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In the press, the reactions to the dismissal yesterday of Donald Trump's National Security Advisor, John Bolton.

Sign of the importance of the character, the news of his departure made the front page of many newspapers in the world, including the Irish Times , which refers to "the lack of major victory of the Trump Administration in international politics since 2017" - a gap likely to cause John Bolton's dismissal. "Trump returns his national security adviser": The Independent reports on "strong differences" between John Bolton and the US president, particularly on secret talks with the Taliban, which John Bolton opposed. This case would have finally cost the adviser, presented by the German daily Der Tagesspiegel as a supporter of the hard line vis-à-vis the Taliban but also Iran, and North Korea.

"Good riddance": the least we can say is that the American press does not regret the departure of John Bolton, Slate going to greet, once is not custom, "the smart decision" Donald Trump to separate from his adviser, "the worst security advisor in the history of the White House". "Bolton is out of the game, which proves that blind loyalty to narcissistic characters never gives a result," The Washington Post reacts. "John Bolton should never have joined this administration headed by a president who is a pathological liar, openly corrupt, understanding dictators, and strangely indebted to Vladimir Putin," the newspaper said. "Like so many others, his hunger for insatiable power and his presumption, his ambition to bend President Trump to his wishes were right John Bolton," the newspaper concludes. Exit, then, Councilor Bolton - one more. What if Donald Trump really only counted on himself, to develop his policy? To see with the drawing of Jim Morin, who shows it all alone, surrounded by mirrors returning his own reflection: "I finally set up a team of advisers to which I can trust". A drawing published on Twitter .

The US press also reports on the self-immolation last week of a 29-year-old Iranian woman. According to The New York Times , Sahar Khodayari was arrested last year for attempting to enter a stadium disguised as a man. She wanted, she said, to attend a match of her favorite team, Tehran's Esteghlal FC, which is strictly forbidden for women, in Iran - the photo illustrating the NYT story of Iranian women in a stadium being an exception, since they are supporters, mostly belonging to the families of the players, allowed to attend a match between Iran to Bolivia at the Azadi stadium in Tehran in 2018. Nicknamed "the blue girl", in reference to the colors of her favorite team, Sahar Khodayari, burned herself to a capital court last week, after hearing that she would spend six months in prison. This drama provokes turmoil on social networks, where calls have been made to FIFA to ban Iran from international competitions and fans to boycott matches in Iran - this is what asks the Iranian footballer Ali Karimi, who has called its 4.5 million subscribers to boycott stadiums until further notice. "The women of our land are better than men," he wrote on his Instagram account. The Iranian Vice-President sent a letter to the head of the judiciary asking him to open an investigation.

Finally, a word, before telling us tomorrow, about the new European Commission, whose members will have to be approved by Parliament, before taking up their duties on 1 November. Led by Germany's Ursula von der Leyen, this new team is made up of 13 women and 14 men, three of whom have been appointed executive vice-presidents, according to Le Monde : the Dutchman Frans Timmermans, responsible for the environment, the Danish Margrethe Vestager to digital, and the Latvian Vladis Dombrovskis to the economy. "Ursula von der Leyen promises a green, high-tech, and ambitious Europe on the world stage": according to Les Echos , the new president of the Commission is "the bet of a power Europe", "flexible, modern and agile".

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