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US didn’t destroy Iran’s nuclear program: What new intelligence report says

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Columnists   来源:Style  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"Together, we win!", he

"Together, we win!", he

"I had three nights in a row while I was down there, so it was a bit of a bonus really."Mr Nuttall posted the images onto social media and said he was surprised how popular they have become.

US didn’t destroy Iran’s nuclear program: What new intelligence report says

He said: "I put them on a local Facebook page."Obviously it went viral on there, and a lot of people, you know obviously liked it, and commenting on it and all that, saying how fantastic they were."When Edna Nicole Luckett sings the Blues on the stage at Red's, her voice, deep and soulful, echoes against the walls. The juke joint in Clarksdale, Mississippi is one of the last of its kind in the region, a landmark for a bygone era of American music.

US didn’t destroy Iran’s nuclear program: What new intelligence report says

"I was raised in Delta dirt, sunshine and flatland that goes on for miles and miles," she sings, as people nod their heads and stomp their feet to the beat.Ms Luckett, like many who were raised in the Mississippi Delta, grew up listening to locally-crafted Blues music and singing in her church choir. It's experiences like hers - and places like Red's - that are getting a fresh moment to shine with the box office success of Ryan Coogler's film Sinners.

US didn’t destroy Iran’s nuclear program: What new intelligence report says

The genre-defying film has earned more than $300 million (£22 million) globally, against a $90m (£67m) budget, and attracted the world's attention to a historic small town.

For the those who live there - and especially those who still sing the Blues - the spotlight is welcome, in no small part because of Coogler's careful respect for their history.And the biggest source of tariff revenue for the US in the period was from tariffs imposed on China dating back to Trump's first term in office, which raised $23.4bn (£17.3bn). These are also not affected by the court ruling, as they were not justified by IEEPA.

However, this is a backward looking picture - and the new tariffs were expected to raise considerably more revenue over a full financial year.Analysts at the investment bank Goldman Sachs have estimated that the tariffs the trade court has struck down were likely to have raised

In terms of the overall impact on Donald Trump's tariff agenda, the consultancy Capital Economics estimates the court ruling would reduce the US's average external tariff this year from 15% to 6.5%.This would still be a considerable increase on the 2.5% level of 2024 and would be the highest since 1970.

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