Gov. Beshear questions University of Kentucky decision-making after Barnhart’s $950,000 job

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear released a statement Tuesday questioning the decision-making at the University of Kentucky amid a fraught period for the school's athletics department.

Associated Press

Beshear said he is “losing confidence and growing increasingly concerned” after the universityannounced last monththat Mitch Barnhart, the longest-serving athletic director in the Southeastern Conference, is retiring to take on a new role at the school.

"My concerns include the creation of a new $1 million job that has no defined duties," Beshear said in the statement, “and the announcement that the new dean of law was the only candidate not recommended by law school faculty.”

The university announced last month that Barnhart will step down at the end of June. Kentucky President Eli Capilouto later named him the executive-in-residence for the UK Sport and Workforce Initiative, a role that will pay Barnhart $950,000 per year through August 2030, according to contract details. The contract vaguely defines the job, mostly describing it as a collaborative role for the “promotion of sports.”

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Supporters have also questioned the school's decision-making, and some have expressed concern over the direction of some of its sports programs — as men's basketball coach Mark Pope is coming offa second round exitin the NCAA Tournament and has missed on a couple top transfer portal targets — though it is less common for such critique to come from an official like Beshear.

Beshear's concerns also included hiring decisions.

“I've been told that despite previously saying the dean (of law) must be approved by UK's Board of Trustees, the university has shifted and now states that approval is not needed,” Beshear said. “I worry that these actions are related to certain donors pushing partisan and undue outside influence onto the university. I hope students, faculty, trustees and the community attend this week's board meetings and ask the tough questions that should be answered."

AP college sports:https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports

Gov. Beshear questions University of Kentucky decision-making after Barnhart’s $950,000 job

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear released a statement Tuesday questioning the decision-making at the University of Kent...
Analysis-With tariffs stalled, Trump's China policy drifts

By Michael Martina

Reuters

WASHINGTON, April 21 (Reuters) - When President Donald Trump returned to office in 2025, he vowed to use tariffs to reset relations with China, which he said was "killing" the United States with its trade policies.

Now, more than a year into his second term, Trump's aggressive trade moves have not fundamentally altered Beijing's trade or military actions. Instead, Washington's China policy appears adrift, causing confusion among officials and driving contradictory decisions.

The administration's erratic moves toward Beijing have been on ‌full display in recent months. Those include adding top Chinese companies to a military blacklist only to withdraw the list moments later, and a decision by Trump to greenlight AI semiconductor sales to China within minutes of his government labeling Chinese ‌access to them a national security threat.

As Trump prepares for his planned May 14-15 visit to China to meet President Xi Jinping, the first such trip by an American president in eight years, critics argue such inconsistencies, coupled with his improvisational dealmaking style, have undermined the U.S. in its competition with Beijing.

"You have departments and agencies acting ​on their own accord, often with different objectives, and even at times in countervailing ways," said Ely Ratner, a former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs.

"On any given day, it feels like the policy can zigzag in either direction," Ratner said.

Responding to Reuters questions on the administration's approach to China, White House spokesperson Kush Desai said Trump's trade agenda had "flipped the script" on decades of failed policy that hollowed out the U.S. industrial base.

"By leveraging our economy - the biggest and best consumer market in the world - and his great relationship with President Xi, President Trump has empowered America to finally operate from a position of strength in global diplomatic and trade matters," Desai said.

Trump launched his second term China policy with a dramatic trade broadside, initially hiking tariffs on Chinese goods to around 145%.

Beijing did not back down, however, and retaliated with tariff increases of ‌its own.

The countries eventually forged an uneasy dĆ©tente after China, which holds a virtual monopoly on ⁠the refining and processing of the world's rare earths, threatened to choke off supplies of the minerals needed by U.S. industries.

A February ruling by the Supreme Court invalidating many of Trump's duties further undercut the administration's strategy.

"Their entire original strategy was centered around using tariffs to pressure China into major concessions. That effort quickly ran aground," said Scott Kennedy, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank. "There has ⁠been no coherent Plan B."

The tariffs did produce at least one result Trump has sought: the U.S. goods trade deficit with China decreased by 32% to $202 billion in 2025 compared to 2024, U.S. government data show.

But tariffs have not changed Beijing's mercantilist trade policies, and their fitful use likely reduced industry incentive to reshore manufacturing, a major goal of Trump's America First approach. The U.S. lost 91,000 manufacturing jobs from February to December of last year.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, who have run China policy instead of hawkish Secretary of State Marco Rubio, appear to have lowered expectations for ​an ​overhaul in commercial relations, shifting emphasis to a new "managed trade."

"Where do we want to be with China? We want relations to be stable. We want our trade ​to be more balanced. We want it to be in non-sensitive goods," Greer said in March.

In the ‌face of Trump's turmoil, China has sought to portray itself as the responsible power.

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"We ... stay committed to acting as a positive and stable force for good," its foreign ministry said in January when asked if Beijing benefited from the chaotic U.S. approach.

CONFLICTING SIGNALS

The administration's reversals haven't just been on tariffs.

In December, Trump declared on social media that he had approved the controversial sale of advanced Nvidia H200 AI semiconductors to China, the very chips his Justice Department only 30 minutes earlier said were being smuggled to China, constituting a threat to national security.

Two U.S. officials told Reuters those conflicting signals left them and others in the government flummoxed.

In February, Trump's Pentagon blacklisted top Chinese technology companies for allegedly aiding the Chinese military, only to mysteriously withdraw the list an hour later with little explanation.

In the fall, the Commerce Department issued rules to extend export controls to thousands of subsidiaries of Chinese companies, arguing it closed a significant loophole by which foreign companies could access sensitive technology. But the U.S. paused those measures, along with planned U.S. port fees for Chinese-built vessels intended to boost American shipbuilding, in the face ‌of China's threat to restrict rare earths.

"These contradictions ultimately trace back to President Trump, who makes decisions in the moment, unconstrained by a broader strategy," said ​Zack Cooper, who studies U.S. strategy in Asia at the American Enterprise Institute think tank.

'TAKING PAWNS'

Some of Trump's actions have put Beijing on the back foot.

His military operations ​in Iran and Venezuela have weakened two countries that have been close partners for China as well as significant oil suppliers.

Trump ​in December approved $11 billion in weapons sales to Taiwan, a major boost for the democratically governed island China claims as its territory.

He also pressured Panama to dislodge a Hong Kong port operator from around the Panama Canal ‌and blockaded oil from reaching Communist-run Cuba.

"Iran was an extremely powerful signal to the Chinese that the ​United States continues to have overmatch," said Alex Gray, a former senior ​national security official during Trump's first term.

But the costly war with Iran has burned through advanced missile stockpiles and redirected U.S. military assets away from Asia. And even the additional support for Taiwan has been tempered by fears that Trump might barter away U.S. backing for a favorable trade deal from Xi.

"If this is a chess match, the U.S. is taking pawns off the periphery rather than controlling the center of the board. Beijing doesn't like it, but it's an inconvenience rather than a strategic ​setback," said Jonathan Czin, a China expert at the Brookings Institution.

Meanwhile, Trump's antagonism toward American allies – over ‌the NATO alliance, tariffs and the Iran conflict – may erode the hard-earned consensus on the need to push back against China's actions on the global stage.

To Beijing, the U.S. approach looks like institutional breakdown, said Wang Dong, a professor ​at China's Peking University, adding that China would not be diverted from its strategic course by short-term "gambits."

"While transactional tactics and coercive signaling persist, they are increasingly overshadowed by deep coordination failures across the U.S. government," Wang said. "This inconsistency erodes ​U.S. credibility."

(Reporting by Michael Martina, Trevor Hunnicutt and David Brunnstrom in Washington and the Beijing newsroom; Editing by Don Durfee and Alistair Bell)

Analysis-With tariffs stalled, Trump's China policy drifts

By Michael Martina WASHINGTON, April 21 (Reuters) - When President Donald Trump returned to office in 2025, he vowed to use tarif...
5 injured, one critically, in shooting near University of Iowa campus, officials say

Five people were injured early Sunday in ashootingon a pedestrian mall near the University of Iowa campus in downtown Iowa City, according police.

ABC News

At least three University of Iowa students were among those injured, according to the school's president.

Iowa City Police Department officials said the gunfire erupted after a "large fight" broke out on the pedestrian mall around 1:46 a.m. local time. "Multiple victims" were injured in the shooting, police said in a statement at the time. They later said that they had identified five victims in total, one of whom was in critical condition. The remaining victims were in stable condition, according to police.

@HumphreyGman / X - PHOTO: People were seen running from gunfire on a pedestrian mall in downtown Iowa City, Iowa, April 19, 2026.

"Arriving officers heard gunfire. First responders on scene. Confirmed victims," police said in a statement about the shooting that occurred near the intersection of East College St. and St. Clinton Street, just east of the University of Iowa campus.

In a statement to staff and faculty Sunday, University of Iowa President Barb Wilson said that at least three University of Iowa students were injured in the incident.

8 people injured in shooting between 2 groups near Virginia Beach waterfront: Police

"While we await additional information, I am thinking about these students and their families, friends, and all the people who care about them,"Wilson said. "I am holding them close in my thoughts, along with everyone in our community who is hurting or feeling shaken right now."

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There were no immediate announcements of any arrests made in connection with the shooting. However, investigators released a surveillance photo of what they said were four persons of interest associated with the shooting, and are asking the public's help in identifying them.

Iowa City Police Department - PHOTO: The Iowa City, Iowa, Police Department released this surveillance image of four people being sought as persons of interest in a shooting in downtown Iowa City, April 19, 2026.

"Kevin’s and my prayers this morning are with the victims of the shooting in Iowa City and their families," Iowa Gov. Kim Reynoldsposted on XSunday morning. "This senseless act of violence has devastated the university community and our state. I have spoken with University of Iowa President Barbara Wilson and Board of Regents Chair Robert Cramer and assured them that the full resources of the state are available to assist with the investigation. The Department of Public Safety has contacted the Iowa City Police Department to offer their support."

1 dead, 6 injured in shooting at Chick-fil-A in New Jersey, county prosecutor says

Bystander videos verified by ABC News showed multiple people fighting on the pedestrian mall and a large crowd running for cover as gunshots were heard.

"At this time, multiple victims have been taken to area hospitals to be treated for wounds suffered in the shooting," according to the initial police statement. "No information on their conditions is available at this time."

Police told people to avoid the area.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

5 injured, one critically, in shooting near University of Iowa campus, officials say

Five people were injured early Sunday in ashootingon a pedestrian mall near the University of Iowa campus in downtown Iowa City, accord...
Trump and Iran trade conflicting messages over prospect of talks

Seeking accountability in trucking accidents

CBS News

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Using the ocean to power data centers

Crafting a legacy out of wood

Trump and Iran trade conflicting messages over prospect of talks

Seeking accountability in trucking accidents Advertisement Using the ocean to power data centers Crafting a legacy out of wood ...
Japan scraps a ban on lethal weapons exports in a change of its postwar pacifist policy

TOKYO (AP) — Japan on Tuesday scrapped a ban on lethal weapons exports, a major change in its postwar pacifist policy as the country seeks to build up its arms industry amid worries over Chinese and North Korean aggression.

Associated Press Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi speaks to reporters at her office in Tokyo Monday, April 13, 2026, after holding telephone talks with her Pakistani counterpart Shehbaz Sharif. (Keisuke Hosojima/Kyodo News via AP) Security guards the entrance of Japan's Defense Ministry in Tokyo, on Nov. 19, 2025. (Kyodo News via AP)

Japan Iran US

The approval byPrime Minister Sanae Takaichi’sCabinet of the new guideline clears a final set of hurdles for many arms sales, including of Japanese-developed warships, combat drones and other weapons.

China criticized the change in policy, but it has been largely welcomed by Japanese defense partners like Australia and attracted interest from Southeast Asia and Europe.

Opponents say the change violates Japan’s pacifist constitution and will increase global tensions and threaten the safety of the Japanese people.

The new policy will “ensure safety for Japan and further contribute to the peace and stability in the region and the international society as the security environment around our country rapidly changes,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara told reporters. “The government will strategically promote defense equipment transfers to create a security environment that is desirable for Japan and to build up the industrial base that can support fighting resilience."

Japan could start selling weapons like missiles and destroyers

Japan has long prohibited most arms exports under its post-World War II pacifist constitution. It has made recent changes because of rising global and regional tensions, but exports were limited to five areas: rescue, transport, alerts, surveillance and minesweeping.

The new guidelines scrap those limits and allows the export of equipment such as fighter jets, missiles and destroyers. That's a major change from existing exports such as flak jackets, gas masks and civilian-use vehicles that Japan has sent to Ukraine and intelligence radars sold to the Philippines.

For now, such exports will be limited to17 countriesthat have signed defense equipment and technology transfer agreements with Japan. They also must be approved by the National Security Council, and the government will monitor how the weapons are managed afterward.

Japan remains committed to strict screening and export controls to third countries and will not offer lethal weapons to countries at war, officials said, but granted that exceptions could be made to that limit.

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Japan began to export some non-lethal military supplies in 2014, and in December 2023 it approved a change that would allow sales of dozens of lethal weapons and components that it manufactures under licenses from other countries back to the licensors, clearing the way for Japan to sell U.S.-designed Patriot missiles to America to make up for munitions that Washington sent to Ukraine.

The 2023 revision also paved the way for Japan to jointly develop a sixth-generation fighter jet with Britain and Italy, and for Japan's biggest arms deal ever, which was formalized last week with Australia. It calls for Japan to deliver the first three of a $6.5 billion fleet of Japanese-designed frigates for the Australian navy and jointly build eight others in that country.

Japan aims to build up its arms industry

Japan's domestic defense industry was long seen as a bad investment, limited to catering to only the Self-Defense Force and Defense Ministry. Dozens of former defense contractors have withdrawn from the market.

That is changing as Japan accelerates a buildupof its militaryand defense industry to play more offensive roles in the face of threats from China, North Korea and Russia.

The defense industry is one of 17 strategic areas targeted for growth under the Takaichi government. A growing number of major companies and startups are showing interest, especially in dual-use goods and drones.

The government also has increased funding for startups and academic research.

Officials say they believe Japan’s new arms transfer rules would contribute to deepening of military and defense equipment cooperation with Japanese partners and to the regional deterrence.

Outlook for potential customers

Australia on Saturday signed an agreement with Japan for delivery of three of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries' upgraded Mogami-class frigates and to jointly produce eight others. It welcomed Tokyo’s new policy as a move to deepen their defense partnership.

New Zealand has also showed interest in the Japanese frigates. Several other countries have also expressed interests in Japanese defense equipment, including the Philippines, which is seeking to buy used destroyers, officials said.

Last week, a group of 30 NATO representatives visited Japan to discuss further deepening ties as the U.S. commitment to its alliance has been shaken by U.S. President Donald Trump. They visited a subsidiary of Mitsubishi Electric Corp., which is part of the trilateral fighter jet project and also known for its satellite technology.

Japan scraps a ban on lethal weapons exports in a change of its postwar pacifist policy

TOKYO (AP) — Japan on Tuesday scrapped a ban on lethal weapons exports, a major change in its postwar pacifist policy as the country se...

 

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