President Joe Biden delivered a speech in Poland on the Ukraine war; an industrial plant explosion shook the outskirts of Cleveland; United Airlines is changing their seating policy to benefit families after backlash; and a baby formula is being recalled. These stories and more highlight your daily rundown for Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2023.
Biden, Putin deliver speeches on the war
President Joe Biden arrived in Poland and delivered a speech to NATO allies as the war in Ukraine nears its one year anniversary.
The White House announced an additional $460 million in aid to Ukraine in hopes it rallies other countries to offer more aid and support.
“Putin thought Ukraine was weak and the west was divided. As you know, Mr. President, I said to you at the beginning, he’s counting on us not sticking together. He was counting on our inability to keep NATO united. He was counting on us not to be able to bring in others,” President Biden said.
Meanwhile, Putin delivered his state of the nation address to his own parliament Tuesday. He said Ukraine and its Western allies started this war and blamed the U.S. and the West for no resolution. Putin also announced Russia is suspending its participation in the last remaining nuclear treaty with the U.S. The New START Treaty with America limited the two sides’ strategic nuclear arsenal. It caps the number of strategic nuclear warheads that the United States and Russia can deploy. Russia has the largest stockpile of nuclear weapons in the world.
Industrial plant explosion near Cleveland
Video taken at the site of an industrial plant explosion outside of Cleveland, Ohio, shows the extensive damage done. A wall of the I. Schumann and Company plant is fully exposed, molten metal and debris went flying for a few hundred yards, and a smoke plume could be seen above the site for miles. One person died and more than a dozen others were injured. Authorities are unsure what caused the plant fire to break out as they investigate for a cause.
Tremor strikes Turkey again
Rescuers are once again searching for people trapped under rubble in Turkey after another earthquake hit the country, killing at least 6 people.
A 6.4 magnitude tremor struck near the border with Syria, the same area where massive quakes devastated both countries two weeks ago. The death toll has been relatively low this time because the earthquake struck in an area that was largely already empty in the aftermath of the Feb. 6 earthquakes.
The death toll has surpassed 46,000 in Turkey’s worst natural disaster in decades.
United’s new family seating policy
United Airlines has announced a new family seating policy which will allow parents to sit next to their children on flights without having to pay the extra fees associated with assigned seating.
U.S. airline customers have long complained about seating that separates young children from their parents on flights. If families want to sit together, there are added costs to purchasing seats.
Baby formula recall
Reckitt, one of the main formula manufacturers in the U.S., is recalling two batches of its Enfamil Prosobee simply plant-based infant formula because of possible cross-contamination with the bacteria cronobacter which can be deadly in infants.
First-generation iPhone sells for $63,000
A first-generation 2007 IPhone sold for more than $63,000 in an online auction, a phone that originally cost $599.
The first edition device by auctioneer ICG auctions said the box had never been opened before. The phone had an 8 gigabyte storage and had no app store. It ran on a 2G network exclusive to AT&T.