Top Trump adviser Stephen Miller told reporters Friday that the administration is “looking at” ways to end due process protections for unauthorized immigrants who are in the country.
“The Constitution is clear, and that of course is the supreme law of the land, that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus can be suspended at a time of invasion. So I would say that’s an action we’re actively looking at,” Miller said in the White House driveway.
“A lot of it depends on whether the courts do the right thing or not,” Miller said.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for clarification on whether he was referring to a specific group of people who’ve entered the country illegally, or all the people who have. It also did not comment on what he meant by the courts doing “the right thing.”
In his remarks, Miller maintained that the courts don’t have jurisdiction in immigration cases. “The courts aren’t just at war with the executive branch, the courts are at war, these radical rogue judges, with the legislative branch as well too. So all of that will inform the choices the president ultimately makes,” he said.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly voiced frustration about constitutional due process protections slowing down his efforts at mass deportations.
“I was elected to get them the hell out of here, and the courts are holding me from doing it,” he said in an interview with Kristen Welker that aired Sunday on NBC News’ “Meet the Press.”
Welker pointed out the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution says “no person” shall be “deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law” and that the Supreme Court has long recognized that noncitizens have certain basic rights, but Trump complained that those protections take too much time.
“I don’t know. It seems — it might say that, but if you’re talking about that, then we’d have to have a million or 2 million or 3 million trials,” he said, adding that some of the people the administration wants to deport are “murderers” and “drug dealers.”
Welker then asked if he needs to uphold the Constitution.
“I don’t know,” Trump replied. “I have to respond by saying, again, I have brilliant lawyers that work for me, and they are going to obviously follow what the Supreme Court said.”
The administration has already skirted due process in some deportation cases after Trump invoked the rarely used Alien Enemies Act to send alleged members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua to a prison in El Salvador.
The proclamation said the gang “is perpetrating, attempting, and threatening an invasion or predatory incursion against the territory of the United States.” Three federal judges in different states have found the gang’s criminal activities aren’t tantamount to an invasion.
Fortnite was booted from iPhones and Apple’s App Store in 2020, after Epic Games updated its software to link out to the company’s website and avoid Apple’s commissions. The move drew Apple’s anger, and kicked off a legal battle that has lasted for years.
Last month’s ruling, a victory for Epic Games, said Apple was not allowed to charge a commission on link-outs or dictate if the links look like buttons, paving the way for Fortnite’s return.
Apple could still reject Fortnite’s submission. An Apple representative did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment. Apple is appealing last month’s contempt ruling.
The announcement by Epic Games is the latest salvo in the battle between it and Apple, which has taken place in courts and with regulators around the world since 2020. Epic Games also sued Google, which operates the Play Store for Android phones.
Last month’s ruling has already shifted the economics of app development for iPhones.
Apple takes between 15% and 30% of purchases made using its in-app payment system. Linking to the web avoids those fees. Apple briefly allowed link-outs under its system but would charge a 27% commission, before last month’s ruling.
Developers including Amazon and Spotify have already updated their apps to avoid Apple’s commissions and direct customers to their own websites for payment.
Before last month, Amazon’s Kindle app told users they could not purchase a book in the iPhone app. After a recent update, the app now shows an orange “Get Book” button that links to Amazon’s website.
Fortnite has been available for iPhones in Europe since last year through Epic Games’ store. Third-party app stores are allowed in Europe under the Digital Markets Act. Users have also been able to play Fortnite on iPhones and iPads through cloud gaming services.
A seafood company failed to follow federal safety rules to prevent potential botulism contamination. A business was hawking dietary supplements with the misleading claim that they’d cure, treat or prevent disease. A fresh sprouts producer didn’t take adequate precautions against contamination.
The Food and Drug Administration laid out these inspection findings in warning letters, accusing the companies of committing “significant violations” of federal laws, according to an FDA staff member who described the letters to NBC News.
But the public doesn’t know about any of this, after the federal workers responsible for reviewing the food safety letters before they’re posted online were fired, the current FDA staff member and a former FDA employee told NBC News.
That review process ground to a halt after the Trump administration’s mass layoffs of federal health workers in early April, which gutted the teams responsible for reviewing public records and redacting any confidential information, according to the current and former FDA employees, who spoke on the condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to share internal details.
Since then, the publication of more than a dozen food safety warning letters has been stalled, they said.
The FDA responded to questions with a statement that didn’t address the publication of warning letters. The agency “remains fully committed to transparency, accountability, and the protection of public health,” the statement said. The FDA added that it is continuing to conduct inspections, enforcement and oversight “to ensure consumer safety.”
The FDA often issues warning letters after initially flagging its concerns to a company and determining the company’s response was inadequate. The agency typically gives the company a few weeks to respond to the letter, and, after an internal review, the letters are publicly posted on the FDA website.
The letters are one of the agency’s major enforcement tools — and one of the few windows into a company’s food safety record available to the public. The letters can make headlines and are especially important in alerting retailers to serious food safety violations that could put the public at risk, safety advocates said.
“It’s an indication that something has gone wrong — it’s not just a normal part of the inspection process. You get a warning letter when there’s a real problem,” said Thomas Gremillion, director of food policy at the Consumer Federation of America, an advocacy group. “There are people you’d expect to use this information to protect the public.”
The FDA also uses warning letters to pressure companies to take action after the agency’s initial attempts have failed. Last June, for instance, the FDA sent a warning letter to Dollar Tree, the discount retail chain, for failing to pull lead-tainted applesauce pouches from its shelves, even after a national recall of the product. (Dollar Tree denied this, saying in a statement that it “took immediate action” on the recall and “will continue to cooperate with FDA.”)
In recent days, the FDA has rehired some of the staff who worked on public records at the agency, according to two former employees. The agency has also continued to publish warning letters related to drugs and tobacco products, as well as one related to imported food that was issued by a separate FDA division that was spared from deep staff cuts, the former workers said.
But even before the mass layoffs in April, staffers said there was a backlog in posting warning letters related to food safety.
Since the week of President Donald Trump’s inauguration, no warning letters to U.S. food manufacturers have been posted publicly, FDA records show.
The last published letter, posted on Jan. 21, detailed unsanitary conditions that the FDA found in a Utah-based bread factory: Inspectors described more than 50 live insects inside an ingredient bin, apparent insect trails on the floor, inadequate employee hygiene and debris on bread slicers, among other safety violations. The company told NBC News it had addressed the FDA’s concerns and strengthened its food safety practices.
A Fox News Channel analyst fainted on air Thursday night in mid-sentence of her harsh critique of the Biden administration, forcing a show host to awkwardly try going to another guest before heading to break.
Camryn Kinsey was criticizing former President Joe Biden and then-Vice President Kamala Harris when she started slowing down, stopped speaking altogether and suddenly toppled over to her left.
“They have to rewrite history because they had a failed campaign. They had a failed presidency,” she said at the network’s bureau in Los Angeles. “They put her as the borders czar, she never went to the border. So this is about incompetency. ”
At this point, Kinsey slowed down and seemed to struggle for words.
Camryn Kinsey on Fox News.Fox News
“It’s not about ideology where it’s not about,” Kinsey said as she toppled over to her left.
Viewers of “Fox News @ Night” could hear Kinsey hitting the studio floor.
“Oh my goodness!” host Jonathan Hunt said of the fall.
Hunt, a substitute for regular host Trace Gallagher, had the first instinct was to go to another guest, Lynda Moynihan, appearing on remote from New York, before quickly going to commercial.
“We’re just going to get some help here for Camryn. Let me come back to Lydia while we get some help for Camryn here,” Hunt said. “So Lydia, the president … we’re going to, actually, we’re going to go to a break right here. We’ll be right back.”
Kinsey issued a statement on Friday saying she was feeling better. She appeared to suggest she was struggling with dehydration.
“I want to start by thanking the incredible Fox News team and the EMTs who responded with such speed and care,” she posted on X. “It was an unexpected and frightening moment, but thanks to their professionalism and kindness, I’m doing well.”
Fox News Channel also thanked first responders for their quick work.
“After Fox News @ Night guest Camryn Kinsey fainted during a live on-air appearance last night in our Los Angeles bureau, paramedics were called and she was treated and cleared,” the network said in a statement on Friday. “We are happy to hear she is now feeling much better and wish her a speedy recovery.”
VATICAN CITY — The U.S. now has two top-level leaders on the global stage — and there is evidence to suggest Pope Leo XIV will cut a stark contrast to President Donald Trump.
As Cardinal Robert Prevost, Leo also criticized both Trump and Vice President JD Vance on social media. As recently as February, he shared a headline saying that Vance, who is Catholic, was “wrong” to suggest Christians should prioritize loving their countrymen over foreigners.
And like Francis, Leo has expressed deep sympathy for migrants, the poor and those impacted by the climate crisis. He has shared the late pope’s support for appointing women to senior Vatican roles — and his resistance against going all-out in support of female ordination. And he has similarly advocated for an inclusive church that reaches out to other faiths and cultures.
President Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIV.Getty Images; Europa Press
On the other hand, he has not followed Francis’ relative support for LGBTQ+ communities, lamenting in 2012 how TV shows “benignly and sympathetically portrayed” same-sex couples, according to a report by The Arlington Catholic Herald at the time.
The lock-in secrecy of the conclave means we don’t know why the 133 cardinal electors voted for Leo by at least a two-thirds majority. And scholars are divided about how the decision should be interpreted.
For Steven Millies, a professor of public theology at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, it’s an unambiguous repudiation of the Trump administration.
“The cardinals took a side: This new pope will stand against this 21st-century variety of authoritarianism we see getting underway in the U.S. and in too many other parts of the globe,” Millies told NBC News. “To choose an American while a second Trump administration is deporting, disappearing [people] and disrupting to such an alarming extent, again, is a message.”
Asked for comment about these criticisms, the White House directed NBC News toward a social media post by Trump in which he said it was a “great honor” to have an American pope and that he looked forward to meeting him, and one from Vance saying he was “sure millions of American Catholics and other Christians will pray for his successful work leading the church.”
Millies likens the cardinals’ choice to the conclave of 1978, when they selected a Polish pontiff in John Paul II, “from behind the Iron Curtain,” he said. “The cardinals were taking a side — they aimed a new pope at the Soviet Union.”
Others are less sure about the conclave’s intentions.
“Either they’ve chosen an American because they think it sends a message that he stands up to Donald Trump and offers an alternative vision of American leadership, or they’ve chosen him despite the fact that he’s American,” said Miles Pattenden, a historian of the Catholic Church at Britain’s University of Oxford.
“It would seem to me to be rather sensational if they picked him just because he was American and could stand up to President Trump,” he added, if nothing else because Trump’s term is brief compared with a potential papal lifetime.
Whatever the cardinals’ reasoning, they have elected a pope whose personality is night and day to Trump’s brusque persona.
Leo is “a quietly confident person, not a flashy personality,” Bishop Robert Barron of the Diocese of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota, told NBC’s “Nightly News” on Thursday. These are qualities that few, including Trump’s most ardent supporters, would attribute to the president.
Even the new pope’s name carries hints he may oppose Trump’s worldview. The last pontiff to take this name was Pope Leo XIII, who in his 25-year papacy from 1878 to 1903 advocated for social justice and workers rights against the nascent forces of capitalism.
“The pope is not going to agree with anything Trump is saying,” said Bill Ciotti, 63, from Boston, who before he retired was responsible for planning liturgy at his church. Ciotti was staying in Rome, a 10-minute walk from the Vatican, with his friend Bill Champlin, a priest at St. Leo Parish in Leominster, Massachusetts. When they saw white smoke billowing on TV while eating dinner, they got up and ran to St. Peter’s Square.
“He’s already criticized Trump and Vance, so I think it’s going to be a major clash,” Ciotti said Friday.
Politically, Leo is “not going to be real far left and he’s not going to be real far right,” his brother John Prevost said in an interview with The Associated Press on Thursday. But he is widely seen as continuing the program that Francis started, which was disliked by many conservative U.S. Catholics.
“I do think one of the dark horses, and unfortunately one of the most progressive, is Cardinal Prevost,” said former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, who is Catholic and strongly opposed Francis’ platform. “I think it’s pretty shocking given the contempt in which they hold the American church.” He added that “my understanding is Prevost is one of the closest to Francis ideologically.”
Ultimately, believers and nonbelievers alike will have to wait and see how the Trump-Leo era plays out.
“Our God is a God of surprises,” said Cesar Jaramillo, 35, a canon lawyer from Paterson, New Jersey, who has lived in Rome for eight years. “The foresight that the Holy Spirit has shown in allowing Leo the opportunity to lead during a very turbulent time, that is a good sign.”
Radar screens servingNewark Liberty International Airport went black early Friday morning, raising more air traffic safety concerns at the busy New Jersey hub, federal authorities said.
The outrage shortly before 4 a.m. EDT lasted only 90 seconds on a limited number of sectors, the FAA said, but the blackout is still a troubling development in the wake of revelations that controllers lost radio contact with pilots flying into the airport in recent months.
The difficulties were traced to Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) network out of Philadelphia.
“There was a telecommunications outage that impacted communications and radar display at Philadelphia TRACON Area C, which guides aircraft in and out of Newark Liberty International Airport airspace,” according to an FAA statement. “The outage occurred around 3:55 a.m. on Friday, May 9, and lasted approximately 90 seconds.”
The 11 high school lacrosse players accused of tying up a younger teammate in remote woodland as part of a hazing ritual last month regret their actions, their attorney said Thursday.
“Our clients and their families are devastated by the impact this incident has had on the Westhill community,” Tom Cerio of Cerio Law Offices said in a statement. “These young men deeply regret their involvement in what began as a misguided attempt at a prank. They recognize that their actions were inappropriate, and do not minimize the fear and distress experienced by the other students.”
All 11 players, students at Westhill High School in Syracuse, turned themselves in to the Onondaga County Sheriff’s Office in Upstate New York on April 30, after deputies had given them 48 hours to surrender or face felony charges of kidnapping.
As a result, District Attorney Bill Fitzpatrick said last week that would receive appearance tickets for the less serious misdemeanor crime of unlawful imprisonment. They were not detained and will avoid criminal records.
Cerio said this clients appreciated the DA’s approach to the matter and said discussions with him would continue. He added that he hoped that the young men — who have not been identified because of their age — are not subjected to “irreversible punishment” by the school district, media and local community.
“As with any case involving young people, we urge a balanced approach, one that includes appropriate consequences, while also providing an opportunity to make amends and grow from their mistakes,” Cerio said.
The team’s coach at Westhill, Aaron Cahill, said last week in a now-deleted LinkedIn post that that he had no prior knowledge of the boys’ alleged hazing prank. Westhill Central School District Superintendent Steve Dunham said that the lacrosse season would be canceled in light of the incident.
Dunham said in a statement Thursday that the school was working through its own disciplinary process regarding the 11 players but couldn’t legally share the details of individual cases.
The Food and Drug Administration on Friday approved the first at-home test to screen for cervical cancer, Teal Health, which makes the test kit, said.
Currently, cervical cancer screening is done in a doctor’s office during a pelvic exam, a process some women find uncomfortable and even painful.
Some patients don’t get screened for cervical cancer because they don’t want a pelvic exam, said Dr. Emeline Aviki, a gynecologic-oncologist at NYU Langone Health.
“It’s not a fun exam and it’s the easiest thing to cancel,” said Aviki, who worked on some of the early studies to validate the new test.
Cervical cancer is considered highly preventable, thanks to screenings and the HPV vaccine. Rates of the disease have plummeted since the 1970s, according to a 2025 report from the American Cancer Society, though they have begun to level off in recent years. The report estimated that this year, 13,360 women will be diagnosed with cervical cancer and about 4,320 women will die.
However, the number of women getting screened has fallen since the mid-2000s. A 2022 study found that 23% of women were behind on their cervical cancer screening in 2019, up from 14% in 2005. Up to half of women diagnosed with cervical cancer in the U.S. weren’t up to date on their screenings, the American Cancer Society says.
“Cervical cancer screening in general is something that saves lives,” said Dr. Jessica Kiley, chief of general obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern Medicine in Chicago.
The new test, called the Teal Wand, detects HPV using a vaginal swab, making it less invasive than a pap smear, in which the gynecologist inserts a speculum and collects samples of cells from the cervix.
HPV, or human papillomavirus, is a sexually transmitted infection and the leading cause of cervical cancer. There’s no treatment for HPV, but most cases clear on their own. Several strains, however, are linked to cervical cancer.
The Teal Wand is not the first HPV test that uses a vaginal sample: Last year, the FDA approved a similar swab, also performed by patients themselves, that’s collected in a doctor’s office.
“What’s different about this new indication is that this sample can be collected at home and not in a medical setting,” said Dr. George Sawaya, a gynecologist at UCSF Health. “You have to logically believe that would increase access if people’s main barrier was getting to a medical setting.”
A recent report in JAMA Network Open found that women in rural areas are 25% more likely to be diagnosed with cervical cancer and 42% more likely to die from the disease than women who live in cities, a trend that likely reflects lower access to screenings and care in rural parts of the country.
Patients will be able to order the test kit after a telehealth appointment with a doctor and then collect the sample themselves at home. For now, the product will have to be prescribed by one of Teal Health’s virtual providers, but the company plans to make it available for other doctors to order as well. The swab is then mailed to a lab for analysis.
Teal Health said if the result is positive, its providers will help arrange for further care. Following a positive test, women may need additional tests in a doctor’s office.
Still, experts want more information on the cost of the test, and whether patients will follow up if they need more testing.
“Those are some of the uncertainties around it,” Sawaya said.
Kara Egan, the CEO of Teal Health, did not say how much the test would cost.
However, she said, because cervical cancer screening is endorsed by a government group called the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, the company is anticipating the test will be covered by insurance and expects to know definitively in the coming months. In December, the task force recommended in-office self-swabs.
Kiley, the gynecologist from Northwestern, said it’s still important that women see a gynecologist regularly. An annual exam covers more than just cervical cancer screening, she said.
President Donald Trump has signaled a willingness to drastically cut the U.S.’ current 145% tariff rate on China ahead of trade talks between the two countries.
Trump wrote in a Truth Social post Friday morning: “80% Tariff on China seems right! Up to Scott B.,” appearing to refer to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
The post comes a day before Bessent and U.S. Trade Rep. Jamieson Greer meet with their Chinese counterparts in Geneva for trade discussions.
Trump indicated Thursday that he might be open to lowering the current 145% tariff on China. “ I mean, we’re going to see. Right now, you can’t get any higher,” he said during remarks from the Oval Office.
A representative for the Chinese embassy in the U.S. did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
An 80% across-the-board tariff would still be far beyond the duties the U.S. had in place on China before Trump took office. He first imposed a 20% levy on America’s third-largest source of imports in response to its alleged inaction on curbing fentanyl flows, then signed an executive order several weeks later imposing 125% duties.
In general, Trump’s unwieldy approach to tariffs negotiations has continued unabated: On Thursday, he announced an agreement was being worked out with the U.K. that contained few details but which would leave the U.S.’s 10% across-the-board duty on all countries mostly in tact. Yet while the agreement signaled pathways to expand U.S. exports of beef, ethanol and other agricultural products, it provided no guarantees, as yet, that the U.K. would actually increase imports of those products.
Trump has attempted to walk back the eye-watering country-by-country duties he announced during his shock “Liberation Day” speech more than a month ago.
But sizable levies remain, including 25% duties on all steel, aluminum and auto imports. While discussion of trade deals remains plentiful, actual progress on them has been relatively scarce — leaving business confidence throttled.
Nor is it clear that the China tariffs are having Trump’s desired effect. In April, according to CNBC calculations, China’s exports surged amid a ramp up in shipments to Southeast Asian countries — an indicator that China may simply be increasing trans-shipment of goods to third-party countries that then export to the U.S., an expert told CNBC.
With suspended cricket matches, power outages and air raid sirens, fears are swelling of an all-out war between India and Pakistan amid questions over how much of a mediating role the United States will be able to play.
The nuclear-armed neighbors engaged in their worst fighting in decades on Wednesday, when India launched an assault on Pakistan in response to a deadly terrorist attack for which New Delhi blames Islamabad.
Almost four dozen people were killed in the initial violence between the two countries, including India’s strikes on what it said were “terror camps” and the shelling in response by Pakistan, which denies involvement in the April 22 attack in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir.
Pakistan claimed partial victory, saying it downed five Indian fighter jets and dozens of drones, which India has not confirmed. India has said it does not wish to escalate but will respond firmly if Pakistan strikes its territory.
Demonstrators burn an effigy of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Multan, Pakistan on Thursday.Shahid Saeed Mirza / AFP – Getty Images
Both countries accused each other of continuing to launch new military attacks on Friday, including shelling of towns near their de facto border that Pakistan said killed five civilians. The Indian army also said it had “effectively repulsed” drone attacks by Pakistan, which denied the accusation.
Villagers have fled their homes amid cross-border violence near the de facto border in Kashmir, which both India and Pakistan claim in full and control in part.
Tensions have also escalated to cricket, a cherished sport in both countries. The Indian Premier League, which is among the richest sport leagues in the world, was suspended for one week on Friday amid safety concerns after a match was halted amid the turmoil.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with officials in both countries Thursday in the latest U.S. effort to ease tensions.
Speaking with Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, Rubio reiterated his condolences over the April 22 terrorist attack in Indian-administered Kashmir, which killed 26 people, most of them Indian tourists. He also “reaffirmed the United States’ commitment to work with India in the fight against terrorism,” the State Department said.
In his call with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Rubio “expressed sorrow for the reported loss of civilian lives in the current conflict,” the State Department said, and “reiterated his calls for Pakistan to take concrete steps to end any support for terrorist groups.”
Speaking with NBC News, an official Indian government source dismissed the idea of the U.S. or any other country playing a central mediating role, saying the issues were bilateral and that the message of any government to Pakistan should be to stop supporting terrorism. The source said that India’s strikes targeted terrorist infrastructure and followed 15 days of waiting for the Pakistani government to take its own action against militant groups.
An official Pakistani government source called India’s strikes “the ultimate act of provocation.” The source said that the actions taken by Pakistan so far have been in self-defense and that Pakistan reserves the right to respond to strikes on its soil.
Pakistan has called for a “neutral” international investigation into the Kashmir attack, and the government source said there was “no shred of evidence” that Islamabad had supported it.
President Donald Trump has not engaged directly with the leaders of India and Pakistan but said Wednesday that he wants “to see them work it out” and that “if I can do anything to help, I will be there.”
Lisa Curtis, an expert on South Asia at the Washington-based Center for a New American Security, said the Trump administration had sent mixed signals to the two countries and needs to “clean up” its public messaging.
Trump initially said the U.S. would not get involved in the crisis, and on Thursday Vice President JD Vance told Fox News, “We’re not going to get involved in the middle of a war that’s fundamentally none of our business.”
Rubio has made measured statements calling for reducing tensions, while Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said India had a right to defend itself.
Displaced Kashmiri Muslims, take shelter near the Line of Control outside Srinagar, India on May 8, 2025. Yawar Nazir / Getty Images
The U.S. has previously played a key role in defusing conflicts between India and Pakistan, said Curtis, who was senior director for South and Central Asia on the National Security Council from 2017 to 2021. But U.S. relations with Pakistan have deteriorated in recent years, calling into question Washington’s influence with Islamabad.
The U.S. has left the door open to supporting Pakistan’s call for further investigation into the terrorist attack.
“We want the perpetrators to be held accountable, and are supportive of any efforts to that end,” State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce told reporters Thursday.
India responded to the attack by launching military strikes on “terror camps” in Pakistan early Wednesday, which according to Pakistan killed 31 people, including civilians. Pakistan immediately claimed partial victory saying it had downed five Indian fighter jets and dozens of drones, which India has not confirmed.
The April 22 attack was the worst of its kind on Indian civilians in two decades and capped years of separatist insurgency and the bitter resentment between the two neighbors over Kashmir, a former princely state and the only Muslim-majority part of India which ceded territory to India in 1947 when the British colonial rule ended.
Pakistan and India have since fought three out of their multiple wars over it, and India has long-accused Pakistan of supporting cross-border terrorism, which Islamabad denies. Both countries now lay claim to Kashmir in full but only partly control.