Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Egypt hot air balloon crash death toll rises to 19

Rescue workers remove a body from the scene of a balloon crash outside al-Dhabaa village, just west of the city of Luxor, 510 kilometers (320 miles) south of Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. A hot air balloon flying over Egypt's ancient city of Luxor caught fire and crashed into a sugar cane field on Tuesday, killing at least 18 foreign tourists, a security official said. The casualties included French, British, Belgian, Hungarian, Japanese nationals and nine tourists from Hong Kong, Luxor Governor, Saad told reporters. (AP Photo/Hagag Salama)

Rescue workers remove a body from the scene of a balloon crash outside al-Dhabaa village, just west of the city of Luxor, 510 kilometers (320 miles) south of Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. A hot air balloon flying over Egypt's ancient city of Luxor caught fire and crashed into a sugar cane field on Tuesday, killing at least 18 foreign tourists, a security official said. The casualties included French, British, Belgian, Hungarian, Japanese nationals and nine tourists from Hong Kong, Luxor Governor, Saad told reporters. (AP Photo/Hagag Salama)

Egyptians gather at the site of a balloon crash where the remains of the burned gondola are seen, outside al-Dhabaa village, just west of the city of Luxor, 510 kilometers (320 miles) south of Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. A hot air balloon flying over Egypt's ancient city of Luxor caught fire and crashed into a sugar cane field on Tuesday, killing at least 18 foreign tourists, a security official said. The casualties included French, British, Belgian, Hungarian, Japanese nationals and nine tourists from Hong Kong, Luxor Governor, Saad told reporters. (AP Photo/Hagag Salama)

Map locates Luxor, Egypt, where a hot air balloon crash killed foreign tourists

Egyptian rescue workers carry the dead bodies of foreign tourists, near the scene of a balloon crash outside al-Dhabaa village, just west of the city of Luxor, 510 kilometers (320 miles) south of Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. A hot air balloon flying over Egypt's ancient city of Luxor caught fire and crashed into a sugar cane field on Tuesday, killing at least 18 foreign tourists, a security official said. The casualties included French, British, Belgian, Hungarian, Japanese nationals and nine tourists from Hong Kong, Luxor Governor Ezzat Saad told reporters. (AP Photo/Ibrahim Zayed)

Rescue workers remove a body from the scene of a balloon crash outside al-Dhabaa village, just west of the city of Luxor, 510 kilometers (320 miles) south of Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2013. A hot air balloon flying over Egypt's ancient city of Luxor caught fire and crashed into a sugar cane field on Tuesday, killing at least 18 foreign tourists, a security official said. The casualties included French, British, Belgian, Hungarian, Japanese nationals and nine tourists from Hong Kong, Luxor Governor, Saad told reporters. (AP Photo/Hagag Salama)

LUXOR, Egypt (AP) ? A hot air balloon flying over Egypt's ancient city of Luxor caught fire and crashed into a sugar cane field on Tuesday, killing at least 19 foreign tourists in one of the world's deadliest ballooning accidents and handing a new blow to Egypt's ailing tourism industry.

The casualties included French, British, Belgian, Hungarian, Japanese nationals and nine tourists from Hong Kong, Luxor Governor Ezzat Saad told reporters. Three survivors ? two British tourists and the Egyptian pilots ? were taken to a local hospital, but one of the Britons later died of injuries.

Egypt's civil aviation minister, Wael el-Maadawi, suspended hot air balloon flights and flew to Luxor to lead the investigation into the crash.

The balloon, which was carrying 20 tourists and a pilot, was landing after a flight over the southern town, when a landing cable got caught around a helium tube and a fire erupted, according to an investigator with the state prosecutor's office.

The balloon then shot up in the air, the investigator said. The fire set off an explosion of a gas canister and the balloon plunged some 300 meters (1,000 feet) to the ground, according to an Egyptian security official. It crashed in a sugar cane field outside al-Dhabaa village just west of Luxor, 510 kilometers (320 miles) south of Cairo, the official said.

The official and the investigator spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Bodies of the dead tourists were scattered across the field around the remnants of the balloon. An Associated Press reporter at the crash site counted eight bodies as they were put into body bags and taken away. The security official said all 18 bodies have been recovered.

Hot air ballooning is a popular pastime for tourists in Luxor, usually at sunrise to give a dramatic view over the pharaonic temples of Karnak and Luxor and the Valley of the Kings, a desert valley where many pharaoh, notably King Tutenkhamun, were buried.

Luxor has seen crashes in the past. In 2009, 16 tourists were injured when their balloon struck a cellphone transmission tower. A year earlier, seven tourists were injured in a similar crash.

The toll puts the crash among the deadliest involving a recreation hot air balloon. In 1989, 13 people were killed when their hot air balloon collided with another over the Australian outback near the town of Alice Springs.

Among the dead Tuesday was a Japanese couple in their 60s, among four Japanese who were killed, according to the head of Japan Travel Bureau's Egypt branch, Atsushi Imaeda.

In Hong Kong, a travel agency said nine of the tourists that were aboard the balloon were natives of the semiautonomous Chinese city. There was a "very big chance that all nine have perished," said Raymond Ng, a spokesman for the agency. The nine, he said, included five women and four men from three families.

They were traveling with six other Hong Kong residents on a 10-day tour of Egypt.

Ng said an escort of the nine tourists watched the balloon from the ground catching fire around 7 a.m. and plunging to the ground two minutes later.

In Britain, tour operator Thomas Cook confirmed that two British tourists were killed in the crash, and a third later died in the hospital. Another British survivor and the Egyptian pilot, who state media said had severe burns, were being treated in the hospital.

"What happened in Luxor this morning is a terrible tragedy and the thoughts of everyone in Thomas Cook are with our guests, their family and friends," said Peter Fankhauser, CEO of Thomas Cook UK & Continental Europe. He said the firm is providing "full support" to the victims' families.

In Paris, a diplomatic official said French tourists were among those involved in the accident, but would give no details on how many, or whether French citizens were among those killed. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to be publicly named according to government policy. French media reports said two French tourists were among the dead but the official wouldn't confirm that.

Egypt's tourism industry has been decimated since the 2011 uprising and the political turmoil that followed and continues to this day. Luxor's hotels are currently about 25 percent full in what is supposed to be the peak of the winter season.

Scared off by the turmoil and tenuous security following the uprising, the number of tourists coming to Egypt fell to 9.8 million in 2011 from 14.7 million the year before, and revenues plunged 30 percent to $8.8 billion.

Magda Fawzi, whose company operates four luxury Nile River cruise boats to Luxor, said she expects the accident will lead to tourist cancellations. Tour guide Hadi Salama said he expects Tuesday's accident to hurt the eight hot air balloon companies operating in Luxor, but that it may not directly affect tourism to the Nile Valley city.

Poverty swelled at the country's fastest rate in Luxor, which is highly dependent on visitors to its monumental temples and the tombs of King Tutankhamun and other pharaohs. In 2011, 39 percent of its population lived on less than $1 a day, compared to 18 percent in 2009, according to government figures.

In August, Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi flew to Luxor to encourage tourism there, about a month after he took office and vowed that Egypt was safe for tourists.

"Egypt is safer than before, and is open for all," he said in remarks carried by the official MENA news agency at the time. He was referring to the security situation following the 2011 ouster of autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak.

Deadly accidents caused by poor management and a decrepit infrastructure have taken place since Morsi took office. In January, 19 Egyptian conscripts died when their rickety train jumped the track. In November, 49 kindergarteners were killed when their school bus crashed into a speeding train because the railway guard failed to close the crossing.

The Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's most powerful political force and Morsi's base of support, blames accidents on a culture of negligence fostered by Mubarak.

___

Associated Press writers Kelvin Chan in Hong Kong, Jill Lawless in London and Angela Charlton in Paris contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-26-ML-Egypt-Balloon-Accident/id-e2e121e354a4467eb0f0068edcc8e6c1

the Grammys 2013

Monday, February 25, 2013

Martha Stewart in middle of giant retail tug-of-war

Macy's Chief Executive Terry Lundgren said he was shocked when Martha Stewart told him in 2011 that she was starting a new alliance with rival J.C. Penney Co.

Lundgren, testifying on Monday in the trial of two Macy's lawsuits over the alliance, said Stewart told him of the deal the night before J.C. Penney announced it. He said he was so appalled he hung up on her.

"I was completely shocked and blown away," Lundgren said. "I was literally sick to my stomach."

J.C. Penney announced on December 7, 2011, that it would launch Martha Stewart boutiques in about 700 of its department stores in 2013. It also bought 17 percent of her company, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia .

Macy's, which has its own deal with Martha Stewart, sued her company in January 2012 for breach of contract, and later sued J.C. Penney as well. Macy's says it has the exclusive right to sell Martha Stewart products in certain product categories, including cookware and bedding.

The two cases were consolidated for a non-jury trial before Justice Jeffrey Oing in New York state court in Manhattan.

Lundgren, 60, said Stewart sounded like she was reading from a document prepared by lawyers when they spoke, and that he cut off the conversation when the home goods doyenne claimed her deal with J.C. Penney would be good for Macy's.

"I think that's when I hung up," said Lundgren. "The thought this was going to be good for Macy's was so far from anything I could comprehend."

Lundgren said that at the time he considered Stewart a friend, and he has not spoken to her since.

Macy's is still committed to the business relationship it developed with Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, however. The Martha Stewart brand at Macy's grew 8 percent last year, growth that is twice that of Macy's as a whole, Lundgren said.

"This is an extremely important brand and we are going to continue to highlight the brand in our stores," Lundgren testified.

Macy's built Martha Stewart into its No. 1 home brand after Stewart came out of prison in 2005 after serving time for lying about a stock sale.

J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson is scheduled to take the stand on Friday. Martha Stewart also is expected to testify, but it is unclear when.

Martha Stewart shops in J.C. Penney stores, set to open in May, are the centerpiece of an improved home goods section that Johnson has called crucial to returning Penney to growth.

The cases are Macy's Inc. v Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc., 650297/2012, and Macy's Inc. v J.C. Penney Corp., 652861/2012, New York State Supreme Court, New York County.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/martha-stewart-middle-giant-retail-tug-war-1C8541698

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US moves to salvage Syrian opposition talks

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, center, visits with the traveling media aboard a plane en route to London on his inaugural trip as secretary on Sunday, Feb. 24, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, center, visits with the traveling media aboard a plane en route to London on his inaugural trip as secretary on Sunday, Feb. 24, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, centre, is greeted by U.S. Ambassador Louis Susman upon his arrival in Britain marking the start of his first official trip overseas, at Stansted Airport east of London on Sunday, Feb. 24, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

(AP) ? The U.S. is frantically trying to salvage a Syrian opposition conference that John Kerry plans to attend this week during his first official overseas trip as U.S. secretary of state.

A senior Obama administration official said Sunday that Kerry has sent his top Syrian envoy to Cairo in hopes of convincing opposition leaders that their participation in the conference in Rome is critical to addressing questions from potential donors and securing additional aid from the United States and Europe.

Some members of the sharply divided Syrian Opposition Council are threatening to boycott Wednesday's meeting, which is the centerpiece of Kerry's nine-nation tour of Europe and the Middle East.

According to the official, U.S. envoy Robert Ford will say that the conference is a chance for foes of Syrian President Bashar Assad to make their case for new and enhanced aid ? and get to know America's new chief diplomat, who has said he wants to propose new ideas to pressure Assad into leave power.

The official was not authorized to discuss sensitive diplomatic matters publicly and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

If the meeting with Kerry were to be postponed, the official said the delay would likely hurt chances for short-term boosts in U.S. aid or shifts in Syria policy, which is now focused on providing non-lethal and humanitarian assistance to the opposition.

The U.S. is concerned that the same kind of infighting that doomed the Syrian National Council may be hindering the SOC, the official said.

In addition to Ford's trip to Cairo, the top U.S. diplomat for the Mideast, Elizabeth Jones, planned to head to Rome on Monday to add her voice to the argument to opposition members there.

Kerry is on a self-described "listening tour" of Europe and the Mideast, chiefly focused on ending the crisis in Syria.

The former Democratic senator from Massachusetts has said he wants to discuss fresh proposals to ratchet up the pressure on Assad and make way for a democratic transition. Violence in Syria has killed at least 70,000 people.

Kerry has not elaborated on those plans, but there is internal debate in the Obama administration about stepping up aid to the rebels, perhaps to include lethal military assistance.

Key to increasing pressure on Assad will be Russia, which has staunchly resisted efforts to push Assad out, to the increasing anger and frustration of the United States and its allies in Europe and the Middle East.

Kerry will meet Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on the second stop of his trip, in Berlin on Tuesday, and hopes to get a better idea of what Moscow may be willing to support. However, two officials traveling with Kerry said they did not expect any breakthroughs in the German capital.

In London, his first stop, Kerry was expected to be asked by the British about the administration's views on Britain's dispute with Argentina over the Falkland Islands. London is looking to Washington to support a referendum next month on the islands' future. Residents are expected to vote widely in favor of remaining part of Britain.

Senior officials traveling with Kerry would not discuss possible outcomes or the vote, and the U.S. position remains that it is up to Britain and Argentina to work out a resolution. Argentina claims the islands as the Islas Malvinas.

Britain asserted control of the South Atlantic islands by placing a naval garrison there in 1833. Britain and Argentina fought a brief war in 1982 after Argentina invaded the islands. More than 900 people died, most of them Argentines.

After Britain and Germany, Kerry's 10-day trip will take him to France, Italy, Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.

In addition to Syria, he will focus on conflicts in Mali and Afghanistan, and on Iran's nuclear program.

In Germany, Kerry will discuss trans-Atlantic issues with German youth in Berlin, where he spent time as a child as the son of an American diplomat posted to the divided Cold War city.

In Paris, Kerry plans to discuss France's intervention in Mali.

Despite the numerous Middle East stops, Kerry will not travel to Israel or the Palestinian territories. He will wait to visit them when he accompanies Obama there in March.

___

Online:

Trip details: http://www.state.gov/secretary/travel/2013/205086.htm

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-24-Kerry/id-073cd5a9618d4867b0699b209e11c215

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Creepy Art on Cat Body | Hi5ing

While tattooing may be thousands of years old the ancient art has certainly has come a long way. Everyone seems to be rushing to get tats and there is a definite following for people who are into body art. The tattoo has blessed some of today?s biggest names in entertainment.

The Sphinx cat is known for naturally being hairless and, despite the fact that they look like? lets just say they are not the prettier of all cats, have always been sought after for people who love cats, but have allergies.

Some women and men came up with the craziest ideas for their tattoos with their pet. See the artistic, bizarre and outrageous tattoos that cat adorn their bodies with. I?ve never seen such unusual tattoos before. Some people express themselves in the creepiness way with their pets. A lot of these crazy tattoos and piercings look really gross.

Tattoos have been around for as long as anyone can remember. It is hard to imagine how most of these people are able to eke out a living. The p###y cat is not as dumb as it used to be. It has groomed its outer appearance with the fast pacing world.

Inside this post, you will see the results of such weird body art on cat body. We have added some fun by attaching some wild, and crazed ink shots of those body parts.

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Source: http://www.hi5ing.us/2013/02/24/creepy-art-on-cat-body/

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Wall Street ends down sharply after Fed minutes

TORONTO, Feb 20 (Reuters) - Canada's Rebecca Marino, a rising star in women's tennis, stepped away from the sport in search of a normal life on Wednesday, weary of battling depression and cyber-bullies. Ranked number 38 in the world two years ago, the 22-year-old admitted she had long suffered from depression and was no longer willing to make the sacrifices necessary to reach the top. "After thinking long and hard, I do not have the passion or enjoyment to drive myself to the level I would like to be at in professional tennis," Marino explained in a conference call. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stock-index-futures-signal-more-gains-103747893--finance.html

Skyfall

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

The Union Finance Minister, Shri P. Chidambaram launches the Operations of India the First Infrastructure Debt Fund (IDF) under the NBFC Structure by handing over the First IDF ? NBFC License to the Promoters of India Infra Debt Limited (INFRADEBT)- ICICI

The Union Finance Minister, Shri P. Chidambaram launches the Operations of India the First Infrastructure Debt Fund (IDF) under the NBFC Structure by handing over the First IDF ? NBFC License to the Promoters of India Infra Debt Limited (INFRADEBT)- ICICI Bank, Bank of Baroda, Citibank and Life Insurance of Corporation (LIC), in New Delhi on February 19, 2013.

Photo no.CNR - 48439

Source: http://pib.nic.in/release/phsmall.asp?phid=45558

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Leftist president breezes to re-election in Ecuador

  • VOA - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    WASHINGTON -- Thousands of protesters gathered outside the White House, to urge President Barack Obama to aggressively combat climate change. Demonstrators formed a "human pipeline" ...

  • Baird concerned with Iran ties with Venezuela

    CBC News - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Minister of Foreign Affairs John Baird responds to a question during question period in the House of Commons Wednesday February 13, 2013 in Ottawa. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian ...

  • Leftist president breezes to re-election in Ecuador

    Tribune Review - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    QUITO, Ecuador -- President Rafael Correa, a dynamic leftist who has championed Ecuador's lower classes with generous social spending but faced wide rebuke as intolerant of dissent, coasted to ...

  • Exit polls Ecuador re-elects Correa

    Middle East Times - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Rafael Correa with 58.8 percent of the vote, exit polls showed. Correa, 49, a leftist economist educated in the United States, has drawn praise from voters for using Ecuador's oil revenues to ...

  • Portos Colombia Duo Lined Up to Sink Malaga

    New York Times - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    LISBON (Reuters) - In-form Malaga must brace themselves for a barrage of attacking football from Porto's Colombian Jackson Martinez and his returning compatriot James Rodriguez when they meet at the ...

  • Correa re-elected in Ecuador

    The Courier Mail - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    ECUADORIAN President Rafael Correa has been re-elected to consolidate an impressive run in a country that was only recently very difficult to lead. The left-wing economist, 49, won a landslide with ...

  • Ecuador president re-elected as Head of State

    Itar Tass - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    CARACAS, February 18 (Itar-Tass) - Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa has been re-elected as Head of State as a result of Sunday polls. Ecuadorian television reports that Correa polled almost 58 ...

  • Ecuador holds legislative and presidential elections

    Global Times - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    An Ecuadorian soldier participates in a surveillance operation at a polling station, in Quito, capital of Ecuador, on February 17, 2013. Ecuador held legislative and presidential elections on ...

  • Official results show Correa winning Ecuador presidential election

    Fox News - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Feb. 17, 2013: Ecuador's President and candidate for re-election Rafael Correa, top right, and vice presidential candidate Jorge Glass, top left, accompanied by relatives, celebrate after ...

  • Ecuador president Rafael Correa re-elected again

    The Guardian - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Rafael Correa celebrates with his son, Miguel, daughter, Anne and wife Anne Malherbe in Quito, Ecuador, after the first results of the presidential elections. Photograph: Cecilia ...

  • Minister Peru to exceed its 2013 foreign tourist target

    eTN - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Feb 17, 2013 LIMA, Peru - Peru should exceed this year its foreign tourist target of three million this year, stated the Peruvian Minister of Foreign Trade and Tourism, Jose Luis Silva, while ...

  • Rafael Correa Wins Re-election in Ecuador

    International Herald Tribune - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    CARACAS, Venezuela - President Rafael Correa of Ecuador swept to re-election on Sunday in a vote that showed the broad popularity of his government's social programs and support for the poor in a ...

  • Ecuadors Correa breezes to 2nd re-election

    Sign on San Diego - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Ecuador's President and candidate for re-election Rafael Correa, top right, and vice presidential candidate Jorge Glass, top left, accompanied by relatives, celebrate after presidential ...

  • Caribbean leaders U.S. attorney general to meet in Haiti

    The Miami Herald - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    PORT-AU-PRINCE -- When Jamaican officials snubbed a group of young Haitian soccer players who visited two years ago on the heels of a deadly cholera outbreak in their quake-torn homeland, a ...

  • Correa challenger concedes defeat in Ecuador

    Lexington Herald-Leader - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Ecuador's President Rafael Correa gives a thumbs up to supporters as he stands with the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, not in picture, on a balcony at the government palace in ...

  • Argentinas Boca obtains goalless draw

    Global Times - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Argentina's Boca Juniors Sunday tied with Club Atletico Tigre in a non-goal play from the Argentinean Final Tournament's second matchday.In the "Monumental" Stadium in Victoria, ...

  • Ecuadors Correa reelected president official results

    Global Times - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa was reelected in Sunday's general elections, according to preliminary results released by National Electoral Council (CNE).Based on unfinished ballot count, ...

  • Ecuadors Correa claims victory in presidential poll

    Global Times - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    President Rafael Correa won in the first-round of Ecuador's presidential poll on Sunday, according to two exit polls giving him around 60 percent of the vote, released as polls closed in the ...

  • Key facts about Ecuadors general elections

    China.org.cn - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    According to the National Electoral Council, 11,666,478 Ecuadorans, out of a total population of 14,483,499, are registered to vote in the elections to select the country's president, 137 ...

  • Ecuador likely to return Correa to presidency

    Irish Times - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    Poll shows half of Britons would vote to leave EU in referendum Ecuadoreans voted for their president yesterday and were almost certain to give incumbent Rafael Correa a new term to advance an ...

  • PROFILE-Ecuadors Correa from boyhood leader to firebrand president

    Reuters - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    The innate charisma that he showed as a schoolboy has helped make Correa one of the Andean nation's most popular presidents, celebrated as a champion of the poor by supporters from windswept ...

  • Ecuadors Correa cruises to re-election victory

    Reuters - Sunday 17th February, 2013

    QUITO (Reuters) - Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa swept to a re-election victory on Sunday that allows him to strengthen state control over the OPEC nation's economy and gives a timely boost ...

  • Source: http://www.argentinanews.net/index.php/sid/212644760/scat/1f5f6572907d15fb

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    Monday, February 18, 2013

    Anker? Ultra Slim Mini Bluetooth Wireless Keyboard for iPad Mini / iPad 4 / New iPad 3 / iPod Touch / Android 3.0 and Later Tablet ? White

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    How mayor rocketed to national stardom

    Less than four years ago, Juli?n Castro simply was Phil Hardberger's successor.

    As the new mayor of San Antonio, Castro joined a pantheon that included Ed Garza, Howard Peak and Bill Thornton ? people whose political careers peaked during their years on the council dais.

    These days, Castro is everywhere: on the pages of Vogue, in the middle of a ?Meet the Press? panel, guesting on ?Face the Nation? and, most importantly, keynoting the Democratic National Convention.

    How did he get from there to here?

    Most politicians who experience a rise to national prominence do so by winning a high-profile race, possibly even knocking off a seemingly unbeatable titan in their home state. That's how John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, and Ronald Reagan did it.

    Castro, by contrast, rose to national heights without ever appearing on a ballot outside the city of San Antonio. Yes, he is a young, bright, attractive Latino mayor. The same could have been said 10 years ago for Garza. And no one ever asked Garza to pose for Annie Leibovitz or schmooze with the POTUS in the Oval Office as Castro did recently to discuss the president's own pre-k plan for the nation.

    Castro's rise can't be explained by his policy achievements either. His signature program ? Pre-K 4 SA ? only recently won voter approval and has yet to be implemented. His SA 2020 initiative boils down to a series of fuzzy, long-term goals.

    So, if Castro didn't become a major figure on the strength of election victories or policy breakthroughs, how did it happen?

    Castro's ascendance is a remarkable story of collective wish fulfillment, a star-making process that rivals anything conjured by Simon Cowell, creator of ?American Idol? and other reality television shows.

    On July 9, 2009, only 51/2 weeks after Castro took office, his old friend Ruben Navarrette wrote a nationally syndicated column predicting that either Castro or his brother, Joaqu?n, would become the first Latino president of the United States.

    Before Castro had done anything ? other than pass a largely symbolic ethics ordinance ? as mayor, Navarrette touted him as someone who could inspire Latinos ?without threatening non-Latinos.? (Last September, this man-crush reached new heights when Navarrette gushed: ?The Castros don't let people down; they lift people up.?)

    The Navarrette column seemed outrageously premature, but it hit South Texas like a thunderbolt, and set in motion a hype machine that ran on its own power and incessantly defined Castro as the Latino Barack Obama and the future savior of the Democratic Party.

    Within a few weeks of the Navarrette column, the New York Times sent writer Zev Chafets to San Antonio to find out about this promising young mayor that everyone (or at least everyone who read Navarrette's column) was buzzing about. Chafets spent some days shadowing Castro, and the lengthy result, ?The Post-Hispanic Hispanic Politician,? appeared in the Sunday Times on May 6, 2010.

    From that point on, the media offers came gushing in. Less than eight weeks after the Times piece, Castro made his first big national TV splash, with an interview on Stephen Colbert's Comedy Central Show. The interview was obviously informed by the Times profile, with Colbert pointing out ? as Chafets had ? that the mayor did not speak Spanish fluently. An appearance on CNN with John King followed two weeks later.

    By this point, Castro had landed on the Obama administration's radar. Sources say Cecilia Mu?oz, Obama's initial director of intergovernmental affairs, clicked with Castro early on and helped establish a connection between San Antonio and the White House.

    It didn't hurt that the mayor had some prominent San Antonians in his corner.

    Juan Sepulveda, a prot?g? of Southwest Voter Research Education Project founder Willie Vel?squez, ran Obama's 2008 general-election campaign in Texas and would go on to become the Democratic National Committee's senior adviser for Hispanic affairs. UTSA graduate Adrian Saenz became Obama's Latino-vote point man.

    In October 2011, San Antonio architecture-firm executive Henry Mu?oz III co-hosted a posh Obama fundraising bash at the Los Angeles home of Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith, with Castro in attendance.

    The Obama administration consistently put Castro in a position where he could shine: inviting him to the White House to discuss immigration and energy policy; having first lady Michelle Obama praise Castro's fitness initiative; and enabling him to join a presidential delegation to Mexico City.

    By early 2012, he'd clearly passed the audition. Obama invited him to watch the 2012 State of the Union address from the first family's VIP box. Six months later, Obama made a fundraising swing to S.A., with both Castros by his side.

    As last year's DNC approached, Obama sat down with 20 Latino leaders from around the country to sound them out about the campaign. Every Latino rep in the room agreed that Castro was the ideal choice to make the keynote address at the convention.

    To Castro's credit, he took that opportunity and made the most of his 20 minutes on the national stage. There's no slowing down the machine now.

    Source: http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/news_columnists/gilbert_garcia/article/How-mayor-rocketed-to-national-stardom-4285407.php

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    Sunday, February 17, 2013

    Israel, Hamas negotiating truce agreements: report

    JERUSALEM: Israel and Gaza-rulers Hamas have been holding indirect talks on easing the blockade on the Palestinian enclave, Channel 2 television reported Friday, under the terms of a truce deal reached last year.

    The report said the talks have been going on for "a number of weeks," and involved Israeli army officers. Both sides speak only via Egyptian mediators, it said.

    The report on the privately owned channel noted that these negotiations were part of the agreements reached between Israel and Gaza after the deadly week-long conflict in and around the Gaza Strip last November.

    Talks included opening the Rafah crossing on Gaza's border with Egypt to enable the transfer of construction materials from Qatar, as well as enabling agricultural produce from Gaza to enter Israel.

    A Hamas spokesman on Friday said that in the past two weeks there have been no talks, but in the past there has been contact between their representatives and the Egyptians on implementing the truce.

    In November, senior Hamas official Mussa Abu Marzuk said an Israeli delegation was due in Cairo for indirect talks with Hamas on easing the Gaza blockade.

    Israel has restricted the import of goods into Gaza since 2006, when Palestinian militants captured an Israeli soldier in a cross-border raid.

    The blockade was tightened a year later after Hamas seized Gaza from its secular Fatah rivals in fighting that erupted after the Islamist group won legislative elections.

    In December, Israel announced it was to begin allowing materials for private construction into Gaza for the first time since 2007.

    Source: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2013/Feb-16/206701-israel-hamas-negotiating-truce-agreements-report.ashx

    hugo

    Saturday, February 16, 2013

    Fireball over North California causes a stir

    Traveling at 33,000 mph, a massive meteor hit the Earth's atmosphere creating a giant shockwave that blew out windows of glass, injuring nearly 1,000 people and creating panic. On the same day, an asteroid half the size of a football field came within 17,000 miles from Earth. NBC's Tom Costello reports.

    By Gil Aegerter, NBC News

    A fireball streaking across the Northern California sky Friday night brought a flood of witness reports -- the same day that a meteor exploded over Russia and an asteroid made a near-Earth fly-by.

    The fireball was seen around 7:45 p.m., by witnesses as far north as Fairfield and as far south as Gilroy, NBCBayArea.com reported. It was also reportedly seen in Sacramento and Walnut Creek. NBC station KSBW of Monterey said the object was visible along California's Central Coast, too.

    NBCBayArea.com said Candice Guruwaiya gave this account on Facebook of seeing it in San Jose: "I was leaving Safeway on Branham and Snell when I saw it. ... It was a bright green when it first appeared, then it went to a bright yellow. It was awesome!"


    The fireball was seen about 24 hours after?a meteor exploded over Russia's Chelyabinsk region?and a?150-foot-wide asteroid came within 17,200 miles of Earth.

    An astronomer at the Chabot Space and Science Center in Oakland told NBCBayArea.com that Friday night's event wasn't related to the asteroid's passing:

    Gerald McKeegan, an astronomer at Chabot, said he did not see it, but based on accounts he thinks it was a "sporadic meteor," which can happen several times a day but? most of the time happens over the ocean, away from human eyes. Sporadic meteors bring as much as 15,000 tons of space debris to Earth each year, according to McKeegan. He explained that meteors, which are hunks of rock and metal from space that fall to Earth, burn up as they go through Earth's atmosphere, which is what apparently? caused tonight's bright flash of light.

    He said it was likely smaller than another meteor that landed in the Bay Area in October, which caused a loud sonic boom as it fell, breaking apart and spreading rocks, called meteorites, in the North Bay.

    More about the cosmic hits (and near-misses):

    ?

    ?

    ?

    ?

    ?

    Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, speaks to NBC's Lester Holt about the meteor and asteroid that approached Earth on Friday.

    Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/16/16980332-fireball-over-north-california-causes-a-stir?lite

    marie colvin

    Fireball over North California causes a stir

    Traveling at 33,000 mph, a massive meteor hit the Earth's atmosphere creating a giant shockwave that blew out windows of glass, injuring nearly 1,000 people and creating panic. On the same day, an asteroid half the size of a football field came within 17,000 miles from Earth. NBC's Tom Costello reports.

    By Gil Aegerter, NBC News

    A fireball streaking across the Northern California sky Friday night brought a flood of witness reports -- the same day that a meteor exploded over Russia and an asteroid made a near-Earth fly-by.

    The fireball was seen around 7:45 p.m., by witnesses as far north as Fairfield and as far south as Gilroy, NBCBayArea.com reported. It was also reportedly seen in Sacramento and Walnut Creek. NBC station KSBW of Monterey said the object was visible along California's Central Coast, too.

    NBCBayArea.com said Candice Guruwaiya gave this account on Facebook of seeing it in San Jose: "I was leaving Safeway on Branham and Snell when I saw it. ... It was a bright green when it first appeared, then it went to a bright yellow. It was awesome!"


    The fireball was seen about 24 hours after?a meteor exploded over Russia's Chelyabinsk region?and a?150-foot-wide asteroid came within 17,200 miles of Earth.

    An astronomer at the Chabot Space and Science Center in Oakland told NBCBayArea.com that Friday night's event wasn't related to the asteroid's passing:

    Gerald McKeegan, an astronomer at Chabot, said he did not see it, but based on accounts he thinks it was a "sporadic meteor," which can happen several times a day but? most of the time happens over the ocean, away from human eyes. Sporadic meteors bring as much as 15,000 tons of space debris to Earth each year, according to McKeegan. He explained that meteors, which are hunks of rock and metal from space that fall to Earth, burn up as they go through Earth's atmosphere, which is what apparently? caused tonight's bright flash of light.

    He said it was likely smaller than another meteor that landed in the Bay Area in October, which caused a loud sonic boom as it fell, breaking apart and spreading rocks, called meteorites, in the North Bay.

    More about the cosmic hits (and near-misses):

    ?

    ?

    ?

    ?

    ?

    Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, speaks to NBC's Lester Holt about the meteor and asteroid that approached Earth on Friday.

    Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/16/16980332-fireball-over-north-california-causes-a-stir?lite

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    Friday, February 15, 2013

    Lady Gaga's Little Monsters Wish Their 'Valentine' A Speedy Recovery

    After a hip injury forces Lady Gaga to cancel her Born This Way Ball tour, fans take to social media to send her their love.
    By Jocelyn Vena


    Lady Gaga
    Photo: Getty Images

    Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1701996/lady-gaga-born-this-way-ball-hip-surgery.jhtml

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    Thursday, February 14, 2013

    Lew warns of dangers from automatic spending cuts

    WASHINGTON (AP) ? Jacob Lew, President Barack Obama's nominee for Treasury secretary, is urging Congress to avoid steep automatic spending cuts that are set to take effect on March 1, saying they threaten the broader economy.

    The $85 billion in cuts would impose "self-inflicted wounds to the recovery and put far too many jobs and businesses at risk," Lew told the Senate Finance Committee Wednesday.

    The committee is considering Lew's nomination to succeed Timothy Geithner, who stepped down last month as Treasury secretary. Lew, who most recently served as Obama's chief of staff, is expected to win Senate confirmation late this month.

    During the hearing, Lew faced sharp questions from Republicans about his tenure at Citigroup during the 2008 financial crisis. He was also pressed about a nearly $1 million bonus he received while the bank was being bailed out by taxpayers.

    Several senators wanted to know more about Lew's brief time serving as chief operating officer for Citi's alternative investments unit. He took the job Jan. 2008 and held the position during the peak of the financial crisis, when Citi received a $45 billion bailout from the federal government. He left in early 2009 to join the Obama administration.

    Lew's unit had been criticized for making risky investments that imploded during the crisis. Lew told the panel that he did not make decisions about investments during that time.

    "I was not in the business of making investment decisions," he said. "I was aware of what was going on, but I wasn't designing" the investment funds.

    When pressed about a $940,000 bonus he received in early 2009, Lew said he was then an employee of the private sector.

    "I was compensated for my work," Lew said. "I'll leave for others to judge."

    If confirmed, Lew will need to turn his attention immediately to the proposed cuts to both defense and domestic spending programs. But many other challenges await him. He also would have to manage tense relations with China, press Europe to reduce debts while fighting a recession and defend the financial overhaul law.

    Still, the job isn't quite as perilous as the one that greeted Geithner, who had to help stabilize the U.S. banking system after the worst financial crisis since the 1930s and help lift the economy out of the Great Recession.

    The economy and banking system are far healthier now. Still, Lew will likely have to marshal all his strengths as a budget specialist and perhaps overcome inexperience in some areas to achieve significant success.

    Lew, 57, is well-prepared for questions about taxes and spending. He has twice served as a White House budget director ? once during the Clinton administration and once under Obama before becoming his chief of staff.

    Going back to his days as an aide to House Speaker Tip O'Neill in the early 1980s, Lew has amassed three decades of experience at the top levels of Washington policy-making.

    He isn't expected to have trouble winning Senate confirmation, despite the likely arguments from Republicans that the administration isn't doing enough to contain "entitlement" programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security whose costs are straining the federal budget.

    After Wednesday's hearing, committee members will have two days to send questions to Lew to answer before they vote. The full Senate could vote on the nomination late this month.

    That would give Lew little time before his first budget challenge ? the March 1 date when deep spending cuts in defense and domestic programs will kick in unless Congress and the administration agree on some way to avert them.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lew-warns-dangers-automatic-spending-cuts-150058561--finance.html

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    U.S. withdrawing 34,000 troops from Afghanistan within a year

    WASHINGTON | Wed Feb 13, 2013 12:38am EST

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama announced on Tuesday that 34,000 troops - about half the U.S. force in Afghanistan - will withdraw by early 2014, bringing the United States one step closer to wrapping up the costly, unpopular war.

    Obama announced the withdrawal in his annual State of the Union address, as he renewed his pledge to a war-weary American public that the 66,000 remaining U.S. troops in Afghanistan would move into a support role this spring.

    "This drawdown will continue. And by the end of next year, our war in Afghanistan will be over," Obama said to applause.

    The announcement was limited in detail and appeared to give the White House time and flexibility before it answers bigger questions about its exit strategy from America's longest war.

    This includes the size of the U.S. force that Obama will keep in Afghanistan once the NATO mission is completed and the war is declared formally over at the end of 2014.

    Obama also must decide how large an Afghan force to finance, and for how long, as his allies in Congress press to keep them at their maximum strength.

    No decisions on broader issues have been made, a senior administration official said, and Obama said only that the future U.S. mission would be focused on training and equipping Afghan forces and combating al Qaeda.

    "Beyond 2014, America's commitment to a unified and sovereign Afghanistan will endure, but the nature of our commitment will change," Obama said.

    The announcement came a month after Obama and Afghan President Hamid Karzai agreed in Washington on a plan to slightly speed up the handover of combat operations in Afghanistan, with Afghan forces taking the lead role throughout the country this spring.

    How the Afghan forces fare in this leading role has yet to be seen. Although U.S. military officials express confidence in growing Afghan capabilities, Afghan forces remain highly dependent on U.S. support.

    The Taliban dismissed the announcement, re-iteratating their position that the war would only end once all foreign troops had left Afghanistan.

    "As long as invading forces remain in the country, the jihad will continue," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid wrote in a text message to reporters in the Afghan capital. "Decreasing or increasing the number of troops does not solve the problem."

    FLEXIBILITY

    Outgoing U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta welcomed the decision and said the plan to continue drawing down American forces in a phased approach over the coming year was recommended by the former commander in Afghanistan, General John Allen.

    Allen's successor, General Joseph Dunford, "will have the combat power he needs," Panetta assured in a statement.

    Another U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said U.S. commanders would have the flexibility to decide when to withdraw the 34,000 troops, as long as they were out by early next year, meaning the bulk of them could stay through this year's peak fighting months.

    Jeffrey Dressler of the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington think-tank, said such flexibility would allow the military to "focus on the fight at hand" during the summer and early fall.

    Still, he described the removal 34,000 troops as a "tall task" that comes at a challenging time for Afghan forces.

    "The real question now is what the post-2014 presence will be, which in my mind, is a far more important question," Dressler said.

    Previous discussions at the White House focused on a range of options of between 3,000 and 9,000 troops, with military commanders most comfortable with the higher-end figures.

    It was unclear when Obama might make a decision.

    Bruce Riedel, who chaired Obama's 2009 review of Afghan policy and is now at the Brookings Institution think-tank in Washington, said a crucial factor will be the extent to which al Qaeda's core leadership in Pakistan continues to degrade.

    A stronger al Qaeda in neighboring Pakistan means the United States would need a more robust counter-terrorism presence, for example, he said.

    "The president is rightly not making that decision now when he doesn't have to," said Riedel, who heads the Intelligence Project at Brookings.

    "He should wait and see how much success we have against (al Qaeda core)."

    (Additional reporting by Hamid Shalizi in KABUL; Editing by Jackie Frank, Bill Trott, Cynthia Osterman and Lisa Shumaker)

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Reuters/PoliticsNews/~3/xJOuPiaweJo/us-obama-afghanistan-idUSBRE91C06F20130213

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    The festive holiday of Purim commemorates Israel?s salvation from extermination...

    PURIM: Turning Sadness into Joy!

    unitedwithisrael.org

    Purim is a classic story of deep-rooted anti-semitism, pitting a powerful ruler (King Ahasuerus) and his vicious, arrogant advisor (Haman) against the Nation of Israel. Plans were drawn up for the ?final solution? ? wiping the Jews off the face of the earth. Sound familiar? Learn more and SHARE...

    Source: http://www.facebook.com/unitedwithisrael/posts/564268473585763

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    Wednesday, February 13, 2013

    Security: Explosive breakthrough in research on molecular recognition

    Feb. 12, 2013 ? Ever wonder how sometimes people still get through security with explosives on their person? Research done in the University of Alberta's Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering has revealed a new way to better detect these molecules associated with explosive mixtures.

    A team of researchers including post-doctoral fellows Seonghwan Kim, Dongkyu Lee and Xuchen Liu, with research associate Charles Van Neste, visiting professor, Sangmin Jeon from the Pohang University of Science and Technology (South Korea), and Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering professor Thomas Thundat, has found a method of using receptor-free nanomechanical infrared spectroscopy to increase recognition of chemical molecules in explosive mixtures.

    Detecting trace amounts of explosives with mixed molecules presents a formidable challenge for sensors with chemical coatings. The nanomechanical infrared spectroscopy used by the Univesity of Alberta research team provides higher selectivity in molecular detection by measuring the photothermal effect of the absorbed molecules.

    Thundat, who holds the Canadian Excellence Research Chair in Oil Sands Molecular Engineering, says the spectroscopy looks at the physical nature of the molecule and "even if there are mixed molecules, we can detect specific molecules using this method."

    Seonghwan (Sam) Kim explained that conventional sensors based on coatings generally cannot detect specific molecules in complex mixtures if the concentration of interfering molecules is five times greater than the target molecules. The detection sensitivity and selectivity are drastically increased using the high-power infrared laser because the photothermal signal comes from the absorption of infrared photons and nonradiative decay processes. Using this method, a few trillionths of a gram of explosive molecules can now be detected in a complex mixture even if there is a higher concentration of other interfering molecules.

    The research team's findings are published in Scientific Reports by Nature Publishing Group on January 23, 2013.

    The research team's current work looks at detecting biomolecules and hydrocarbons in the oil industry and nerve gas stimulants (DMMP), which can be found in household radiators, gasoline, and fabric softeners, for example. The team also hopes to develop a hand-held device for chemical detection that could be utilized in fields such as security, health care and environmental protection.

    Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Alberta. The original article was written by Nicole Basaraba.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Seonghwan Kim, Dongkyu Lee, Xunchen Liu, Charles Van Neste, Sangmin Jeon, Thomas Thundat. Molecular recognition using receptor-free nanomechanical infrared spectroscopy based on a quantum cascade laser. Scientific Reports, 2013; 3 DOI: 10.1038/srep01111

    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

    Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/Ox1Gp-Et9W8/130212154623.htm

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    Monday, February 11, 2013

    Japan's Asada wins Four Continents figure skating ? Artesia News

    Mao Asada of Japan reacts after her performance during the women's free skating event at the ISU Four Continents Figure Skating Championships in Osaka, western Japan, Sunday, Feb. 10, 2013. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi)

    Mao Asada of Japan reacts after her performance during the women?s free skating event at the ISU Four Continents Figure Skating Championships in Osaka, western Japan, Sunday, Feb. 10, 2013. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi)

    OSAKA, Japan (AP) ? Two-time world champion Mao Asada won figure skating?s Four Continents on Sunday, leading a Japanese sweep.

    After reintroducing her trademark triple axel in Saturday?s short program, Asada was downgraded on the jump in Sunday?s free skate but was solid in her other elements to finish with 205.45 points. Akiko Suzuki was second with 190.08 points while Kanako Murakami finished third with 181.03.

    Canadians Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford won the pairs with a total of 199.18 points, edging compatriots Kirsten Moore-Towers and Dylan Moscovitch, who finished with 196.78.

    Moore-Towers and Moscovitch won Sunday?s free skate but couldn?t overtake Duhamel and Radford, who built a lead in winning the short program.

    U.S. champions Marissa Castelli and Simon Shnapir were third with 170.10 points.

    Tags: Asia, East Asia, Figure skating, Japan, Skating, Sports, Women's skating, Women's sports

    Source: http://www.artesianews.com/ap-news/sports-ap-news/japans-asada-wins-four-continents-figure-skating/

    ryan oneal

    Friday, February 8, 2013

    UK Government Reasserts Its Right to Snoop on All Electronic ...

    Last April Fool?s Day, the BBC reported that the UK government was planning to introduce legislation that would allow the monitoring of all the ?calls, emails, texts and website visits of everyone in the UK? by the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) intelligence agency. The information would be monitored in real-time and then stored for two years before being erased. The government needed the monitoring capability, it said, to be able to ?investigate serious crime and terrorism and to protect the public.?

    The government also promised that the legislation would ?ensure that the use of communications data is compatible with the government's approach to civil liberties.?

    It's good to see the tradition of doublethink is alive and well in the UK.

    Almost immediately, members of even the government?s own party said that this legislation was a massive overreach and threatened civil liberties. Telecommunication and Internet providers weren?t too happy either, saying that the program was going to be expensive and a nightmare to implement.

    A pre-legislative parliamentary scrutiny committee was set up to look into the feasibility of the proposed legislation, now being dubbed the ?snoopers charter.? By late autumn, word was that the committee did not like what it saw and was preparing to say so in a report in early December. The UK Home Secretary, Theresa May, was aggressively pushing the legislation and on 3 December, upon hearing of the committee?s unflattering appraisal of it, launched a preemptive strike on the committee?s findings. She told the Sun newspaper that the legislation had to be passed, otherwise ?we could see people dying? and ?criminals going free? including ?pedophiles who will not be identified.? She also warned of a reduction in ?our ability to deal with this serious organized crime.?

    May concluded, ?Anybody who is against this bill is putting politics before people?s lives.?

    However, the committee was unimpressed by May?s "you are either with us or against us" attack.? On 10 December, the Guardian published a story detailing the committee's determination that the legislation was unworkable as written, that it ?tramples on the privacy of British citizens,? and further that the estimated cost of the effort of some ?1.8 billion over 10 years was ?fanciful and misleading.? Nick Clegg, the leader of the government?s Liberal Democrat coalition party, told May, ?We cannot proceed with this bill and we have to go back to the drawing board."

    So politics and common sense won out, at least for a little while. ?There were warning signs that this wouldn't last, however. While May stated that she was ?open-minded? about changing the legislation, the Guardian reported that she ?remained determined to introduce it before the session ends next spring and get it on the statute book before the next election.?

    This week May's snooping desires got a boost as the London Telegraph reported that the cross-party parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) has come out in support of the "snoopers charter," though it also warned that the ?the government must do more to convince public of the need for them.?? Hmm, sounds like it time to beat the ?it?s all for the sake of the children? drum a bit louder, or maybe, to say, a la Orwell, that the charter is needed as an ?act of self-defense against a homicidal maniac.?

    According to the Telegraph, the Director General of MI5, Jonathan Evans, said that without the legislation, ?it was increasingly difficult to be confident that targets were being fully watched? because of rapid changes in communication technology. And in a related story at the Guardian, the Home Office claims that the charter is urgently needed as ?there is already a 25 percent ?capability gap? between the tracking data that the security services need to access and their ability to do so.?

    Evans did admit to the ISC, though, that the Home Office?s 25 percent figure depended upon some ?pretty heroic assumptions,? the Guardian reported. In other words, it was most likely a number that made for a good news sound bite, but that the capability gap has little credibility indeed.

    A story at the Daily Mail reports that the UK's intelligence service says it isn't interested in unfettered access to the content of every communication, and that its fetters would still be court orders, which it would continue to obtain. It just wants information on ?who sends a message, where and how it is sent, and who receives it.?

    Of course, with people's identities closely bound with their cellphones, and with all the GPS and other information that cellphones throw off these days, this metadata is often more important than the information content itself, much of which, by the way, can probably be inferred pretty quickly with advanced data analytics. And if the messages are passing though the communication channels being monitored by the U.S. National Security Agency, the contents can probably be provided to GCHQ without a UK court order request even being filed.

    The Daily Mail article also points out that GCHQ isn?t worried whether the messages are encrypted, either. Apparently, it has ?options? to deal with it.

    How this all plays out, time will only tell. But the idea of a democratic government that maintains its belief in its citizens' right to privacy also claiming in the same breath it also has a right to snoop on all forms of electronic communication reminds me of another Orwell quote: ?We have now sunk to a depth at which restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men.?

    Image: iStockphoto

    Source: http://spectrum.ieee.org/riskfactor/telecom/wireless/uk-government-reasserts-its-right-to-snoop-on-all-electronic-communications

    norovirus

    Lawmakers study drone report before CIA hearing

    FILE - In this Oct. 29, 2010 file photo, Deputy National Security Adviser for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism John Brennan briefs reporters at the White House in Washington. Brennan, now President Barack Obama's nominee to be CIA director, withdrew from consideration for the job in 2008 amid criticism over the agency's use of harsh interrogation techniques, like waterboarding, against terrorist suspects. This time, in 2013, he's making it clear he strongly opposes such practices. Former and current U.S. intelligence officials say Brennan wasn't so vocal a decade ago. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

    FILE - In this Oct. 29, 2010 file photo, Deputy National Security Adviser for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism John Brennan briefs reporters at the White House in Washington. Brennan, now President Barack Obama's nominee to be CIA director, withdrew from consideration for the job in 2008 amid criticism over the agency's use of harsh interrogation techniques, like waterboarding, against terrorist suspects. This time, in 2013, he's making it clear he strongly opposes such practices. Former and current U.S. intelligence officials say Brennan wasn't so vocal a decade ago. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

    (AP) ? Lawmakers pored over a top-secret memo explaining the White House's rationale for drone strikes targeting al-Qaida operatives overseas, just hours before President Barack Obama's choice to head the CIA faced a Senate Intelligence Committee confirmation hearing.

    John Brennan, the White House counterterrorism chief and Obama's nominee to run the nation's spy agency, helped manage the drone program. His confirmation hearing Thursday afternoon set the stage for a public airing of some of the most controversial programs in the covert war on al-Qaida, from deadly drone strikes to the CIA's use of interrogation techniques like waterboarding during President George W. Bush's administration.

    Delivery of the secret document to the Senate and House intelligence committees, directed by Obama late Wednesday, suggested the White House was trying to clear obstacles to Obama's second run at placing Brennan in the top spot at the CIA. His first attempt, in 2009, was stymied by critics who charged that Brennan backed harsh interrogation techniques used while he was at the CIA.

    Obama directed the Justice Department to provide the memo to members of the Senate and House intelligence committees. Lawmakers were examining the opinion Thursday.

    Spokesman Jay Carney said the White House was making an "extraordinary accommodation" in allowing lawmakers to view classified Justice Department legal advice on drone strikes against Americans. Carney said the White House does not plan to send the Justice memos to lawmakers beyond those on the House and Senate intelligence committees.

    "This is not an open-ended process," he said. "This is a specific and unique accommodation in this circumstance."

    Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., a committee member who had pressed the administration to provide the opinion, left open the possibility he might still try to block Brennan's nomination. He said turning over the opinion was a good first step.

    "I'm committed to making sure that we get all the facts," Wyden said on NBC's "Today" show. "Early this morning, I'm going to be going in to read the opinion. We'll go from there."

    Wyden said "there are still substantial questions" about how the administration justifies and plans drone strikes. "The Founding Fathers thought the president should have significant power in the national security arena. But there have to be checks and balances," Wyden said. "You can't just skirt those checks and balances if you think it's inconvenient."

    An unclassified memo leaked this week says it is legal for the government to kill U.S. citizens abroad if it believes they are senior al-Qaida leaders continually engaged in operations aimed at killing Americans, even if there is no evidence of a specific imminent attack.

    Brennan laid out the administration's policy for targeting al-Qaida with lethal drone strikes ahead of the hearing, defending the use of such strikes but disavowing the harsh interrogation techniques used when he was at the CIA.

    In answers to pre-hearing questions released Wednesday by the Senate Intelligence Committee, Brennan said no further legislation was necessary to conduct operations against al-Qaida wherever it's operating.

    He also answered some of his critics who charged him with backing the detention and interrogation policy while he served at the CIA. Brennan said in his written answers that he was "aware of the program but did not play a role in its creation, execution, or oversight." He added that he "had significant concerns and personal objections" to the interrogation techniques and voiced those objections privately to colleagues at the agency.

    Brennan went on to describe how individuals are targeted for drone strikes, saying whether a suspect is deemed an imminent threat ? and therefore appropriate for targeting ? is made "on a case-by-case basis through a coordinated interagency process" involving intelligence, military, diplomatic and other agencies.

    Human rights and civil liberties groups have decried the methods for targeting terror suspects, especially U.S. citizens.

    Brennan defended the missile strikes by unmanned Predator or Reaper drones as a more humane form of war, but he acknowledged "instances when, regrettably and despite our best efforts, civilians have been killed."

    "It is exceedingly rare, and much rarer than many allege," he added.

    Aides have portrayed Brennan as cautious in the use of drones, restraining others at the CIA or military who would use them more often, even though as the White House's counterterror adviser, he has presided over an explosion of drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. Fewer than 50 strikes took place during the Bush administration, while more than 360 strikes have been launched under Obama, according to the website The Long War Journal, which tracks the operations.

    Administration officials say Brennan would further limit the use of drones by the CIA and leave the majority of strikes to the military. Brennan signaled in his written answers that he would not seek to expand the CIA's paramilitary operations.

    "While the CIA needs to maintain a paramilitary capability ... the CIA should not be used, in my view, to carry out traditional military activities," Brennan wrote, referring to activities like the special operations raid that killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

    The CIA's drone strikes primarily focus on al-Qaida and Taliban targets in the tribal regions of Pakistan, while the military has launched strikes against al-Qaida targets in Yemen and Somalia. The agency also carries out strikes in Yemen, where three American citizens with al-Qaida connections have been killed: Anwar al-Awlaki, his 16-year-old-son and Samir Khan.

    Brennan said he would work to improve the CIA's intelligence collection and performance across the Arab world after a spate of unanticipated unrest, from the revolts of the Arab Spring to the terror attack that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans in Benghazi, Libya.

    Brennan will also face questions about charges that White House officials leaked details of the administration's national security policies, including its cyberattacks against Iran's nuclear infrastructure, to burnish Obama's standing as commander in chief ahead of last year's presidential election.

    Brennan told the Senate committee that he was questioned as a voluntary witness in a leaks investigation the White House launched in response to congressional anger.

    He also said that in his current role, he is "vigilant about not disclosing classified intelligence matters with unauthorized persons" but added that "in exceptional circumstances ... it may be necessary to acknowledge classified information to a member of the media or to declassify information for the very purpose of limiting damage to national security."

    ___

    Associated Press writers Julie Pace, Lara Jakes and Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

    ___

    Follow Dozier on Twitter: http://twitter.com/KimberlyDozier

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-07-Brennan-CIA/id-ab3d67ec924441d29a6ebe4fac5d8225

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