m. EST: SpaceX has launched a Falcon 9 rocket carrying a pair of SES O3b mPOWER satellites from Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

Next, the first-stage booster should land on a SpaceX drone ship out on the Atlantic Ocean.


SpaceX live launch webcast underway

Update 4:02 p.m. EST: SpaceX's live launch webcast hosted on X (formerly Twitter) is now posted at the top of this page.

Liftoff is scheduled in six minutes from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
SpaceX Falcon 9 fueling underway

Update 3:59 p.m. EST: Nine minutes before today's 4:08 p.m. launch window opens, visual cues indicate Falcon 9 fueling procedures are well underway.

That means today's SES O3b mPOWER mission is now committed to lift off today, or else the launch must be postponed.


SpaceX booster to land on drone ship


Update 3:47 p.m. EST: Tonight's mission marks the ninth flight for this Falcon 9 first-stage booster, SpaceX reports.

Following stage separation, the booster is slated to land on the drone ship A Shortfall of Gravitas out on the Atlantic Ocean 8 minutes, 43 seconds after liftoff.
SpaceX Falcon 9 launch countdown

Update 3:22 p.m. EST: Following is a list of key milestones in the upcoming Falcon 9 countdown timeline:

35 minutes: Rocket-grade kerosene and first-stage liquid oxygen loading begins.


16 minutes: Second-stage liquid oxygen loading begins.


7 minutes: Falcon 9 begins engine chill prior to launch.


1 minute: Command flight computer begins final prelaunch checks; propellant tank pressurization to flight pressure begins.


45 seconds: SpaceX launch director verifies “go” for launch.


3 seconds: Engine controller commands engine ignition sequence to start.


0 seconds: Falcon 9 liftoff.

SpaceX launch weather: overcast skies

Update: 3:11 p.m. EST: Skies above Cape Canaveral Space Force Station are overcast with a temperature of 76 and north wind of 13 mph, the National Weather Service reports.

The Space Force's 45th Weather Squadron previously forecasted a 70% chance of "go" weather for today's launch.

SpaceX to launch SES satellites

The Luxembourg-based satellite company SES released this photo of a technician making preparations alongside O3b mPOWER satellites in advance of SpaceX's Nov. 12 mission launching them into medium-Earth orbit from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.



Update 2:55 p.m. EST: This morning, SES tweeted a quartet of photos featuring its third pair of O3b mPOWER satellites, which will head into orbit atop the Falcon 9 rocket.

These will mark satellites No. 5 and 6 in the company's planned series of 13 in orbit.

For the latest schedule updates at the Cape, visit floridatoday.com/launchschedule.



321 Launch: Space news you may have missed over the past week (Nov. 14)

Rick Neale, Florida Today
Mon, November 13, 2023 


SpaceX launch obscured by clouds Sunday in Central Brevard during SES O3b mPOWER mission

Quickly cloaked by thick cloud cover, as viewed by many Central Brevard spectators, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifted a pair of communications satellites into medium-Earth orbit Sunday afternoon for the Luxembourg-based company SES.

After the 4:08 p.m. EST launch from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, the Falcon 9's first-stage booster separated and returned to Earth for a fiery landing aboard the drone ship A Shortfall of Gravitas out at sea.

Read the full story here.
NASA supply mission to ISS launches Thursday night aboard SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from KSC

Liftoff! A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched from Kennedy Space Center on Thursday night, sending a Dragon cargo capsule on a 32-hour trek to dock with the International Space Station.

NASA's 29th commercial resupply services mission soared into orbit on a northeasterly trajectory at 8:28 p.m. EDT from pad 39A under picture-perfect launch conditions, per the Space Force's 45th Weather Squadron.

Read the full story here.
'Bacteria Boys': Viera students to send experiment on NASA's SpaceX resupply launch to ISS

Scuttling about in the Indian River Lagoon's murky depths, horseshoe crabs — regarded as "living fossils" that predate the dinosaurs — may provide a future biomedical function that helps keep NASA astronauts healthy during marathon missions to Mars and deep space.

The "Bacteria Boys" of Pinecrest Academy Space Coast want to find out. So they're sending horseshoe crab blood up to the International Space Station to study whether it can detect E. coli bacteria in the microgravity of low-Earth orbit.

Read the full story here.

SpaceX Starlink mission launches 5 minutes after midnight, lighting darkened Brevard sky

With SpaceX's newly installed crew access arm for use by future astronauts stationed alongside on a support tower, a Falcon 9 rocket blazed into the post-midnight darkness Wednesday carrying another payload of 23 Starlink satellites into low-Earth orbit.

Next, SpaceX is slated to launch a Thursday night NASA resupply mission — including a horseshoe crab blood experiment devised by the "Bacteria Boys" of Pinecrest Academy Space Coast — to the astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

Read the full story here.

Next launch: SpaceX Starlink 6-28 on Thursday/Friday, Nov. 16/17

Though SpaceX has yet to confirm this mission's existence, a National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency navigational warning indicates a rocket launch window will open late Thursday night:

About: A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch the company's latest batch of Starlink internet satellites from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.

Launch window: 11 p.m. Thursday to 3:31 a.m. Friday EST.

Live coverage: Starts 90 minutes before liftoff at floridatoday.com/space.

For the latest schedule updates, visit floridatoday.com/launchschedule.

Rick Neale is a Space Reporter at FLORIDA TODAY (for more of his stories, click here.) Contact Neale at 321-242-3638 or rneale@floridatoday.com. Twitter/X: @RickNeale1

This article originally appeared on Florida Today: 321 Launch: Space news you may have missed over the past week (Nov. 14)

SpaceX launches O3b mPOWER communication satellites on its 84th mission of 2023

Brett Tingley
Sun, November 12, 2023 

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off with two SES O3b mPOWER communication satellites from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on Sunday, Nov. 12, 2023.

SpaceX launched the SES O3b mPOWER mission on Sunday (Nov. 12), a flight that placed two communication satellites into medium Earth orbit (MEO).

The Falcon 9 rocket ferrying these satellites lifted off from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 4:08 p.m. EST (2108 GMT).

Related: SpaceX launches its 29th cargo mission to the International Space Station


A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket's first stage lands on the droneship

The Falcon 9's first stage came back to Earth and made a vertical touchdown on the company's drone ship about 8.5 minutes after liftoff. The ship, known as "A Shortfall of Gravitas," was waiting nearby in the Atlantic Ocean; the rocket's upper stage will not be recovered, as is standard for Falcon 9 flights.

Two hours after liftoff, the rocket's upper stage deployed the first of the two satellites into medium Earth orbit (MEO) some 5,000 miles (8,000 km) above our planet. Seven minutes later, the second satellite was deployed.

Related Stories:

SpaceX launches 22 Starlink satellites from California

SpaceX aims to launch 144 missions next year

Amazon's Kuiper satellite constellation will use these sleek antennas to serve you internet

The two Boeing-built spacecraft that were aboard the flight will expand the O3b constellation of communication satellites operated by provider SES S.A. of Luxembourg. Once the six-satellite constellation is complete, it is expected to provide high-speed connectivity to a variety of customers in both government and private industries beginning in late 2023.

The Falcon 9 booster on the flight flew on eight previous missions, five of which were devoted to building out Starlink, SpaceX's megaconstellation of broadband internet satellites. Starlink currently consists of more than 5,000 operational satellites.

The SES O3b mPOWER mission marked SpaceX's 84th launch of the year.
SHHH
DoD's secret spaceplane to launch on SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket

Emilee Speck
Sun, November 12, 2023 

The X-37B orbital test vehicle on KSC's Launch and Landing Facility after concluding its sixth successful mission. (Image: Staff Sgt. Adam Shanks/U.S. Space Force)


KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. – SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket will deliver the Department of Defense’s record-breaking spaceplane to orbit in December.

The X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle is scheduled to launch on its seventh mission on Dec. 7 from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

According to a U.S. Space Force news release, the mission will mark the first time the Boeing X-37B spaceplane hitches a ride to orbit with SpaceX.


"We are excited to expand the envelope of the reusable X-37B’s capabilities, using the flight-proven service module and Falcon Heavy rocket to fly multiple cutting-edge experiments for the Department of the Air Force and its partners," X-37B Program Director Lt. Col. Joseph Fritschen said in a statement.

The spaceplane is an orbital test platform for different test and experimentation missions, some of which are classified. This seventh mission, known as OTV-7, will fly unclassified and classified experiments.

A NASA experiment called Seeds-2 will expose plant seeds to radiation during long-duration spaceflight. A previous version of the experiment flew on X-37B's last mission for more than 900 days.

X-37B has set new records for time in orbit with each flight.

According to the spaceplane manufacturer Boeing, X-37B spent 908 days in orbit during its last mission, setting a new endurance record. Prior to the most recent mission, the space plane was in orbit for 780 days before returning to Earth in October 2019.

The X-37B orbital test vehicle on KSC's Launch and Landing Facility after concluding its sixth successful mission. (Image: Staff Sgt. Adam Shanks/U.S. Space Force)

X-37B's last mission ended in November 2022 after more than 900 days in orbit on a mission for the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Space Force. The spaceplane lands on the former space shuttle runway at Kennedy Space Center – now called the Launch and Landing Facility.

Information regarding when the spaceplane will land is kept confidential and, last year, the only sign of the landing to residents along the Space Coast was the sound of sonic booms when X-37B landed.



Original article source: DoD's secret spaceplane to launch on SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket
Rivian to raise nearly $15 billion in debt for EV plant in Georgia

Reuters
Mon, November 13, 2023 

The Rivian name and logo are shown on one of their new electic SUV vehicles in California

(Reuters) - Rivian Automotive plans to raise nearly $15 billion in debt to help build an electric vehicle manufacturing plant in Georgia, the EV maker said on Monday.

The taxable bonds would be issued by the Georgia Department of Economic Development and the Joint Development Authority of Jasper, Morgan, Newton and Walton Counties, according to an agreement on Nov. 9, it said in a securities filing, adding that Rivian has agreed to purchase bonds as they are issued.

The company has agreed to pay a minimum of nearly $300 million in property tax payments through 2047. The payments would increase if the carmaker exceeds its $5 billion investment.

Rivian had said in 2021 that it plans to set up the Georgia plant and had said at the time that it would be commissioned by 2024. The new plant will employ more than 7,500 people and eventually build 400,000 vehicles a year.

(Reporting by Anirudh Saligrama in Bengaluru; Editing by Rashmi Aich


Megan Rapinoe Says Injury 3 Minutes Into Her Final Game Is ‘Proof’ God Does Not Exist

Favour Adegoke
BLAST
Mon, November 13, 2023

MEGA

Megan Rapinoe tore her Achilles tendon in her final career match. During the National Women's Soccer League Championship, she referred to getting the "Aaron Rodgers treatment" for recovery.

Despite the unfortunate incident, Rapinoe managed to find humor, expressing disbelief in a higher power.

Her impact transcends sports, marked by advocacy for Black Lives Matter, coming out as a lesbian in 2012, and defending patriotism amid controversies. Now retired, Rapinoe leaves a legacy as a complex and outspoken advocate.

Megan Rapinoe Finds 'Proof' There Is No God


MEGA

Rapinoe, the prominent U.S. soccer star, tried to find humor in an injury where she tore her Achilles during the final match of her career on Saturday.

The incident occurred in the sixth minute as OL Reign faced defeat against Gotham FC in the National Women's Soccer League Championship.

In the post-match press conference, the winger humorously mentioned getting the "Aaron Rodgers treatment" for recovery and, despite describing the situation as unfortunate, managed to laugh it off with a candid remark about divine intervention.

"I'm not a religious person or anything and if there was a god, like, this is proof that there isn't," she said, per Daily Mail. "This is f----- up. It's just f----- up. Six minutes in and I eat my Achilles."

Megan Rapinoe Says 'It's Devastating To Go Out In The Final So Early'


MEGA

Rapinoe suffered the non-contact injury during an attempt to make a defensive play at the game, marking the end of her illustrious career.

Before exiting the field for the last time, the FIFA Women's World Cup shared a poignant hug with former USWNT teammate Ali Krieger, who was also playing her final professional game for Gotham FC.

Describing the injury to The Seattle Times, Rapinoe noted: "That's what it felt like. Just a huge pop and I can't even feel where the Achilles is, but pretty sure I tore my Achilles. The worst possible outcome."

Despite the devastating exit from a final, she acknowledged her deep sense of humor, adding: "Thank God I have a f----- deep well of a sense of humor. It's devastating to go out in a final so early."
Megan Rapinoe Jokes About Being A 'NARP' After Her Retirement


MEGA

Rapinoe injected dark humor and self-deprecation into the situation with her trademark style, downplaying the emotional impact of her shocking injury.

"I wasn't overly emotional about it," she said. "I mean, f----- yeeted my Achilles in the sixth minute in my last game ever in the literal championship game."

While reflecting on the injury, the 38-year-old quipped, "I guess I just rode until the wheels came right off! Now I'm just a NARP, a normal-a-- regular person, having to do rehab, which is f----- devastating."

Despite the challenging circumstances, Rapinoe emphasized that "You gotta find the silver lining and the dark humor," and "That's just who I am as well," she added.

However, during her final press conference, she couldn't contain her emotions, tearing up as she approached the NWSL Final against Gotham FC.
Her Impact As An Athlete And Social Advocate

MEGA

Now retired, Rapinoe's impact extends beyond her athletic prowess. Her legacy reflects a complex and outspoken athlete committed to both excellence and societal progress.

She is a vocal supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement and faced criticism for kneeling during the national anthem in 2016.

In 2012, the U.S. player courageously came out as a lesbian, confronting backlash from anti-LGBT detractors.

In another incident in 2019 at the Women's World Cup, she defended her patriotism, describing herself as "particularly and uniquely and very deeply American."

MEGA

In an interview, she said: "If we want to talk about the ideals that we stand for, the song and the anthem, and what we were founded on, I think I'm extremely American."

However, she acknowledged her imperfections but emphasized the continual quest for improvement.

"Yes, we are a great country, and there are many things that are so amazing and I feel very fortunate to be in this country. I would never be able to do this in a lot of other places," she said.

"But also, that doesn't mean we can't get better. It doesn't mean we shouldn't always strive to be better," Rapinoe added.

We wish her a happy retirement!