Puppet Masters
"On Sunday, a very powerful hacking attack was made on the Russian president's website. The defense system worked, even though it was not easy," Peskov, said as quoted by Russian media.
He has not disclosed any information about the source of the attack claiming that he had no details, although he noted that he was "sure that [cyber-security] specialists know who is behind this attack.
Peskov also said that the attack on the Kremlin site was carried out simultaneously with another attack that reportedly targeted the website of the Russian Electoral Commission. Both of the attacks were made on national Election Day, when people region-wide went to polling station to elect local authorities.
According to Peskov, the hacking attack on the Kremlin site occurred between 5:00am and 10:00am (2:00am-7:00am GMT) on Sunday.
Earlier on Monday, the head of the Russian Electoral Commission, Vladimir Churov also told the Russian media that, on Sunday, the commission's website came under a cyber-attack carried out by an US-based company.
"Yesterday someone attempted to hack our website and alter the data there making 50,000 requests per minute. They failed and we have already established the culprit - it's a company based in San Francisco," Churov told reporters adding that the documented proof of the attack would be prepared before the end of the week.
The German Interior Ministry refused on Monday to specify terms of the newly-instated controls on the country's southern border.
"This is an operational event, we do not disclose the details in order not to reduce its effectiveness," ministry spokesman Tobias Plate told reporters.
MEMORANDUM FOR: The President
FROM: Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)
SUBJECT: Veteran Intelligence Professionals Challenge CIA's "Rebuttal" on Torture
Former CIA leaders responsible for allowing torture to become part of the 21st Century legacy of the CIA are trying to rehabilitate their tarnished reputations with the release of a new book, Rebuttal: The CIA Responds to the Senate Intelligence Committee's Study of Its Detention and Interrogation Program. They are pushing the lie that the only allegations against them are from a partisan report issued by Democrats from the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Syria is a prime example.
Although Syria is a mess that cannot be sorted out easily (thanks to the US-supported 'Arab Spring' and the ensuing civil war), there are practical ways of preventing Islamic extremists from overrunning the country.
Comment: Of course Russia and Putin gets the blame since they don't follow the US game plan.
Russia understands the threat of ISIL and what is needed to defeat it, says former CIA officer
US chooses dangerous path of working with Al-Qaeda over Russia on Syrian issue
The fact that the United States now supports al-Qaeda in its fight against ISIL and al-Assad is a big mistake that will only cause more trouble for Washington in the future.
"To say that Bashar al-Assad is the bigger evil than ISIL is dangerous and to say that one can negotiate with other jihadists [al-Qaeda and so-called "moderate" Syrian rebels] is a big mistake... This strategy is insane," del Valle told Sputnik.
Comment: This expert states what should be common sense. But psychopaths can't seem to grasp simple common sense.
Russia is providing military support to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad because Moscow understands what it takes to defeat the ISIL while US policy continues to fuel extremism, former CIA officer Larry Johnson told Sputnik.
"I personally am glad that Russia is taking these steps," Johnson said on Monday when asked about a private sector intelligence firm claiming it has satellite imagery showing Russia is ramping up military operations in Syria. "At least [Russian President Vladimir] Putin understands the threat and understands what is needed to confront it and defeat it."
The United States has persistently called for Assad to step down, arguing that regime change is the only viable political solution, while Russia has assisted the Syrian government in its fight against the ISIL.
Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) that operates the crippled nuclear plant released its first 850 tons of filtered radioactive groundwater by sundown on September 14. This is a part of TEPCO's "subdrain plan" that was approved in late July after a year-long battle with local fishermen who opposed the release fearing that it would pollute the ocean and contaminate marine life.
A third party panel has given the green light to the release after confirming that the radioactive content was below measurable limits, according to The Japan Times. TEPCO allows one becquerel of radioactive cesium per liter of decontaminated groundwater, three becquerels for elements that emit beta rays and up to 1,500 becquerels for tritium, which cannot be removed with existing technology.
Monday's batch measured 330 to 600 becquerels per liter, TEPCO said, citing analyses conducted by the company and an outside organization.
Under the plan, TEPCO has to pump tons of water from 41 subdrain wells around the main buildings of the power plant and decontaminate it before the release. It has planned to pump 100 to 200 tons of groundwater daily and later increase it to 500 tons unless it triggers problems with the decontamination facilities.
By dumping the treated water into the ground, TEPCO and the government expects to halve the approximately 300 tons of contaminated water that is generated at the plant daily as well as reduce groundwater flowing into the reactor buildings.
TEPCO has yet to deal with remaining 680,000 tons of water that was used to cool the reactors during the 2011 meltdown.
Despite being the richest nation in the world, the United States says it will only admit 10,000 Syrian refugees this year. Although no one will ever be able to verify that, it's still shamefully low, particularly given the role of the United States in stoking the refugee crisis in the first place.
Facing criticism for its lagging humanitarian response so far, the US seeks to frame its commitment as a significant boost. And indeed it does constitute an increase, as the US has admitted less than 1,500 Syrian refugees since the US-led war began in 2011. Still, the number falls well below commitments of other countries that are far smaller. For instance, Germany has committed to accepting up to 800,000 refugees by the end of this year.
What's more, the US is not planning to ease the cumbersome background and medical checks that leave refugees in legal limbo for up to two years. They have to go through the most robust security process of anybody who's contemplating travel to the United States.
This clearly means the US won't be able to meet its commitment this year - no matter how hard they try to convince the United Nations and human rights organizations. Bureaucratic impediments means the US will not provide immediate sanctuary — or anything close - either.
Comment: "It is time for the United States to become a country of value, not a country of success." The time was long ago, way before we were born. It becomes the incumbent responsibility of all Americans to bring and hold the US to a standard it obviously isn't familiar with, doesn't understand and has rarely practiced. Success and Value--two very different things.

A razor-wire-equipped train wagon seals off the final section of Hungary's anti-refugee fence near Roszke village.
But Hungary isn't the only country to close its borders and tighten up security measures in the past few days. The Schengen system of open borders between EU nations seems to be falling apart.
Germany, which has willingly received the bulk of the refugees so far, stepped up their border controls this week, halting trains from Austria and stationing more police on their border with Austria. Slovakia (which has said it only wants Christian refugees - they have no mosques, apparently) has done the same on their borders with Hungary and Austria. Austria in turn sent the army to its borders. Hungary had done the same, with authorities planning to arrest and jail anyone entering the country illegally. Police in riot gear blocked the main railway track used by migrants. Hungarian police detained 9 Syrians and 7 Afghans, accused of 'breaching' the new razor-wire barrier. The government has made a decision to declare a crisis in the south of the country because of the 'problem'. Finland plans to increase its border monitoring; along with the Czech Republic and Poland, too.
Today, Tuesday, after the detentions in Hungary, migrants have begun a sit-down hunger strike.
The situation is very serious, Putin said, adding that Moscow is very worried that IS terrorists are publicly announcing their designs on Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem. The jihadists also plan to spread their activities to Europe, Russia, central and southeastern Asia.
"Extremists from many countries of the world, including, unfortunately, European counties, Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) undertake ideological and military training in the ranks of Islamic State [IS, formerly known as ISIS/ISIL]," said Putin. "And certainly we are worried that they could possibly return."
Putin said it's necessary for geopolitical ambitions to be set aside in the fight against IS terrorists.
"Simple common sense, responsibility for global and regional safety require uniting efforts of the international community [to fight] such a threat. It is necessary to set aside geopolitical ambitions, drop so-called double standards, the policy of direct or indirect use of separate terrorist groups for achieving one's own goals, including removing the governments and regimes."
Comment: Putin is speaking the surface-level discourse on ISIS: accepting its reality at face value and presenting threats and solutions based on this narrative, at least on the surface. In reality, any statements about ISIS, or plans against ISIS, are simultaneously directed against ISIS' masters: the U.S. Because a defeat of ISIS (which everyone in the West claims to want) would actually be a defeat of the U.S.'s greatest allies in the destabilization and destruction of Syria. And it looks like some German elements are perhaps starting to see the light and are using some common sense. Of course, that could spell trouble in and of itself: 'ISIS among the refugees' - Prelude to another European "terror attack"?














Comment: US-based hackers attempted to tamper with Russian polls