Council of Worlds at WAR re Announcement Delays

Note the location of “Planet 9” and the inbound path for Nibiru provided by the Zetas in 1997. Nibiru arrived, right on schedule in 2003, and right where predicted a full 7 years earlier. Where the Zetas provided the location of the gravity draw represented by the Sun’s dark unlit binary and the inbound Nibiru in 1983, when the IRAS team lofted its infra-red balloon in search of the inbound Nibiru, this location was not provided to the public. All articles in print at that time only referring to the location as the “western edge of the constellation Orion”, quite vague, and the “western edge” is vast. Yet the Zetas pinpointed the location as being just outside the lower bow of Orion. Such is the accuracy of ZetaTalk. How would the public eventually become “aware of the history and accuracy of ZetaTalk predictions” as predicted by the Zetas on April 16, 2016? ? It would seem this is already in process.


SOZT March 19, 2016

So what happened to the announcement? Obama lacked the courage. As a result of this colossal failure,  having to disband the Jade Helm structure, the US military reacted. Obama is no longer running the country. Chief of Staff General Dunford is. Ben Fulford has for months been referring to Obama as the US “spokesperson”. Is this true, and how does this work? In that the Middle East, under the direction and press from Israel, Turkey, the Jewish bankers of the Federal Reserve, and the Saudis were supporting ISIS and this threatened to create a force that would not only invade Europe but also create an endless terrorism threat to the US, the military did indeed effect a silent coup. Russia needed to enter the fray, and Dunford, but not Obama, agreed. This will never be admitted, publicly, nor do the parties want this.
EOZT


SOZT October 1, 2015
The three major social media outlets in use around the globe all had significant, and simultaneous outages between September 20-24, 2015. Skype had complaints from the UK, Australia, and Japan. Twitter received reports from the US, Australia, and Singapore. FaceBook had the loudest howls, primarily from the US and Europe. Notably these downtimes, some lasting for hours or even days, got no attention in the major media, and there was no real explanation for the outages.  Every Skype user has an account and a password, as do their contacts. Every Skype user can broadcast messages to their contacts, even if these contacts are not presently online. Every twitter use likewise has an account and a password, and by sending a tweet passes information along to subscribers, who can retweet the info in the future. FaceBook users likewise have an account and a password, with many friends who pick up info from each other and pass it along on their FaceBook accounts.  In all of this, the networks themselves are AWARE of the accounts and passwords, and could do a broadcast to all in the event of an announcement. Check your user agreements. This is legal!
EOZT


SOZT April 25, 2015
When we announced that the Council of Worlds would be going to war with the elite over their blockage of the announcement, the tools available to the Council were not immediately apparent. Early in the campaign the Sony hack showed one such mechanism, whereby an anonymous hacker revealed embarrassing information about Sony executives. Similarly exposing pedophile activities by Prince Andrew and Bill Clinton and blatant lies by self-promoting media talking heads such as Brian Williams and Bill O’Reilly required nothing more than encouraging contactees to step forward.  In many, many cases a financial loss sufficient to trigger a clash among the elite is a result of an electronic delay during trades. 
EOZT


SOZT July 4, 2015
What is the message here? As with other failed launches, this most recent failure is a definitive message from the Council of Worlds. Space X has had success in resupplying the ISS, though has flounded on landing on a floating ocean platform.  Resupply of the ISS is OK, reuse of their launch equipment so as to help the elite escape, not OK. The message now is that the elite should not expect to get into space at all. No escape. The message here is to take all hope away from such plans among the elite. They are to remain on Earth with the common man. We expect the battle to shift from attempts to block the announcement, or deny its meaning, to attempts to enslave the common man in some way. That is another fight, on another day.
EOZT


SOZT November 1, 2014
The elite – the wealthy and politically powerful in the world – have continued in their attempts to thwart the announcement by Obama and his partners admitting that Nibiru, aka Planet X exists. We have long stated that the announcement date was set by Obama and Xi at their June 7-8, 2013 meeting in Santa Monica. The flustered slip given by the French Foreign Minister on May 13, 2014 re “500 days
http://www.zetatalk.com/ning/17ma2014.htm
until climate chaos” was in reference to this, as the date set was to be 500 days from the 2013 meeting, ie October 20, 2014.
EOZT


SOZT November 8, 2014
Relying solely on Russia or China to proceed would get the truth out BUT since the block had always been on the US end, via Reagan’s national security directive, without a confirmation from Obama this is awkward and subject to being countered. If true, where is the confirmation from Obama? It would be packaged as some odd communist attack against Obama going into the elections, to make him seem weak, almost comical. So where is this going now? For us to comment would be to empower the enemy, which of course we will not do. Your curiosity is not as important as having the announcement succeed.
EOZT


SOZT December 10, 2014
We have stated that the public will see only the flash and parry of swords from a distance during the Council of Worlds war with the cover-up crowd. Meanwhile, periodic tests of the Emergency Broadcast System in the US are done, to see if the channels are open. As of this writing, they are not yet open. The war is still on, full press. Meanwhile, during the flash and parry of swords, one can see resistance, pleading, panic, and capitulation.
EOZT

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Comment by SongStar101 on November 8, 2015 at 12:11pm

CIA Email Hackers Return With Major Law Enforcement Breach

http://www.wired.com/2015/11/cia-email-hackers-return-with-major-la...

Hackers who broke into the personal email account of CIA Director John Brennan have struck again.

This time the group, which goes by the name Crackas With Attitude, says it gained access to an even more important target—a portal for law enforcement that grants access to arrest records and other sensitive data, including what appears to be a tool for sharing information about active shooters and terrorist events, and a system for real-time chats between law enforcement agents.

The CWA hackers said they found a vulnerability that allowed them to gain access to the private portal, which is supposed to be available only to the FBI and other law enforcement agencies around the country. That portal in turn, they say, gave them access to more than a dozen law enforcement tools that are used for information sharing.

The hackers wouldn’t identify the vulnerability that gave them access, but one of the hackers, who calls himself Cracka, provided WIRED with a screenshot of one of the systems they accessed called JABS. JABS stands for Joint Automated Booking System, and is a database of arrest records for the US.

Cracka is the same handle of a hacker who spoke with WIRED last month to describe how the same group hacked into the private email account of the CIA....

This latest breach, if legitimate, is significant because it gives the hackers access to arrest records directly after they have been entered into the system. This would be valuable information for gossip sites and other media outlets interested in breaking stories about the arrest of celebrities and politicians.

More importantly, the system can also include information about arrests that are under court seal and may not be made public for months or years—such as the arrest of suspected terrorists, gang members and drug suspects. Knowledge about these arrests can tip off other members of a terrorist cell or gang to help them avoid capture.

“Just to clear this up,” Cracka tweeted on Thursday about the breach of the JABS database. “CWA did, indeed, have access to everybody in USA’s private information, now imagine if we was Russia or China.”

Sealed arrest records are also quite common in hacker investigations when law enforcement officials quietly arrest an individual, then flip him to work as a confidential informant with agents to capture others.


A former FBI agent confirmed to WIRED that JABS shows “all arrests and bookings no matter the sealing.” But he noted that arrest records in which suspects are charged under seal “will only have limited data,” and sensitive records are sometimes removed from the system to prevent news of an arrest from leaking.

“The records go in but after processing they can be removed if they are sensitive matters,” he said, “or more likely there will be [a] flag when you run a name to contact a specific agency. Hackers might be removed if they are potentially cooperating witnesses or sources.”

He noted, however, that “[i]t takes some serious work or threats to get the records removed.”

The investigation into Silk Road, for example, involved a number of initial arrests that were kept quiet to avoid tipping off other suspects.

Cracka told WIRED that he and his fellow hackers were able to view the JABS arrest record of Jeremy Hammond. Hammond was a hacktivist with Anonymous who is currently serving a 10-year sentence for hacking into Strategic Forecasting in 2011 and stealing 5 million private email messages and 60,000 customer credit card numbers. He told WIRED, however, that they did not access other criminal records.

“[W]e wasn’t there to hurt innocent people, just the government,” he said.

Cracka wouldn’t identify the vulnerability used to access the portal, because he said the hackers are still trying to obtain more information from the system. But, notably, an announcement from Box earlier this year indicated that law enforcement has recently begun using its file-sharing system for transmitting records. It’s not clear if this partnership has some significance to the breach, and Cracka did not not respond when WIRED inquired about Box specifically.

It was through the vulnerable law enforcement portal that the hackers say they also obtained a list of about 3,000 names, titles, email addresses and phone numbers for government employees that they posted to Pastebin on Thursday. The posting, which they indicated was just “Part 1” of a presumably multi-part leak, consisted of a snippet of an alphabetical list of government employees working for the FBI and other federal agencies as well as various local police and sheriff departments around the country. It included job titles, email addresses and phone numbers.

The hackers leaked these contact details yesterday, November 5, which is also known as Guy Fawkes Day, a popular symbolic figure and date that has previously been appropriated by the hacking collective Anonymous.

In addition to the names and contact details of law enforcement agents and the JABS database, the CWA hackers say they had access to law enforcement’s Enterprise File Transfer Service, which the government describes as a web interface for securely sharing and transmitting files. Cracka provided WIRED with a long menu of sensitive tools that appeared on the portal’s main page and to which they presumably had access. The menu includes:

Enterprise File Transfer Service—a web interface to securely share and transmit files.

Cyber Shield Alliance—an FBI Cybersecurity partnership initiative “developed by Law Enforcement for Law Enforcement to proactively defend and counter cyber threats against LE networks and critical technologies,” the portal reads. “The FBI stewards an array of cybersecurity resources and intelligence, much of which is now accessible to LEA’s through the Cyber Shield Alliance.”

DFS Test and eGuardian Training—there was no description for either of these.

IC3—“a vehicle to receive, develop, and refer criminal complaints regarding the rapidly expanding arena of cyber crime.”

IDEAFX—a “web-based, file/folder sharing capabilities for cross-organizational teams”

Intelink—a “secure portal for integrated intelligence dissemination and collaboration efforts”

Intelink IM—provides real-time chat between users logged into the law enforcement system.

Justice Enterprise File Sharing—“This application has been created using http://box.com as the base technology and provides cloud hosted capabilities for greater stability and growth for file/folder sharing. It has the ability to transfer files up to 15 GB,” reads the description.

In addition to these, the portal also includes access to:

Special Interest Group—described as a “controlled/structured-access area for specialized organizations or disciplines to share and store information as a means to enhance collaboration with law enforcement, intelligence and emergency management communities.”

Virtual Command Center—a real-time, collaborative tool is used for operations and events that include active shooter incidents, warrants, natural disasters, child abductions, terrorist attacks and threats, as well as something described only as special events. The latter likely includes visits by dignitaries, such as the president or visiting foreign leaders, that require special coordination with local law enforcement agencies.

National Data Exchange, also known as N-DEx—“provides local, state, tribal, and federal criminal justice agencies with a mechanism to nationally share, search, link, and analyze information across jurisdictional boundaries.

National Gang Intelligence Center—a “multi-agency effort that integrates gang information from local, state, and federal law enforcement entities to serve as a centralized intelligence resource for gang information and analytical support.”

Repository for Individuals of Special Concern, also known as RISC—“allows officers on the street to use a
mobile identification (ID) device to perform a ‘lightsout’ rapid search of a limited repository of fingerprint records.”

RISSNET—which provides “timely access to a variety of law enforcement sensitive, officer safety, and public safety resources”

ViCAP Web National Crime Database—“a repository for behavioral and investigative information related to criteria Homicides, Sexual Assaults, Missing Persons, and Unidentified Human Remains cases. Authorized users can click on the ViCAP logo to access the database. All other users can go to the ViCAP SIG to obtain information about gaining access and view various ViCAP documents and resources.”

Active Shooter Resources Page—a clearinghouse for materials available for use by law enforcement agencies and other first responders around the country.

Malware Investigator—an automated tool that “analyzes suspected malware samples and quickly returns technical information about the samples to its users so they can understand the samples’ functionality.”

Homeland Security Information Network, or HSIN—which “provides users with a trusted network to share Sensitive But Unclassified information.”

eGuardian—a “system that allows Law Enforcement, Law Enforcement support and force protection personnel the ability to report, track and share threats, events and suspicious activities with a potential nexus to terrorism, cyber or other criminal activity.”

Cracka told WIRED that he didn’t conduct the hack for fame or laughs.

“[I] just want people to u8nderstnad im NOT and NEVER will be here for fame, im here for my message and thats it,” he wrote WIRED. “[I] just want people to know im doing this for palestine.”

On Thursday he posted several images to Twitter showing Palestinian victims of violence, and also posted a statement to Pastebin explaining his motives.

“I’m the bad guy in the news that’s targeting the US government for funding Israel,” he wrote in the Pastebin message. “Did you know there was over 26,000 civilian deaths due to war-related violence in the Afghanistan war? Did you know the US military bombed an Afghan hospital?…I am standing against the US government for a good reason and I don’t give a fuck what the consequences are, fuck the fame bullshit, I’m here to get my message across and that’s all I’m here for.”

Cracka told WIRED that they don’t currently have plans to leak more information, at least not any time soon.

Comment by SongStar101 on November 4, 2015 at 10:09pm

Zeta's Right Again! The start of more in the EU, US perhaps?  Immunity seems no longer possible with those in high positions. 

http://www.zetatalk.com/ning/14jy2012.htm

There has been steadfast erosion in the ranks, who leave their jobs or city residences to head for bunker locations, converting their stocks and bonds and real estate holdings to precious metals and jewels. This trend has pock marked the ranks of the establishment determined to maintain the cover-up so that it looks like Swiss cheese, rather than a wall of solid determination.

All it takes on the part of the Council of Worlds to accelerate the trend is a nudge here or a nudge there, a hint that it would be oh, so easy, to remove the Element of Doubt and allow the common man to speak out. And then the roar of rage, which the establishment so fears would emerge from the populace, would be heard. How often has one seen, in movies or in real life, the bully suddenly groveling and pleading, the tables turned, when they lose control. This point is approaching, and will be seen by a capitulation in the cover-up crowd.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Bringing in the scalps: the woman leading Romania's war on corruption

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/nov/04/woman-leading-war-on-c...

Victor Ponta’s decision on Wednesday to resign as Romania’s prime minister may not be the end of his woes. Street protests this week were merely the culmination of months of pressure triggered by a fraud and corruption case against him.

Ponta is not alone. A slew of politicians, mayors, judges and prosecutors have been targeted in an anti-corruption drive quite unlike any other in eastern Europe – or the world for that matter. And it is a quiet, unassuming chief prosecutor, Laura Codruţa Kövesi, who is bringing in the scalps.

“Before 2005, Romanian justice was not independent,” says Kövesi, 42, in an interview given before Ponta’s resignation. “This is why there was not enough courage to open complex investigations against high-level officials.”

A specialist anti-corruption agency, known by the acronym DNA, was founded in 2003, and it took a few years for it to narrow its focus on high-level graft – cases involving more than €10,000 (£7,000) – and for it to start bringing successful prosecutions.

Nowadays there are 120 prosecutors working on more than 6,000 cases. The entrance to the DNA’s central Bucharest offices is permanently staked out by television news crews waiting to see who will turn up next for questioning.

Last year the agency successfully prosecuted 24 mayors, five MPs, two ex-ministers and a former prime minister, not to mention more than 1,000 other individuals, including judges and prosecutors, with a conviction rate above 90%.

“This year we have investigated 12 members of parliament, two of them being former ministers,” says Kövesi, who was appointed head of DNA in 2013. “We have investigated two sitting ministers, one of whom went from his ministerial chair directly to pre-trial detention.”

In September, Bucharest’s mayor, Sorin Oprescu, was arrested after being accused of taking kickbacks from companies awarded contracts by the city.

However, Ponta is by far the biggest target to date. According to Kövesi, the investigations into the outgoing prime minister lasted about four months, at the end of which he was formally indicted on multiple counts of forgery, money laundering and being an accessory to tax evasion, dating from a period between 2007 and 2008 when he was still a practicing lawyer.

Prosecutors had hoped to investigate him for activities while in office, but in June Romania’s parliament voted down an attempt to lift his parliamentary immunity.

Romanians seem to have been impressed by the activities of DNA: according to one recent poll, 60% of people said they trusted the agency, while only 11% said they trusted parliament.

However, not everyone is happy with DNA’s activities. Barely a week goes by without Kövesi being attacked in the media.

After he was formally indicted, Ponta denounced the prosecutor in charge of his case on his Facebook page, saying Romania’s only problem was “the obsession of a totally unprofessional prosecutor trying to make a name by inventing and imagining facts and untrue situations from 10 years ago”.

Others have questioned the political motivations of prosecutors at DNA, though the agency has successfully gone after plenty of politicians on both sides of the parliamentary aisle.

Some have also criticised the use of wiretaps, suggesting it is behaviour taken from the playbook of the Securitate, the feared communist-era secret police.

Kövesi dismisses those concerns, saying that every wiretap has to be authorised by a judge and that such monitoring is “a tool used all over the world. It is used in EU member states. It is a common tool for prosecutors.”

The criticism and public attention has apparently had little impact on Kövesi. “Before being chief prosecutor of DNA I was the general prosecutor of Romania for six years, so for the last nine years I have had enough time to get accustomed to these things. Fortunately there are people who also praise me, so things are balanced,” she says.

The biggest challenges for prosecutors come from politicians, she adds. “Every two weeks they come with a new bill trying to change or amend the current provisions. Trying to limit our possibilities of investigations. Trying to amend the criminal code. Trying to deprive us of our tools to limit our possibilities of investigation. What’s curious is they never try to improve the legislation to help us more,” she says.

Strong support in Romania and within the EU has made it harder to hinder the efforts and independence of DNA. “Every time we hear that they try to pass a new law limiting our possibilities, we go public and we take a stand regarding this issue,” says Kövesi.

Despite all this, there is still a long way to go. Romania ranked joint last among EU members on Transparency International’s 2014 corruption perceptions index, alongside Italy, Greece and Bulgaria. But for Kövesi at least there is a sense that the agency is making a difference.

“I do think DNA’s activities have changed the mentality of Romanian citizens,” she says. “They are aware now that they don’t need to pay bribes in order to be granted their rights.”

Comment by SongStar101 on November 3, 2015 at 10:46pm

Vatican hit by new claims of financial mismanagement and lavish spending

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/nov/03/vatileaks-scandal-deep...

Journalists claim to have exposed millions in lost revenues and senior officials pouring church funds into their already-lavish apartments

Ever since his election as spiritual head of the Roman Catholic church in 2013, Pope Francis has always said he wants a church for the poor.

But two controversial new books describe a Vatican awash with cash that is woefully mismanaged, where senior officials pour church funds into their already-lavish apartments, and where even the office that researches candidates for sainthood has had its bank accounts frozen out of concerns about financial impropriety.

Nuzzi’s book is not the only publication to be raising eyebrows in Rome this week. Avarice, a work by journalist Emiliano Fittipaldi also to be released on Thursday, delves into allegations of financial shenanigans, including an allegation that the Vatican’s former secretary of state, Tarcisio Bertone, used €200,000 (£142,000) from a foundation meant to support the Bambino Gesù paediatric hospital in Rome to renovate his own apartment. Under an agreement alleged in the book, the “mega-penthouse” could, in exchange, be used for hospital functions.

According to La Repubblica, which published excerpts of the book, Bertone told Fittipaldi that he had paid his share of the renovation costs.

The embarrassing allegations were unveiled a day after the Vatican announced it had arrested two members of a former Vatican committee on suspicion of leaking documents that apparently formed the basis of the books’ key allegations.

Francesca Chaouqui, a public relations expert, and Monsignor Lucio Ángel Vallejo Balda, a Spanish member of the church bureaucracy, or curia, were questioned and arrested for allegedly stealing church documents. On her Facebook page, Chaouqui, whose profile picture captures a smiling Pope Francis shaking her hand, denied having betrayed the Argentinian pope.

Under the hashtag #MoreThanAnythingInThisWorld, she wrote: “I have not betrayed the Pope. Nor have I have given a piece of paper to anyone ... It will emerge soon that I have the full certainty and total trust in the investigators ... No pity please, I have my head held high, and [have] nothing to be ashamed of.”

Balda could not be reached by the Guardian.

In Rome on Tuesday the sensational story of the arrests was superseded by the new allegations of Vatican impropriety.

Pope Francis signalled when he was elected that cleaning up church finances was a top priority and the Vatican bank – just one arm of the Vatican’s financial empire – has since claimed that it has come a long way since the days when it was considered a pariah in the global banking system, a place where mobsters and corrupt politicians alike could allegedly launder their funds with impunity.


Can Pope Francis clean up God’s bank?


But the two books, citing confidential documents, describe intense resistance to Pope Francis’s reform efforts, even as international auditors warned the pope that there was a “complete lack of transparency in the bookkeeping of both the Holy See the Governorate”, and that costs were out of control, according to Nuzzi’s book.

The allegations are not entirely new. The most senior cardinal charged with overhauling the Vatican finances, the Australian George Pell, described earlier this year that the Vatican had $1.5bn (£1bn) in assets that had not been previously ac... that the accounts were “muddled”.

Nuzzi’s tell-all, which the Guardian has seen in advance of its release, describes how one of the tasks of the committee for which Baldi and Chaouqui worked was to get to grips with the Vatican’s $2.7bn real estate holdings, which the commission found were worth seven times more than previously reported.

It also examined the office within the Vatican that researches candidates for sainthood. What it allegedly found was astounding: even though the office is closely examining the records of hundreds of people for possible sainthood – an effort that costs about €500,000 per possible saint – the office told the commission that it had no documentation it could provide to back up its expenses, which run into the “tens of millions of euros”.

The Vatican bank did not include the closure of the account in detail in its annual report.

The Vatican declined to comment on the allegations contained in the books. “For now, we are not saying anything,” said Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman.

On Monday, when it announced the arrests, the Holy See said in a statement: “Publications of this nature do not help in any way to establish clarity and truth, but rather generate confusion and partial and tendentious conclusions.”


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In December 2013 this shows the leading up to the Swiss bank accounts issues:

The scandal at the Vatican bank

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/3029390a-5c68-11e3-931e-00144feabdc0.html

On June 28 this year (2013), Italian police arrested a silver-haired priest, Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, in Rome. The cleric, nicknamed Monsignor Cinquecento after the €500 bills he habitually carried around with him, was charged with fraud and corruption, together with a former secret service agent and a ­financial broker. All three were suspected of attempting to smuggle €20m by private plane across the border from Switzerland.

“We cannot have any more scandal. It is so shameful,” a senior member of the Vatican’s financial administration said.

How God’s bank ended up as a financial penitent this year is a bracing chapter in the history of financial reforms that have swelled up in the aftermath of the 2008 credit crisis. Untouchable havens such as Switzerland and Liechtenstein were forced to open their chocolate-box palaces to the probes of international regulators. This year the power of the popes was challenged.

The FT interviewed two dozen bankers, lawyers, regulators and Catholic insiders over 11 months to understand how the murky operations of a bank with €5bn in assets, and which says its aim is to serve the global mission of the Catholic Church, had unnerved bankers, regulators and governments across Europe and the US.

Comment by Mark on November 1, 2015 at 10:01am

Pressure builds on Blair over Chilcot report as it's revealed ministers were told to destroy key evidence on eve of conflict which showed Iraq War was ILLEGAL

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3298498/Burn-destroy-Pressu...

Tony Blair was rocked last night by a new crisis over Iraq after it was revealed that Ministers were told to ‘burn’ a secret document which said the war was illegal.
The Mail on Sunday has learned how Downing Street descended into panic on the eve of the war when Attorney General Lord Goldsmith told Mr Blair the conflict could be challenged under international law.
The Prime Minister was horrified, and Ministers and officials who had a copy of Goldsmith’s written opinion were told: ‘Burn it. Destroy it.’
Ten days later, with the invasion just days away, Goldsmith did a U-turn and said an attack could be justified. Among those who were told to ‘burn’ their copy was Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon, who flatly ignored the order.
It is also claimed that Mr Hoon threatened to expose such Iraq War secrets when he resisted a bid by Tony Blair to kick him out of the Cabinet. Mr Hoon denied those claims last night. The disclosure is one of the most shocking indications yet that Blair and his inner circle were intent on war, while publicly claiming to be pursuing a diplomatic solution.
It has long been suspected that Labour’s ruling clique put pressure on the Attorney General to come up with a legal opinion in favour of the conflict – an accusation which is being investigated by Sir John Chilcot as a key part of his long-delayed inquiry into the war.
Last week, Sir John announced his report would not be published until June or July 2016.

Comment by KM on October 29, 2015 at 10:55am

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3294356/My-Blair-dossier-mo...

My Blair dossier: PETER OBORNE has conducted his own investigation into the Iraq war. With Chilcot Report scandalously delayed, he delivers his own devastating verdict

  • It is feared the Chilcot Report into the Iraq War will not be ready until 2017
  • Peter Oborne and a BBC team have since worked to produce their own
  • Here, he gives answers to the four key questions of the build up to the war

Already years late, Sir John Chilcot will write to the Prime Minister in the next few days, setting the timetable, at last, for publication for his inquiry into the Iraq War.

It is feared that will not be ready until 2017 - no less than seven years late and a full decade after the last British troops pulled out of Iraq.

The delay in the inquiry, commissioned by prime minister Gordon Brown in 2009, has become a national scandal. The relatives of the 179 servicemen who died in Iraq — in many people’s view an unnecessary and futile war — should not be kept waiting a minute longer.

For the past three weeks, I have been working with a BBC team to produce our own Iraq Report. Our findings are based on the testimonies and evidence that has already been offered to Chilcot — as well as on our own interviews with key players involved in the run-up to the war. We have set out to answer the four central questions that Chilcot and his team have yet to deliver on . . . and they make chilling reading.

Sir John Chilcot will write to the Prime Minister in the next few days, setting the timetable for publication for his inquiry into the Iraq War

Sir John Chilcot will write to the Prime Minister in the next few days, setting the timetable for publication for his inquiry into the Iraq War



Comment by casey a on October 28, 2015 at 10:53am

report on the world series power outage...

Power outage disrupts Fox telecast of World Series

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/28/us-baseball-worldseries-o...

The Fox Sports telecast of Game One of the World Series in Kansas City was knocked off the air due to a "rare electronics failure," the broadcaster said on Tuesday...

Fox switched to the MLB Network's live international feed of the game, though that too went down before shortly coming back on air.

"Before the start of the bottom of the fourth inning ... a rare electronics failure caused both the primary and backup generators inside the Fox Sports production compound to lose power," Fox Sports said in a statement.

Google Fiber apologized for a "service outage" in Kansas City just as the game was starting, but it was not immediately clear whether that problem was related to the Fox glitch.

Comment by Kris H on October 28, 2015 at 3:16am
Mysterious power outage during World Series.
Comment by SongStar101 on October 26, 2015 at 11:08am

Tony Blair makes qualified apology for Iraq war ahead of Chilcot report

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/oct/25/tony-blair-sorry-ira...

Click here to see the CNN interview

Former British PM admits ‘mistakes’ and conflict’s role in rise of Islamic State but defends armed intervention in 2003

Tony Blair has moved to prepare the ground for the publication of the Chilcot inquiry into the Iraq war by offering a qualified apology for the use of misleading intelligence and the failure to prepare for the aftermath of the invasion.

In an interview with Fareed Zakaria on CNN, the former British prime minister declined to apologise for the war itself and defended armed intervention in 2003, pointing to the current civil war in Syria to highlight the dangers of inaction.


There is no doubt about it: Tony Blair was on the warpath from earl...


Blair, who will be aware of what Sir John Chilcot is planning to say about him in the long-awaited report into the Iraq war, moved to pre-empt its criticisms in an interview with CNN. He told Zakaria: “I apologise for the fact that the intelligence we received was wrong.

“I also apologise for some of the mistakes in planning and, certainly, our mistake in our understanding of what would happen once you removed the regime.”

But Blair made clear that he still felt he made the right decision in backing the US invasion of Iraq to remove Saddam Hussein. He said: “I find it hard to apologise for removing Saddam.”

Blair also made light of the claims that he should stand trial on war crimes charges and defended his policy of what he used to describe as liberal interventionism. He contrasted what he described as “my ‘crime’” – the removal of Saddam – and the civil war in Syria.

“We have stood back and we, in the west, bear responsibility for this – Europe most of all. We’ve done nothing. That’s a judgment of history I’m prepared to have.”

Blair indicated that he saw merit in the argument that the Iraq war was to blame for the rise of Islamic State (Isis). “I think there are elements of truth in that,” he said when asked whether the Iraq invasion had been the “principal cause” of the rise of Isis.

He added: “Of course you can’t say those of us who removed Saddam in 2003 bear no responsibility for the situation in 2015.”

Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish first minister, responded by saying that the “Blair spin operation” had swung into action as Chilcot prepares to set out a timetable for the publication of his report.


— Nicola Sturgeon (@NicolaSturgeon) October 24, 2015

The Blair spin operation begins but the country still awaits the truth. The delay to Chilcot report is a scandal. https://t.co/pPhRcZzGrc


Sturgeon tweeted: “The Blair spin operation begins but the country still awaits the truth. The delay to Chilcot report is a scandal.”

In his long-awaited report, Chilcot is expected to criticise the use of intelligence that suggested Hussein had weapons of mass destruction in the run-up to the Iraq war. The former Northern Ireland Office permanent secretary is also expected to say that the UK and the US failed to make adequate preparations for the aftermath of the invasion.

Blair’s office sought to downplay the significance of the CNN interview, part of a programme called Long Road to Hell: America in Iraq, to be broadcast on the network on Monday.

A spokeswoman said: “Tony Blair has always apologised for the intelligence being wrong and for mistakes in planning. He has always also said, and says again here, that he does not however think it was wrong to remove Saddam.”


There is no doubt about it: Tony Blair was on the warpath from earl...


She added: “He did not say the decision to remove Saddam in 2003 ‘caused Isis’ and pointed out that Isis was barely heard of at the end of 2008, when al-Qaida was basically beaten. He went on to say in 2009, Iraq was relatively more stable.

“What then happened was a combination of two things: there was a sectarian policy pursued by the government of Iraq, which were mistaken policies. But also when the Arab spring began, Isis moved from Iraq into Syria, built themselves from Syria and then came back into Iraq. All of this he has said before.”

Chilcot is preparing to outline a timetable for the publication of his report in the next 10 days. Blair will be aware of what criticisms Chilcot is planning to make of him because the inquiry chair has written to all key participants as part of what is known as the Maxwellisation process. It allows them to respond to criticisms before publication.

Chilcot was a member of the Butler inquiry, which in 2004 raised concerns about the intelligence before the Iraq invasion. The inquiry also questioned the way in which senior intelligence officials and Downing Street stripped out caveats from intelligence assessments.

Comment by casey a on October 22, 2015 at 11:48am

Files for lawsuit against CIA stolen in break-in at UW

University of Washington police are investigating a break-in at the offices of the director of the school’s Center for Human Rights after a computer and hard drive containing sensitive information about a recent lawsuit against the Central Intelligence Agency were stolen.

The center says that the office of Dr. Angelina Godoy was burglarized sometime between Thursday and Sunday. Godoy reported that the hard drive contained “about 90 percent of the information” relating to research in El Salvador that is the foundation of a freedom-of-information lawsuit the center filed Oct. 2 against the CIA.

The lawsuit alleges that the CIA has illegally withheld information about a U.S.-supported El Salvador army officer suspected of human-rights violations during that country’s civil war in the 1980s against leftist rebels.

-------------

Dr Angelina Godoy acknowledged that the theft could be a “common crime,” but said in the statement that there are disturbing and suspicious elements to the burglary.

The break-in coincided with a campus visit by CIA Director John Brennan, who spoke Friday at a symposium at the UW law school. However, Norm Arkans, the UW’s associate vice president for media relations and communications, cautioned against “connecting those dots.”

Only Godoy’s office was targeted in the break-in and there was no sign of a forced entry, according to the news release. It appeared that the office was carefully searched rather than ransacked and the door was relocked upon exit, “characteristics that do not fit the pattern of an opportunistic campus theft,” the release says.

Finally, the timing of the theft — just weeks after publicity surrounding the CIA lawsuit — “invites doubt as to potential motives.”

Comment by SongStar101 on October 22, 2015 at 10:55am

This hack appears similar to the Sony hack and others.

WikiLeaks posts CIA chief’s hacked emails

http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/257597-wikileaks-plans-...

WikiLeaks began posting what it claims are the contents of CIA Director John Brennan’s private email account on Wednesday, days after a teenager claimed to have hacked into his account.

The six initial emails posted by the anti-secrecy organization date from 2007 and 2008, and include personal information as well as draft versions of advice and policy positions.

Additional documents will be posted “over the coming days,” WikiLeaks said, while claiming that Brennan used the account “occasionally for several intelligence related projects.”

In a statement, CIA spokesman Dean Boyd did not dispute the authenticity of the leaked emails.

Among the released documents is a draft version of Brennan’s security clearance questionnaire, which contains detailed information about his life and biography, including his passport number, home telephone number and a list of home addresses dating back to his childhood home in 1963. The document also contains Brennan’s wife’s Social Security number as well as birthdates, names and other information about close family members.

The form, known as an SF86, is a common questionnaire for performing background checks of national security officials and contains information that could be personally compromising.

The draft of a 2007 memo also contained in Brennan’s emails contains advice for the next president — who would be President Obama — about what to do with Iran.

Brennan’s account was broken into on Oct. 12, the hacker allegedly said.

According to reports, none of the documents obtained in the apparent hack contain classified information.

FBI Director James Comey declined to answer reporters’ questions about the incident on Tuesday. CIA representatives did not respond to an inquiry about the leaked documents.

--------------------------------------------

You've Got Fail: high school students hack CIA director's AOL account

The AOL account of the CIA director, John Brennan, appears to have been hacked, revealing email addresses, telephone numbers and social security numbers of agency employees. Photograph: Larry Downing/Reuters

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/oct/19/cia-director-john...

Federal investigators are examining claims that high school students hacked CIA director John Brennan’s personal email account and published identifying information for more than 20 alleged CIA personnel.

On Monday the hackers released a spreadsheet allegedly from Brennan’s account that included the alleged CIA employees’ clearance levels, email addresses, phone numbers and social security numbers.

The hack is one of dozens in the past several months, among them data broker Experian, the US government’s Office of Personnel Management, and a hotel chain owned by Donald Trump.

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