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BREAKING NEWS: Thursday, August 7, 2014 5:08 PM EDT American Forces Said to Bomb ISIS Targets in Iraq

August 7, 2014 By administrator

American military forces bombed at least two targets in northern Iraq on Thursday night to rout Islamist insurgents who have trapped tens of thousands of religious minorities in Kurdish areas, Kurdish officials said.
Word of the bombings, reported on Kurdish television from the city of Erbil, came as President Obama was preparing to make a statement in Washington.

READ MORE »
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/08/world/middleeast/american-forces-said-to-bomb-isis-targets-in-iraq.html?emc=edit_na_20140807

Filed Under: News Tagged With: bombing, ISIS, US

BREAKING NEWS, U.S. Weighs Iraq Airstrikes, Citing humanitarian crisis

August 7, 2014 By administrator

Thursday, August 7, 2014 12:02 PM EDT

President Obama is considering airstrikes or airdrops of food and medicine to address a humanitarian crisis among some 40,000 religious minorities in Iraq who have f16been dying of heat and thirst on a mountaintop after death threats from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, administration officials said on Thursday.
The president, in meetings with his national security team at the White House on Thursday morning, has been weighing a series of options ranging from dropping humanitarian supplies on Mount Sinjar to military strikes on the fighters from ISIS now at the base of the mountain, a senior administration official said.
“There could be a humanitarian catastrophe there,” a second administration official said, adding that a decision from Mr. Obama was expected “imminently — this could be a fast-moving train.” report new york time

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Airstrikes, Iraq, US

New Nixon Documentary Highlights How Easily the White House Can Mislead the Press

August 5, 2014 By administrator

By Sarah Mimms

nationaljournal.com

August 4, 2014 In late 1971, the media portrayed Richard Nixon as a combatant in the war for women’s equality, pushing forcefully to appoint the first woman to the Supreme Court of the United States. But in reality, as cdn-media.nationaljournalhis secret recordings reveal, Nixon never intended to seat a woman on the bench at all. As he would time and again during his presidency, Nixon used the media to promote a false narrative about himself. And the press was never the wiser.

The episode is one of many dissected in director Peter Kunhardt’s new HBO documentary, Nixon by Nixon: In His Own Words, released this week just ahead 40th anniversary of Nixon’s resignation. Using only the secret tapes recorded by the president and media accounts from the time, the documentary offers a unique and personal perspective on one of the most studied presidencies in U.S. history, undiluted by modern analysis.

What emerges is a portrait of a deeply paranoid president, convinced that his “enemies”—most frequently, the press—were out to get him. And of course, eventually, they did.

Whereas most documentaries following the Nixon presidency focus on the Watergate scandal and the press’s involvement in his ultimate downfall, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein are mentioned just once in “Nixon by Nixon.” Instead, the film uncovers the troubling ways in which the Nixon White House would manipulate reporters and just how much the press got wrong. The documentary raises questions about just how much the media can truly know, much less report, about any administration.

Take, for example, Nixon’s nominations to the Supreme Court. In September, 1971, two Supreme Court justices announced their resignations, giving Nixon an opportunity to shift the Court’s ideological lineup. His staff floated a list of possibilities to the press, including two women, either of whom would become the first female to serve on the Supreme Court.

The Nixon administration signaled publicly that the president would name Mildred Lillie, then a judge for the Second District Court of Appeals, to one of the seats. But listening to Nixon’s secret tapes on the matter, it becomes clear that both women were included merely to gain favor with the press and female voters ahead of the 1972 election.

But the media obsession over Lillie and her potentially historic appointment became too much for Nixon. In a recorded phone call, Nixon asks Attorney General John Mitchell to float some other names to the press, telling Mitchell: “I would like to sorta get off the woman kick if we can.” He even mentions the possibility of adding some Jewish names to the list, despite frequently using a four-letter slur in reference to them in his private phone calls and telling staff, in a separate conversation: “Most Jews are disloyal. You can’t trust the bastards.”

In the end, the American Bar Association ruled Lillie unqualified for the position and media reports portrayed Nixon as having suffered a minor defeat.

But the recordings make it clear: Nixon had no intention of appointing a woman to the Court. He repeatedly characterized women as too “emotional” for such a position and spoke repeatedly with Mitchell in the days leading up to the ABA’s decision to insure that the association would find Lille not qualified for the job. “He’s aware of the fact that we’re going to have to put it on them?” Nixon asked Mitchell, referring to then-ABA president Lawrence E. Walsh. ” … Let them take the rap for the women.”

Two days later, Nixon nominated two white men: Lewis F. Powell Jr. and William Rehnquist. In media footage, Nixon makes the announcement as if with a heavy heart, promising that one day soon a woman will serve on the Supreme Court. The crowd applauds.

This is the disturbing theme of Nixon by Nixon: that the president who told Henry Kissinger, “The press is the enemy. The press is the enemy. The press is the enemy,” was so often able to subvert the media establishment. It wasn’t just Lillie. Media clip after media clip from the era is followed immediately by a secret recording of the Nixon White House directly contradicting it, on everything from his connections to the Watergate scandal to the war in Vietnam.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: documentary, media, nixon, US

US judge signs order to seize Kurdish oil from tanker off Texas

July 29, 2014 By administrator

By Terry Wade and Supriya Kurane

A US court has moved to seize a cargo of crude oil from Iraqi Kurdistan that Baghdad says was sold without its permission after the central Iraqi government filed suit to restrain export

The oil tanker United Kalavyrta approaches Galveston, Texas

(Reuters) – Acting on a request from the central government in Iraq, a U.S. judge has signed an order telling the U.S. Marshals Service to seize a cargo of oil from Iraqi Kurdistan aboard a tanker off the Texas coast, court filings showed on Tuesday.

The United Kalavrvta tanker, carrying some 1 million barrels of crude worth about $100 million, arrived near Galveston Bay on Saturday but has yet to unload its disputed cargo. The ship, which is too large to enter ports near Houston and dock, was given clearance by the U.S. Coast Guard on Sunday to transfer its cargo offshore to smaller boats that would deliver it to the U.S. mainland.

But Iraq’s central government, in a court filing on Monday, laid claim to the cargo that it says was sold by the regional government of Kurdistan without permission from Baghdad, which has said such deals amount to smuggling.

To carry out the order from Magistrate Judge Nancy K. Johnson of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, the Marshals Service may need to rely on companies that provide crude offloading services.

The judge’s order said the vessel would be allowed free movement after the cargo is unloaded.

The U.S. State Department has expressed fears that independent oil sales from Kurdistan could contribute to the breakup of Iraq, has said the oil belongs to all Iraqis, and warned potential buyers of legal risks. But it has also made clear it will not intervene in a commercial transaction.

The filings on Monday did not name the end-buyer of the cargo in the United States. AET Offshore Services, a company in Texas that had been hired to unload the tanker for the buyer, asked in a separate court filing whether Iraq’s claims were valid.

Piecemeal oil exports have gone from Iraqi Kurdistan to Turkey and Iran by truck in the past, which Baghdad also opposed. But the opening of a new pipeline to Turkey earlier this year, which could supply the Kurds with far greater revenues, has met much fiercer opposition from Baghdad. One cargo of Kurdish crude was delivered in Houston in May to an unidentified buyer, and four other cargoes of Kurdish crude have been delivered this year in Israel.

The case is Ministry of Oil of the Republic of Iraq v. Ministry of Natural Resources of Kurdistan Regional Governate of Iraq et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Texas, No. 3:14-cv-00249.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraq, Kurd, oil, US

Tor network received over $1.8m from U.S. govt. in 2013: report

July 29, 2014 By administrator

Tor, the internet anonymizer, received more than $1.8m in funding from the U.S. government in 2013, even while the NSA was reportedly trying to destroy the network, the Guardian says.

181179According to the Tor Project’s latest annual financial statements, the organization received $1,822,907 from the U.S. government in 2013. The bulk of that came in the form of “pass-through” grants, money which ultimately comes from the U.S. government distributed through some independent third-party.

Formerly known as “the onion router”, Tor is software which allows its users to browse the internet anonymously. It works by bouncing connections through encrypted “relays”, preventing any eavesdropper from determining what sites a particular user is visiting, or from determining who the users of a particular site actually are. That makes it popular amongst organizations trying to promote freedom of speech in nations like China and Syria – but also popular amongst users trying to evade surveillance in the West.

The two largest single grantors of federal money were SRI international, a non-profit research and development centre that aims to bridge the gap between abstract research and industry, and Internews Network, an international non-profit that funds programs supporting democracy and human rights. The latter gave $555,413 in funding originally from the U.S. Department of State, while the former gave $830,269 in funding ultimately stemming from the U.S. Department of Defense.

The Tor Project also received direct funding from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of State, totaling $100,325 and $256,900 respectively.

Despite the NSA’s attacks on the service, federal funding of Tor has actually increased year-on-year. In 2012, the organization only received $1.2m in funding from the U.S. government, none of which was direct.

Meanwhile, Russia has offered 3.9m rubles ($110,000) in a contest seeking a way to crack the identities of users of the network. The Russian interior ministry made the offer, saying the aim was “to ensure the country’s defense and security”. The contest is only open to Russians and proposals are due by August 13.

Russia has the fifth-largest number of Tor users with more than 210,000 people making use of it.

Source: theguardian.com/

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: tor, US

BREAKING NEWS Surface-to-Air Missile Shot Down Malaysian Airliner, U.S. Officials Say

July 17, 2014 By administrator

New York time report U.S. officials confirmed that a surface-to-air missile shot down the Malaysian airliner at about 30,000 feet based on a partial track of the missile’s final trajectory showing impact with the airliner.
The track was obtained through infra-red sensors on a military spy satellite orbiting the earth, senior US officials said. The satellite, however, was able to detect only the final partial track, not the point of origin.
READ MORE »
http://www.nytimes.com?emc=edit_na_20140717

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Surface-to-Air Missile, US

Joel Kovel told Press TV Russia deflating US globalist ambitions

July 17, 2014 By administrator

The United States, with its antagonistic approach toward Russia, is considering fresh sanctions against Moscow because Russia is blocking its expansionist policies, an analyst tells Press TV.

Putin-ambargo“This is not a simple matter at all because there is a longstanding deep antagonism between the United States and Russia, which really comes more from the American side because Russia is the one great power that can inhibit United States’ expansion,” Joel Kovel told Press TV in an interview.

Noting that the United States is the only “imperial country” with “global aspirations”, he said that the US is “very eager to inhibit Russia” which is standing on its way.

Kovel said the US Treasury – under the pretext of the crisis in Ukraine – is specifically targeting Russia’s oil and gas companies in order to undermine European interest in Russia’s energy sector.

“I think the reasons for the sanctions have to do with the American’s desperate need to weaken European attraction for Russia and the sanctions would make it harder for that to go forward,” he said.

He said Russia, enjoying a “greatly stabilized” economy, has always been willing to share its “vast quantities of hydrocarbon resources” with European countries.

Under the new embargoes, Washington also targeted a series of large banks, energy and defense firms.

Ukraine’s mainly Russian-speaking parts in the east have been the scene of deadly clashes between pro-Russia activists and the Ukrainian army since Kiev launched military operations in mid-April in a bid to crush pro-Moscow protests in the east.

Violence intensified after the Donetsk and Luhansk regions held local referendums on May 11, in which their residents voted overwhelmingly in favor of independence from Ukraine.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: globalist, Russia, US

U.S. ambassador-designate to Turkey denies Armenian Genocide (video)

July 17, 2014 By administrator

John Bass, President Barack Obama’s nominee for the post of US Ambassador to Turkey, during his confirmation hearing at the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee denied the Armenian Genocide and stumbled on 180814characterizing the widely documented abuses and freedom violations by official Ankara, Asbarez reports.

In his written statement to the committee, Bass, who is a former U.S. Ambassador to Georgia, opted to use the now infamous and denialist “condolence” statement that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made on April 23 as the basis for his forthcoming work as the U.S. envoy to Ankara vis-à-vis the Armenian Genocide issue.

“On this year’s Remembrance Day, Prime Minister [Recep Tayyip] Erdoğan expressed his condolences to the grandchildren of those Armenians killed during World War I. That gesture and other positive efforts by the Turkish government in recent months indicate that the space for dialogue is opening. But more can be done, and we encourage both sides to pursue a full, frank and just acknowledgement of the facts surrounding the tragic events of 1915,” Bass told committee members.

While there have been endorsements for the Erdogan announcement by the State Department, Bass’s statement sheds light on the tenor of his possible tenure regarding the Armenian Genocide and sheds further light on the Obama Administration’s views on the matter on the eve of the Armenian Genocide’s centennial.

Asbarez says this reinforces a column by Harut Sassounian, who asserted that the White House and Ankara are in collusion when drafting statements regarding the Armenian Genocide.

The tone of the hearing took an abrupt turn when Bass was unwilling to properly characterize the widespread and documented abuses by the Erdogan regime of democratic principles and freedoms, such as banning YouTube and Twitter in Turkey.

When Senator John McCain asked about authoritarianism in Turkey and Erdogan’s style of government, Bass stumbled.

“Are you concerned about Prime Minister Erdogan’s desire to change the Constitution and other actions that we have seen on the part of Erdogan as a drift towards authoritarianism?” McCain asked.

“The prime minister is the leader of the democratically elected parliamentary democracy. We’ll obviously look closely at whatever steps he takes,” responded Bass.

McCain continued by asking whether the Turkish government’s “suppression of social media, YouTube and Twitter and restrictions on the freedom of the media” represented “a drift toward authoritarianism,” and added that Bass was “jeopardizing his nomination” by not giving a succinct response to his question. “It is a pretty simple straight forward question … Do you believe that the oppression of social media, the desire to change the Constitution to be a more powerful president, which he obviously will be, is a drift towards authoritarianism?” McCain asked.

When Bass again faltered in answering the question, McCain shot back saying: “Mr. Chairman, I am not going to support this nomination, and I will hold it until I get a straight answer. I think it is a fairly straightforward question, Mr. Bass. Is it a drift toward authoritarianism?”

“It is a drift in that direction, yes,” Bass replied. “Thank you. It took 3 minutes and 25 seconds,” McCain said in response.

The Armenian National Committee of America’s Executive Director Aram Hamparian expressed disdain at Bass’s complicit approach to Turkey’s human rights violations. “Sugar-coating Ankara’s growing domestic intolerance and increasingly anti-U.S. regional approach only serves to embolden Turkey’s leaders to escalate their open challenges to American interests and values,” said Hamparian.

“The painful extent to which Turkey’s leadership has succeeded in gaming our Department of State was spotlighted by Senator McCain, who had to repeatedly press Ambassador-Designate Bass — even to the point of threatening a ‘hold’ on his nomination — to secure even the mildest U.S. criticism of Turkey’s unrelenting and highly public crackdown on social media.”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, John Bass, Turkey, US

U.S. Escalates Sanctions Against Russia

July 16, 2014 By administrator

President Obama escalated sanctions against Russia on Wednesday by targeting a series of large banks and energy and defense firms in what officials described as the most punishing measures to date for Moscow’s intervention in Ukraine.
While the latest moves do not cut off entire sectors of the Russian economy, as threatened in the past, the administration’s actions go significantly further than the financial and travel limits imposed so far on several dozen individuals and their businesses. The new measures will severely restrict access to American debt markets for the targeted companies.
The moves were coordinated with European leaders, who were meeting in Brussels on Wednesday to consider their own package of penalties against Russia. The Europeans declined to go as far as the United States, instead focusing on a plan to block loans for new projects in Russia by European investment and development banks.
READ MORE »
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/17/world/europe/obama-widens-sanctions-against-russia.html?emc=edit_na_20140716

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Russia, Sanction, US

SCANDAL RIDDEN TURKISH GÜLEN SCHOOLS SPARK DISTURBANCE AMONGST PARENTS IN US

July 16, 2014 By administrator

Ragıp Soylu

WASHINGTON, D.C. – A series of teachers’ testimonies in front of the Ohio Board of Education unleashed dramatic problems related to Gülen-tied charter schools and led an immediate investigation of 19 Horizon AMERIKASchools in the state. Former teachers from the Horizon Science Academy Dayton High School claimed that the school was the center of test cheating, sexual misconduct, attendance tampering, racism and unequal student treatment for many years.Kellie Kochensparger, a teacher having worked with Horizon until last year, told the board that school administrators had failed to tell parents that there was sexual misconduct when they suspended a number of students. Instead administrators explained parents that the suspension of the students was due to the fact that they were outside of their assigned areas.

According to the written statements of the teachers, racism and sexism were other issues that they had to deal with during their daily routine with school officials.

Tim Neary, another professional who taught for two years at the school, argued that racism and sexism were common at Horizon Science Academy. “There was no professionalism toward women. It was almost gross how they’d talk to women. Asking questions that could get you fired, especially if you were a woman. The majority of the people fired were women.” she added.

Other testimonies of Turkish teachers’ treatment of black students explained that many of the teachers called them “monkey” and “dog” in Turkish and punished black kids more severely than their Turkish friends. Some teachers said they had been afraid to come forward before finding new jobs. Teachers also cited the incompetency of emigrated Turkish colleagues numerous times and pointed out that school administrators weren’t acting based on common testing rules and tampered results.

According to the Columbus Dispatch’s report, after listening to what had been happening in the school, members of the Ohio Board of Education were “outraged” and “disgusted.” “Inside, my blood is boiling,” said Deborah Cain, a board member from Uniontown. “It is almost incomprehensible.”

Horizon Science Academies are operated by Chicago-based Concept Schools. The Federal Bureau of Investigation last months also raided 19 charter schools affiliated with the Gülen Movement in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois for reasons allegedly related to crimes linked to education tenders. The investigation targeted Concept Schools, an institution that operates the movement’s schools, according to local media outlets.

Most recently, two charter schools (Magnolia Charter Schools 6 and 7) affiliated with the Gülen Movement in Los Angeles have been ordered to be shut down when they were denied a renewal of their four-year contract with the LA School District Charter School Division following an internal fiscal audit report by the district’s Inspector General. Another charter school affiliated with the movement was shut down in 2011 for bribery charges.

The movement is led by a controversial imam living in rural Pennsylvania in self-imposed exile, who is at odds with the Turkish government over the influence he wields inside the Turkish police forces and top judiciary. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan recently requested the extradition of Fethullah Gülen both privately and publicly from the Obama administration and accused Gülen of plotting a judicial coup against the Turkish government before the local elections last March.

Notice: Daily Sabah known to be the pacemouth of government
Source: http://www.dailysabah.com/politics/2014/07/16/scandal-ridden-gulen-schools-spark-disturbance-amongst-parents-in-us

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gulen, scandal, US

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