US Fed Chair Powell to attend Supreme Court session on Cook case: Report

In an unusual display of support from the chair of the central bank, US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will speak at the Supreme Court’s oral argument in a case involving the Fed governor’s&nbsp, attempted firing&nbsp, of course.

In an unprecedented attempt to remove one of the seven members of the Fed’s governing board, the high court is considering whether US President Donald Trump can fire Cook, as he promised to do in late August. According to a person with knowledge of the situation, Powell plans to attend the high court’s Wednesday session.

The Fed chair has previously shown Cook more public support than it has shown. However, it comes in response to Powell’s announcement last week that the Trump administration had issued subpoenas to the Fed, threatening an unprecedented criminal indictment of the chair. Powell appears to be reversing Trump’s less-than-distant approach to the central bank in favor of a more public dispute now that Trump has been appointed to the position in 2018.

On January 11, Powell condemned the subpoenas as “pretexts” for Trump’s attempts to slash the Fed’s key interest rate in a video statement released on January 11. Few economists agree with Powell’s recommendation that the rate should be as low as 3%, but Trump has argued that this should be as low as 1%, which he oversaw three rate cuts late last year.

Cook has denied the accusations made by the Trump administration regarding mortgage fraud. Cook has not been charged. She filed a lawsuit to keep her job, and the Supreme Court granted her a brief stay of office while the case was being considered.

Bulgaria’s president says he is stepping down ahead of snap elections

Could events in Syria have a wider impact for Kurds?

Before declaring a ceasefire, the Syrian army has taken control of territory that Kurdish-led forces had previously held.

The national power balance is altered by the lightning offensive.

Are Kurds’ issues with Syria going beyond Syria’s borders?

Presenter: Maleen Saeed

Guests:

Professor at the Thayer Marshall Institute, David Des Roches

Mohammed Salih, Senior Non-resident at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, is

From a refugee family to Nobel Laureate: Omar Yaghi’s story

Omar Yaghi, a Nobel laureate, describes how pioneering science combating the climate crisis was fuelled by humble beginnings.

Omar Yaghi, a 2025 Nobel Laureate, is working with The Take to create metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), which are a form of carbon storage and storage. Yaghi, who was born into a Palestinian refugee family in Amman, describes how hardship affected his creative process, from having fresh water only once per week to developing irrigation systems that draw water from the desert air.

In this episode: &nbsp .

  • Dr. Omar Yaghi, founder of Atoco, professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and Nobel Laureate in Chemistry.

Credits for each episode:

Phillip Lanos, Spencer Cline, Tamara Khandaker, Kylene Kiang, Sar el-Khalili, and our host, Malika Bilal, were the producers of this episode. Noor Wazwaz and Sar el-Khalili edited it. &nbsp,

Marcos Bartolomé, Sonia Bhagat, Spencer Cline, Sar el-Khalili, Tamara Khandaker, Kylene Kiang, Phillip Lanos, Chloe K. Li, Melanie Marich, and Noor Wazwaz make up the Take production team. Malika Bilal is our host. &nbsp,

Adam Abou-Gad and Vienna Maglio are the wedding planners. The audience engagement lead is Andrew Greiner.

Alex Roldan is our sound designer. Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhem are our video editors. Executive producer of The Take is Alexandra Locke. The head of audio for Al Jazeera is Ney Alvarez. &nbsp,

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ISIL fighters flee jail as Syrian army clashes with Kurdish-led SDF

According to the state news agency SANA, the Syrian army has declared a curfew in the city of al-Shaddadi in the northeast of the country following the release of ISIL (ISIS) fighters from its prison after fighting with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

As its troops searched al-Shaddadi and its surrounding areas for the escaped fighters, the Syrian army announced to Al Jazeera Arabic on Monday that it was now in complete control of the city and the prison where suspected ISIL prisoners were kept.

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The Ministry of Interior would take control of the al-Aqtan prison and security facilities in the city northeast of Raqqa, according to the Syrian Operations Authority, who also claimed that the SDF had purposefully released ISIL members.

How many prisoners had been released from the prison, according to the army.

The SDF claimed in a statement that it had lost control of the prison as a result of an army attack, which the military has refuted.

In addition, the Kurdish-led organization reported that al-Aqtan fighting resulted in the deaths of nine of its members and the injuring of 20 others.

The statement further stated that despite numerous calls to a nearby coalition base, the US-led coalition against ISIL had not yet taken action.

The Syrian government announced the SDF’s intention to leave parts of Syria on the day after Bashar al-Assad was ousted in 2024, making the most significant change to President Ahmed al-Sharaa.

The SDF, which have control of Syria’s main oil fields and two Arab-majority provinces, agreed on Sunday to step down from both Raqqa and Deir Az Zor, which the group had previously agreed to control.

Mazloum Abdi, the SDF’s chief commander, was scheduled to visit Damascus on Monday to discuss the ceasefire agreement.

Hasakah, where al-Shaddadi is located, is still largely under the control of the SDF, with its central prisons housing detainees suspected of having links to ISIL, and a camp housing tens of thousands of prisoners suspected of being ISIL-linked.