Today’s edition of quick hits.
* The 35th strike: “The U.S. struck another alleged drug boat in the eastern Pacific on Thursday, killing two people, U.S. Southern Command announced on social media. … The strike is at least the 35th since September but only the second since the U.S. captured Nicolás Maduro, then the president of Venezuela, in a military operation on Jan. 3.”
* Fourteen years later: “A man the U.S. considers a key participant in the 2012 Benghazi attack has been arrested, Attorney General Pam Bondi said Friday, announcing a break in one of the most politicized foreign affairs events of the Obama administration. Zubayr al-Bakoush was taken into custody overseas and arrived at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland early Friday, authorities said.”
* Another major step backwards: “The Trump administration finalized a policy Thursday that creates a new category of federal workers that would make it easier to fire high-ranking career civil servants for their perceived unwillingness to implement the president’s agenda. The new rule, set to be published in the Federal Register on Friday, will affect approximately 55,000 workers.”
* The White House’s use of the word “obliterated” last year was unwise: “Iran appears to have rapidly repaired several ballistic missile facilities damaged in strikes last year, but it has made only limited fixes to major nuclear sites struck by Israel and the United States, a New York Times analysis of satellite imagery suggests.”








