Puppet Masters
The Debka file said, in a report on Saturday, that its sources had identified the type of modern missiles used by Hamas in recent attacks on the Israeli-occupied territories that inflicted considerable damage and casualties on the regime and forced the Israeli government to accept a ceasefire with the Palestinians.
It said, according to Al Ray Palestinian Media Agency, that the missiles were of the 333mm-caliber type and had a medium range of 11 kilometers. The report added that the missiles were capable of destroying Israel's "artillery emplacements, Iron Dome batteries, armored force concentrations - whether over ground or in trenches, as well as combat engineering equipment and command centers".
"It is not launched from stationary batteries, but from any combat 4×4 vehicle or jeep, each of which carries two rockets," said the report, adding that the main advantage of the missiles was its mobility which allowed Hamas to fire them from any area in the Gaza Strip without Israeli radars noticing them.
- New text messages show that Roger Stone learned about WikiLeaks' plans to release Clinton-related emails through Randy Credico.
- The messages, which Stone's lawyers extracted from an old phone on Wednesday, back up Stone's claims about how he learned of WikiLeaks' plans. The messages severely undercut Credico's denials that he was a source for Stone.
- Robert Mueller has been investigating whether Stone had advance knowledge of WikiLeaks' plans to release emails stolen from John Podesta.
"Julian Assange has kryptonite on Hillary," Randy Credico wrote to Stone on Aug. 27, 2016, according to text messages that Stone provided to The Daily Caller News Foundation.
"You are not going to drag my name into this are you," Credico wrote on Sept. 29, 2016, suggesting that he was worried that Stone would identify him as his source for public claims he was making about WikiLeaks' plans.
"[B]ig news Wednesday," Credico wrote on Oct. 1, 2016, days before WikiLeaks began releasing emails stolen from Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta. "Now pretend u don't know me."
Credico also suggested in the texts that his source for some information about WikiLeaks was one of the group's lawyers, who he said was one of his "best friends." Stone has long claimed that the lawyer, Margaret Ratner Kunstler, was a source for Credico.
NBC News first reported details of the text exchanges.
"More dialogue could only be better," Pahon said. "We are talking with the Russians in the area... The more we talk and the more we are able to avoid miscalculation, the better." Pahon said the established military-to-military deconfliction channel has been working well and there have not been any interruptions, but pointed out that the US military is prohibited from actually cooperating with Russia.
"General Dunford has had communications with his counterpart on the mil-to-mil level. We haven't had any significant incidents between the coalition aircraft or Russian aircraft operating in the area. So, clearly we were able to deconflict our operations and that continues," Pahon said.In August, The US government extended its ban against cooperating militarily with Russia in a bilateral format through 2019, according to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
The prohibition, first enacted in the 2017 NDAA, says none of the funds authorized may be used for any bilateral military-to-military cooperation with Russia until Moscow implements the Minsk accords and returns Crimea to Ukrainian sovereignty.
However, the 2019 law adds a provision - missing from two previous NDAAs - that explicitly authorizes negotiations between Washington and Moscow.
When I wrote about all of this both here on Techdirt and on Twitter, I had a bunch of "data protection experts" in Europe completely freak out at me that I had no idea what I was talking about, and how any negative impact was simply the result of everyone misreading the GDPR. I kept trying to point out to them that even if that's true in theory, out here in the real world, the law was being used to disappear news stories and was creating massive chilling effects and burdens on journalists. And the response was the same: nah, you're reading the law wrong.
And now we have an even more horrifying story of the damage the GDPR is doing to journalism. There's a Romanian investigatory journalism publication called RISE Project that has reported on corruption in Romanian politics. Not surprisingly, not everyone is happy about that. OCCRP -- the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project -- a partner to RISE Project has the worrisome details about how the very Romanian government that RISE Project has been breaking corruption stories on has magically found the need to use the GDPR to demand the journalists turn over their sources.
Comment: Rules and regulations are rarely fair. The scale is always tipped to the powerful. It is only the public that is fooled into thinking 'protections' are for them.
The Trump administration announced sanctions this month covering banking, oil exports and shipping, aimed at forcing Tehran to stop what the US described as its "destabilising activities" in the Middle East.
Speaking after meeting the British foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, in Tehran on Monday, Javad Zarif said:
"We are used to pressure and we are used to resisting pressure. Sanctions always hurt and they hurt ordinary people, but sanctions seldom change policy, and that has been the problem with US sanctions all the time. They do not take people back to the negotiating table. In fact, they strengthen the resolve to resist.Speaking to the Guardian, Zarif said he was confident the Iranian oil industry would find markets, even though the US measures have pushed down exports sharply. "There are always markets for oil, it depends on the conditions and the price," he said. "I believe Iran will always sell oil."
"We will certainly survive. We will not only survive - we will thrive. We have tried to minimise the impact on the population but the ordinary people are going to suffer, the economy is going to suffer."
A person "familiar with the deliberations" told the Washington Post on Monday that, while no timetable for adding Venezuela to the list had been decided, discussions had "moved forward" in recent days, thanks to Rubio's insistence. The State Department has shopped the move around to various agencies for feedback, including the Department of Health and Human Services, and the US Agency for International Development.
The administration will have a difficult time finding proof to tie the Venezuelan government to terrorism, according to another anonymous source, this one a US official. Rubio and two other Republican senators implored Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a September letter to declare Venezuela a terrorism sponsor, accusing the country of links to both Hezbollah and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) but neglecting to furnish proof.
Comment: If Venezuela is a terrorist-sponsor state, it surely doesn't have any money to pay the buggers. See also:
- Senator Rubio makes inflammatory call for military coup in Venezuela to overthrow Maduro
- As regime change fails, could a military coup or invasion of Venezuela be next?
White House press secretary Sarah Sanders and deputy chief of staff for communications Bill Shine sent a letter to Acosta on Monday, notifying him that his hard pass was restored, but that it might be suspended or revoked again if he fails to abide by the new rules that apply to all White House correspondents going forward.
Under the rules laid out in the letter, each journalist gets "a single question" before having to yield the floor, with follow-ups solely at the discretion of White House officials. Failure to obey the rules may result in suspension or revocation of the "hard pass," the document allowing major networks regular access to the White House.
"Should you refuse to follow these rules in the future, we will take action in accordance with the rules," wrote Sanders and Shine.
Acosta's pass was yanked following an incident at President Donald Trump's November 7 press conference, where the CNN correspondent argued with Trump instead of asking questions (not for the first time) and physically prevented a White House intern from taking the microphone away from him.
Comment: Russia's pipe dreams are coming true.
One of France's largest banks has also pledged to pay $95 million to resolve another dispute over violations of anti-money laundering regulations.
"We acknowledge and regret the shortcomings that were identified in these settlements, and have cooperated with the US authorities to resolve these matters," the group CEO Frederic Oudea said in a statement.
"These resolutions, following on the heels of the resolution of other investigations earlier this year, allow the bank to close a chapter on our most important historical disputes."
Comment: The amazing thing is that these European companies are actually paying these 'fines'.
Of course, because of the sinking of the Iran Deal, we now know why: these companies have such huge market shares and joint investment deals in the US market that they prefer to accept the shakedown than tell Uncle Sam to take a hike.
Six individuals have been sanctioned over oil shipments to Syria, the US Treasury Department has said. Three institutions have also been sanctioned.
In addition to the fresh measures, the US Coast Guard has issued an advisory warning of "significant sanctions risks" on petroleum shipments to Syria. The US has promised that it will "disrupt" any attempted shipments to government-owned ports in Syria.
The Treasury Department claims that the individuals and companies affected by the measures are involved in a "complex and malign scheme" to bolster the regime of Syrian leader Bashar Assad. It claims that oil is being imported into Syria from Iran in defiance of American sanctions. The Syrian government then allegedly transfers cash to Islamic militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah, at Iran's direction.
















Comment: Finally a strategic advantage for the Palestinian resistance. Will Israel be as bold and brazen, or more so?