每日一语 2025.7.6
猪都不如
猪都不如
(德國之聲中文網)美國總統川普週日(7月6日)晚間在社群平台「真實社群」(Truth Social)上發文稱,「任何與金磚國家(BRICS)的反美政策同一陣線的國家,都將被額外徵收10%的關稅。這項政策將不會有任何例外」。
川普並未進一步說明所謂的「反美政策」指的是什麼。川普發布該貼文前,金磚國家在聯合聲明中稱,成員國對「關稅上升表示嚴重關切」,並指出這些措施「不符合世界貿易組織(WTO)規則」。
金磚國家強調,這些限制措施「威脅全球貿易、破壞全球供應鏈並帶來不確定性」,呼籲恢復世界貿易組織解決貿易爭端的功能。雖然內容直接並未指名美國,但顯然是對著川普政府喊話。
聲明中也提及今年6月伊朗與以色列的衝突,並指針對伊朗民用及「和平核設施」的攻擊違反國際法。這份31頁的聯合聲明僅在一處提及烏克蘭的名稱,並強烈譴責了烏克蘭5月底對俄羅斯基礎設施及平民的攻擊,但並未批評入侵烏克蘭的俄羅斯。
此外,身為東道主的巴西總統盧拉(Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva)在金磚峰會的開幕式上,抨擊了北約國家此前宣布將在2035年前大幅增加國防開支的計畫,稱「投資戰爭總是比投資和平來得容易」,形容國際法已變成了「一紙空文」,這個立場隨後也反映在金磚國家的聯合聲明中。
中國國家主席習近平並未親自出席今年的金磚峰會,而是派總理李強參加。李強稱金磚國家是「全球南方第一方陣」,「應堅持獨立自主,展現責任擔當,在凝聚共識、匯聚合力方面拿出更大作為,努力成為推動全球治理變革的先鋒力量」。他還說,在當前全球保護主義抬頭之際,金磚國家應團結維護多邊主義。
俄羅斯總統普丁亦未實際到場,僅透過視訊參與。普丁在演說中主張,新崛起的經濟體應更積極使用本國貨幣展開貿易往來,並呼籲金磚各國之間增加雙向投資、建立金磚國家的投資平台和結算體系。
川普關稅讓金磚成員自顧不暇?
雖然盧拉週日呼籲要改革由西方主導的全球機構,但巴西如今正極力避免成為川普政府提高關稅的目標。
里約熱內盧聯邦農業大學的教授加西亞(Ana Garcia)表示,在川普重返白宮後,巴西決定將金磚峰會的焦點放在較不具爭議的議題上,例如促進成員國之間的貿易關係和全球衛生。
加西亞指出:「巴西希望儘量減少損害,並避免吸引川普政府的注意,以防對巴西經濟造成任何風險。」
川普曾威脅,若金磚國家採取任何試圖削弱、取代美元的措施,將對該組織徵收100%的關稅。去年在俄羅斯喀山舉辦的金磚峰會上,俄國曾提議發展出一個替代體系來取代由美國主導的支付系統,以繞過西方對莫斯科實施的經濟制裁。
然而,當前包含中國、巴西在內的許多國家都正在與美國進行貿易談判,對於可能激怒川普的行動也抱持謹慎態度,因此在面對來自美國的一系列地緣政治和經濟挑戰時,金磚國家顯然未能發出一致的回應。
舉例而言,雖然金磚峰會發布了一份措辭強烈的聯合聲明,表達了對和平用途的核設施遭到襲擊的「嚴重關切」,但與伊朗簽署合作協議的金磚成員國——俄羅斯和中國,當時並沒有為德黑蘭採取任何實質性作為。
在川普的對等關稅問題上,儘管金磚國家佔全球人口的40%,且按照購買力平價(PPP)計算,佔全球GDP的比例超過35%,但仍未能凝聚起來共同與美方談判。
印度智庫觀察家研究基金會(ORF)專家潘特(Harsh V. Pant)指出:「整體而言,這些國家接觸川普政府的方式非常務實,不是在一些大原則上與之對抗。」
潘特補充道:「如果看(金磚成員國)言辭和實際情況,會發現目前俄羅斯和中國更傾向與川普達成雙邊協議。俄羅斯與川普正就歐洲安全架構展開合作,中國則尋求與美國達成貿易協議。印度也有意與美國簽署雙邊貿易協定。」因此當前並無法看到太多金磚國家集結對抗美國的案例,「因為它們都在推動雙邊協議」。
金磚影響力取代西方聯盟?
由於七大工業國(G7)和二十國集團(G20)等主要經濟體論壇也存在內部分歧,加上川普奉行「美國優先」政策,金磚國家的擴展看似也為外交協調開辟了新的空間。
不願具名的巴西外交官向路透社表示,「部分國家留下的空白幾乎瞬間被金磚國家補上」,他認為,儘管權力依然集中在G7,「但它已不再擁有曾經的主導地位」。
盧拉週日在開幕演說上將金磚國家與冷戰時期的「不結盟運動」作類比,當時多個開發中國家採中立主義,拒絕加入兩極化的西方世界與共產集團任何一方。
盧拉對與會領袖表示:「金磚國家是『不結盟運動』的繼承者......在多邊主義受到攻擊時,我們的自主性再次受到挑戰。」
金磚國家至今仍難以取代由西方主導的多邊機構。就根本而言,金磚國家更像是一個鬆散的集團,而不是像歐盟這樣的區域聯盟,或類似北約的軍事聯盟。隨著成員國增多,想達成共識變得更加複雜。
金磚國家提出最野心勃勃的計畫就是在2015年成立的新開發銀行(NDB),旨在作為世界銀行等機構的替代方案。新開發銀行在資助開發中國家的基礎設施上取得了一些成功,並使用當地貨幣融資,但由於規模較小,不太可能挑戰世界銀行和全球金融體系的地位。
金磚內部分歧影響團結
金磚國家內部的區域衝突分歧也依然存在。印度智庫學者潘特指出:「問題在於,現在俄羅斯在挑戰其他國家的主權;中國也在挑戰印度及其他一些國家在海洋空間的主權。」
中國與印度之間有邊界爭端,且中國近期在巴基斯坦及印度的衝突中選擇支持巴基斯坦。潘特表示:「印度和中國之間有相當大的分歧......中國仍然對印度崛起及其在全球秩序中的角色感到不安。」
儘管如此,專家仍認為本屆金磚峰會對於成員國來說依然相當重要,尤其在川普關稅引發全球貿易不穩定的背景之下。聖保羅大學金磚國家研究小組研究員沙伊德爾(Bruce Scheidl)稱,這次峰會為新興國家提供了最佳的機會,有助於它們尋求替代方案,並實現經濟夥伴關係多元化。
DW記者Wesley Rahn對此文有貢獻
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US President Donald Trump says countries that side with the polices of the Brics alliance that go against US interests will be hit with an extra 10% tariff.
"Any country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS, will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10% tariff. There will be no exceptions to this policy," Trump posted on his Truth Social platform on Sunday.
His comments came after Brics members criticised his tariff policies as well as proposing reforms to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and how major currencies are valued.
Trump has long criticised Brics - an alliance designed to boost member nations' standing on the international stage to challenge the US and Western Europe.
Last year, the list of Brics members expanded beyond Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa to include Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
The bloc is said to represent more than half of the world's population.
Brics leaders, who started a meeting in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil this weekend, have called for reforms to global institutions and positioned the alliance as a platform for diplomacy amid escalating trade conflicts and geopolitical tensions.
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(德国之声中文网) 美国总统特朗普设下的90天关税谈判期限即将于7月9日到期。美国财政部长贝森特(Scott Bessent)周日(7月6日)接受美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)访问时说,未能跟美国达成协议的贸易伙伴将于8月1日起承受更高的关税。
贝森特称,这并不代表美国对实施对等关税设定新的期限,“我们只是说,到时候就会这样做(实施关税),如果你想加快(谈判)进展,尽管去做,如果你想重回旧的税率,那也是你的选择”。
据贝森特说法,大约有100个跟美国较少贸易往来的国家会收到特朗普的信函,内容是向对方告知将面临的关税。他称有些国家“根本都没有联络过美国”,“如果你不推动进展,那8月1日就会自食其果,重新回到4月2日的关税水准”。 4月初,特朗普宣布对几乎所有的贸易伙伴施加10%的基本税率,并威胁课征更高的对等关税,但后来暂缓实施。
特朗普上周五(4日)曾透露他签署了一些信函,“大概有12封”将于周一(7日)寄出。特朗普说,信上会这样写:“听着,我们知道我们存在一定的逆差,或者在某些情况下存在顺差,但数额不大。这就是你们在美国开展业务需要支付的费用。”
贝森特6日另外指出,针对美国主要贸易伙伴的税率,应不至于高达特朗普先前曾暗示的70%。特朗普随后称,“可能是12%,或是15%”。
他还表示,接下来几天会有多项“重大宣布”,但并未透露这包含哪些国家。他以欧盟为例,称美国在关税谈判时“施加最大的压力”,促使对方更积极与美国协商,如今已有显著进展。
至今为止,美国仅与英国、越南达成贸易协议;跟中国则签署了贸易协议“框架”。印度、欧盟持续跟美国谈判,美国官员近期也表示跟这两方协商都有进展;日本此前因进口美国汽车及稻米与特朗普政府谈判陷入僵局,日方官员曾强调不会为了达成协议而牺牲农民利益。
关税威胁:从10%到70%的冲击
此前在周四(7月3日),特朗普已预告将通过信函通知贸易伙伴其面临的惩罚性关税,并透露关税税率将在10%至70%之间。目前,欧盟与美国之间的关税争议仍未达成任何协议。
特朗普政府系统性地利用关税作为杠杆,试图迫使其他国家在其他领域做出让步。今年4月初,美国曾对多个国家征收高额附加关税,但随后在90天内将大部分国家的关税降至10%,以便进行谈判。
欧盟的关税豁免期限将于7月9日到期,而其他许多国家的期限更早,在7月8日便告截止。受影响的国家目前正竭力与美国达成协议,以避免更高的关税。美国官员曾暗示,未来几天可能会宣布多项贸易协议。
欧盟面临50%关税重压 美中领导人互动引关注
特朗普曾威胁欧盟,如果不能在7月9日前与美国达成协议,可能面临50%的关税上调。这比目前适用的10%的基准税率高出五倍。尽管如此,他也暗示了延长最后期限的可能性。值得注意的是,特朗普推行的10%基本关税税率,已经远高于此前的关税水平。
欧盟贸易委员谢夫乔维齐 (Maros Sefcovic) 本周在华盛顿进行了进一步谈判,并形容这是一次“富有成效的工作周”。
特朗普的关税政策已在全球范围内引发了与贸易伙伴的争议。针对某些特定产品,如汽车,美国已适用25%的更高关税税率,而钢铁和铝产品的关税税率更是高达50%。
在贸易紧张气氛日益加剧之际,有消息指出,美国总统特朗普周五(7月4日)表示,他可能会访问中国与中国国家主席习近平会晤,或者邀请习近平访问美国。两位领导人上个月曾相互发出访问邀请。
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© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。
K1373次列车砸窗自救事件发酵到如此地步,早已超过了我当初《民敢破窗,官必究之》的逻辑。从最近的系列表现看,让人对一个封闭系统会如何长出可笑的花朵更有感受。
就这种水平,让人重温了一番二十年前舆论引导的整齐划一。
要是放在其他系统,哪怕是从监狱征调的跟帖者,也不至于如此可笑!
更有趣的是今天项栋梁老师发现,三篇发在官方网站上的文章,三名作者全部是铁路系统的「正能量」写手——又是一番自拉自吃。
也不知道是其他人干不了这么脏的活,还是他们有绝对的自信,仅凭一己之力,足以对抗全国舆论?
通报称,列车工作人员对车内闷热和旅客耐受情况跟踪研判,认为车内虽闷热但没有达到马上开启车门和破窗应急预案的紧急程度。
人与人的感受差异,有时高过人与牲畜。铁路系统怎么就能以自己的主观判断,取代乘客的耐受情况?
借用海瑞骂嘉靖的话,设百官如家奴,视国库如私产,以一人之心夺万民之心!可恶!
为什么会出现如此可笑的现象?
可能很多人没有意识到,这位砸车勇士不是被地方带走的,而是被铁警带走的。
自新中国成立以来,铁路系统模仿苏联,完全成为「国中之国」,不但有自己的独立运营体系,还配有独立的公检法!
直到如今,虽然铁道部早已消失,但铁警仍在,铁路运输法院和检察院也在!
一家公司,拥有独立的公检法司法系统,你别笑。
虽然2012年已将法检下放地方管理,但由于它是专门法院,又优先适用专门法,事实上还是铁路系统的机构,外界怎么跟它打官司?
但凭常识就知道,系统越封闭就越落后,越落后就越不敢开放,循环往复。
项老师揭露的网评员全部是2023年前后的获奖正能量作者,水平为什么这么差,甚至用动车标准评绿皮车?
因为权力完全在封闭的体系内自娱自乐,他们在系统内比、系统内用,一旦用来对外,平时华丽的正能量,不过是密密麻麻的臭虫,丑态暴露无遗。
若回到2011年温州动车事故现场,就更明白了:事故尚未调查,车内是否还有乘客尚未明确,铁路系统竟然要求直接挖坑埋车!
幸被当地官员报请省里出面阻止,终于抢救出一名女婴。
但最终,还是埋了,且留下千古名言「不管你信不信,反正我信了」。
为什么要埋掉?因为这超出了铁路系统的控制范围,惊惶失措之下,只有埋掉、对外封闭起来。
这次砸窗事件愈演愈烈,终究是人心难安。要说具体,只是两个很小的事件。一是2000块的玻璃钱谁出,二是铁警的批评教育能不能收回。
从一段广泛流传的视频看,拿着对讲机请示的列车员自己其实已经快撑不住了,他只是拿不到授权。
如果诛心一点,现在要死保的除了铁路系统绝不对外服输的一贯形象,还有那个下令禁止砸窗的「杀人犯」!
现在的情形是,一旦砸窗合法合理合情,那这位下令阻止的领导,就得拖出去喂野狗。
而封闭的系统,注定了上下级之间无法切割,也就连基本的纠错能力都没有。
封闭的系统,完全不懂与外界沟通,甚至连基本的人性都丧失了。
而它的独立性,只有最上层的震怒才能打破,各级地方都只能干瞪眼。
于是,铁路系统继续投入天量资源对抗人心和舆论,就为了坚持批评得对、讨2000元的玻璃钱。
可笑不?
不可笑,这就是封闭系统的虚弱性。一旦开了这个口子,独立性也就丧失了。
这是不可承受之重。谁敢做出这个决定,谁就是系统的罪人!
但窗户既已砸开,不想让人窥见败絮、指指点点是不可能的。
7月2日,K1373次列车因事故滞留沪昆线的事件引发全网热议。当车厢温度飙升至42℃,在列车员仅采取开气窗、发矿泉水等有限措施的情况下,一名黑衣乘客挥锤破窗的举动,不仅打破了密闭的车窗,更击中了现代社会治理的深层矛盾。
此事被公众关注的原因有两点:1.前后三个多小时,在闷热的车厢内,列车员以及相单位采取的应急措施是什么?2.小伙砸开车窗后被警察调查,后被评判教育的是否得当?
对以上两点,许多官方媒体和自媒体都作出了评价。其实这则事件中最让大家不能接受的就是,对于砸窗的小伙的处理过程和处理结果。有文章批评称如果不是舆情发酵,小伙或许要受到相应的处罚。其中不服从可能是所有人的退路 | 舆论手札文章中提到“摆在铁路警方面前的,随着舆情变强烈,也明朗起来。如果对小伙处以任何处罚,都将为广铁集团招致更猛烈的非难。轻拿轻放,似乎是明智的选择。”
为什么舆论一边倒?除了对铁路部门的对应急事件处理不当的愤怒之外,最荒唐的是,本来应对砸窗小伙鼓励或表彰的铁路部门,再次挑战大家的底线,为了维护自我权威而将为了让更多人获得新鲜空气的砸窗小伙带走调查并进行了批评教育,好像对大家说,你们能不能呼吸到空气不重要,但不能坏我的规矩-车窗只能由我来砸。其实,对于小伙的行为如何评价,南都一针见血的说出了大家的心声:砸窗乘客不应交给公安部门,而应该受到嘉奖。
这件事,让我不由想到平时看到、听到、遇到的一些不公事件,每当关键时刻,总有一位或几位“砸窗者“奋不顾身,冒着极大风险将阻隔新鲜空气的“车窗”砸烂,让众人呼吸到新鲜空气。
近期,最高人民法院和最高人民检察院联合发布《关于依法保障在押犯罪嫌疑人、被告人选择辩护人权利有关问题的批复》,这就是博士张用自己的执业之锤为众人在厚厚的玻璃上砸开了一道能呼吸的口子1+1本来就不等于3。
就在昨天,为了让公众不再被“被人打,还手不是互殴”思想误导的邓庆高等律师,砸破了错误之窗,在制度的高墙上凿开通风的缝隙李爱军|晋江公安撤销了对邓庆高律师的行政处罚。虽然晋江公安局没有承认错误,但对拘留决定撤销的文书已经能够说明一切。如果没有以上几位律师以及同行的奋力呼吁,相关单位不会如此草草收场。
还有……
然而现实情况是这些"破窗者"远没有K1373事件中的小伙幸运。
我们经常看到,挥锤之人为了尽量让每个人呼吸到新鲜空气,用自己勇敢之锤砸破充满黑幕的这扇玻璃时,但他们的结局却让人唏嘘-遭受打击报复。是他们砸错了吗,肯定没有。那问题出在哪呢?答案无法名状。
这些敢于向不合理规则挥锤的人,是社会自我更新的重要力量。珍惜他们,就是珍惜我们每个人呼吸自由空气的权利。当最后一扇窗户被焊死时,我们失去的不仅是新鲜空气,更是改变现状的勇气与可能。
7月2日晚,K1373次列车脱线停运约3小时。由于车内闷热,有一名年轻乘客砸窗通风,当安全锤挥向密闭车窗,碎玻璃飞溅的瞬间,某些网络声音竟将其吹捧为“自救壮举”。然而,剥开情绪外衣,这非但不是值得欢呼的“义举”,更是对公共安全底线的一次粗暴踩踏。所谓“值得肯定”,实为对法律秩序与集体安危的短视、漠视。这种舆论倾向看似充满所谓“人文关怀”,实则模糊了法治底线,消解了公共秩序的价值根基。
所谓“紧急通风”的砸窗必要性,实为伪命题。高铁车厢非密不透风的铁罐。空调系统失效后,工程师设计的通风机制仍在运作,确保基础空气流通。更有列车员在侧,专业沟通与应急处置本应是首选。砸窗者却越过所有既定流程,任由鲁莽支配行动——这不是清醒的自救,而是典型的“情绪脱轨”。当个体焦虑凌驾于公共规程之上,实质是以全车秩序为代价换取小范围“虚假安全感”。《铁路安全管理条例》明令禁止损毁列车设备;《刑法》第114条更将危害公共安全行为置于重典之下。高铁车窗非普通玻璃,破碎飞溅的碎片瞬间化身伤人利器,而破坏车体结构更直接动摇运行安全根基。当列车被迫紧急停靠,后续班次大面积延误——这一锤砸开的,是千万旅客的行程与铁路大动脉的秩序。所谓“自救”,实为代价高昂的“自戕”与“他戕”。
美化肯定破窗行为,其害甚于行为本身。破窗行为的示范效应远比玻璃碎片更危险。当“法不责众”的错觉在舆论场蔓延,当个体冲动被冠以“弱者抗争”的外衣,公共空间的物理秩序与精神秩序都将遭受双重侵蚀。这种论调无异于鼓励“以暴制障”,将公共安全推入“野蛮自救”的丛林法则。若人人遇急皆可破窗,铁路安全网将千疮百孔。社会非情绪竞技场,秩序是文明存续的基石。在密闭车厢里守护规则,恰如守护黑暗中的微光——它看似微弱,却为所有人指明生路。真正的“自救之道”,在于对专业应急的信任与协同。列车员手持应急预案,车厢配备多重联络系统,统一指挥下的疏散远比各自为政高效安全。提升应急响应速度、完善信息透明机制,方为治本之策。而作为乘客,以冷静信任取代恐慌盲动,以秩序协作取代野蛮破窗,才是对生命最深的敬畏。
谨防“弱者叙事”陷阱,在共情中坚守秩序底线。理解旅客在闷热环境中的焦虑,是讨论的起点,但绝不能成为美化破窗行为的理由。文明社会的进步,恰恰体现在越是危急时刻,越能在共情中坚守理性。此次事件中,部分乘客自发协助维持秩序的举动,比破窗行为更值得肯定——它证明了秩序内生的力量与公民理性的可贵。真正的“英雄主义”,不是挥锤打破规则,而是在困境中主动成为秩序的守护者。铁路部门对当事人的“批评教育”,既体现了在极端情境下的人性关怀,更重申了“安全红线不可逾越”的法治原则。我们需要构建的,是一个既能回应个体诉求、又不破坏公共规则的应急文明:公民懂得在困境中信任专业、有序协作,社会完善更敏捷的响应机制,让“破窗冲动”在制度保障与理性共识中失去土壤。
当安全锤再次被举起,请记住:砸向规则的那一击,永远不会带来真正的安全。唯有让秩序的微光穿透情绪的迷雾,公共安全的灯塔才能永续长明——那才是值得我们全力守护的生命之光。
Ministers are facing calls to not cut education plans for children and young people with special needs and disabilities (Send).
Campaigners say education, health and care plans (EHCPs) are "precious legal protections", warning that thousands of children could lose access to education if the plans are abolished.
The government has said it inherited the current system "left on its knees". Speaking on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson described it as a "complex and sensitive area" when asked if she could rule out scrapping EHCPs.
But Neil O'Brien, the shadow education minister, has criticised the government for "broken promises and U-turns".
An EHCP is a legally binding document which ensures a child or young person with special or educational needs gets the right support from a local authority.
Full details of the proposed changes are due in October, but ministers have not ruled out scrapping the education plans, insisting no decisions have been taken.
In a letter to the Guardian newspaper, campaigners have said that without the documents in mainstream schools, "many thousands of children risk being denied vital provision, or losing access to education altogether".
"Whatever the Send system's problems, the answer is not to remove the rights of children and young people. Families cannot afford to lose these precious legal protections," they added.
Signatories to the letter include the heads of charities, professors, Send parents including actor Sally Phillips, and campaigners including broadcaster Chris Packham.
Speaking to the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, Ms Phillipson saidL
"What I can say very clearly is that we will strengthen and put in place better support for children.
"I've been spending a lot of time listening to parents, to disability rights groups, to campaigners and to others and to colleagues across Parliament as well, because it's important to get this right," she added, but said it is "tough".
Mr O'Brien, the shadow minister, said the government had "no credibility left".
"This is a government defined by broken promises and u-turns. They said they would employ more teachers and they have fewer. They said they would not raise tax on working people but did," Mr O'Brien said.
Data from the Department for Education released in June showed that the number of EHCPs has increased.
In total, there were 638,745 EHCPs in place in January 2025, up 10.8% on the same point last year.
The number of new plans which started during 2024 also grew by 15.8% on the previous year, to 97,747.
Requests for children to be assessed for EHCPs rose by 11.8% to 154,489 in 2023.
A Department for Education spokesperson said: "We have been clear that there are no plans to abolish Send tribunals, or to remove funding or support from children, families and schools."
The spokesperson added that it would be "totally inaccurate to suggest that children, families and schools might experience any loss of funding or support".
Nearly 80 people have been killed after devastating flash floods swept through parts of central Texas. Rescue efforts are ongoing and the total number of casualties remains unconfirmed, though officials warn the death toll will rise.
Questions have been raised about whether adequate flood warnings were provided and why people weren't evacuated ahead of the deluge.
Most of the fatalities, including 28 children, were in Kerr County, where a girls' camp was inundated.
Judge Rob Kelly, the top elected official in Kerr County, told CBS the severity of the flooding had been unexpected.
"We had no reason to believe that this was gonna be any, anything like what's happened here. None whatsoever," Kelly said.
The flash floods began on Thursday night and continued into Friday morning, with meteorologists saying several months' worth of rain fell in just a few hours.
Within the space of 45 minutes, the Guadalupe River rose by 26ft (8m), causing it to burst its banks.
At a news conference on Sunday, Governor Greg Abbott said people in Texas are used to flash flood warnings.
"But there's no expectation of a water wall of almost 30ft high," he added.
Nim Kidd, chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management, told reporters: "You have areas where there is no cell phone coverage, plus some coverage.
"It doesn't matter how many alert systems you sign up for, you're not going to get that."
The public can get desensitised to too many weather warnings, said Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice, according to the Associated Press.
He said he didn't notice any problems and that it was only raining lightly at 03:30 Friday when he went jogging along the Guadalupe River trail.
But by 05:20, the water had risen so fast "we almost weren't able to get out of the park," he said.
Judge Kelly said there is no county-administered warning system in the area because such systems are expensive.
He said that about six years ago, before he took office, the county had looked into a flood warning system along the river, similar to a tornado warning siren. Because of the cost, however, it was never implemented.
The NWS said it was "heartbroken by the tragic loss of life in Kerr County" and defended itself.
"On July 3, the NWS office in Austin/San Antonio, TX conducted forecast briefings for emergency management in the morning and issued a Flood Watch in the early afternoon.
Flash Flood Warnings were issued on the night of July 3 and in the early morning of July 4, giving preliminary lead times of more than three hours before warning criteria were met."
After some officials in Texas appeared to blame the NWS for underestimating the rainfall, former Weather Service officials told the New York Times newspaper that the forecasts were as good as they could have been given the huge amounts of rainfall and storm's abrupt escalation.
Before the tragedy, there had been concerns over the Trump administration's budget cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) - the government agency that operates the National Weather Service.
The Fiscal Year 2026 budget includes cuts and closures of some weather research laboratories, while the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) has slashed hundreds of employees at NOAA and the NWS.
Meteorologists in the US and elsewhere have expressed concerns over "reduced number of weather balloons" that observe wind, relative humidity and pressure above the ground.
They claim that budget cuts have resulted in 20% fewer weather balloons being released for such observations, impacting the accuracy of weather forecasting.
The New York Times reported that critical positions of the NWS were vacant on Friday morning, with some experts questioning whether staffing shortages had impeded the agency's efforts to coordinate with local emergency managers.
However, Tom Fahy, legislative director of the NWS Employees Organization, told NBC News: "The WFOs [weather forecasting offices] had adequate staffing and resources as they issued timely forecasts and warnings leading up to the storm".
And the Associated Press quoted Jason Runyen, a meteorologist in the National Weather Service office, as saying their office that delivers forecasts for that part of central Texas had extra staff on duty at the time of the storms - five, instead of the usual two.
Asked whether the tragedy was due to "fundamental failure" by the government to provide early warnings, US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the "weather is difficult to predict", but that President Donald Trump was seeking to modernise the current system.
In response to questions during a Sunday press conference about the impact of cuts to the NWS, she said that she would "carry your concerns back to the federal government".
Over the years the NWS had done well, Noem said, but "we know that everybody wants more warning time, and that's why we're working to upgrade the technologies that have been neglected for far too long".
Noem said that it was difficult for forecasters to predict how much rain would fall but that the Trump administration would make it a priority to upgrade the technology used to deliver warnings.
She added that when Trump took office he "wanted to fix and is currently upgrading the technology" and that "reforms are ongoing".
Trump is planning a possible visit to the area on Friday.
Al-Qaeda affiliate Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) is the main group behind a surge in militant jihadist attacks sweeping across several West African nations, especially Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger.
On 1 July, the group said it had carried out a major coordinated attack on seven military locations in western Mali, including near the borders with Senegal and Mauritania.
There is growing concern about the impact JNIM could have on the stability of the region.
Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger have struggled to contain the violence – and this is one of the factors that contributed to several military coups in the three Sahel countries over the last five years.
But like the civilian governments they replaced, the juntas are seemingly unable to stem the growing jihadist threat, especially from JNIM.
JNIM has become one of Africa's deadliest jihadist groups within the space of just a few years.
It was formed in Mali in 2017, as a coalition of five jihadist militant groups:
These groups started collaborating after the French military pushed back several jihadist and separatist organisations that were operating in northern Mali in 2012. Eventually, the leaders of the groups came together to create JNIM.
In recent years, they have expanded geographically, establishing new areas of operation.
JNIM is led by Iyad Ag Ghali, a former Malian diplomat who belongs to the Tuareg ethnic group. He was at the helm of the Tuareg uprising against the Malian government in 2012 which sought to establish an independent state for the Tuareg people called Azawad. Deputy leader Amadou Koufa is from the Fulani community.
Analysts believe the central leadership helps guide local branches which operate across the Sahel region of West Africa.
While it is difficult to know exactly how many fighters there are in JNIM's ranks, or how many have recently been recruited, experts suggest it could be several thousand - mostly young men and boys who lack other economic opportunities in one of the poorest regions in the world.
The group rejects the authority of the Sahel governments, seeking to impose its strict interpretation of Islam and Sharia in the areas where it operates.
Analysts say that in some areas, JNIM has been known to impose strict dress codes, implement bans against music and smoking, order men to grow beards and prevent women from being in public spaces alone.
This version of Islam can be at odds with the religion as practised by local communities, says Yvan Guichaoua, a senior researcher at the Bonn International Centre for Conflict Studies.
"These practices are clearly breaking from established practices and certainly not very popular," he says.
"But whether it's attractive or not, also depends on what the state is able to deliver, and there has been a lot of disappointment in what the state has been doing for the past years."
Disillusionment with the secular justice system can make the introduction of Sharia courts appealing to some.
After its beginnings in central and northern Mali, JNIM rapidly expanded its reach. While its strongholds are in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, JNIM has also carried out attacks in Benin, Togo and at one point Ivory Coast.
It is now operational throughout Mali and 11 of Burkina Faso's 13 regions, according to the Global Initiative against Transnational Organised Crime (Gi-Toc), a civil society organisation.
In the last year, Burkina Faso has become the epicentre of the group's activities – predominately the northern and eastern border regions. This is, in part, because of divisions and defections in the country's military as well as how deeply embedded the militants are in the local communities, according to Beverly Ochieng, a senior analyst for security consultancy firm Control Risk.
"JNIM have an ability to embed in local communities or to be able to use local grievances as a means of recruiting or winning sympathy towards their cause," she told the BBC.
In recent months violent incidents have spiked in Burkina Faso to previously unseen levels, according to analysis from BBC Monitoring's jihadist media team. Major attacks have also recently been carried out in Mali, Niger and Benin.
In the first half of 2025, JNIM said it carried out over 280 attacks in Burkina Faso – double the number for the same period in 2024, according to data verified by the BBC.
The group has claimed to have killed almost 1,000 people across the Sahel since April, most of them members of the security force or militias fighting alongside government forces, according to BBC Monitoring data.
Almost 800 of these have been in Burkina Faso alone. Casualties in Mali were the next highest (117) and Benin (74).
"The frequency of attacks in June is just unheard of so far," says Mr Guichaoua. "They have really stepped up their activities in the past weeks."
The militants use a variety of tactics designed to cause maximum disruption, Ms Ochieng explains.
"They plant IEDs [improvised explosive devices] on key roads, and have long-range capabilities.
"They [also] target security forces in military bases, so a lot of their weapons come from that. They have also attacked civilians - in instances where communities are perceived to be cooperating with the government."
Starlink - a company owned by Elon Musk which provides internet via satellites - has also been exploited by groups like JNIM to enhance their capabilities, according to a recent report by Gi-Toc.
The company provides high-speed internet where regular mobile networks are unavailable or unreliable.
Militant groups smuggle Starlink devices into the country along well-established contraband routes, G-toch says.
"Starlink has made it much easier for [militant groups] to plan and execute attacks, share intelligence, recruit members, carry out financial transactions and maintain contacts with their commanders even during active conflict," an analyst from Gi-Toc told the BBC's Focus on Africa podcast.
The BBC has contacted Starlink for comment.
The group has multiple sources of income.
At one time in Mali, funds were raised through kidnapping foreigners for ransom but few remain in the country because of the deteriorating security situation.
Cattle-rustling has now become a major source of income, according to an analyst from Gi-Toc. They did not want to be named as it could risk their safety in Mali.
"Mali is a big exporter of cattle so it's easy for them to steal animals and sell them," the analyst said.
Research by Gi-Toc shows that in one year in just one district of Mali, JNIM made $770,000 (£570,000) from livestock. Based on this figure, JNIM could be earning millions of dollars from cattle theft.
JNIM also imposes various taxes, according to experts.
"They tax the gold, but basically tax anything that goes through their territory, whether that's listed goods or illicit goods," Gi-Toc says.
"There can be an extortion type of tax, where JNIM tell citizens they need to pay in return for protection."
The militants have also been known to set up blockades, at which people must pay to leave and enter the area, according to Ms Ochieng.
France's armed forces were on the ground supporting the government in Mali for almost a decade - with over 4,000 troops stationed across the Sahel region fighting groups that went on to form JNIM, as well as Islamic State in the Greater Sahara.
While they had some initial success in 2013 and 2014, reclaiming territory from the militants and killing several senior commanders, this did not stop JNIM's growth after it was formed.
"Counterinsurgency efforts have failed so far because of this idea that JNIM can be beaten militarily, but it is only through negotiation that the group will end," Gi-Toc's analyst suggested.
In 2014, Sahelian countries banded together to form the G5 Sahel Task Force, a 5,000-strong group of international troops. However, over the past couple of years, Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger have withdrawn, undermining the task force's ability to tackle the insurgency.
Minusma, the UN peacekeeping force – while not a counter-insurgency effort – was also in Mali for a decade to support efforts, however it left the country at the end of 2024.
Military coups took place in Mali in 2020 and 2021, Burkina Faso in 2022 and Niger in 2023.
Poor governance under the military juntas in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger subsequently has allowed militant groups like JNIM to flourish, according to analysts.
These juntas were swift to tell French troops to leave, replacing them with Russian support and a joint force formed by the three Sahelian countries.
Though Russian paramilitary group Wagner has withdrawn its troops from Mali entirely, Africa Corps, a Kremlin-controlled paramilitary group, will remain in place.
In Burkina Faso, a so-called "volunteer" army, launched in 2020 before the military takeover, is one strategy being used to fight militants. Junta leader Ibrahim Traoré has said he wants to recruit 50,000 fighters.
But experts say many of these volunteers are conscripted by force. Inadequate training means they often suffer heavy casualties. They are also often a target for JNIM attacks.
The military juntas in Burkina Faso and Mali have also been accused by human rights organisations of committing atrocities against civilians, particularly ethnic Fulanis. Human rights group say the government often conflates the Fulani community with Islamist armed groups, which has furthered hampered peace efforts.
Between January 2024 and March 2025, the military government and their Russian allies were responsible for 1,486 civilian casualties in Mali, according to Gi-Toc.
This extreme violence against civilians has generated anger towards the government, fuelling further recruitment for JNIM.
Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.
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At least 78 people have been confirmed dead in central Texas and another 41 are missing following flash floods on Friday.
Sixty-eight of the fatalities, including 28 children, occurred in Kerr County, where a riverside Christian girls' camp was deluged. Ten girls and a counsellor from Camp Mystic are still missing.
Officials say the death toll is certain to rise. More storms are expected in the next 24-48 hours in the region, which could hamper rescue teams who are already facing venomous snakes as they sift through mud and debris.
Three days after the inundation, one of the largest search-and-rescue efforts in recent Texas history was shifting towards a recovery operation.
Of those recovered in Kerr County, 18 adults and 10 children have yet to be formally identified.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott said on Sunday that authorities would "stop at nothing" to ensure every missing person is found.
"It was nothing short of horrific to see what those young children went through," said Abbott, a day after he toured the area.
A major focus of the search has been Camp Mystic, a popular summer camp for girls perched on the banks of the Guadalupe River, which suffered significant damage.
The catastrophe unfolded before daybreak on Friday as the river rose 26ft (8m) in the span of just 45 minutes while most campers were asleep.
Several young campers and the camp's longtime director, Richard "Dick" Eastland, are among the dead.
Greg Froelick, a former Navy Seal and volunteer with the rescue group 300 Justice, is helping the effort to find survivors.
Speaking to the BBC, he said he had heard of victims being found up to eight miles downriver from where Camp Mystic once stood.
He said he has seen "clothing and items from the camp dressers scattered everywhere, up and down the river".
There is also uncertainty about how many other people were camping in the area for the Fourth of July weekend - and how many may have been swept away in the floods.
A two-lane highway that skirts the Guadalupe River and connects the city of Kerrville to Camp Mystic is a scene of devastation.
Ravaged homes are surrounded by fallen trees and furniture on lawns. Fences are toppled and utility lines down in some areas.
President Donald Trump signed a major disaster declaration on Sunday for Kerr County, activating the Federal Emergency Management Agency to Texas. He also said he would probably visit the state on Friday.
"We're working very closely with representatives from Texas, and it's a horrible thing that took place, absolutely horrible," Trump said on Sunday in New Jersey.
On the ground, local residents are stepping up to support relief efforts - collecting supplies, offering shelter, and doing what they can to help neighbours displaced by the storm.
Alma Garcia drove in from the city of San Antonio to deliver home-cooked meals to residents and volunteers helping with the clean-up effort.
The BBC saw her pull over on the side of the road and take off a top layer T-shirt to give to a resident.
"She was all wet, I told her she's going to need it," Ms Garcia told the BBC.
Local resident Perla started collecting clothes and shoes on Friday after she finished her shift at Walmart. She dropped them off at a shelter the next morning.
"I've never seen something like this before," she told the BBC.
Meanwhile, well wishes poured in from around the world.
In Rome, Pope Leo XIV offered special prayers on Sunday for the bereaved in Texas.
"I would like to express sincere condolences to all the families who have lost loved ones, in particular their daughters who were in summer camp, in the disaster caused by the flooding of the Guadalupe River in Texas in the United States," the pontiff said.
"We pray for them."
Angélica Casas and Alex Lederman contributed to this report
Camp Mystic, a Christian girls' camp perched on the banks of the Guadalupe River in Texas, was a place of laughter, prayer, and adventure just days ago.
Among the girls at the camp was eight-year-old Renee Smajstrla, smiling ear-to-ear in a picture taken on one of those days - "having the time of her life" with her friends.
But the next day, the camp she, and so many other young girls loved, turned into the site of one of the deadliest flood disasters in recent Texas history.
Smajstrla was among those killed.
"She will forever be living her best life at Camp Mystic," her uncle Shawn Salta wrote on Facebook.
Photos show the eerie aftermath: the bunk beds are still there - mud-caked and toppled over, the detritus of a summer camp cut tragically short.
Destroyed personal belongings are scattered across soaked interiors where children once gathered for Bible study and campfire songs.
At least 59 people - among them camp's longtime director, Richard "Dick" Eastland, and several young campers - have been confirmed dead.
Eleven of its campers and one camp counsellor remain missing. Many of the girls who remain missing were sleeping in low-lying cabins less than 500ft (150m) from the riverbank, US media report.
Camp Mystic has been operated by the same family for generations, offering girls a chance to grow "spiritually" in a "wholesome" Christian atmosphere, according to its website.
Families from all across Texas and the US send their daughters each summer to swim, canoe, ride horses, and form lifelong friendships.
But the beauty of the Guadalupe River, which draws so many to the area, also proved deadly.
The floodwaters arrived with little warning, ripping through the picturesque riverfront area that is home to nearly 20 youth camps.
Though Camp Mystic suffered the greatest losses, officials say the scale of the disaster is far-reaching.
Nearby, the all-girls camp Heart O' the Hills also faced flooding.
Its co-owner and director, Jane Ragsdale, was among the dead. Fortunately, the camp was out of session at the time.
A statement from the camp said, "Most of those who were on camp at the time have been accounted for and are on high ground… We are mourning the loss of a woman who influenced countless lives and was the definition of strong and powerful."
Questions are now mounting over why so many camps were situated so close to the river, and why more was not done to evacuate the children in time.
Congressman Chip Roy, who represents the area, acknowledged the devastation while urging caution against premature blame.
"The response is going to be, 'We've gotta move all these camps - why would you have camps down here by the water?'" Roy said.
"Well, you have camps by the water because it's by the water. You have camps near the river because it's a beautiful and wonderful place to be."
As recovery efforts continue, families wait anxiously for news of the missing. Search and rescue teams - some navigating by boat, others combing through debris - are working around the clock.
Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said on Sunday the search for survivors continued.
"Until we can get them reunited families, we are not going to stop," City Manager Dalton Rice said.
Governor Greg Abbott has declared a state of emergency, and officials warn the final toll may rise in the days to come.
Delegations from Israel and Hamas have begun an indirect round of ceasefire talks in Qatar, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heads to Washington to meet Donald Trump.
Netanyahu said he thinks his meeting with the US president on Monday should help progress efforts to reach a deal for the release of more hostages and a ceasefire in Gaza.
He said he had given his negotiators clear instructions to achieve a ceasefire agreement under conditions Israel has accepted.
Hamas has said it has responded to the latest ceasefire proposal in a positive spirit, but it seems clear there are still gaps between the two sides that need to be bridged if any deal is to be agreed.
For now, Hamas still seems to be holding out for essentially the same conditions it has previously insisted on - including a guarantee of an end to all hostilities at the end of any truce and the withdrawal of Israeli troops.
Netanyahu's government has rejected this before.
The Israeli position may also not have shifted to any major degree. As he was leaving Israel for the US, Netanyahu said he was still committed to what he described as three missions: "The release and return of all the hostages, the living and the fallen; the destruction of Hamas's capabilities - to kick it out of there, and to ensure that Gaza will no longer constitute a threat to Israel."
Qatari and Egyptian mediators will have their work cut out during the indirect talks between Israel and Hamas in trying to overcome these sticking points, which have have derailed other initiatives since the previous ceasefire ended in March.
Israel has since resumed its offensive against Hamas with great intensity, as well as imposing an eleven-week blockade on aid entering Gaza, which was partially lifted several weeks ago.
The Israeli government says these measures have been aimed at further weakening Hamas and forcing it to negotiate and free the hostages.
Just in the past 24 hours, the Israeli military says it struck 130 Hamas targets and killed a number of militants.
But the cost in civilian lives in Gaza continues to grow as well. Hospital officials in Gaza said more than 30 people were killed on Sunday.
The question now is not only whether the talks in Qatar can achieve a compromise acceptable to both sides - but also whether Trump can persuade Netanyahu that the war must come to an end at their meeting on Monday.
Many in Israel already believe that is a price worth paying to save the remaining hostages.
Once again, they came out on to the streets on Saturday evening, calling on Netanyahu to reach a deal so the hostages can finally be freed.
But there are hardline voices in Netanyahu's cabinet, including the national security minister Itamar Ben Gvir and the finance minister Bezalel Smotrich, who have once again expressed their fierce opposition to ending the war in Gaza before Hamas has been completely eliminated.
Once again, there is the appearance of real momentum towards a ceasefire deal, but uncertainty over whether either the Israeli government or Hamas is ready to reach an agreement that might fall short of the key conditions they have so far set.
And once again, Palestinians in Gaza and the families of Israeli hostages still held there are fervently hoping this will not be another false dawn.
The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas's 7 October 2023 attacks, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 57,338 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
A senior officer in Hamas's security forces has told the BBC the Palestinian armed group has lost about 80% of its control over the Gaza Strip and that armed clans are filling the void.
The lieutenant colonel said Hamas's command and control system had collapsed due to months of Israeli strikes that have devastated the group's political, military and security leadership.
The officer was wounded in the first week of the war, which began after the Hamas-led attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, and has since stepped away from his duties for health reasons.
He shared several voice messages with the BBC on condition of anonymity.
In the messages, the officer painted a picture of Hamas's internal disintegration and the near-total collapse of security across Gaza, which the group governed before the conflict.
"Let's be realistic here - there's barely anything left of the security structure. Most of the leadership, about 95%, are now dead... The active figures have all been killed," he said. "So really, what's stopping Israel from continuing this war?"
"Logically, it has to continue until the end. All the conditions are aligned: Israel has the upper hand, the world is silent, the Arab regimes are silent, criminal gangs are everywhere, society is collapsing."
Last September, Israel's then-defence minister declared that "Hamas as a military formation no longer exists" and that it was engaged in guerrilla warfare.
According to the officer, Hamas attempted to regroup during the 57-day ceasefire with Israel earlier this year, reorganizing its political, military, and security councils.
But since Israel ended the truce in March, it has targeted Hamas's remaining command structures, leaving the group in disarray.
"About the security situation, let me be clear: it has completely collapsed. Totally gone. There's no control anywhere," he said.
"People looted the most powerful Hamas security apparatus (Ansar), the complex which Hamas used to rule Gaza.
"They looted everything, the offices - mattresses, even zinc panels - and no-one intervened. No police, no security."
The officer said a consequence of the security vacuum was gangs or armed clans were "everywhere".
"They could stop you, kill you. No one would intervene. Anyone who tried to act on their own, like organising resistance against thieves, was bombed by Israel within half an hour.
"So, the security situation is zero. Hamas's control is zero. There's no leadership, no command, no communication. Salaries are delayed, and when they do arrive, they're barely usable. Some die just trying to collect them. It's total collapse."
On 26 June, at least 18 people were killed when an Israeli drone strike targeted a plainclothes Hamas police unit attempting to assert control over a market in Deir al-Balah, accusing vendors of price gouging and selling looted aid, witnesses and medics said.
The Israeli military said it struck "several armed terrorists" belonging to Hamas's Internal Security Forces.
In this vacuum, six armed groups affiliated with powerful local clans have emerged as serious contenders to fill the void, according to the officer.
These groups have access to money, weapons and men, and are active across all of Gaza, but mostly in the south.
One of them is led by Yasser Abu Shabab, a figure who has attracted attention from the Palestinian Authority, which is based in the occupied West Bank and is a rival to Hamas, as well as regional players - particularly after Israel confirmed last month that it was supplying him with weapons.
The officer confirmed that Hamas had placed a large bounty on Abu Shabab's head, fearing he could become a unifying figure for its many enemies.
"Hamas would ignore ordinary thieves. People are hungry and [the fighters] don't want to provoke more chaos. But this guy? If the Hamas fighters find him, they might go after him instead of Israeli tanks."
Sources in Gaza told the BBC that Abu Shabab was working to co-ordinate with other armed groups to form a joint council aimed at toppling Hamas.
A retired Palestinian security official, who was part of the force that cracked down on Hamas's military wing in 1996 following a wave of bombings in Israel, said Abu Shabab's network was gaining traction.
"Abu Shabab's group is like an orphaned child who everyone will want to adopt if he succeeds in undermining Hamas rule," said the official, who now lives in Cairo.
"Publicly, all sides deny links to the armed groups in Gaza. But Abu Shabab has met a senior Palestinian intelligence officer three times and sent messages of assurance to the Egyptians through relatives in Sinai," he claimed.
He also said Abu Shabab "maintains good ties with Mohammad Dahlan's camp". Dahlan is a former Gaza security chief who has lived in exile since he fell out with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas 15 years ago.
The Hamas security officer warned the group was "willing to do anything" to eliminate Abu Shabab not because of his current military strength, but out of fear he could become a symbol around which all of Hamas's adversaries rally.
"For 17 years, Hamas made enemies everywhere. If someone like Abu Shabab can rally those forces, that could be the beginning of the end for us."
As Gaza is plunged further into lawlessness, with entire neighbourhoods descending into gang rule, Hamas finds itself not just under Israeli fire but increasingly surrounded by rivals from within.
US President Donald Trump has hit out at former close ally Elon Musk over the multi-billionaire's plan to launch a new political party.
"I am saddened to watch Elon Musk go completely 'off the rails,' essentially becoming a train wreck over the past five weeks," Trump posted on his Truth Social platform on Sunday.
After teasing the idea for weeks, Musk posted on X over the weekend that he had set up the America Party to compete against the Republican and Democratic parties.
The Tesla boss's announcement comes weeks after a dramatic falling out with Trump, who appointed Musk to lead the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge), which is tasked with identifying areas to cut federal spending.
Trump said third political parties "have never succeeded in the United States" as the system was "seems not designed for them".
"The one thing Third Parties are good for is the creation of complete and total disruption and chaos."
Trump also took aim at Musk's push for an "Electric Vehicle (EV) Mandate", saying it would have "forced everyone to buy an electric car in a short period of time."
The president's tax and spending plan, which he signed into law on 4 July, ended tax breaks for electric vehicles.
He added that he had opposed Musk's proposal for an EV mandate from the beginning, explaining the reasons for omitting such vehicles in the legislation.
"People are now allowed to buy whatever they want - Gasoline Powered, Hybrids (which are doing very well), or New Technologies as they come about - No more EV Mandate."
The legislation includes increased spending for border security, defence and energy production, offset by controversial cuts to healthcare and food-support programmes.
Musk floated the idea of a new political party online during his public spat with Trump as he repeatedly criticised his spending plans.
Israel says it has launched strikes on Houthi targets in three Yemeni ports, including the western port of Hodeidah, Ras Isa and Saif.
The attacks come shortly after the Israeli military issued evacuation orders for civilians in the areas, warning of imminent air strikes.
Israeli defence minister Israel Katz confirmed on social media the strikes on the Houthi-controlled sites including a power station and ship that was hijacked by the group two years ago.
Houthi-run media in Yemen said the strikes hit the port of Hodeidah, but no further details were provided on damage or casualties.
Katz said the strikes were part of "Operation Black Flag" and warned that the Houthis "will continue to pay a heavy price for their actions".
"The fate of Yemen is the same as the fate of Tehran. Anyone who tries to harm Israel will be harmed, and anyone who raises a hand against Israel will have their hand cut off," he said in a post on X.
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Archaeologists have announced the discovery of an ancient city in Peru's northern Barranca province.
The 3,500-year-old city, named Peñico, is believed to have served as a key trading hub connecting early Pacific coast communities with those living in the Andes mountains and Amazon basin.
Located some 200km north of Lima, the site lies about 600 metres (1,970 feet) above sea level and is thought to have been founded between 1,800 and 1,500 BC - around the same time that early civilisations were flourishing in the Middle East and Asia.
Researchers say the discovery sheds light on what became of the Americas' oldest civilisation, the Caral.
Drone footage released by researchers shows a circular structure on a hillside terrace at the city's centre, surrounded by the remains of stone and mud buildings.
Eight years of research at the site unearthed 18 structures, including ceremonial temples and residential complexes.
In buildings at the site, researchers discovered ceremonial objects, clay sculptures of human and animal figures and necklaces made from beads and seashells.
Peñico is situated close to where Caral, recognised as the oldest known civilisation in the Americas, was established 5,000 years ago at around 3,000 BC in the Supe valley of Peru.
Caral features 32 monuments, including large pyramid structures, sophisticated irrigation agriculture and urban settlements. It is believed to have developed in isolation to other comparative early civilisations in India, Egypt, Sumeria and China.
Dr Ruth Shady, the archaeologist who led the recent research into Peñico and the excavation of Caral in the 1990s, said that the discovery was important for understanding what became of the Caral civilisation after it was decimated by climate change.
The Peñico community was "situated in a strategic location for trade, for exchange with societies from the coast, the highlands and the jungle", Dr Shady told the Reuters news agency.
At a news conference unveiling the findings on Thursday, archaeologist Marco Machacuay, a researcher with the Ministry of Culture, said that Peñico's significance lies in it being a continuation of the Caral society.
Peru is home to many of the Americas' most significant archaeological discoveries, including the Inca citadel of Machu Picchu in the Andes and the mysterious Nazca Lines etched into the desert along the central coast.
A 90-day pause on Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs plan is about to expire on Wednesday, which could upend US trading relationships with the rest of the world. But the uncertainty of the last few months has already forced several companies to rethink their supply lines in radical ways.
When an Illinois toymaker heard that Trump was introducing tariffs on Chinese imports, he was so incensed that he decided to sue the US government.
"I'm inclined to stand up when my company is in genuine peril," says Rick Woldenberg, who is the CEO of educational toy firm Learning Resources.
The majority of his company's products are made in China, so the tariffs, which US importers have to pay, not Chinese exporters, are now costing him a fortune.
He says his import taxes bill leapt from around $2.5m (£1.5m) a year to more than $100m in April when Trump temporarily increased tariffs on Chinese imports to 145%. That would have "devastated" the company, he says.
"This kind of impact on my business is just a little bit hard to wrap my mind around," he says.
With US tariffs on Chinese imports now at 30%, that's still unaffordable for many American companies such as Learning Resources.
So in addition to its continuing legal fight, it is changing its global supply chain, moving production from China to Vietnam and India.
These two countries, like most others around the world, have seen the US hit them with general 10% tariffs, two-thirds lower than those on China. Although these 10% tariffs are due to run out on Wednesday, 9 July, uncertainly remains over what they may be replaced by.
Meanwhile, many Canadian companies, who often trade in both their home country and in the US, are now facing a double hit to their supply chains.
These hits are the 25% tariffs put in place by Trump on many Canadian imports, and the reciprocal ones of the same level that Canada has placed on a host of American exports.
And other businesses around the world are looking at exporting less to the US, because their American import partners are having to put up prices to cover the tariffs they now have to pay, which makes their products more expensive on US shelves.
At Learning Resources, Mr Woldenberg has now moved about 16% of manufacturing to Vietnam and India. "We have gone through the process of vetting the new factories, training them on what we needed, making sure that things could flow easily, and developing relationships."
Yet he admits that there are uncertainties: "We don't know if they can handle the capacity of our business. Much less the whole world moving in there at the same time."
He also points out that switching production to another country is expensive to organise.
In the meantime, his legal case against the US tariffs, called "Learning Resources et al v Donald Trump et al" is continuing its way through the US court system.
In May a judge at the US District Court in Washington DC ruled that the tariffs against it were unlawful. But the US government immediately appealed, and Learning Resources still has to pay the tariffs for the time being.
So the firm is continuing to move production away from China.
Global supply chain expert Les Brand says that it is both expensive and difficult for companies to switch manufacturing to different countries.
"Trying to find new sources for critical components of whatever you are doing - that's a lot of research," says Mr Brand, who is CEO of advisory firm Supply Chain Logistics.
"There's a lot of quality testing to do it right. You have to spend the time, and that really takes away from the business focus."
He adds: "The knowledge transfer to train a whole new bunch of people on how to make your product takes a lot of time and money. And that effects already razor-thin margins businesses have right now."
For Canadian fried chicken chain Cluck Clucks, its supply chain has been significantly impacted by Canada's revenge tariffs on US imports. This is because while its chicken is Canadian, it imports both specialist catering fridges and pressure fryers from the US.
While it can't live without the fridges, it has decided to stop buying any more of the fryers. Yet with no Canadian company making alternative ones, it is having to limit its menus at its new stores.
This is because it needs these pressure fryers to cook its bone-in chicken pieces. The new stores will instead only be able to sell boneless chicken, as that is cooked differently.
"This was a substantial decision for us, but we believe it's the right strategic move," says Raza Hashim, Cluck Clucks CEO.
"It's important to note that we do plan to retain the necessary kitchen space in new locations to reintroduce these fryers should the tariff uncertainty be completely resolved in the future."
He also warns that with the US fridges now more expensive for the company to buy, the price it charges for its food will likely have to go up. "There is a certain amount of costs we cannot absorb as brands, and we may have to pass those on to consumers. And that is not something we want to do."
Mr Hashim adds that the business is continuing with its US expansion plans, and it has set up local supply chains to source American chicken. It currently has one US outlet, in Houston, Texas.
In Spain, olive oil producer Oro del Desierto currently exports 8% of its production to the US. It says that the US tariffs on European imports, presently 10%, are having to be passed on to American shoppers. "These tariffs will directly impact the end consumer [in the US]," says Rafael Alonso Barrau, the firm's export manager.
The company also says it is looking at potentially reducing the volume it sends to the US, if the tariffs make trading there less profitable, and exporting more to other countries instead.
"We do have other markets where we can sell the product," says Mr Barrau. "We sell in another 33 markets, and with all of them, and our local market, we could cushion US losses."
Mr Brand says that firms around the world would have been less impacted if Trump had moved more slowly with his tariffs. "The speed and velocity of these decisions are really making everything worse. President Trump should have gone slower and been more meaningful about these tariffs."
Back in Illinois, Mr Woldenberg is also concerned about where Trump will go next in his trade battles.
"We just have to make the best decision we can, based on the information we have, and then see what happens," he says.
"I don't want to say 'hope for the best', because I don't believe that hope is a strategy."