Up First from NPR - Iran's President Dies, Israel's Political Turmoil, Michael Cohen Resumes Testimony
Episode Date: May 20, 2024Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has named an acting president following the death of President Ebrahim Raisi, the country's foreign minister and other officials in a helicopter crash. Pr...ime Minister Benjamin Netyanyahu is facing accusations from his own war cabinet that he doesn't have a strategy for replacing Hamas in Gaza. Michael Cohen will return to the stand in what will likely be the final day of testimony in the New York criminal trial of former President Donald Trump. And a London court is expected to deliver a final decision on whether or not Julian Assange can appeal extradition to the U.S. Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by John Helton, Lauren Migaki, Dana Farrington, Lisa Thomson and Alice Woelfe. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Ben Abrams and Nina Kravinsky. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is Zac Coleman. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Iranian state media now affirm the president and foreign minister died in a helicopter crash.
Their bodies were recovered after an overnight search that took place amid thick fog and blizzard conditions in mountainous terrain near the border of Azerbaijan.
I'm Steve Inskeep with Michelle Martin and this is Up First from NPR News.
Benny Gantz, a member of Israel's war cabinet, issued an ultimatum.
Change course in the war or he will quit.
How is discontent about the war affecting Israel's leadership?
And it is likely the final day of testimony in the New York criminal trial of former President Donald Trump.
Michael Cohen will take the stand again, but will Trump testify?
Stay with us. We'll give you the news you need to start your day. commemorative circulation coin marks their storied past and promising future. Find the limited edition Royal Canadian Air Force $2 coin today.
The president of Iran is dead.
Ebrahim Raisi died in a helicopter crash in northern Iran.
He'd been flying with the foreign minister who was also killed.
Raisi was not really the top official in a country where clerics hold supreme power,
but he was the top elected official, and the foreign minister routinely shuttled through
the region as Iran worked its alliances against enemies, including Israel and the United States.
NPR's Peter Kenyon is following this story from Istanbul. Good morning, Peter.
Hi, Michelle.
So just to start by telling us what more you can about the crash. Well, yes, for President Raisi, it was a disastrous end to what started out as a pretty routine day.
He had traveled to the border with Azerbaijan.
He was there to inaugurate a new joint dam project.
That all went well after the ceremony.
Raisi and his entourage boarded three helicopters and headed for another event up in northern Tabriz city in Iran. Two of
the helicopters made it no problem, but the state media earlier today started posting images
purporting to show the crash site of the third helicopter in mountainous terrain in East
Azerbaijan province. And the reports quoted the head of Iran's Red Crescent Society as saying
there was no trace of survivors. What has been the reaction to Raisi's death?
Well, government in Tehran convened an emergency meeting right away after the news broke,
and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei named Iran's first vice president,
a man named Mohammad Mokhbar, as acting president for now.
He's not very well known, but has held some key positions.
The Iranian cabinet released a statement lauding Raisi as a hardworking president who made the ultimate sacrifice on the path of serving his nation. And Hamas, the Iran-backed
proxy militia, expressed complete solidarity with Iran. Others who know of Raisi's longtime career
as a hardline cleric had varying reactions. He was a protege of Supreme Leader Khamenei,
and critics have long condemned his role, Raisi's role in the
committees known as death squads back in the 1980s. They handed down thousands of death sentences to
political prisoners. Raisi's been called the Supreme Leader's enforcer. Recently, he was seen
as a supporter of the violent crackdown on women who had failed to comply with Iran's strict Islamic
dress code, the hijab. His government's been the target of massive protests that spread all across the country following the death of one young Kurdish
Iranian woman at the hands of Iran's infamous morality police. Those protests were described
as the biggest threat to the Islamic Republic in its history.
Look, as Steve just mentioned, this is a cleric-led government, so he's not the supreme
figure, but he was the highest elected official. So what does all this mean, or what do you think this sort of foretells this all coming at a time of high
tensions, especially with Iran's longtime regional adversary, which is Israel?
Well, that's very true. And it's an important point. Iran is a longtime backer of these proxy
militias around the region. And of course, last October, it was Hamas that broke out of the Gaza
Strip, killed some 1200,200 people, Israel says.
The Israeli military responded with a long operation.
It's still ongoing inside Gaza as the death toll of both fighters and civilians mounts.
In addition, after an Israeli strike killed two Iranian generals in Syria,
Tehran launched a massive barrage of missiles and drones,
and they were mostly all shot down by Israel, the U.S., and other allies. They've
signaled a reluctance to continue escalating hostilities, but in a volatile region like the
Middle East, there's no guarantee that will continue to be the case. So what happens next?
Well, they're supposed to have elections. They need a new president. They have an acting president.
So the one thing we do know is whoever is the next president, he will serve under the Supreme
Leader, who has the final say on all major policy matters.
That is NPR's Peter Kenyon. Peter, thank you.
Thank you.
As you might imagine, the death of Iran's president and foreign minister is being closely watched in Israel.
Just last month, Iran and Israel traded a tax, came close to a full-on war. Now Iran's government is in transition
to say the least, while Israel's is in turmoil. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing
accusations from his own war cabinet that he doesn't have a strategy for replacing Hamas as
the ruler of Gaza. So let's go now to NPR's Daniel Estrin in Tel Aviv for the latest from there.
Good morning, Daniel.
Good morning, Michelle.
So how is Israel responding to the news out of Iran?
Well, publicly, Israel is not saying anything.
But off-record, officials have been telling Israeli media that
Israel had nothing to do with this helicopter crash.
And Israeli analysts say that they don't expect any major changes.
I mean, Iran's proxies, the Houthis, Hezbollah, have been waging a low-grade war with Israel
throughout the entire Gaza war.
But there is a lot of concern in Israel about instability in Iran now.
Israel's opposition leader, Yair Lapid, met with U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan,
and Lapid told him Iran will enter a period of instability. And he said
the strategic relations between the US and Israel are more important than ever.
Okay, but let's talk about instability within Israel's own leadership. There's been some very
public criticism over Israel's war in Gaza. Tell us more about that.
Yeah, growing discontent about Netanyahu's exit strategy for the Gaza war. Netanyahu has a war cabinet with two other members,
and both of those members are now openly challenging him.
And one is former Army Chief Benny Gantz.
Here's what he said in a speech this weekend.
He said, Prime Minister Netanyahu, I look you in the eyes tonight,
and I tell you the choice is in your hands.
And Benny Gantz gave him a three-week ultimatum.
He said he would quit the government and demand early national elections
if there is no plan to replace Hamas with international and local Palestinian supervision.
The defense minister in Israel said similar criticism late last week.
How does this seem to be affecting Netanyahu's government and the war?
Well, if Benny Gantz does follow through and quit the government, Netanyahu can still hold on to power in Israel.
But it would just leave Netanyahu more dependent on his own far-right partners who want something very different for Gaza.
They want full Israeli control of Gaza, not even moderate Palestinians taking charge. They want even Israeli settlements in Gaza. And so that could leave Netanyahu with very into Gaza. The U.S. military has started delivering
aid by sea, but the Biden administration says the aid getting in is not enough to address the threat
of famine in Gaza. And the U.S. says over 800,000 Palestinians have fled Rafah in Gaza in just the
last two weeks. Fighting is still fierce in Gaza, Michelle. Israeli strikes against Hamas, but also
women and children have been killed recently,
according to officials there.
We're nearly eight months into the war
and there is no end in sight.
That is NPR's Daniel Estrin in Tel Aviv.
Daniel, thank you as always.
You're welcome.
Today is likely the final day of testimony in Donald Trump's criminal trial in New York City.
Former Trump attorney Michael Cohen returns to the stand.
The defense continues its cross-examination of him.
Then prosecutors get a chance to ask another round of their questions.
NPR's Andrea Bernstein has been covering the trial all along.
Andrea, welcome back.
Good morning.
How much damage has the defense already done to Michael Cohen in cross-examination?
Well, they definitely shook him some on Thursday.
Trump attorney Todd Blanche was questioning Cohen about a series of lies that Cohen had made.
He'd pleaded guilty to lying to Congress during the Russia investigation about a Trump Tower
Moscow project. He'd lied to banks on loan applications and pleaded guilty to that.
He said during testimony last week he'd misled the Federal Elections Commission on Trump's behalf.
And then Blanche got to a phone call Cohen had testified about earlier in the week.
Cohen had said he'd called Keith Schiller, Trump's bodyguard, in late October 2016
so he could pass the phone to Trump so they could
discuss Stormy Daniels. Discussing the actress, the actor who received this payment that is at
the center of the trial. Did that phone call happen the way that Michael Cohen had testified
that it did? Well, there's something that Cohen didn't say. Blanche introduced text messages
between Cohen and Schiller that the
jury hadn't seen before about a 14-year-old who'd been harassing Cohen. So then Blanche said,
when you told the jury you were calling to say you'd finalized the deal with Stormy Daniels,
that was a lie. And he was raising his voice to punctuate the point. Cohen said it wasn't a lie,
but he seemed a little shaken, saying, I believe I also spoke to Mr. Trump about the hush money payoff.
I grant that that must have been dramatic to watch, but what does that exchange add to all
the other testimony the jury has heard? Yeah, so this was something different from
all the previous prevarications the defense brought up. This was a fresh alleged lie.
The defense noted this was only a 96-second call, and Cohen
maintained he discussed both. It's possible. It's just a little shorter than you and I've been
speaking this morning. But the defense clearly thought it had made major headway in its strategy
to get the jury to disbelieve everything that Cohen testified to. That said, there's a lot the defense hasn't discussed,
including other longer calls with Trump
on the same day that documents show
Cohen sent the payment to Stormy Daniels.
Let's remember that this payment,
or rather the falsification of business records
relating to this payment,
is the big picture of the trial,
what the trial is about.
Did they get to the reimbursement plan?
They did not. They have yet to question Trump about the testimony that Trump knew of and approved
the reimbursement scheme as it was being planned. And about the time when he was in the White House
signing those $35,000 checks to Cohen every month. The defense could get into that today,
but the defense says they only have about an hour and a half of cross-examination to go. Will Donald Trump testify in his own defense?
Defense hasn't said. Defense attorneys I've spoken to said that would be foolish because
it would put the focus on Trump flies, not Cohen's. But from previous trials, it's clear
Donald Trump believes no one can make his case as well as he can. All he needs is one juror to get to a hung jury.
And we are facing summations and jury instructions and a possible deliberation, maybe a verdict, this week.
NPR's Andrea Bernstein.
Thanks so much.
Thank you.
Also today, we're waiting for a London court to deliver a decision on Julian Assange, determining whether he can appeal extradition to the United States.
The WikiLeaks founder is wanted in the U.S. on charges of espionage related to the publication
of classified government documents more than a decade ago. The court had been seeking assurances
from the U.S. about his treatment if he were extradited, including that he would not face
the death penalty. This may not be the final word. Assange's lawyers have said that if he loses his
request for an appeal, he will try again before the European Court of Human Rights. For more on
this story, tune in to Morning Edition. And that's up first for Monday, May 20th. I'm Michelle Martin.
And I'm Steve Inskeep. For your next listen, consider, consider this from NPR News. We are a little less than six months from Election Day and early voting is even sooner than that. The youth vote will be key this fall. And while conventional wisdom says Generation Z leans more liberal, is that true of women and men? Listen to Consider This. Today's episode of Up First was edited by John Helton, Lauren Megaki, Dana Farrington, Lisa Thompson, and Alice Wolfley.
It was produced by Ziad Budge, Ben Abrams, and Nina Kravinsky.
We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott, and our technical director is Zach Coleman.
Join us again tomorrow.