Showing posts with label QUESTIONS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label QUESTIONS. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

We’re still not asking the right questions about HS2

At The Daily News Source, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by The Daily News Source and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, The Daily News Source makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


The Daily News Source does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


DoubleClick DART Cookie


  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on The Daily News Source.

  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to The Daily News Source and other sites on the Internet.

  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on The Daily News Source send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


The Daily News Source has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.


You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. The Daily News Source"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.



We’re still not asking the right questions about HS2

Saturday, March 8, 2014

The Slow Mo Guys Answering YOUR Questions - FAQ

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, Not Just The News makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Not Just The News does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


DoubleClick DART Cookie


  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Not Just The News.

  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to Not Just The News and other sites on the Internet.

  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Not Just The News send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


Not Just The News has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.


You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Not Just The News"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.



The Slow Mo Guys Answering YOUR Questions - FAQ

Monday, March 3, 2014

Jacob Appelbaum Questions FBI on National Security Letters.avi

Jacob Appelbaum Questions FBI on National Security Letters.avi
http://img.youtube.com/vi/dTuxoLDnmJU/0.jpg


In this Q&A with an FBI Deputy General Counsel, Jacob Appelbaum questions how individuals could possibly know when they are being targeted by a law enforceme…




Read more about Jacob Appelbaum Questions FBI on National Security Letters.avi and other interesting subjects concerning Commentary at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Holder Health Scare Highlights Questions About Obama



President Obama has not undergone a complete medical examination since well before his re-election, apparently not since October 2011, according to public records.


The importance of medical assessments for any president, vice president and cabinet members came into sharper relief Thursday as 63-year-old Attorney General Eric Holder was taken to a Washington, D.C., hospital after complaining to Justice Department staff of shortness of breath.


At the start of 2013, the president underwent a fitness test that lasted about two hours at a Pentagon health clinic, but results of that assessment were unclear. The White House at the time said a report would be made public in February 2013. A search of available public records and requests to the White House Press Office have not clarified those results.


The White House did not provide information, despite repeated RCP requests this month, about the results of Obama’s exam at the “Fit to Win Clinic,” or his expectations to complete another in a series of customary medical evaluations all Oval Office occupants require.


Dr. Jeffrey Kuhlman, the former White House physician, departed in July to work for a Florida hospital after directing the medical unit that serves the president. Dr. Kuhlman did not respond to a request for information last year. Navy physician Capt. Ronny Jackson took over as director of the White House Medical Office following Kuhlman’s departure.


Obama in December enrolled for coverage in the Washington, D.C., health insurance exchange under the Affordable Care Act, but customarily receives his medical care from military physicians at the White House and at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.


According to public records, the president, 52, completed a medical exam at Walter Reed on Oct. 31, 2011, and a similar evaluation at Walter Reed Feb. 28, 2010. His Pentagon fitness test took place Jan. 12, 2013, and results were to be available by February 2013, White House officials told reporters at the time.


Obama, a workout and basketball enthusiast and reformed smoker, often jokes about his graying hair and encroaching middle age, but boasts of his good health and the excellent medical care as commander-in-chief.


During a Google+ question-and-answer session Jan. 31, when asked how he was faring personally, Obama said he and his family remain “healthy” and happy.




Alexis Simendinger covers the White House for RealClearPolitics. She can be reached at asimendinger@realclearpolitics.com. Follow her on Twitter @ASimendinger.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Holder Health Scare Highlights Questions About Obama

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

2014 Winter Olympics, Sochi: Islam and Questions Unanswered



The Olympic rings at Bolshoy arena, Sochi, Russia, February 14, 2014 (Atos International/Flickr)

The Olympic rings at Bolshoy arena, Sochi, Russia, February 14, 2014 (Atos International/Flickr)



The Sochi Olympics proved to be a big success—exactly what Russia wanted. Right from the opening ceremony itself, the entire event was a megalith in terms of popularity and success. If one wanted to catch a glimpse of Russia’s glorious past as well as its vibrant art, this year’s Winter Olympics were the thing to watch!


But the Olympics at Sochi were not without their share of controversy. Take, for example, the case of the Pussy Riot protest performance.


So success on one hand and chaos on the other. A mixed bag, probably?


However, Russia’s mixed bag had one key element missing: the plight of the Muslims of Sochi.


 

A Bit of Perspective


Once the city was awarded the Winter Olympics, Sochi underwent a massive reconstruction. Roads, bridges, train stations, schools, hospitals, luxury hotels, Olympics’ villages, post offices, and a floating archipelago—yeah, Sochi got all that within the short span of the past six years.


But one particular construction was denied. Sochi’s more than 20,000 Muslims, most of whom had migrated to the city to help with the construction process, just wanted to construct a small mosque.


Nope. Disallowed.


The issue regarding the construction of a mosque in Sochi is older than the city’s Olympics, by the way. The first request to allow the construction of a mosque in the city was put forth in 1996—denied. Year after year, on and on. Same story—the answer is not affirmative.


The city’s leaders, such as the Deputy Mayor Anatoli Rykov, claim that Sochi’s Muslims do not really need a mosque anyway, because the mountain village of Tkhagapsh (roughly two and a half hours by road from downtown Sochi; no rail connectivity) has a single-room mosque.


In reality, Sochi’s bias against Muslims has a historical touch to it. The entire region was ethnically cleansed of Circassian Muslims by the Czarist regime in the 19th century.


Islamophobia in Russia


Yet, the athletes who went to Sochi did not have a hard time praying. The organizers had ensured the presence of separate prayer rooms for various religions. But for the city’s Muslim residents, unfortunately, the story remained the same. Furthermore, the fact that Muslim athletes had prayer rooms at their service was not a sign of religious tolerance. It was, in reality, a shy effort to quell the voices against Islamophobia.


In fact, these Winter Games brought to the fore an ugly face of rampant Islamophobia in Russia. Whilst issues such as rights of the Russian LGBTQ community managed to receive the limelight, the Russian Muslims were ignored by both the local and international media.


Russia’s homophobia was severely criticized—almost every Western country decided to take a stand against it. But Russia’s Islamophobia went unquestioned. Sochi is not the only city in question; Moscow, for example, has over two million Muslims, but just four mosques (and this number does not seem likely to change anytime soon, according to the Mayor of Moscow).


Appraisal


The billion-dollar Olympic structures, being termed as symbols of a new Russian nation, also signify Russia’s deeply entrenched phobias.


Truth is, Sochi’s mosque-less skyline is just the tip of the iceberg. In Russia, Muslim identity in itself is a matter of suspicion. Also, Russia is not just about Islamophobia. The definitions of Russian nationalism are way too narrow for most folks to fit in. As such, xenophobia and subtle racial hatred are not alien concepts in the country. Winters are cold, after all.


On the brighter side, Sochi has shown that Russia can pull off world-class events and conduct them with success. Russia’s infrastructural investment is paying off well, and the country, against all odds, is doing better than most of its European buddies. Yet, Russia’s growth will be meaningless if xenophobia continues to dominate Russian society. Resorting to racial stereotypes and hatred is not a policy that a state should adhere to.


At the end of it all, if Russia wants its growth to be truly appreciated, it will need to shun its narrow-minded ways, because as of now, all the infrastructural advancement looks futile. Sadly, Sochi will be remembered not just for its world-class stadiums, but also for its pillars of hatred.




Foreign Policy Journal



2014 Winter Olympics, Sochi: Islam and Questions Unanswered

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Questions for Statists

At A Political Statement, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by A Political Statement and how it is used.

Log Files

Like many other Web sites, A Political Statement makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.

Cookies and Web Beacons

A Political Statement does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.

DoubleClick DART Cookie

  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on A Political Statement.
  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to A Political Statement and other sites on the Internet.
  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on A Political Statement send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.

A Political Statement has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.

You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. A Political Statement"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.

If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.


Questions for Statists

Friday, January 31, 2014

Obama answers citizens" questions in Google "hangout road trip"

Obama answers citizens" questions in Google "hangout road trip"
http://feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663871/s/369655de/sc/1/mf.gif

Hangout dubbed ‘first-ever presidential hangout road trip’ by White House as president took friendly questions from nine Americans












Technology news, comment and analysis | theguardian.com


Read more about Obama answers citizens" questions in Google "hangout road trip" and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, December 6, 2013

Sean Hannity, Brent Bozell Flunk Chris Matthews for Failing to Ask the President Tough Obamacare Questions


On Thursday night’s Media Mash on Fox News Channel, Sean Hannity and MRC president Brent Bozell were quick off the mark, denouncing Chris Matthews for failing to press Barack Obama about the broken promises and lies of Obamacare.


Both men lined up questions they would have asked. “Let’s say little old Sean Hannity gets to interview the president. What, at this moment, you have an audience of kids, what are the main questions that you think, that you would ask the president?” (Video, transcript below)


HANNITY:  I’ll give you my list off the top. What do you say to those people you promised if they liked their plan, they keep their plan, but lost their plan? What do you say to those people who liked their doctor, lost their doctor, when you said they can keep their doctor? What do you say to those people, those families that you promised would save on average $ 2500 per family per year? What do you say to the country about you said it would be $ 900 billion and now it’s $ 2.7-or-8 trillion. Did you know that people wouldn’t be able to keep their plan, but say it anyway? Were those questions asked, Brent Bozell? No. What other questions?


BOZELL: No, no, another one. How about just asking the question, Mr. President, just yesterday you spoke to a national audience and you lied. You said the republicans have no [health] plans. The Republicans have been putting out one plan after another since 2009. It was just sheerly dishonest. No, Chris Matthews is not going to ask him any serious questions. What is going on here is the president is now in full community organizer mode. You are seeing it with the chest thumping rhetoric, you’re seeing it with the ugly accusations, you’re seeing it with the lying. And he’s looking for the most comfortable venue that will be most sympathetic to him, and that’s why he’s on MSNBC with Chris Matthews.


HANNITY: Frankly, Noah Rothman over at Mediaite had a good line. I think it’s a desperate move by the president to do this, and frankly, fairly pathetic, because I don’t think he can answer [tough Obamacare] questions in a way that would be credible to the American people.


Scott Whitlock reported that on a show still mysteriously called “Hardball,” sympathetic Matthews could only ask Obama about how he would like to encourage the twentysomethings to sign up:


MATTHEWS: You have a great audience here of– college age– people and some graduate students and faculty. There’s some resistance out there among young people– We’ve seen it in the polls– to, to enrolling in the– in the exchanges and to get involved in taking responsibility for their health care. What’s your argument why they should do that?


After listing their questions, Hannity turned to a funny clip of Matthews trying to say Obamacare is a great theme, but the president had bad spelling and handwriting on it:


MATTHEWS: I think I would compare it [the ObamaCare fiasco], Andrea, to a brilliant writer, perhaps, with a great theme who turns in a paper with a lot of misspellings, or bad handwriting. It’s a bad way to roll out something. With all the great strengths, potentially, of a national health care system along these lines, the way it was rolled out has hurt it. It hurt its reputation. It’s given the other side a lot of talking points to use against the President generally in terms of his competence.


Hannity called that “hero worship.” Bozell just tried to keep from laughing through an answer:


BOZELL: When they’re down to this, it’s time to punt the ball and go to something else! When you’re going to [laughs] — when you’re going to say the reason Obamacare isn’t working, bad handwriting! [Laughs] . I mean, you’ve to say, you’ve run out of excuses here! It’s time to move on to another subject. This isn’t selling, but again, in community organizer mode, you go to your  base and try to mobilize your base. The minority base. That’s what he’s down to. It is panic mode for this administration.




NewsBusters – Exposing Liberal Media Bias



Sean Hannity, Brent Bozell Flunk Chris Matthews for Failing to Ask the President Tough Obamacare Questions

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Ben Dimiero: Some Questions For S.E. Cupp To Ask Glenn Beck On CNN


Tomorrow night, CNN will feature the odd spectacle of its employee S.E. Cupp interviewing Glenn Beck, her boss at The Blaze, where she also serves as a contributor. 


According to an article on The Blaze promoting the interview, “It is likely the two will discuss Beck’s latest book, ‘Miracles and Massacres: True and Untold Stories of the Making of America,’ the creation of TheBlaze and current events.”


Considering Cupp’s relationship with Beck, it’s unlikely he’s due for a primetime grilling on CNN. In the event she wants the interview to be more than an exercise in self-promotion, Media Matters came up with a handful of questions for Cupp to ask Beck:


  • So my bosses here at CNN are allowing me to interview you about your media company, which I also work for and which is actively competing with CNN. How is this interview even happening?

  • You bristle at being labeled a “conspiracy theorist” and have tried to distance yourself from people like Alex Jones while positioning The Blaze as a serious news outlet devoted to finding truth. Yet this year you have claimed there’s a “very good chance” a May shooting at a Houston airport could have been a “setup” like “the burning of the Reichstag.” You also spun a convoluted theory about how the government was covering up Saudi Arabia’s supposed involvement in the Boston Marathon bombings. Do you see any conflict between positioning The Blaze as a serious news venture and your tendency to run with stories that would get a reporter laughed out of a traditional news outlet like, say, CNN? 

  • In recent years you’ve mostly moved away from the radio shock jock shtick that first made you famous towards your current incarnation as a self-fashioned media mogul/self-help guru/world-important historical figure. Do you regret any of the things you did during your time as a relatively obscure radio host — like the time you reportedly called the wife of a rival to ridicule her on-air for her recent miscarriage?

  • Since you’ve softened your position on gay marriage, why do you still surround yourself with and promote a variety of vociferous anti-gay bigots like Pastor Ken Hutcherson — who hosts a Blaze show — and Pastor David Barton, a man you recently petitioned to run for Senate?

  • Do you worry that your own history of sexist comments — often towards progressive women — undercuts your ability to express outrage when conservative women are unfairly targeted? Like the time you called Hillary Clinton a “stereotypical bitch” on your radio show, which you later clarified, saying “probably a better word was nag.” Or when you mock-vomited into a trash can after discussing Meghan McCain’s involvement in a skin cancer PSA in which she bared her shoulders?

  • Do you worry that your constant warnings of impending catastrophic global disaster — “Hindenburg omens,” “perfect storms,” “Archduke Ferdinand moments,” and the End Times, to name a few – could cause you to lose credibility with your followers when your predictions don’t pan out? Do you ever worry about over-promising your audience about the historical importance of your yearly events, which you have labeled ”planet course-altering” historical turning points that could represent fulfillments of biblical prophecy? 

  • What’s the status of “Independence, USA,” the self-sufficient libertarian city/theme park hybrid you unveiled in January? 


Media Matters for America – County Fair



Ben Dimiero: Some Questions For S.E. Cupp To Ask Glenn Beck On CNN

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

U.S. court questions Google defense against Oracle over Android

U.S. court questions Google defense against Oracle over Android
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/f18e3__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



Google’s Android 4.3 operating system, is announced to be installed in the new Nexus 7 tablet, during a Google event at Dogpatch Studio in San Francisco, California, July 24, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Beck Diefenbach




Reuters: Business News




Read more about U.S. court questions Google defense against Oracle over Android and other interesting subjects concerning Business at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Jeb Bush questions Obama on Vatican

Jeb Bush is shown. | M.Scott Mahaskey/POLITICO

Bush is the latest to join in criticism of the move. | M.Scott Mahaskey/POLITICO





Jeb Bush slammed President Barack Obama for “closing” the U.S. Embassy in the Vatican, suggesting it’s an attack against Catholics who don’t support Obamacare.


Taking to Twitter on Wednesday, the former governor of Florida tweeted:



Why would our President close our Embassy to the Vatican? Hopefully, it is not retribution for Catholic organizations opposing Obamacare.— Jeb Bush (@JebBush) November 27, 2013


Bush, widely seen as a top GOP contender for 2016, is the latest to join in criticism of what has been described, in some reports, as a closure of the mission.


However, State Department officials told reporters Monday that the embassy to the Vatican is not closing. Instead, they are moving the mission to a building within the larger U.S. compound in Rome, which also includes two separate buildings that house U.S. Embassy to Italy and the U.S. Mission to the U.N. offices in Rome.


The State Department attributed the move to increased security and cost savings, of up to $ 1.4 million a year in lease and operating costs.


Nevertheless, the National Republican Senatorial Committee created a petition this week that say “President Obama plans to close the U.S. Embassy to the Vatican.”


The NRSC’s spokesperson, like Bush, slammed administration for hostile actions.


“This certainly isn’t the first time that the Obama Administration has been perceived as taking actions hostile toward religion and religious freedom,” Brad Dayspring told CNN Wednesday.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Jeb Bush questions Obama on Vatican

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Pot Taxes, GMO Labels, And Other Ballot Questions Voters Are Deciding Today

Last year, people in 38 states weighed in on 174 ballot measures questions. Today, just six states are putting such questions in front of voters, and the 31 items up for decision are a motley bunch, ranging from the bizarre (storage and taxation of airplane parts, anyone?) to more hot-button topics. Here are some of these state-level issues that may end up having larger national implications.


Put a GMO label on it (Washington)
Both sides have already poured nearly $ 30 million into Washington’s fight over whether to label foods containing genetically modified organisms. While twenty-five other states have considered similar legislation, the vote could make Washington the first to pass a such a requirement. Poll watchers aren’t certain which way this one will go: a KING 5 News survey released two weeks ago showed 45 percent of respondents in favor of GMO labeling and 38 percent opposed, with a full 16 percent pleading uncertainty.
 


Tax tokers (Colorado)
After Colorado’s approval one year ago of a measure to legalize recreational marijuana use, the state now wants pot users to cover the costs of overseeing the new industry. Proposition AA would add a 15 percent excise tax and a 10 percent sales tax to marijuana sales, meant to pay for retail regulation of the drug as well as some school construction. The measure seems likely to pass, having drawn 77 percent support in an April poll. That hasn’t stopped proponents of low-tax weed from throwing free joint parties in protest.
 


Supercharge schooling (Colorado)
This ballot measure would raise taxes by nearly a billion dollars to overhaul education, by increasing teacher pay, charter school funding, and money for early childhood development and English-language programs. The measure has the support of Gov. John Hickenlooper and many prominent state Democrats; opponents include the current Republican state treasurer and the subtly named Coloradans Against Unions Using Kids As Pawns. The initiative’s passage hinges on whether voters can stomach the tax increase in a still-rough economy: 44 percent of voters opposed the measure in a September poll; even more people (52 percent) said they would oppose after hearing how much individual tax rates would increase.
 


Raise the minimum wage (New Jersey)
After a veto from Gov. Chris Christie, New Jerseyans will decide whether or not to raise the minimum wage from $ 7.25 to $ 8.25, and set up a system of annual automatic cost-of-living increases. Despite Christie’s popularity, 76 percent of state residents—including many registered Republicans—favor the increase, according to a Rutgers University poll from September. California and Minnesota recently passed minimum wage increases of their own, while South Dakota voters will decide one next year.
 


Screw Atlantic City (New York)
Gambling conglomerates and New York state Democratic leaders, including Gov. Andrew Cuomo, are hoping voters will amend the constitution to allow seven Vegas-style casinos, with four upstate and three in the Big Apple. The initiative comes a year after Maryland’s passage of a measure to expand gambling, which drew a record $ 90 million in campaign spending. New York’s fight won’t be nearly as expensive—the main committee in favor has raised just north of $ 2 million, while those opposed have raised almost nothing. (What opponents lack in funds they make up for in sledgehammer stunts.) Still, it’s a rare issue that has managed to unite the editorial boards of both the New York Times and the New York Post—both are opposed.



Politics | Mother Jones



Pot Taxes, GMO Labels, And Other Ballot Questions Voters Are Deciding Today

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Former NYPD sergeant questions sister"s killing by police in Washington


Thursday, September 26, 2013

‘Too many questions’ in UN chemical weapons report to blame Damascus



Published time: September 26, 2013 10:17

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon prepares to speak to the media about the conclusion of the U.N. inspectors


While many in the West asserted that the UN report on August sarin attack in Syria all but proves the Syrian government was behind it, a closer look on it shows inconsistencies which clash with that narrative, says political expert Sharmine Narwani.


“I am certainly not saying that the UN team was trying to cover anything up. But I think some of this was staged and manipulated for impact,” she told RT.


Narwani, who is a senior associate at Oxford University, detailed her doubts about the UN report and the conclusions drawn from it in a piece she co-authored for the English-language branch of Al Akhbar, a Beirut-based newspaper.


The piece points to some facts mentioned in the report, which those accusing Damascus of the incident don’t take into account, but which also may cast doubt on that scenario. For instance The UN inspectors had to conduct their probe in tight time constraints, spending just two hours at one location and five-and-a-half hours at the other.


An image grab taken from a video uploaded on YouTube on August 26, 2013 allegedly shows a UN inspectors (C) visiting a hospital in the Damascus suburb of Moadamiyet al-Sham. (AFP Photo)


Both locations are controlled by rebel forces and were not cordoned off until the UN team arrived. On the contrary, the report mentions on several occasion that potential evidence they were presented was “being moved and possibly manipulated.” A similar problem arises with witnesses interviewed and victims sampled by the UN, who had been pre-screened by the rebels.


“It was a questionable exercise from the start. If you cannot have proper access, random sampling and the time you need in which to conduct a thorough investigation, what was the point?” Narwani wondered in a comment for RT.


The particular evidence the UN team reports are open for interpretation, the Al Akhbar piece said. One is inconsistency between human and environmental samples gathered at Moadamiyah, the area in West Ghouta which the inspectors visited on August 26 before moving to a second location. Alleged victims of the attack there tested highest for sarin exposure in the entire sampling, but environmental samples showed no traces of sarin.


Some of the samples in the area contained sarin degradation products, but at the same time many samples gathered from the other area, which were taken days later tested positive for sarin. A scenario, in which the victims were exposed to sarin somewhere else and brought to Moadamiyah for UN inspectors to investigate, is one possible explanation.


The authors also cite American chemical weapons expert Dan Kaszeta, who pointed out that the 36 survivors tested by the UN mission are too small a sample from statistical point of view to represent the entire population of affected victims. He also wonders why the number of victims showing symptoms of more serious sarin exposure was so large compared to those showing milder symptoms.


Finally there are questions to the munitions examination conducted by the UN, which many reports said proved beyond doubt that the sarin attack originated from a base of the government troops. Of the five munitions mentioned in the report as possible sources of sarin, only two provide a trajectory date.


Image from Secretary General Report of CW Investigation


One was successfully identified and could have been fired from the base in question, but it didn’t test positive for sarin. The other one is a ‘mystery missile’ with sarin traces, the range of which remains in question. Given its larger caliber, it could have been fired from a rebel-controlled area located further from the impact site that the government base, the authors argue.


“There are just too many questions. And unfortunately people have leaped ahead with stark answers,” Narwani told RT. “It’s not the case. Nobody is able to make a conclusive determination of any kind based on the evidence that the UN team provided.”


The UN report gave the grounds for US and some other Western nations to reiterate their demands for Syrian President Bashar Assad to be ousted and possibly tried for war crimes. Narwani agrees that the perpetrators of the chemical attacks must be brought to justice, but suggests not jumping to conclusions over an issue of such importance.


“We need to identify culpability here and we cannot do it on the basis of the current report of the United Nations. And it’s very dangerous to extrapolate from a report with these many holes,” she said.


“What’s important here is that the UN as the result of all these holes in its original report needs to then address these and ensure for itself that it has the proper access and time to investigate other areas of alleged chemical weapons attacks,” she added, referring to the return of the UN inspectors to Syria this week.


Narwani called on Russia to make public the evidence that it presented to other UN Security Council members and which, Moscow says, proves that rebels have possession of chemical weapons.


She also said that parties involved in the Syrian crisis in any way should pursue less their own goals and focus on the important part, which is stopping the bloodshed.


“We’ve been stalemated for a very long time in this conflict,” she said. “I think an end is possible, but the rhetoric needs to stop, things need to start being evidence-based and the headlines need to show a little bit more responsibility.”




RT – Op-Edge



‘Too many questions’ in UN chemical weapons report to blame Damascus

Friday, August 30, 2013

On Syria, Some Questions


WASHINGTON — There’s a lot of chest-thumping certainty over President Obama and Syria, on both sides: He must attack. He shouldn’t. It would dangerously undermine U.S. credibility for the administration to remain passive. It risks sucking the country into another costly, unwinnable conflict.


These confident assertions make no sense. Yogi Berra was right about predicting the future — and he was not dealing with a situation as devilishly complex as Syria and its alleged use of chemical weapons. Which leaves me with more questions than satisfying answers:


What’s the goal, what isn’t the goal, and why?


Obama told the “PBS NewsHour” Wednesday that he hadn’t made a decision, but the intent of any action would be to “send a shot across the bow” to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad “saying, ‘Stop doing this.’”


Of course, one way to stop Assad from using chemical weapons on his own people would be to get rid of him. But administration officials have simultaneously made clear that regime change, although the ultimate aim, is not the goal of responding to the latest attack.


Quite the contrary. It may not be in the U.S.’ interest to have the Syrian state, bloodstained as it is, simply melt away. It must eventually be replaced but, as Obama intimated in the PBS interview, post-Assad anarchy could be even worse than the intolerable status quo:


“In a country that has the largest stockpile of chemical weapons in the world, where over time, their control over chemical weapons may erode, where they’re allied to known terrorist organizations that, in the past, have targeted the United States, then there is a prospect, a possibility, in which chemical weapons that can have devastating effects could be directed at us.”


This argument has been embedded in the president’s rhetoric from the start of the violence in Syria. “We cannot have a situation where chemical or biological weapons are falling into the hands of the wrong people,” he said a year ago.


Yet its prominence is intriguing in the context of chemical weapons allegedly being employed by Assad himself, not because they fell into the wrong hands. When Secretary of State John Kerry denounced the weapons attack Monday, he spoke in humanitarian terms about the “moral obscenity” of using chemical weapons.


Obama’s different focus simultaneously addresses the issue of why intervention may be in the U.S.’ interest and why this attack, which killed hundreds, merits a response when Assad has been responsible for killing tens of thousands through other means. And it could serve to allay the U.S. public’s reluctance to embark on another overseas adventure, stressing self-interest over purely humanitarian concerns.


How should the question of maintaining U.S. credibility be factored into the decision about what action to take? In other words, if the president hadn’t repeatedly said that the use of chemical weapons was a “red line” and “game changer,” would the calculus of response be different?


Obama used those terms in a calculated effort to deter Syria from doing what it has now apparently done twice.


The implications of an absent or, more likely, limp response to the second, far bloodier attack extend beyond Syria. Why, for example, should Iran take U.S. warnings about nuclear weapons seriously if Obama’s threats prove so empty?


At the same time, maintaining credibility seems like a dangerously flimsy basis for military action. Perhaps a finger on the scale, but not a sufficient justification in itself.


What’s the reason to believe that the contemplated action would achieve the goal of deterring future use? What happens if it doesn’t?


Obama told PBS that if the U.S. chooses to impose “repercussions,” the Assad regime “will have received a pretty strong signal that, in fact, it better not do it again.”


This depends on the strength of the signal, and the administration has miscalculated before. It thought stern warnings about red lines would suffice and were worth the risk of drawing them publicly.


Now, assuming Assad is behind the attack, he knows the consequences of behaving badly do not include regime change. Perhaps he’ll calculate that the less onerous costs are sustainable. If we don’t understand why Assad chose to unleash such a destructive attack — and with weapons inspectors already in the country — how can we know that a shot across the bow will work?


So the crucial question becomes: What happens if it doesn’t? The path to escalation and quagmire is disturbingly well-marked. Before taking a step down it, I’d like to hear a convincing answer. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



On Syria, Some Questions

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Dangling Questions on Syrian War


Official Washington’s neocons are in full-throated war cry over Syria, creating what many of them surely hope is a momentum toward a U.S. intervention that cooler heads won’t be able to stop. But many questions regarding this latest rush to war remain unanswered, writes ex-CIA analyst Paul R. Pillar.


By Paul R. Pillar


With a U.S. military attack on Syria now being discussed in the media as a question of “when” rather than “if,” let us devote more honest thought to the “why.” I am not referring to any official rationale but instead to the actual political and emotional dynamics in the United States that have gotten us to this point.


Even if, as it appears, this train has left the station and has gotten beyond the point of being able to apply well-reasoned assessment of likely consequences to well-founded objectives, maybe by being above-board now about what is propelling the train we will be better able to make sense of what happened once we survey whatever mess is left by our actions and people have moved on to the stage of recriminations, second-guessing, and lessons learned.



United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon urges all sides to give UN inspectors time to complete their investigation into alleged chemical weapons attacks in Syria. (UN photo)



A major part of what is happening is that the heartstrings of non-Syrians, including Americans, are being tugged by the suffering of Syrians caught in Syria’s civil war. When what appears to be an especially grisly episode occurs in this war, the heartstrings are yanked even harder.


And so there is a constituency and domestic political market for “doing something” about what’s going on in Syria. But the satisfaction of that constituency’s yearnings is unaccompanied, at least so far, by an explanation and analysis of how something like an attack by U.S.. air power would alleviate the Syrians’ woes — bearing in mind that any such analysis would have to take full account of responses by both the Syrian regime and the opposition, responses of outsiders, and effects on the overall tempo and trajectory of the civil war.


We should admit to ourselves that the objective is more about lessening the tension on those heartstrings and inducing a warm feeling in the tummies in the same torsos, than it is about actually improving the condition of suffering Syrians. That objective is not nearly as noble as its surface manifestation makes it appear.


Supposedly the one event that most got us to where we are today regarding policy on Syria was a reported use by the Syrian regime of chemical weapons. But the basic question of why this particular battlefield development and choice of a weapon should drive U.S. policy toward somebody else’s civil war — even to the point of forcefully intervening in that war — remains unanswered, just as it was unanswered the first time the regime reportedly used such a weapon and President Barack Obama declared that any such use by Assad’s regime would be a “game changer.”


Why should this one reported incident be given so much more status than the non-chemical warfare, by both sides in the civil war, that has killed a hundred times more people?


What we are seeing here is partly an effect of a popular fascination with all types of unconventional weapons, because they are more intriguing than plain old bombs and bullets and they provide better material for spell-binding scare stories. It is this fascination that underlies the persistent tendency to refer to chemical agents as “weapons of mass destruction” on a par with nuclear or biological weapons, even though they aren’t that.


There is a more serious concern about chemical weapons that is expressed by what is generally known as the arms control community. That community is not usually known for belligerence, but in this case at least parts of it believe forceful action in Syria is appropriate for the purpose of deterring future use of chemical weapons.


That concern leads to many other important unanswered questions. In particular: even if protecting a norm of non-use of CW is a worthwhile goal, since when did that goal become such an overriding priority, among all the other much greater U.S. interests at stake especially in the Middle East, that it would be given determinative weight to the point of impelling intervention in somebody else’s civil war?


The norm about non-use of CW that the arms control aficionados want to protect has not been as sturdy as some would suggest. There has been repeated use of chemical weapons since the World War I experience that led to international conventions on the subject — by Egypt in Yemen, probably by the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, and most notably by Iraq inside Iraq.


That last instance was noteworthy partly because the United States turned a blind eye toward this use of CW at a time when it was tilting toward Iraq and against Iran in the Iran-Iraq War. Especially given that well-known precedent, an attack on Syria will be seen less as a deterrence-upholding blow in favor of a non-use norm than as a use of the CW issue as an excuse to bash a regime the United States doesn’t happen to like.


It is hard to see how Bashar al-Assad himself will be deterred against use of any particular weapon in his arsenal when he is fighting for his regime’s – and probably his own – life. It is even harder to see that happening if the reported use of CW that triggered the latest surge of threats was an unauthorized action taken below the top level of the regime, as may have been the case.


And what will happen, and how will deterrence supposedly be upheld, if Assad follows up with not just increasingly lethal non-chemical operations but even with additional chemical attacks? How will it be upheld, that is, without the United States getting drawn even more deeply into the Syrian war? Oh, but the sort of air strike being talked about isn’t supposed to draw the United States in like that, is it?


Much of the propulsion for the train heading for an attack on Syria is coming from elements who have wanted all along for the United States to get involved in the war there, and for whom this business about chemical weapons is just a serendipitous selling point. These elements include those of the neoconservative persuasion who never met a U.S. military intervention they didn’t like.


Their position leaves unanswered even broader questions: What exactly is the U.S. national interest in this sectarian civil war? What reason could there be for favoring one side or the other when both sides are dominated by those holding values that are anathema to those of the United States? How could the United States bring about a particular outcome of the war even if one such outcome were clearly in its interests? And where does this all lead, and where does it all end?


For this part of the pro-intervention crowd, the chemical weapons issue would be, just as with the Iraq War, a rationale rather than the actual motivation for going to war. And just as with that earlier war, all the attention to did-he-or-didn’t-he questions concerning unconventional weapons are irrelevant to the matters that will prove most important after the United States resorts to military force.


As has been pointed out often, a big difference between that earlier war and the current situation regarding Syria is that the incumbent U.S. administration is not itching to go to war. Far from selling others on the idea of military action, the Obama administration is worrying about how to deal with pressure from others to take such action.


Perhaps the President and his advisers correctly see that a victory by neither side in the Syrian war serves U.S. interests, and the best thing to do is to let the sides bash each other. As Edward Luttwak observes, the Obama administration’s policies to date have appeared well designed to do that.


The President’s reluctance to get dragged into this war has, however, boomeranged on him regarding the CW issue. As of several months ago it may have seemed a convenient way to resist the pro-intervention pressure by saying in effect, “Not now, but if they use chemicals then I’ll do something.”


Now we hear lots of talk about how given Mr. Obama’s earlier statements on this subject, he has to act to uphold his and the country’s credibility. That is another misplaced motive, because the historical record demonstrates that governments simply do not assess the credibility of other governments that way.


But even if the notion about upholding credibility were valid, for this to be a reason to launch a military attack on Syria now would not be a case of two wrongs making a right. It would instead be an example of an administration compounding a mistake and digging itself into a deeper hole.


Perhaps the CW topic of the moment is now also serving for the administration a purpose similar to what it serves for the neocons: as a convenient peg on which to hang an intervention taken for other reasons. Except that for the administration it is not because it always wanted to intervene in Syria but instead has decided — after a couple of years of unrelenting nagging from others for it do so — that it finally has to act in some forceful way.


Using a CW incident as a peg saves it from looking like it is changing a policy for no other reason than that it is succumbing to political pressure.


A glimpse of the underlying political calculations comes through in a comment from an anonymous U.S. official that the level of military attack being contemplated is “just enough not to get mocked.” Politically, that is an understandable calibration. But it is not a sound motive to enter a foreign war.


Some of the same people who have been pestering the administration about intervening in Syria have also been berating it more generally for being too tactical and reactive, especially in the Middle East, and not being sufficiently bold and strategic. But responding with an armed attack to a single reported use of a particular kind of weapon is about as tactical and reactive as one can get.


A truly strategic approach to the topic would not only lay out a thorough sense of what is at stake for the U.S. in Syria and what we intend to accomplish there, but also would consider carefully the repercussions of any U.S. military action on other important U.S. equities in the region.


There are several of those equities that would need to be considered, but take, for example, just one: the negotiations with Iran about its nuclear program. Analysts’ views vary regarding current Iranian perspectives toward Syria, but a U.S. military intervention would at a minimum complicate the effort to reach an agreement with Tehran and at worst would kill off what is, following the election of President Hassan Rouhani, an excellent chance to negotiate an accord.


It surely would make it politically harder inside the Iranian government to sell the making of concessions to the United States. One Western diplomat stationed in Tehran says a U.S. attack on Syria would be “a game changer for negotiations with Iran.” So we come full circle from President Obama’s comment about Syria use of CW as a game changer.


We also come full circle on the objective of controlling proliferation of unconventional weapons. The most reliable way to preclude an Iranian nuclear weapon is through a negotiated agreement placing restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program. An attack made supposedly to deter use of one kind of unconventional weapon would thus increase the chance that another nation would develop a different kind of unconventional weapon — one that really is a weapon of mass destruction.


Of course, some of those pushing for U.S. intervention in the Syrian war are the same ones who want to kill the prospects for a negotiated agreement with Iran. That is one of the most warped motives of all for a U.S. attack.


Paul R. Pillar, in his 28 years at the Central Intelligence Agency, rose to be one of the agency’s top analysts. He is now a visiting professor at Georgetown University for security studies. (This article first appeared as a blog post at The National Interest’s Web site. Reprinted with author’s permission.)


Tags: , , , , , ,




Consortiumnews



Dangling Questions on Syrian War

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Syria intervention: the 5 questions MPs should ask | Frank Ledwidge


Both David Cameron and the intelligence community know they have to get this right. MPs can help by asking these questions


The miserable ghost of Iraq hangs over us, and once again the reliability of intelligence assessments on chemical weapons may provide the foundation for another controversial decision to go to war. During Thursday’s debate in parliament, the prime minister will base his case for intervention in Syria on an assessment agreed by the joint intelligence committee. He may not call it that, but when he refers to “intelligence”, that is what he will mean.


Sounds familiar? It is. Whilst the procedures have been tightened up, this was the process that brought us the Iraq war and its various dossiers. What Cameron will present will be the results of hundreds of hours of debate and argument by intelligence collectors (spies of one kind or another), analysts and their managers. The intelligence community is well aware that this time they need to get it right.


The job of intelligence analysts is to turn information gained (“collected”) into assessed intelligence. They work a bit like journalists except that they never, or should never, cross the line into recommending policy. Their analysis of any given piece of information will comprise two main elements. There will be an assessment of the reliability of the source of the information. There will also be an assessment of the accuracy of the information itself, based on what the analysts know, or what can be confirmed.


The government seems clear that it has evidence of Assad government responsibility for the attack on eastern Ghouta near Damascus. We do not yet know what this evidence is. Some of it may be “open source” intelligence (known as Osint), meaning essentially media reports which have been analysed by government experts. In the absence of agents (human intelligence or Humint) within the Damascus regime, it is likely that the bulk of secret intelligence relied on will be sourced from signals intelligence (listening to phone calls, radio messages and so on), known as Sigint. The problem with Sigint is that whilst collecting and decrypting it is fairly straightforward, what it actually means (analysis) is rather more challenging.


It was the misinterpretation of Sigint that sank Colin Powell’s career when he presented it as evidence of Iraqi possession of WMD. A complicating feature here is that much of the relevant Sigint seems to be coming not from British, French or US intelligence assets, but from Israel, specifically the elite 8,200 signals unit. This need not invalidate the intelligence, but we should know.


So what questions should MPs ask about this intelligence? Here are five lines of approach:



1. What is the exact nature of the intelligence the government is relying on to support its conclusions?


What does it say? How specific is it, for example, with respect to orders given, and personnel involved in the attacks of 21 August?



2. Is the intelligence taken from single or multiple sources?


If multiple source, from which countries does the intelligence originate? How much of it is Israeli in origin?



3. How have British analysts graded the reliability of the source/sources of the key intelligence reports?


Sources are usually graded A-F. How have British analysts graded the information from those sources? This is usually graded 1-6.



4. What level of unanimity is there in the British intelligence community about their conclusions?


What dissent is there? Were there caveats and what was the nature of those caveats? Has there been a full “red team” (taking an opposing perspective) analysis?



5. What similarities are there between the analyses of the leading countries involved, France and the US?


Are their analyses drawn from the same sources? Is there a dissenting voice in the western international intelligence community? What is the nature of that dissent?



It is worth remembering that our intelligence analysts are competent, professional people who are in no way keen on being implicated in another intelligence debacle. This is important because backs will sensibly have been covered. The prime minister will have been extensively briefed on any reasonable doubts. For that reason, this time, MPs may get answers if they ask the right questions. Without those answers, discussion of legality and justification will be pointless.





theguardian.com © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds









Comment is free | theguardian.com

Syria intervention: the 5 questions MPs should ask | Frank Ledwidge

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Troubling Questions: No-Spy Pact Backfires on Berlin


When German Chancellery Chief of Staff Ronald Pofalla sat before a parliamentary committee on Monday, his prepared text was almost entirely marked up in yellow. Everything that he intended to present to the Parliamentary Control Panel, the body in German parliament charged with keeping tabs on the country’s intelligence agencies, was apparently important. He ran down the 15 items on his list, speaking without pause — just as he did at his last appearance before the committee, more than two weeks ago.


Pofalla appeared before the committee to clear the air. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives hope finally to put a lid on the NSA scandal, which was set off by reports leaked by whistleblower Edward Snowden. The core of Pofalla’s message was simple: The American intelligence agency and its British counterpart adhere to German law and have agreed in writing to do so. Pofalla went on to say that the rights of millions of Germans have not been violated, ostensibly in response to recent criticism by the opposition Social Democrats. The data that the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), Germany’s foreign intelligence agency, has handed over to America’s National Security Agency pertained to reconnaissance abroad and not to German citizens, he assured the panel.


It was a peculiar sort of political spectacle. Merkel’s chief of staff and the government’s official intelligence coordinator praised the “hard work” of the agency and quoted written assurances made recently by the American and British intelligence agencies to the German government. Pofalla painted a picture of a harmonious world of German-American intelligence cooperation. And it’s this collaboration, he said, that has prevented terrorist attacks on German and US soldiers in Afghanistan.


If you subscribe to Pofalla’s version of events, all the recent fuss is actually superfluous.


Only, there’s a hitch in this rosy scenario. The BND and the NSA have agreed on pursuing brand new “no-spy pact.” The agreement, says Pofalla, represents a unique opportunity to set standards for the future work of Western intelligence agencies.


The No-Spy Pact


Just last Friday, BND chief Gerhard Schindler sent NSA Director Keith B. Alexander a written request that discussions over a mutual no-spying pact be initiated. It is to be the placebo administered to the public at election time, to pacify brewing concern and say, “Look, everything is going to be just fine.”


Yet the establishment of such a no-spying agreement implies that espionage has been allowed up to now, an unwitting confirmation of the information in the documents leaked by Snowden — including the internal paper that SPIEGEL reported on this week: As a target of espionage, Germany ranks somewhere in the middle of the priority list, about on par with France and Japan. In the leaked document, the US notes a particular interest in Germany’s foreign policy and economic situation, citing threats to the financial system and “economic stability” as high-priority subjects of interest when it comes to spying in the European Union.


The no-spying agreement isn’t likely to make the NSA scandal disappear. On the contrary, Berlin will be faced with new questions: What should comprise such a pact? Will it only pertain to the work of foreign intelligence agencies? Or will it address the interests of citizens whose Internet data flow through American servers and can potentially be captured and cached? None of this has been definitively answered, all written assurances to the contrary.


Pofalla obviously anticipated what new questions might be raised by the envisaged agreement. It was he who carefully said that the US agency would not have made the offer, “if their assurance that they would abide by the law were not true.” This is twisted logic — logic that only Pofalla himself could explain.


But an explanation never came. Just like at his last appearance before the committee, the Chancellery chief declined to take any questions. After item 15, Pofalla exited without a word.




Keep track of the news


Stay informed with our free news services:


All news from SPIEGEL International

Twitter | RSS

All news from Germany section

RSS



© SPIEGEL ONLINE 2013
All Rights Reserved
Reproduction only allowed with the permission of SPIEGELnet GmbH




SPIEGEL ONLINE – International – NSA Spying Scandal



Troubling Questions: No-Spy Pact Backfires on Berlin