U.S. Considers Removing Forces from Syria, While FBI Faces iPhone Security Challenge
Washington, D.C. - The United States is considering withdrawing its remaining forces from Syria, even as other domestic issues are unfolding, including the FBI's struggle to access a Washington Post reporter's iPhone due to its Lockdown Mode, according to NPR.
The potential troop withdrawal comes as the U.S. weighs possible military action against Iran, NPR reported.
Meanwhile, court records revealed that the FBI was unable to access the seized iPhone of Hannah Natanson, a Washington Post reporter, because it had Lockdown Mode enabled, a security feature that makes iPhones more secure, according to Hacker News. Natanson's home was raided in January as part of an investigation into leaks of classified information. The court record showed which devices and data the FBI was able to access and which it could not, providing insight into the effectiveness of Lockdown Mode, Hacker News noted.
In other news, the White House announced that 700 federal immigration agents would be withdrawn from Minneapolis following a month-long enforcement surge, Time reported. White House border czar Tom Homan stated at a press conference that the drawdown was possible due to cooperation between federal and local officials. Homan added that the departing agents would be drawn from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP), but that around 2,000 federal law enforcement officers would remain in the area. "This is smart law enforcement, not less law enforcement," Homan said, according to Time.
On Capitol Hill, Congress faces a tight deadline to fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), NPR reported. Yesterday, the House voted 217 to 214 to fund most government operations, according to NPR.
In economic news, President Trump's plans for a more receptive Federal Reserve may have backfired, Fortune reported. Jerome Powell may remain chairman beyond the end of his term, while Stephen Miran, Trump's supporter on the bank's rate-setting committee, is leaving the institution, according to Fortune. Trump had repeatedly criticized Powell and sought lower interest rates, even making legal threats to shape monetary policy, Fortune noted.
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