Jessica Thivenin enceinte : comment elle a annoncé la nouvelle à Thibault

Bien qu’ils résident à Dubaï, Jessica Thivenin et Thibault Kuro ne pouvaient pas manquer le mariage de leurs amis Manon Marsault et Julien Tanti. Les tourtereaux sont donc apparus dans l’épisode spécial des Marseillais consacré à l’union des parents de Tiago (9 mois), vendredi 10 mai 2019, sur W9. Ils y ont dévoilé comment ils ont chacun découvert la grossesse de la jolie blonde de 29 ans.

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On ne s’en rend pas compte, à part quand on va voir le gynécologue. Sinon je ne sens rien“, confie tout d’abord Jessica Thivenin à Kevin Guedj, qui deviendra papa en octobre prochain. Thibault confirme qu’il ne réalise toujours pas qu’il va avoir un bébé. Il révèle ensuite qu’il a appris la grossesse de sa belle alors qu’il était à Phuket, en Thaïlande.

J’achète le test, je fais pipi. Et là, quand je vois que je suis enceinte, je l’appelle“, raconte Jessica Thivenin. Et son mari de poursuivre : “Tu n’as pas réussi à m’avoir donc tu m’as envoyé une photo du test. Je lui ai demandé si elle était sûre qu’il était de moi parce que je n’étais pas auprès d’elle. Dans ma tête, j’étais à Phuket, ce n’était pas possible que ce soit moi.” Mais il a bien vite compris qu’il allait prochainement accueillir son premier enfant.

Des craintes avant l’accouchement

S’il semble serein à l’idée de devenir papa, Jessica n’a pas caché avoir quelques craintes. Mercredi 8 mai, c’est en larmes qu’elle est apparue sur Snapchat pour les évoquer : “Je ne suis pas très bien. Des fois, je pleure pour rien. C’est les hormones. Je partage avec vous mon premier cadeau : une petite chaussure ! C’est beige car on ne sait pas si c’est une fille ou un garçon. Ça me refait pleurer. Je me rends compte que je vais être une maman. J’ai peur de ne pas être une bonne maman, je me pose plein de questions. Je ne me rends pas compte. Et quand j’y pense, j’ai peur. Je vous partage toutes mes phases de femme enceinte. (…) Il n’y a pas de raison que je ne m’en sorte pas. Ça y est, je vais être une grande.

C’est le 20 avril dernier que la jeune femme a révélé sa grossesse sur ses réseaux sociaux. “Je suis tellement heureuse de vous annoncer que dans 6 mois nous serons 3. Tu seras un merveilleux papa en plus d’être un incroyable mari. Je t’aime“, avait-elle écrit en légende d’une photo sur laquelle elle était dans les bras de son amoureux Thibault Kuro Garcia, tenant une échographie à la main.

Louise Bourgoin et Charlotte Gainsbourg lancent en beauté le Festival de Cannes

Le coup d’envoi est lancé pour le Festival de Cannes édition 2019. Ce mardi 14 mai, pour la cérémonie d’ouverture, les stars ont effectué la traditionnelle montée des marches pour le film d’horreur de Jim Jarmusch, The Dead Don’t Die. Cette première soirée sur la Croisette a déjà réuni nombre de célébrités sur le tapis rouge.

Fidèle de la maison Vuitton, c’est naturellement dans une tenue signée de la marque que Marina Foïs, tout juste auréolée d’un Molière, a fait une arrivée remarquée, non loin de la nouvelle coqueluche de la chanson francophone, Angèle. Pour sa première montée des marches, c’est sur sa propre chanson, Balance ton quoi, que la jeune Belge s’est prêtée à la séance de pose dans sa robe Chanel. Pour cette 72e édition du Festival rendant hommage à Agnès Varda, Angèle a interprété la chanson Sans toi du film Cléo de 5 à 7, en l’honneur de la réalisatrice disparue en mars. Les enfants de cette dernière, Mathieu Demy et Rosalie Varda, ont quant à eux monté les marches en compagnie du ministre de la Culture Franck Riester.

Bras dessus, bras dessous, non loin de Nathalie Baye, Charlotte Gainsbourg est arrivée avec Javier Bardem, tout sourire dans sa minirobe Saint Laurent. Autres duos de charme, Audrey Lamy était quant à elle escortée par son ami de longue date Alex Lutz, Sabine Azéma de son mari dans les films Tanguy, André Dussollier. Elle a ainsi croisé Estelle Lefébure, Louise Bourgoin, Macha Méril, Romane Bohringer (bijoux Messika), Julianne Moore et Amira Casar habillées en Dior, le top Alessandra Ambrosio ou encore le réalisateur belge Lukas Dhont. Habituée de la Croisette, Frédérique Bel a quant à elle misé sur une robe fluide Yanina Couture pour la cérémonie d’ouverture.

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Experts warn US needs to better prepare for hurricane season

As hurricane season approaches, experts say the country is still not adequately prepared.

They warn that as climate change continues to intensify extreme weather, the U.S. will need to adopt stronger resilience policies.

“There’s some definite room for improvement on resilience for hurricanes,” said Gavin Dillingham, director of clean energy policy at the Houston Advanced Research Center.

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“Living along the Gulf Coast, there has not been a significant amount of preparation for major storm surge related to hurricanes, not a lot of preparation beyond just some standard infrastructure work for reliability of our power systems,” Dillingham said.

This year, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted that hurricane season, which starts Tuesday, will be above average, with between six and 10 hurricanes, following last year’s active season, which had 13 hurricanes.

On Monday, the White House announced it would double the funding to $1 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s program that helps communities take on hazard mitigation projects.

President BidenJoe BidenTexas Democrats stage walkout to block passage of sweeping election overhaul package DOJ adds four defendants to Oath Keepers conspiracy case Biden remembers late son Beau in Memorial Day remarks MORE’s infrastructure plan also calls for $50 billion in resilience funding.

The plan aims for this funding to include boosts to resilience for services such as the electric grid, food systems, hospitals and transportation.

It also proposes “new initiatives at the Department of Transportation, a bipartisan tax credit to provide incentives to low- and middle-income families and to small businesses to invest in disaster resilience, and transition and relocation assistance to support community-led transitions for the most vulnerable tribal communities.”

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Experts have praised the $50 billion as a decent step but say more will be needed going forward.

“[$50 billion] is a good start,” said Chris Uejio, a co-author of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Building Resilience Against Climate Effects Framework. “I think the distributional aspect of it is just as important as the headline number.”

But the government will have a lot more to do going forward, he said, adding that such resilience issues could eventually cost much more to manage.

“Reflecting both upgrading our existing transportation, wastewater, electrical power generation, storage and transmission lines — those alone are in the hundreds of billions for the next 10, 20, 30 years,” said Uejio, who’s also a professor at Florida State University.

In February, a group called the Resilience Action Fund, which seeks to promote community resilience, wrote an open letter to the Biden administration calling for additional actions such as requiring minimum resilience standards for federally funded buildings and requiring such standards for buildings that get loans from federally backed mortgage organizations.

Aris Papadopoulos, the group’s chairman, argued that it’s important to have such federal standards, saying it’s unsustainable to continue the current “patchwork” under which “everybody does what they locally want” and then asks the government for help when it fails.

“You can divide the country into a handful of regions and say for these regions, we should have consistency of codes and standards,” he said.

Papadopoulos also said that the focus should be on homes, which he referred to as the “weak underbelly of our communities.”

“If you look at a single home, it’s less important than a bridge or a school or hospital, but if you multiply one home times hundreds of thousands or millions, that’s a big problem,” he said.

Carol Friedland, a professor at Louisiana State University, similarly said there must be be more standards, such as an existing flood standard for buildings constructed with federal money, but warned that “there’s no clear pathway” for the federal government to impose resilience standards.

“The federal government really doesn’t have the power to dictate building codes to the states, but they can incentivize it,” she said.

Meanwhile, Uejio suggested that another mitigation strategy could be to offer buyouts for homeowners who live in particularly vulnerable areas.

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“There are some places that have been flooded multiple years in a row or multiple years in the past five or 10 years and people who are ready to move but don’t have the resources to,” he said.

Even as storms are expected to become stronger, Dillingham, with the Houston Advanced Research Center, said that the U.S. can still adapt but needs to move quickly.

“We can continue to adapt, we can continue to work on improving the resilience of our infrastructure, but it just becomes harder and harder the longer we wait,” he said.

“There’s going to be just a higher level of suffering happening across communities, especially in vulnerable communities, unless we start taking some action,” he added.

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9 new COVID-19 cases, 4 deaths reported by Navajo Nation

The Navajo Nation reported on Saturday 9 new COVID-19 cases and 2 COVID-19 related deaths, according to the Navajo Department of Health. 

Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez said in a statement on Twitter that health officials reported the total number of deaths has risen to 1,332. 

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The total number of COVID-19 cases in the nation have risen to 30,839, according to the Associated Press report. 

Nez said the tribe has seen a decrease in new COVID-19 cases and increase in the number of people getting vaccinated. But he still urged members of the Navajo Nation to follow its mask mandate, even in states or cities that have lifted the requirement.

“Some cities and states do not have mask mandates in place, but our mask requirement remains in effect across the entire Navajo Nation. If you or your loved one have not yet received the COVID-19 vaccine, please consider doing so soon,” Nez said in his statement. “As stated before, the vaccines are highly-effective against the impacts of the virus, but it does not guarantee that you will not get the virus. We have to continue to make good choices that keep us safe and healthy.” 

The Navajo Nation, which stretches across Utah, Arizona and New Mexico, reported last week, when the total number of cases rose over 30,000, that more than 29,000 had recovered from their symptoms. 

According to a NPR report in April, the tribe has been hit hard during the ongoing pandemic with Native Americans dying at twice the rate of white Americans.

Nigeria bans Twitter after president's tweet deleted

Nigeria banned Twitter on Friday after the platform deleted a tweet by President Muhammadu Buhari, saying it violated their abusive behavior policy.

The Federal Government has suspended, indefinitely, the operations of the microblogging and social networking service, Twitter, in Nigeria,” the country’s ministry of information posted on Twitter Friday.

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Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the Minister of Information and Culture, said people were using the platform “for activities that are capable of undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence.”

Twitter responded to the move on Saturday, saying it was “deeply concerned” by the blocking of its platform.

“Access to the free and #OpenInternet is an essential human right in modern society,” the company tweeted.

“We will work to restore access for all those in Nigeria who rely on Twitter to communicate and connect with the world. #KeepitOn,” Twitter added.

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The ban comes after the Nigerian president posted a now-deleted tweet where he compared the attacks from gunmen on national electoral commission offices to the Nigeria Civil War, according to The New York Times.

“Many of those misbehaving today are too young to be aware of the destruction and loss of lives that occurred during the Nigerian Civil War,” Buhari said, adding that those “who went through the war, will treat them in the language they understand.”

Some took the tweet as a call to genocide for the Igbo ethnic group, the majority in the southeast region of the country where most of the attacks have been occurring, The Times reported.

Twitter proceeded to take the tweet down, saying it violated its “abusive behavior” policy.

Although Twitter has been suspended in the country, many Nigerians are still on the platform using virtual private networks to evade the ban hours after it was announced. 

California ban on assault weapons ruled unconstitutional by federal judge

A federal judge in California ruled that the state’s ban on assault weapons is unconstitutional, a major defeat for gun control advocates as Democrats eye a federal prohibition on the same kind of guns.

U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez of San Diego issued a 94-page ruling panning the 30-year-old ban as an overstep by the state government and a violation of the Constitution’s Second Amendment, likening the AR-15, a popular rifle, to a “Swiss Army Knife” that is “Good for both home and battle.”

“This case is not about extraordinary weapons lying at the outer limits of Second Amendment protection. The banned ‘assault weapons’ are not bazookas, howitzers, or machineguns. Those arms are dangerous and solely useful for military purposes,” Benitez wrote Friday. “Instead, the firearms deemed ‘assault weapons’ are fairly ordinary, popular, modern rifles. This is an average case about average guns used in average ways for average purposes.”

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The judge, a George W. Bush appointee, boiled his ruling down to the concept that a state should not “force a gun policy choice that impinges on that right with a 30-year-old failed experiment.” 

“Government is not free to impose its own new policy choices on American citizens where constitutional rights are concerned,” he wrote. “California may certainly conceive of a policy that a modern rifle is dangerous in the hands of a criminal, and that therefore it is good public policy to keep modern rifles out of the hands of every citizen. The Second Amendment stands as a shield from government imposition of that policy.”

While Benitez deemed California’s ban unconstitutional, he still allowed for a 30-day stay before his ruling takes effect, allowing California Attorney General Rob Bonta (D), the defendant in the case, to appeal.

“Because this case involves serious questions going to the merits, a temporary stay is in the public interest. This declaration and permanent injunction are stayed for 30 days during which time the Attorney General may appeal and seek a stay from the Court of Appeals,” he wrote. 

Still, the ruling drew swift pushback from Bonta and California Gov. Gavin NewsomGavin NewsomCalifornia state workers union donating M to help Newsom fight recall Biden bolsters push for offshore wind Another Arnold in this California recall? Would it even matter? MORE (D), with both suggesting that Benitez was downplaying the risk posed by weapons like the AR-15.

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“Today’s decision is fundamentally flawed, and we will be appealing it. There is no sound basis in law, fact, or common sense for equating assault rifles with swiss army knives — especially on Gun Violence Awareness Day and after the recent shootings in our own California communities. We need to take action to end gun violence now. We will fight this ruling and continue to advocate for and defend common sense gun laws that will save lives,” Bonta said in a statement. 

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“Today’s decision is a direct threat to public safety and the lives of innocent Californians, period,” added Newsom. “[T]he fact that this judge compared the AR-15 – a weapon of war that’s used on the battlefield – to a Swiss Army Knife completely undermines the credibility of this decision and is a slap in the face to the families who’ve lost loved ones to this weapon.”

Benitez’s ruling marks a defeat for Democrats who have looked to expand gun control in recent years, only to be rebuffed by conservative judges and Republicans in Congress. The ruling on Bonta’s appeal could hold sway over whether Democrats, led by President BidenJoe BidenBipartisan lawmakers press Biden to ‘immediately’ evacuate Afghans who helped US forces Chris Wallace: Backlash over Fauci emails ‘highly political’ Democrats claim vindication, GOP cries witch hunt as McGahn finally testifies MORE, will be successful in their push to implement a federal ban on assault weapons, a prohibition Biden promised on the campaign trail he would put into effect.

Gun rights advocates hailed Benitez’s ruling, saying they would be prepared to fight to uphold it all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary.

“This historic victory for individual liberty is just the beginning, and FPC [Firearms Police Coalition] will continue to aggressively challenge these laws throughout the United States. We look forward to continuing this challenge at the Ninth Circuit and, should it be necessary, the Supreme Court,” FPC President Brandon Combs, whose group helped bring the lawsuit to court, said in a statement.

White House requests $2.8 billion for parks, conservation projects

The Biden administration is proposing $2.8 billion for the departments of Interior and Agriculture to fund national park programs and conservation projects across the country, the agencies announced Thursday.

The proposed funding for fiscal 2022 represents the maximum allowed under the bipartisan Great American Outdoor Act, which former President TrumpDonald TrumpFacebook to end policy shielding politicians from content moderation rules: reports US government found no evidence that Navy UFO sightings were alien spacecraft: report More than a dozen police officers still on medical leave from Jan. 6 injuries MORE signed in August.

The law included $900 million a year for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) as well as up to $1.9 billion annually for national park maintenance for five years.

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“One of the best investments we can make is in stewarding the lands and waters that sustain us and the generations to come. Today we are making critical investments that will create tens of thousands of jobs, safeguard the environment, and help ensure that national parks and public lands are ready to meet the challenges of climate change and increased visitation,” Interior Secretary Deb HaalandDeb HaalandWhite House requests .8 billion for parks, conservation projects The Hill’s 12:30 Report: Biden’s meeting with Queen Elizabeth II The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Citizens’ Climate Lobby – Deal or no deal? Biden, Capito continue infrastructure talks MORE said in a statement.

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“Deferred maintenance means a backlog of much-needed repairs and improvements throughout our managed lands,” she added. “In particular, I am encouraged that funding for Bureau of Indian Education schools will help ensure that we are providing a safe and reliable space where students and educators alike can focus on learning.”

The administration has announced it will take on more than 500 maintenance projects under the Public Land Legacy Restoration fund, including 63 under the Interior Department and 484 under the National Forest Service. The departments estimated the projects would together support more than 20,000 jobs.

Tom Cors, director of government relations for lands at The Nature Conservancy and a spokesperson for the LWCF Coalition, praised the administration’s proposals.

“The LWCF Coalition appreciates the historic investments President BidenJoe BidenWHO warns of continent-wide third wave of coronavirus infections in Africa 30 House Democrats urge Biden to do more for global vaccine distribution Manchin isn’t ready to support Democrats passing infrastructure on their own MORE is proposing for LWCF, protecting special places from Minnesota’s Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness to neighborhood parks in cities like Cleveland, to Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming and the High Peaks of Maine,” Cors said in a statement. “We look forward to working with the administration to maximize LWCF’s role in helping meet the president’s ambitious conservation and recreation goals, addressing the climate and nature crisis and creating more equitable access to the outdoors.”

The move follows Interior’s announcement last month that $150 million would be made available in grants to local communities under the LWCF-funded Outdoor Recreation Legacy Partnership grant program, which provides funds to create outdoor recreation spaces in urban areas.

New Russian hacks spark calls for tougher Biden actions

Officials are calling for harsher measures against Russia following Microsoft’s assessment by that hackers behind the devastating SolarWinds hack were continuing to launch cyberattacks against U.S. government agencies and other organizations. 

President BidenJoe BidenWhat you need to know about the international tax talks 9 Senate seats most likely to flip in 2022 Is Biden trying to avoid congressional review of Russia sanctions? MORE just last month levied sweeping sanctions on Russia in retaliation for both the SolarWinds hack and election interference. But in the wake of the new hacking efforts, some officials are urging the Biden administration to get tougher.

“If Moscow is responsible, this brazen act of utilizing emails associated with the U.S. government demonstrates that Russia remains undeterred despite sanctions following the SolarWinds attack,” House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam SchiffAdam Bennett SchiffSchiff: Marjorie Taylor Greene’s actions ‘a sign of the greater rot in her party’ Sunday shows – Cheney removal, CDC guidance reverberate Schiff: Biden administration needs to ‘push harder’ to stop violence in Mideast MORE (D-Calif.) said in a statement Friday. “Those sanctions gave the administration flexibility to tighten the economic screws further if necessary — it now appears necessary.”

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Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Mark WarnerMark Robert WarnerExtraordinary explanations for UFOs look increasingly plausible Former Va. Sen. John Warner dies at 94 Senators offer bill to allow remote online notarizations MORE (D-Va.) had similar thoughts.

“We have to step up our cyber defenses, and we must make clear to Russia – and any other adversaries – that they will face consequences for this and any other malicious cyber activity,” Warner said in a separate statement Friday.

Microsoft announced Thursday night that a sophisticated Russian hacking group they named “Nobelium” had gained access to an email marketing account used by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to target other organizations with malicious phishing emails.

The emails continued a link that would install a backdoor if clicked on that could allow the hackers to steal data and infect other computers in the network. While most of the attacks were blocked, around 3,000 email accounts at 150 different organizations in two dozen countries were targeted, including government agencies and think tanks. 

Microsoft assessed that Nobelium is the same group behind last year’s SolarWinds hack. The incident, one of the largest in U.S. history, allowed the hackers to compromise at least nine federal agencies and 100 private sector groups. 

“These attacks appear to be a continuation of multiple efforts by Nobelium to target government agencies involved in foreign policy as part of intelligence gathering efforts,” Tom Burt, Microsoft’s corporate vice president for Customer Security and Trust, wrote in a blog post announcing the findings last week.

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The tensions come as Biden prepares for a summit with Russian President Vladimir PutinVladimir Vladimirovich PutinIs Biden trying to avoid congressional review of Russia sanctions? Belarus crisis heightens stakes of Biden-Putin summit Putin backs up Belarus’s Lukashenko amid international pressure MORE in mid-June.

The U.S. intelligence community earlier this year formally assessed the SolarWinds hack was carried out by Russian state-sponsored hackers. In April, Biden announced a sweeping sanctions, but warned that he would impose harsher measures if the malicious cyber activity continued.

“The United States is not looking to kick off a cycle of escalation and conflict with Russia,” Biden said as part of a speech last month. “We want a stable, predictable relationship. If Russia continues to interfere with our democracy, I am prepared to take further actions to respond.”

The federal government has not formally blamed Russia for the recent activities announced by Microsoft. The latest incident was also far less damaging than the SolarWinds hack, with Microsoft announcing Friday afternoon that they were “not seeing evidence of any significant number of compromised organizations at this time.”

But following escalating cyber threats from Russia, including a Russia-based cyber criminal group’s recent ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline, officials are voicing concerns that more steps should be taken.

“Russia must be held accountable for its continued malicious activity against our networks,” Rep. Jim LangevinJames (Jim) R. LangevinBiden budget includes 0M to help agencies recover from SolarWinds hack in proposed budget Colonial Pipeline CEO to testify on Capitol Hill in June following cyberattack School districts struggle to defend against rising ransomware attacks MORE (D-R.I.), the chair of the House Armed Services Committee’s cybersecurity subcommittee, told The Hill Friday. “I hope the Biden administration will strongly consider all available options – including increased sanctions – as it determines our response to this blatant intrusion.”

House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie ThompsonBennie Gordon ThompsonGOP gambles with Pelosi in opposing Jan. 6 commission DHS to require pipeline companies to report cyberattacks Is lawmaking today a game of principals? MORE (D-Miss.) described the potential new Russian actions as “disturbing.”

“If the reporting so far is accurate, it is clear we are dealing with an adversary that is difficult to deter and we must behave and defend our networks accordingly,” Thompson told The Hill in an emailed statement. “Moving forward, the government and the private sector will have to do better. Collectively, we need to keep our foot on the gas.”

Committee ranking member John KatkoJohn Michael KatkoBiden budget includes 0M to help agencies recover from SolarWinds hack in proposed budget GOP gambles with Pelosi in opposing Jan. 6 commission Is lawmaking today a game of principals? MORE (R-N.Y.) agreed, telling The Hill Friday that he “believes Russia will not stop attempting to undermine U.S. cyber space until they know the consequences will be dire.”

“Earlier sanctions were a necessary first step, but we must continue the full court press,” Katko said. “That reality is now more evident than ever before— after repeated attacks on U.S. cyber infrastructure, we must take a stronger stance and hold Russia accountable.”

Mark Montgomery, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, pointed to Biden’s statement in citing the need to hold Russia accountable if the administration determines it is behind the new incident.

“If you make a statement like that, President Biden is a man of his word, we need to take more aggressive measures, both sanctions and other elements of the defend forward strategy,” Montgomery told The Hill Friday. 

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Montgomery stressed that the sanctions were part of a larger toolbox of ways to address the hacking efforts, including diplomacy, law enforcement actions, and the use of U.S. cyber capabilities against Russia.

“The only way to establish deterrence throughout all of cyberspace is a balance of offense and defense, so it would be appropriate for us to be taking actions against the kind of critical infrastructure that conducts these kinds of operations,” Montgomery said. 

A spokesperson for the White House’s National Security Council (NSC) told The Hill in an emailed statement the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) was “actively managing this incident” and working with USAID, and that the NSC was “monitoring the situation closely.”

“While we may learn more, this is basic phishing which is blocked by most systems automatically,” they stressed. “As Microsoft’s blog noted, it’s likely to have been blocked by automated systems as spam. If an email got by the automated systems, a user would still have to click on the link to activate the malicious payload. And we should all know better than to click links in unknown emails.”

The spokesperson pointed to improvements made to federal cybersecurity through a newly issued executive order recently signed by Biden. 

“Each of these incidents underscores the importance of the president’s executive order and the aggressive but achievable efforts it outlines and the partnership between the government and private sector in addressing these threats,” the NSC spokesperson said. 

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While the cyberattacks will likely be on the Biden-Putin summit agenda, Montgomery cautioned that while diplomatic efforts were useful in responding to Russian hacking efforts, the meeting alone would likely do little to address the immediate threat. 

“I don’t think he’s going to look into Putin’s eyes and see anything other than an authoritarian rogue,” Montgomery said of Biden’s meeting with the Russian president. “I think our actions will speak much louder than any words that Putin hears.”

 

Le prince Charles a finalement rencontré son petit-fils Archie

Il ne manquait plus que lui. Ce 16 mai 2019, le prince Charles a finalement été à la rencontre d’Archie, son quatrième petit-enfant. Comme le confirme Town and Country magazine, l’heureux grand-père de 70 ans a rendu visite à son fils Harry et sa belle-fille Meghan Markle dans leur nouvelle demeure à Windsor, le Frogmore Cottage.

Un voyage officiel en Allemagne avec Camilla, une réception pour les anciens combattants au palais St James, une garden party au palais de Buckingham… Avec un planning bien rempli, le prince Charles aura donc attendu pas moins de dix jours avant de féliciter les jeunes parents en personne, jeudi après-midi. Avant lui, la reine Elizabeth II, le prince Philip et Doria Ragland, la mère de Meghan Markle, avaient rencontré le petit Archie le 8 mai dernier au château de Windsor, le jour de sa présentation au monde.

Egalement bien occupés ces derniers jours, le prince William et Kate Middleton ont eux-aussi attendu le 14 mai pour aller voir leur neveu chez lui, au Frogmore Cottage. “Nous sommes très heureux et impatients de les voir dans les prochains jours. Je suis très heureux d’accueillir mon frère dans la société du manque du sommeil qu’est la parentalité“, avait déclaré le prince William lors d’une sortie officielle à Londres, le 7 mai 2019. J’espère que, dans les prochains jours, ils pourront prendre leurs marques et profiter de l’arrivée du nouveau-né dans leur foyer et des joies qui vont avec.” Les enfants des Cambridge, George (5 ans), Charlotte (4 ans) et Louis (1 an), n’ont en revanche toujours pas rencontré leur cousin.

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Scarlett Johansson fiancée : en route pour le mariage avec Colin Jost !

Après deux années d’idylle, Scarlett Johansson et son compagnon Colin Jost ont décidé de faire le grand saut : la star hollywoodienne de 34 ans et le membre de l’émission comique Saturday Night Live âgé de 37 ans vont se marier. Une belle nouvelle confirmée à l’AP par l’agent de l’actrice. Leurs fiançailles sont donc officielles, mais aucune date n’a encore été avancée pour les noces.

Scarlett et Colin étaient apparus plus amoureux que jamais au mois d’avril 2019 sur le tapis rouge du dernier film de la fameuse Veuve noire, Avengers – Endgame. Il s’agira du troisième mariage de la star, puisque de 2008 à 2011, elle a d’abord été l’épouse de Ryan Reynolds (désormais papa de bientôt trois enfants avec Blake Lively), puis celle du journaliste français Romain Dauriac, père de sa fille Rose, née en 2014. Elle s’est séparée de lui à la fin de l’année 2016, puis ils ont divorcé en septembre 2017. Le futur marié, quant à lui, n’avait jamais franchi le cap.

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C’est au printemps de l’année 2017 que Colin Jost et Scarlett Johansson se sont rapprochés. En effet, le beau brun est tombé sous le charme de l’héroïne de Her lors de sa venue sur le plateau de l’émission américaine culte dont il est l’un des scénaristes, le Saturday Night Live, également appelé SNL.