Puppet MastersS


Camera

Apocalyptic images reveal shocking scale of U.S.-led devastation in Syria: Al-Qaeda outpost of Homs retaken by Syrian government, historic city left in ruins

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© Getty ImagesAn aerial view of destruction in the al-Khalidiyah neighbourhood of the central Syrian city of Homs
Syrian troops drove insurgents from central Homs on Monday, tightening their siege on remaining rebel bastions in the strategically important city, which links Damascus to the Mediterranean heartland of President Bashar al-Assad's Alawite sect. The fighting has devastated the city, leaving buildings in ruins.

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FBI Taps hacker tactics to spy on suspects

Law-Enforcement officials expand use of tools such as spyware as people under investigation 'go dark,' evading wiretaps

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© Agence France-Presse/Getty ImagesA view of the J. Edgar Hoover Building, the headquarters for the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington, DC.
Law-enforcement officials in the U.S. are expanding the use of tools routinely used by computer hackers to gather information on suspects, bringing the criminal wiretap into the cyber age.

Federal agencies have largely kept quiet about these capabilities, but court documents and interviews with people involved in the programs provide new details about the hacking tools, including spyware delivered to computers and phones through email or Web links - techniques more commonly associated with attacks by criminals.

People familiar with the Federal Bureau of Investigation's programs say that the use of hacking tools under court orders has grown as agents seek to keep up with suspects who use new communications technology, including some types of online chat and encryption tools. The use of such communications, which can't be wiretapped like a phone, is called "going dark" among law enforcement.

USA

51st state of USA (UK) follows suit by ordering British subjects to leave Yemen

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Foreign Office say any Britons who stay in Yemen are unlikely to be able to be evacuated if unrest gets worse

British nationals have been warned to leave the Middle Eastern state of Yemen immediately, amid fears of escalating violence in the country.

The Foreign Office issued new advice warning against all travel to the country, and said that any Britons who stay in Yemen are unlikely to be able to be evacuated if unrest gets worse. The British embassy in the capital Sana'a will be closed on Sunday and Monday as a "precautionary measure".

The advice came as the US state department issued a global travel alert because of a threat of possible al-Qaida terrorist attacks during August, particularly in the Middle East. Twenty one American embassies in the region - including Yemen - will close on Sunday. There was no immediate indication of any link between the British and US actions.


Comment: Puh-leeze don't insult us with that horse hockey! The actions are blatantly the result of joint policy.


War Whore

U.S. general reveals plans for Air Force expansion in Asia

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American officials routinely deny that Obama's "pivot to Asia" is aimed at preparing for war against China. However, in comments this week reported on the Foreign Policy web site, General Herbert Carlisle, chief of US Air Force operations in the Pacific, outlined a far-reaching build-up of American war planes and personnel throughout Asia.

The four-star general told reporters in Washington on July 29 that the US Air Force would dispatch "fighters, tankers, and at some point in the future, maybe bombers on a rotational basis" to bases in northern Australia. He indicated that the "rotations" would begin next year to Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) Base Darwin before moving to RAAF Base Tindal, several hundred kilometres south.

The US Air Force has already flown training missions into RAAF Base Darwin, with a B-52 arriving from Guam last August. Longer stays are now being prepared, in line with the US Marine "rotational presence" in Darwin that will reach 1,150 next year. By 2016, a fully-equipped 2,500-strong Marine Air Ground Task Force will operate from Darwin on six-month rotations.

Bomb

Florida law enforcement agencies refuse to probe killing of Boston Marathon bombing witness

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Ibragim Todashev
Attempts made by the American Civil Liberties Union to obtain an independent probe into the killing of Ibragim Todashev have been rebuffed by representatives of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE). Todashev, the 27-year-old Chechen and associate of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was killed by Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents during an interrogation on May 22.

A letter sent Tuesday by FDLE Commissioner Gerald M. Bailey to the ACLU stated, "This is an active federal investigation; it would be inappropriate for [the state] to intervene" in the probe currently being carried out by the FBI into the circumstances surrounding the killing. Referring any subsequent questions to the FBI, the FDLE commissioner refused to make any additional comments.

The stonewalling prompted the ACLU of Florida's Executive Director Howard Simon to comment, "Secrecy fosters suspicion and the people of Florida deserve better than to be left without an explanation from their government about what led to a person being shot to death."

Eye 1

Anglo-American Establishment: NSA pays £100m in secret funding for GCHQ

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© Kieran Doherty/ReutersThe NSA paid £15.5m towards redevelopments at GCHQ’s site in Bude, north Cornwall, which intercepts communications from the transatlantic cables that carry internet traffic.
-  Secret payments revealed in leaks by Edward Snowden
-  GCHQ expected to 'pull its weight' for Americans
-  Weaker regulation of British spies 'a selling point' for NSA

The US government has paid at least £100m to the UK spy agency GCHQ over the last three years to secure access to and influence over Britain's intelligence gathering programmes.

The top secret payments are set out in documents which make clear that the Americans expect a return on the investment, and that GCHQ has to work hard to meet their demands. "GCHQ must pull its weight and be seen to pull its weight," a GCHQ strategy briefing said.

The funding underlines the closeness of the relationship between GCHQ and its US equivalent, the National Security Agency. But it will raise fears about the hold Washington has over the UK's biggest and most important intelligence agency, and whether Britain's dependency on the NSA has become too great.

In one revealing document from 2010, GCHQ acknowledged that the US had "raised a number of issues with regards to meeting NSA's minimum expectations". It said GCHQ "still remains short of the full NSA ask".

Vader

U.S. government issues worldwide travel alert, closes embassies in 21 countries, cites nebulous 'global terror threat'

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The State Department issued a worldwide travel alert Friday as it suspended operations in 21 Muslim countries in response to "current information" that suggests al Qaida and affiliated militant groups could strike within the next month, according to an official announcement.

Apart from mentioning that an attack could occur in or emanate from the Arabian Peninsula, which is home to one of the most active al Qaida branches, the U.S. government gave no details as to the nature of this particular threat, or specifics on when or where such an attack might take place.

"They may focus efforts to conduct attacks in the period between now and the end of August," the State Department's travel alert said.

One date in particular - this Sunday, Aug. 4 - was mentioned in the State Department warning. All embassies that would've been open that day were ordered to close Sunday and perhaps longer. The edict affects embassies in Muslim countries, where Sunday is a workday, and coincides with a special night in the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

However, analysts who study militant groups said, there's too little public information to draw conclusions as to the reasons for such a widespread shutdown of diplomatic operations. Such precautionary measures have become increasingly common in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans at U.S. posts in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi.

Bomb

Free Syrian Army massacres 40, injures 120 in Homs with another series of unusually large bombs for a protest movement that Western intel agencies 'might arm'

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© AFP/YouTubeA screengrab from a Youtube video believed to show a massive fireball rising over a weapon's depot in Syrian city of Homs. Are the 'rebels' using mini-nukes supplied by USrael?
Rocket attacks have struck government-held districts in the central Syrian city of Homs, setting off successive explosions in a weapons depot that killed at least 40 people and wounded dozens, an opposition group and residents said.

The blasts sent a massive ball of fire into the sky, causing widespread damage and panic among residents, many of whom are supporters of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

One resident said the explosions were so strong they cracked the walls of some buildings. Thick smoke and dust could be seen from a distance as explosions shook the ground.

A video posted online by activists showed a huge ball of fire over Homs neighbourhoods.

The explosions in Homs reflected the see-saw nature of the conflict. It showed that despite significant advances by Assad's military, rebels could still strike back.

Comment: Remember, officially, the FSA/rebels/al Qaeda-in-Syria/Syrian protest movement has not yet received any weapons from the West nor its client regimes in the Middle East... so where are we supposed to think they're conjuring anti-aircraft, anti-tank, mini-nuke type explosives, shells, machine guns, millions of rounds of ammunition, satellite comms, etc, etc, etc... do they have a genie in a lamp which they rub to get three wishes?




Cult

Elite pedophile network: Moroccans to protest against royal pardon for Spanish child rapist

Royals!
© AP/ReutersKing's deal: The convicted paedophile is among 48 jailed Spaniards who were pardoned by King Mohamed VI, right, on Tuesday at the request of Spain's King Juan Carlos, left, who visited Morocco last month.
Moroccans outraged by a royal pardon for a Spanish paedophile serving a 30-year sentence for raping 11 children in the North African kingdom are planning a protest in Rabat on Friday.

The convicted paedophile is among 48 jailed Spaniards who the state news agency MAP said were pardoned by King Mohamed VI on Tuesday at the request of Spain's King Juan Carlos, who visited Morocco last month.

The decision prompted a frenzy of angry postings on social media in Morocco. Activists from the February 20 movement, which organised anti-government demonstrations during the Arab unrest of 2011, called for Friday's rally in the Moroccan capital.

"The king's pardon is a second rape for the victims," a woman identifying herself as Meryem El said on Twitter.

Arrow Down

'Nazi style': Japan constitution revision proposal sparks outrage

Minister Taro Aso
© AFP Photo/Toru YamanakaJapanese Finance and Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso.
Japan's Deputy PM has called on local politicians revising the constitution to learn from Nazi Germany when it amended the Weimar charter. Although he later retracted his words neighbors Beijing and Seoul said such militaristic remarks "hurt many people".

"Germany's Weimar Constitution was changed before anyone knew. It was changed before anyone else noticed. Why don't we learn the technique," Japanese media quoted Taro Aso as saying during a far-reaching event in Tokyo.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's ruling Liberal Democratic Party, to which Aso also belongs, has been keen to revise the US-imposed pacifist constitution, including war-renouncing Article 9, so Japan can use the right of collective self-defense as stipulated by the UN Charter.

The LDP also wants to define Japan's defense forces as a full-fledged military force amid territorial tensions with China and South Korea.

South Korea, which had suffered under Japan's past militarism, has slammed the Japanese minister's speech.

"Such remarks definitely hurt many people," the Yonhap news agency quoted South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young as saying. "It is clear what such comments on the [Nazi] regime mean to people of the time and to those who suffered from Japan's imperialistic invasion."