CR MAG

Celebs Top News

Hot

Friday, February 20, 2026

What Trump's first Board of Peace summit signals about Gaza's future

February 20, 2026
What Trump's first Board of Peace summit signals about Gaza's future

Billions of dollars earmarked for reconstruction and the promise of an international stabilization force for the destroyedGaza Strip:Those were just two of the promises to emerge from theinaugural summitof PresidentDonald Trump's Board of Peace.

NBC Universal

"We will help Gaza," Trump said at the meeting in Washington on Thursday, attended by representatives of more than 40 countries, including several heads of state.

"We will straighten it out. We will make it successful. We will make it peaceful. And we will do things like that in other spots," he said.

Billions in reconstruction

While Trump initially pitched his board as an entity to oversee peace efforts in Gaza, he has sincedramatically expanded its remitas a United Nations-style organization capable of addressing major conflicts around the world.

Some 27 countries have committed to joining, with Hungarian Prime MinisterViktor Orbán and Argentine President Javier Mileiamong the world leaders attending. So far,key U.S. allies, including the Britain, France, Norway and Sweden, have declined, some citing concerns the body risks undermining the United Nations' role in peacekeeping efforts around the world.

Image: US-POLITICS-DIPLOMACY-TRUMP (Saul Loeb / AFP via Getty Images)

Despite the board's broadened scope, Gaza's future remained in focus at Thursday's summit, with Trump announcing that members had committed at least $7 billion for reconstruction of the shattered enclave, with funding promised from countries including Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, the United Arab Emirates, Morocco, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan and Kuwait.

Trump separately announced that the U.S. was also committed to dedicating $10 billion to the Board of Peace initiative, though it was not clear where exactly that funding would be allotted.

The billions of dollars earmarked for reconstruction represent a "small fraction" of the roughly $70 billion that ajoint estimate from the U.N., the European Union and the World Bank said late last year would be required to rebuild Gaza, according to Julie Norman of Chatham House, a London-based foreign policy think tank.

More than 72,000 people, including thousands of children, have been killed in the enclave, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry, since Israel launched its military offensive. The war followed the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, in which 1,200 people were killed and around 250 taken hostage.

More than 80% of buildings, including schools, hospitals and homes, are estimated to have been destroyed in the territory, the United Nations Development Programme said last year.

The UNDP's Special Representative for the Palestinians Jaco Cillerssaid that at least $20 billion would be neededover an initial three-year period and the rest would be required over a longer time frame.

"I don't think we should be too optimistic about their ability to change things on the ground very soon," Norman, an associate fellow at Chatham House's Middle East and North Africa Program, said ahead of Thursday's summit.

A central focus of reconstruction efforts when they do get underway will be the rebuilding of Rafah. The city in the southern Gaza Strip bordering Egypt has long been a lifeline for Palestinians and a key portal to the outside world, with a video played at Thursday's event outlining a three-year goal to rebuild it.

The plan includes building 100,000 homes for 500,000 residents, plus $5 billion in infrastructure funding, he said. Eventually that number would grow to 400,000 homes with more than $30 billion in spending on infrastructure.

Billionaire Yakir Gabay described plans to develop Gaza's coastline into "a new Mediterranean Riviera with 200 hotels and potential islands," echoing Trump's past calls to turn the enclave into the "Riviera of the Middle East." Gabay, the son of senior Israeli officials, is set to be on the Gaza Executive Board and is leading a reconstruction bid.

Advertisement

Gabay said the plan would be "subject to a full disarmament of Hamas," a key stipulation and sticking point in ceasefire negotiations as Hamas has not agreed to hand over its weapons. It is not clear when disarmament might happen if at all — and equally unclear whether the stabilization force would be deployed prior to demilitarization.

Israel made clear it wanted full disarmament, including for Hamas to hand over "all of" its weapons, and the dismantlement of the underground tunnel network and weapons production facilities.

Image: TOPSHOT-PALESTINIAN-ISRAEL-CONFLICT-RELIGION-ISLAM-RAMADAN (Omar Al-Qattaa / AFP via Getty Images)

Stabilization force

Details of plans for a U.N.-authorized international stabilization force in Gaza were also laid out Thursday, with countries including Indonesia, Morocco, Kazakhstan, Kosovo and Albania committing to dedicating several thousand troops to the effort.

Indonesia reaffirmed its commitment to dedicating as many as 8,000 troops or more, with U.S. Army Gen. Jasper Jeffers, tasked with leading the force, saying the Southeast Asian nation had been offered and accepted the position of deputy commander.

It was not clear how many troops other countries committed to the force in addition to the thousands committed by Indonesia. Morocco, for instance, did not provide a number but said it would deploy high ranking military officers to join the force, in addition to deploying police officers and training officers from Gaza. Meanwhile, Egypt and Jordan also committed to help train police in the enclave, Jeffers said.

Questions and concerns

While Thursday's summit outlined broad next steps forward, some said it did little to address the overall concerns over the board's potential to undermine the U.N. Human rights experts and others have condemned the lack of Palestinian representation on the board.

Image: *** BESTPIX *** TOPSHOT-PALESTINIAN-ISRAEL-CONFLICT-GAZA ( Omar Al-Qattaa / AFP via Getty Images)

"The lack of Palestinians and Palestinian input and the ways in which they're approaching it as though this is some kind of business test case just shows you how problematic it is," Diana Buttu, a Palestinian lawyer and former adviser to Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Liberation Organization, said in a phone interview Friday.

A number of countries have said they would not join the initiative due to the lack of Palestinian presence on most of the bodies created alongside the Board of Peace. A technocratic body will be led by Palestinian official Dr. Ali Shaath and is expected to oversee day-to-day administration in the enclave.

Shaath, chief commissioner of the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza, reminded those gathered that the conditions on the ground were "extremely difficult."

"Large parts of Gaza are severely damaged, destroyed. Actually, humanitarian needs are acute," Shaath said. "Law and order remain fragile. This is not normal operating environment, Mr. President, which is precisely why discipline and privatization matter."

Buttu said that without resolving long-standing Palestinian grievances, such as a lack of an independent state, freedom of movement and the tens of thousands of killed and injured, a true regeneration of Gaza would be impossible.

"This is really an issue about politics and about the lives and futures of people that can't be resolved through a business model," she added.

Andreas Krieg, a Middle East security expert from King's College London, was less skeptical, and said that while the Board of Peace was a flawed project, it was also an "imperfect tool that can still be useful."

The board lacked a "clean design" and carried "real political baggage," he said, noting the reluctance of key U.S. allies to join the initiative, while saying that for those who do, the calculation was largely "transactional."

But, Krieg said, "it may be the only bridge available that has a chance of moving Gaza away from perpetual war."

Read More

ICE now says immigrant detainee died after 'spontaneous use of force'

February 20, 2026
ICE now says immigrant detainee died after 'spontaneous use of force'

Immigration and Customs Enforcement now says "use of force" was a factor in the death of an immigrant detainee.

Scripps News

Geraldo Lunas Campos died in January at the Camp East Montana for-profit detention center in El Paso, Texas.

The Department of Homeland Security said he died after attempting suicide, but a Scripps News investigation revealed Lunas Campos was in handcuffs moments before his death.

RELATED STORY |Photos and 911 calls deepen mystery of immigrant's sudden death in ICE custody

Advertisement

A county autopsy said the death was a result of homicide.

Now, a new document quietly posted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement says Lunas Campos died "after a spontaneous use of force" to prevent him from harming himself.

The statement does not elaborate on who exerted force against Lunas Campos. Scripps News has reached out to officials for more details.

The Camp East Montana detention center is the largest for-profit immigration lockup in the country and relies on the use of private security guards.

RELATED STORY |27-year-old man from Guatemala dies in ICE custody, DHS says

Read More

Snow foolin': Weekend nor'easter to menace East Coast

February 20, 2026
Snow foolin': Weekend nor'easter to menace East Coast

Anor'easteris forecast for the East Coast this weekend, but the amount of snow that falls − and where − remains challenging to pinpoint as of Friday, Feb. 20.

USA TODAY

"An East Coast storm is expected to develop this weekend, but the track of this potential nor'easter isn't yet determined, leaving impacts such as snow, rain, wind and coastal flooding from Sunday [Feb. 22] into Monday [Feb. 23] uncertain from New England to the mid-Atlantic states," saidWeather.com meteorologist Jonathan Erdman in an online forecast from Friday morning, Feb. 20.

According toAccuWeather, there is a risk that the storm strengthens rapidly, bringing heavier snow to parts of the Interstate-95 corridor, including New York City and Philadelphia.

Clarity should come soon, however: "Forecast totals and timing should come into better focus by late tonight," theNational Weather Service in Philadelphianoted in an online forecast discussion posted early Friday, Feb. 20.

Regardless of the final outcome, the weather service also urged caution and preparedness: "We still remain in the 'wait and see' period with this storm, so just take precautions now, should the worst case scenario play out,"the weather service forecast office in Stirling, Virginia, said in an online forecast."Having a preparedness kit stocked up is never a bad idea."

<p style=Snow covers the ground in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. These photos captured the winter storm's aftermath from the sky.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> A person shovels snow off their driveway covers in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. A section of West 42nd Street remains snow covered Monday, Jan. 26, 2026, in Indianapolis. Snow blankets the city Monday, Jan. 26, 2026, as motorists travel along Interstate 65 and West 38th Street in Indianapolis. An aerial photo shows the University of Missouri sitting under several inches of fresh snow on Jan. 25, 2026 in Columbia, MO. An aerial photo shows several inches of fresh snow covering a residential neighborhood on Jan. 25, 2026 in Columbia, MO. Snow covers downtown after a winter storm in Oklahoma City, on Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. People play in snow after a winter storm in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. Downtown Louisville and snowy interstate conditions are seen on Jan. 25, 2026 in Louisville, Kentucky. Downtown Louisville and snowy interstate conditions are seen on Jan. 25, 2026. Snow covers the ground in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026.

Mesmerizing drone photos taken after winter storm show power of nature

Snow covers the ground in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. These photos captured thewinter storm's aftermathfrom the sky.

Storm's track will determine impacts

For several days now, the computer models that meteorologists use to predict weather have had a hard time agreeing on the future path of the storm, which has yet to fully form. A track closer to shore means more snow, while a track farther offshore means less snow.

"The critical question for heavy versus light snow along I-95 is the track of the coastal storm," said Dan DePodwin, AccuWeather vice president of forecasting operations, in an e-mail to USA TODAY. "That track will depend on how quickly the storm intensifies."

Advertisement

Erdman agrees with this, noting that "the main uncertainty is where this offshore low tracks. That affects who may see snow, rain, wind and coastal flooding and the magnitude of those impacts."

A map from the National Weather Service shows the probability of at least minor winter weather impacts from early Sunday Feb. 22 to early Monday Feb. 23.

How much snow could fall?

According to Erdman, the heaviest snow is expected along the coast from New Jersey to Massachusetts, where totals could surpass 4 inches, and in the northern Appalachians, where totals could surpass a foot.

From Washington, D.C., to Philadelphia, New York City and Boston, precipitation is expected to fall mainly as snow, but marginal temperatures may limit accumulation on paved surfaces during daylight hours,AccuWeather said.

"During the day Sunday [Feb. 22] and Monday [Feb. 23], when snow is not falling heavily, highways and city streets can be just wet or slushy in spots due to temperatures near freezing combined with the higher sun angle in late February," DePodwin said.

"However, there will be periods when snowfall rates are heavy enough to overcome marginal temperatures and sunlight, especially at night," he added.

Another snowy weekend

For some Northeast cities, this would mark a fifth consecutive weekend with snowfall, AccuWeather said.

Overall, New York City has recorded 22.3 inches of snow this season, near the historical average of 22.1 inches, following a stretch of temperatures 9.4 degrees below the historical average.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Here's the latest forecast for the looming East Coast nor'easter

Read More

Falcons prez Matt Ryan ready to support QB Michael Penix Jr.

February 20, 2026
Falcons prez Matt Ryan ready to support QB Michael Penix Jr.

When Michael Penix Jr. is healthy, the Atlanta Falcons expect him to be prominent in the team's quarterback pecking order. Until then, team president Matt Ryan plans to make sure the third-year passer has plenty of support from a new coaching staff.

Field Level Media

In comments to Sirius/XM Radio about the cloudy future at quarterback, Ryan attempted to shed light on the team perspective. He initially backed away from a full commitment to Penix in his opening press conference in Atlanta, but Ryan implied the 2024 first-round pick wasn't going anywhere.

"How do you help him improve? No. 1, it starts with surrounding him with really solid coaches," Ryan said. "I'm excited about Alex Van Pelt coming in. He's a good football coach. Coming in, you talk about the wealth of experience that he has for a young player like Michael. I think that's really good. You go to the fundamentals; to me, it always comes down to the fundamentals. Do we start with our feet? I know in that interview process, Alex is going to hammer the footwork and going to hammer getting the basics right. So, it starts with the basics.

"Michael does a great job. He can spin the football. We're excited about what he does and we're excited about the staff we're putting around him."

Advertisement

Penix played in nine games before he tore his ACL, an injury that is all too familiar, as is the recovery and rehab to follow. Penix, determined to get back sooner than projected from his third knee reconstruction surgery, said in early February he's "a little bit" ahead of schedule and expects to be ready for the first game of the 2026 season.

"Michael does a great job. He can spin the football," Ryan said. "We're excited about what he does and we're excited about the staff we're putting around him."

With Penix on injured reserve watching Kirk Cousins operate the offense, the Falcons missed the playoffs and finished 8-9. Since then, head coach Raheem Morris was fired, the Falcons overhauled their front office and hired Ryan as team president. He went with former Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski in Atlanta's wide-ranging search, which multiplied questions about what the Falcons might do behind center.

Cousins is expected to be released if he doesn't retire by the third day of the new league year (March 13). He agreed to modify the final two seasons of a four-year, $180 million deal that lowered his 2026 base salary from a non-guaranteed $35 million to just $2.1 million. The difference of $32.9 million matches the increase of his 2027 salary. Cousins, who has a no-trade clause, still has a guaranteed $10 million roster bonus for 2026.

--Field Level Media

Read More

Team USA skier Hunter Hess has cheeky response to Trump calling him a loser

February 20, 2026
Team USA skier Hunter Hess has cheeky response to Trump calling him a loser

U.S. freestyle skierHunter Hess'Winter Olympicscome to an end on Friday with the freestyle skiing men's freeski halfpipe at the Livingo Snow Park

USA TODAY Sports

But before Hess competes in the medal round of the event, he flashed an "L" over his forehead at the end of his qualification run that was directed to PresidentDonald Trump,who called Hess a "real loser" on social mediafollowing his comments on how it is difficult to represent the United States at theWinter Olympicsdue to the country's current political division.

"Apparently I'm a loser," Hess said into the camera after his qualifying run,according to the Associated Press.

REQUIRED READING:Winter Olympics live updates: Schedule, medal count for Friday, Feb. 20

Hess was one of four U.S. freestyle skiers to qualify for the 12-man final at the Livingo Snow Park on Friday evening.

"I worked so hard to be here. I sacrificed my entire life to make this happen,"Hess continued."I'm not going to let controversy like that get in my way. I love the United States of America. I cannot say that enough. My original statement, I felt like I said that, but apparently people didn't take it that way. I'm so happy to be here, so happy to represent Team USA."

Advertisement

The first-time Olympian caughtTrump's attentionfollowing his comments during a news conference ahead of the opening ceremony, where he said "it's a little hard" to represent the United States on the Olympic stage.Hess' teammates,like the four-member women's halfpipe team led by three-time Olympic medalists Chloe Kim, discussed the current climate of the United States, but he was the only one got Trump to comment on Truth Social.

"There's obviously a lot going on that I'm not the biggest fan of," Hess said at a news conference in Milan ahead of the 2026 Winter Olympics. "Wearing the flag doesn't mean I represent everything that's going on in the U.S.

"I'm representing my friends and family back home, the people that represented it before me, all the things that I believe are good about the U.S. I just think if it aligns with my moral values, I feel like I'm representing it."

This story is developing. Check back for updates.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Hunter Hess, USA skier, responds to Donald Trump calling him a loser

Read More