Sabtu, 18 Maret 2017

Trump shares story of citizen who lost insurance.









        United States President Donald Trump used his official Twitter account on Saturday to repost one of the videos published by the White House in the campaign for the upcoming health system overhaul. In the clip, Kim Sertich explains how she lost insurance three months after the Affordable Care Act was passed. "Stories like Ms. Sertich's are why @POTUS is fighting to #RepealAndReplace #Obamacare," the tweet said.





[ 3/19/17 ] 06.46.00

Trump's agenda blocks free trade pledge of G20.







          The tradition of expressing commitment to free trade and climate change mitigation in communiqués after summits of the Group of Twenty "is not necessarily relevant", said Steve Mnuchin (pictured), United States secretary of the Treasury. The two-day meeting of ministers of finance and central bankers from the most advanced and the biggest emerging economies ended on Saturday in Baden-Baden with only a slight joint reference to open exchange of goods and services. The pledge to fight isolationism was left out.

Mnuchin reiterated the government in Washington wants free but fair trade and stressed "certain agreements" will need to be reexamined. "We are working to strengthen the contribution of trade to our economies. We will strive to reduce excessive global imbalances, promote greater inclusiveness and fairness and reduce inequality in our pursuit of economic growth," participants said as the G20 event in Germany was wrapping up.

"We have reached an impasse," stated Wolfgang Schaeuble, the host country's federal minister of finance. Correspondents of major media outlets revealed Japan signaled more understanding for the stance of US representatives. Global economic expansion is gaining momentum and it may have reached a turning point, but "wrong" policies can reverse the trend, Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said in an issued statement after the summit.






[ 3/19/19 ] 02.03.00

Bitcoin crashes more than 10% to $950.







        The bitcoin collapsed on Saturday to the weakest point in more than a month, in a third consecutive session with sharp swings lower. On some of the main exchanges, the benchmark cryptocurrency plunged to below $950. Prices ripped down under the lows reached on March 10, when the United States Security and Exchange Commission decided not to allow the establishment of the first bitcoin exchange-traded fund, an initiative by the Wiklewoss twins.

        One coin was trading 6.76% down at $1,001.4 at OKCoin at 5:25 pm CET, after it cratered to $965.15, a level unseen since February 13. Compared to the yuan, the digital currency was 4.53% lower at 7,050.1 at the same time at BTCChina, after tumbling to 6,834.01. The bitcoin was buying €878.59 at Kraken at 4:43 pm CET, 11.37% in the hole for the day and the lowest since February 9.






[ 3/19/17 ] 00.13.00

Trump tweets meeting with Merkel was great.









       United States President Donald Trump tweeted on Saturday: "Despite what you have heard from the FAKE NEWS, I had a GREAT meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Nevertheless, Germany owes vast sums of money to NATO & the United States must be paid more for the powerful, and very expensive, defense it provides to Germany!"




[ 3/18/17 ] 8.27.00

China's Wang: Sanctions on N. Korea to include talks.








     According to the framework agreed in the United Nations, all parties should implement sanctions against the regime in Pyongyang and restart negotiations at the same time, said Wang Yi (pictured right), China's minister of foreign affairs. Speaking in Beijing on Saturday with Rex Tillerson (left), his counterpart from the United States, he stated talks with North Korea are intended to ease tensions in the region.

The two countries are determined to work together and solve the situation in the peninsula after it reached "a rather dangerous level," the secretary of state said and cited North Korean nuclear program. Tillerson underscored any conflict must be prevented.
Wang stressed China and the US will address bilateral trade disputes and aim to enhance economic cooperation.

Apple Inc.'s chief executive Tim Cook, who was also in Beijing today, told participants at the China Development Forum that the most populous country must become more integrated in global trade and that it would need to open up its economy to overseas investment.




[ 3/18/17 ] 6.23.00

Soldiers kill attacker at Orly airport in Paris.








     A man who snatched a weapon from a soldier at Orly airport in Paris on Saturday was immediately killed by security forces, inside a shop he ran into. French authorities shut down the complex and blocked exit from incoming airplanes. A witness told BFM television the man was warned by three soldiers to put down the gun.

Local media learned the attacker was on a terror watch list and that he was connected to another shooting today in the capital city. Unnamed police sources were quoted as saying they found a car at the airport that he escaped with following an incident where a police officer has been wounded. While the site was still being searched for weapons and explosives, the government ruled out a possibility there were more attackers.

France has seen several deadly attacks since the imposition of a state of emergency in late 2015.




[ 3/18/17 ] 5.55.00

Bitcoin slips to almost one-month low against yuan








        The benchmark cryptocurrency slightly weakened on Saturday, as the transaction backlog was piling up and technical liquidity issues were emerging parallel to the disputes within the bitcoin project's community over its fate. Furthermore, China's authorities have reportedly started implementing a draft rule at the domestic exchanges that would obligate traders in the sector to get their identity verified.

The bitcoin was 0.65% below the flat line at $1,066.99 at OKCoin at 3:56 am CET, after touching the session low of $1061.1. The value was looking to reach the weakest point since February 20. At the same time at BTC China, the exchange rate declined 1.42% to 7,279.99 or just ten yuan above than the lowest level of the day, unseen since February 22. At 3:44 am CET, one coin bought €978.402 at Kraken, losing 1.3% in the session after dipping to €976.





[ 3/18/17 ] 11.03.00




Jumat, 17 Maret 2017

Trump tells reporter he " very seldom " regrets his tweets...



#Seriously? Trump tells German reporter he 'very seldom' regrets his tweets – and admits he uses Twitter to 'get around the media'




     President Donald Trump 'very seldom' regrets the tweets he sends out to his 27 million followers, the president revealed at a press conference Friday.
Approaching two months in office where he has repeatedly jolted convention and  upended the news with his online missives – often flitted out in the early hours of the morning – the president got asked about his Twitter habits while standing beside the staid German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
'And by the way my second question, are there from time to time tweets that you regret in hindsight?' asked the reporter from Germany's Die Welt.

THERE MUST BE SOMETHING? President Trump got asked at a press conference if he ever regretted tweets that he has sent out

     The reporter tried to follow up: 'Very seldom – so you never would have wished not to have ...'
'Very seldom,' Trump responded again. 'Probably wouldn’t be here right now. But every seldom,' he said, restating his view that eschews apologies of any kind.
Then he explained his Twitter penchant as a form of strategy to counter the press, who he derided Friday as 'fake news.'
'We have a tremendous group of people that listen and I can get around the media when the media doesn’t tell the truth, so I like that,' Trump explained.
Some of the gathered media might have been expecting Trump to express some sort of regret for his recent tweets about President Obama.
Trump earlier this month accused the president of tapping his phones at Trump Tower, making the unsubstantiated charge in a series of tweets.

WELL THERE WAS THAT ONE TIME ... Trump said he 'very seldom' regrets the tweets he sends out

AT LEAST IT'S NOT FAKE NEWS: Trump explained his Twitter strategy: 'We have a tremendous group of people that listen and I can get around the media when the media doesn’t tell the truth, so I like that'

NOT THIS ONE? Trump tweeted this month that President Obama tapped his phones, starting an uproar that followed him to his Friday press conference


Trump suggested Obama's unsubstantiated actions may have been illegal


     'How low has President Obama gone to tapp my phones during the very sacred election process. This is Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!' Trump wrote.
'Is it legal for a sitting President to be "wire tapping" a race for president prior to an election? Turned down by court earlier. A NEW LOW!' he wrote.
After getting pounded for putting out the charge, Trump demanded a congressional investigation. The Republican and Democratic heads of the House Intelligence Committee have since said there is no evidence that Trump or Trump Tower got tapped.
In another demonstration of how he is using Twitter to get around normal channels, Trump tweeted Friday: 'North Korea is behaving very badly. They have been "playing" the United States for years. China has done little to help!'
Such messages normally would have been handled by the State Department or delivered in a highly scripted format to send a message to a rogue state about its missile program.


Trump prods NATO allies to ‘pay their fair share’




Although Trump called for more cost-sharing on the part of other NATO members, he emphasized the importance of American leadership for its allies. 





     President Donald Trump reiterated his desire to see other member-states of the North Atlantic Trade Organization (NATO) “pay their fair share” of the costs of the military alliance, during his first address to the US Congress on Tuesday night.

“We strongly support NATO, an alliance forged through the bonds of two World Wars that dethroned fascism, and a Cold War that defeated communism,” Trump stressed. “But our partners must meet their financial obligations, and now, based on our very strong and frank discussions, they are beginning to do just that.”

“We expect our partners, whether in NATO, in the Middle East, or the Pacific, to take a direct and meaningful role in both strategic and military operations, and pay their fair share of the cost,” Trump added.

     The United States pays more than one fifth of NATO’s common-funded budgets and programs totaling 22% of the cost. The remaining amount is shared among the other 27 member states.

Despite his desire to see the cost-bearing of NATO’s budget more evenly dispersed, Trump also spoke of the US obligation to maintain some leadership role with its allies.

“It is American leadership based on vital security interests that we share with our allies across the globe,” Trump said. “Our foreign policy calls for a direct, robust and meaningful engagement with the world.”



[3/18/17 ] 02.12.00

Kamis, 16 Maret 2017

Spicer: Danger is real and law is clear on travel ban.

        ‘Danger is real,’ Spicer says as Maryland judge also rules against executive order





        President Donald Trump’s administration will appeal the court rulings that blocked his second attempt at restricting travel to the U.S. for people from six predominately Muslim countries, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said.

“We intend to appeal the flawed rulings,“ Spicer said on Thursday. ”We expect action to be taken soon.”






        Spicer said, “The court didn’t even bother to quote the relevant statute” in its decision. “The danger is real,“ he said, referring to the potential for threats to enter the country. “And the law is clear.”

        A federal judge in Hawaii issued a nationwide temporary restraining order Wednesday that bars implementation of Trump’s revised executive order on immigration and refugees, a significant legal blow to the president’s renewed bid to restrict U.S. entry for people from six Muslim-majority countries. In a second decision early Thursday morning, a Maryland judge also ruled against the president, on similar grounds, and issued a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of the travel ban from the six countries, though he didn’t agree to block the refugee program at this time.


China Doesn't Want A War With The US - A Trade War America Would Lose Anyway.






        The Chinese Premier, Li Keqiang, said at his annual press conference that China didn't want to have a trade war with the U.S. Also, that if there was one then it would be America that lost said trade war. He's right there of course, but he's right for the wrong reasons. The people who benefit from trade with China are those Americans who get to buy cheap and lovely things from China. A trade war of any kind would curtail that access and thus make those people worse off. Yes, agreed, it's difficult talking about the true benefits of trade when you've mercantilists on every side but it is indeed said mercantilists who are wrong.

China's Premier Li Keqiang reassured investors on Wednesday that the world's second-largest economy is strong and not at risk of a hard landing, while stressing Beijing's support for globalisation and free trade at a time of rising protectionism.
Li also reiterated that China does not want a trade war with the United States, and urged talks with Washington to find common ground.

So far pretty much standard for public announcements. No one does really go out and say that they want a trade war. A change in trading relationships, perhaps, but not a war:

Premier Li highlighted the damage that any trade war between the two countries would inflict, saying American companies would be the first to suffer.

No, that's not correct, it's not the companies that would suffer at all:

China's trade surplus against the United States was $366 billion in 2015.

That is an important number but not for the reason many think:

But while it’s true that a trade war would a disproportionate effect on American firms like Apple which outsource manufacturing to China, economist Christopher Balding said it wasn’t really accurate to say that the U.S. economy as a whole is more vulnerable.

“China is much more dependent on trade with the U.S. as a percentage of GDP, and received most of its trade surplus from the U.S.,” said Balding, an associate professor at the HSBC Business School in Shenzhen, adding that it would be easier for U.S. firms to move their supply chain than for China to change its industrial structure.

“It remains advisable for China to match its rhetoric on open markets and free trade with action, by opening up is markets to competition in goods and investment,” he said.

Balding is usually pretty good, his dives into Chinese economic statistics are worth following. However, he's wrong about the effects of trade here.

The standard mercantilist belief is that that $366 billion trade surplus is how much China is winning bigly in the trade battle with the United States. That's certainly the belief of those like Donald Trump and some of his advisers (Navarro, Lighthizer, for example). It's also quite possibly true of China's leaders. But these people are wrong. That $366 billion is the amount by which US consumers benefit from trade with China.

It's important to understand this. The purpose of trade is to get our hands on those lovely things which foreigners have sweated blood and tears over making. We then get to consume that loveliness without having had to do that sweating, bleeding and crying. Our exports are just the boring grunt work we've got to do to be able to buy those imports.

Again, this is important. The point and purpose of trade is imports. So, if China's making $366 billion worth of stuff that we, entirely voluntarily, want to buy, $366 billion more than what they buy from us, it is us, the US consumer, who is making out like a bandit from this deal. Mercantilists of course think they other way around, that the people who end up with the cash are doing better. But why do you go to the store to buy bread? Because you value that loaf more than you do the $2 you've just paid for it. It's importing the bread into your house--or gullet--that makes you richer, not having the $2. International trade is no different, this is an area of economics where the individual, the household, the town, county, state and country are all the same. There is absolutely no difference at all between trade with your next door neighbor and someone on the other side of the world.

It is the imports which make us richer, not the exports.

Mnuchin : US dosen't want trade war.




        U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Thursday that the Trump administration has no desire to get into trade wars, but certain trade relationships need to be re-examined to make them fairer.

At a news conference with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, Mnuchin said that President Donald Trump recognizes trade's importance for economic growth.

"It is not our desire to get into trade wars," Mnuchin said. "The president does believe in free trade but he wants free and fair trade."

Bank Of England ( BOE ) votes 8-1 to hold interest rate at 0.25%.







        The Bank of England (BOE) held interest rates at the record low level of 0.25 percent and maintained asset purchases at £435 billion on Thursday.

The decision, which was made by an 8-1 majority, had been as good as unanimously anticipated by central bank watchers with many expecting the BOE to err on the side of caution until more clarity emerges on the Brexit process and the U.K. economy's capacity to manage outside of the European Union (EU).

The fact that the sole dissenter, Kristin Forbes, will be leaving the Bank in June 2017 did not deter currency traders from sending sterling immediately higher to trade at around $1.234, having hovered at an average level of around 1.227 for much of the morning.

BOE governor Mark Carney has repeatedly emphasized his rate-setting board's willingness to ignore a certain level of above-target inflation prompted by the sharp plunge in sterling of around 18 percent since the Brexit vote last June. This came amid arguments from many sides that the current strength of the economy warrants a rate hike.

The resilience of the U.K. economy has defied expectations in recent months with several bouts of stronger-than-anticipated data since last June's referendum, largely propelled by a seemingly irrepressible consumer. In light of the positive surprises, the government recently revised its forecasts for domestic growth in 2017 sharply higher.

However, cautionary signs have appeared in recent weeks with mounting evidence of a consumer spending slowdown compounded by this week's data showing a further squeeze on real incomes.

IMF explosion : " Letter bomb " explodes at office in Paris.






   
         A letter has exploded at the International Monetary Fund in Paris, leaving at least one person injured.

The small explosion happened after a person opened an envelope at the IMF offices in the French capital, police in Paris said.

It is thought the letter contained an explosive substance.

It is yet unclear who sent the letter but police are currently ivestigating at the scene, in the west of the city.

A police source told Reuters: "An envelope exploded after it was opened and one person was slightly injured in the offices of the IMF."

No other damage or injuries have been reported.

France remains in a state of emergency after a string of deadly Islamic extremist attacks over the past two years.

Today's suspect package comes just six weeks before France goes to the polls in their Presidential election.

The IMF's office in Paris works with the European Union, EU governments and international organisations to help countries around the globe work together on financial matters.

In December last year Christine Lagarde, the chief of the IMF and former French finance minister, was found guilty over a public money payout to a businessman while in her government role.



   

US 2018 Budget : $54 billion Increase In Military Spending News.






        President Donald Trump unveiled a $1.15 trillion budget on Thursday, a far-reaching overhaul of federal government spending that slashes many domestic programs to finance a significant increase in the military and make a down payment on a U.S.-Mexico border wall.

       Thursday's scheduled budget release will upend Washington with cuts to long-promised campaign targets like foreign aid and the Environmental Protection Agency as well as strong congressional favorites such as medical research, help for homeless veterans and community development grants.

      "A budget that puts America first must make the safety of our people its number one priority — because without safety, there can be no prosperity," Trump said in a message accompanying his proposed budget that was titled "America First: A Budget Blueprint to Make America Great Again."

        The $54 billion boost for the military is the largest since President Ronald Reagan's Pentagon buildup in the 1980s, promising immediate money for troop readiness, the fight against Islamic State militants and procurement of new ships, fighter jets and other weapons. The 10 percent Pentagon boost is financed by $54 billion in cuts to foreign aid and domestic agencies that had been protected by former President Barack Obama.

        The budget goes after the frequent targets of the party's staunchest conservatives, eliminating the National Endowment for the Arts, legal aid for the poor, low-income heating assistance and the AmeriCorps national service program established by former President Bill Clinton.

       "This is a hard power budget, not a soft power budget," said White House budget director Mick Mulvaney.

       Such programs were the focus of lengthy battles dating to the GOP takeover of Congress in 1995 and have survived prior attempts to eliminate them. Lawmakers will have the final say on Trump's proposal in the arduous budget process, and many of the cuts will be deemed dead on arrival. Mulvaney acknowledged to reporters that passing the cuts could be an uphill struggle and said the administration would negotiate over replacement cuts.

       "This is not a take-it-or-leave-it budget," Mulvaney said.

        Law enforcement agencies like the FBI would be spared, while the border wall would receive an immediate $1.4 billion infusion in the ongoing fiscal year, with another $2.6 billion planned for the 2018 budget year starting Oct. 1.

       Trump repeatedly claimed during the campaign that Mexico would pay for the wall when, in fact, U.S. taxpayers will foot the bill.

      Twelve of the government's 15 Cabinet agencies would absorb cuts under the president's proposal. The biggest losers are Agriculture, Labor, State, and the Cabinet-level EPA. The Defense Department, Department of Homeland Security and Department of Veterans Affairs are the winners.

      More than 3,000 EPA workers would lose their jobs and programs such as Obama's Clean Power Plan, which would tighten regulations on emissions from power plants seen as contributing to global warming, would be eliminated. Popular EPA grants for state and local drinking and wastewater projects would be preserved, however, even as research into climate change would be eliminated.

      Trump's proposal covers only roughly one-fourth of the approximately $4 trillion federal budget, the discretionary portion that Congress passes each year. It doesn't address taxes, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, or make predictions about deficits and the economy. Those big-picture details are due in mid-May, and are sure to show large — probably permanent — budget deficits. Trump has vowed not to cut Social Security and Medicare and is dead set against raising taxes.

      "The president's going to keep his promises" to leave Social Security and Medicare alone, Mulvaney said.

       But the budget increases user fees, boosting the airline ticket tax by $1 per one-way trip. It would also slash subsidies for the federal flood insurance program that's a linchpin for the real estate market, especially in coastal southern states and the Northeast.

       The so-called "skinny budget" is indeed skimpy, glossing over cuts to many sensitive programs such as community health centers, national parks, and payments for rural schools, offering only a vague, two-page summary of most agencies, including the Pentagon, where allocating its additional billions is still a work in progress.

      Trump's proposal is sure to land with a thud on Capitol Hill, and not just with opposition Democrats outraged over cuts to pet programs such as renewable energy, climate change research and rehabilitation of housing projects.

       Republicans like Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio are irate over planned elimination of a program to restore the Great Lakes. Top Republicans like Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker of Tennessee are opposed to drastic cuts to foreign aid. And even GOP defense hawks like Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry of Texas aren't satisfied with the $54 billion increase for the military.

       Before the two sides go to war over Trump's 2018 plan, they need to clean up more than $1.1 trillion in unfinished agency budgets for the current year. A temporary catchall spending bill expires April 28; negotiations have barely started and could get hung up over Trump's request for the wall and additional border patrol and immigration enforcement agents, just for starters.

       Some of the most politically sensitive domestic programs would be spared, including food aid for pregnant women and their children, housing vouchers for the poor, aid for special education and school districts for the poor, and federal aid to historically black colleges and universities.

       But the National Institutes of Health would absorb a $5.8 billion cut despite Trump's talk in a recent address to Congress of finding "cures to the illnesses that have always plagued us." Subsidies for airlines serving rural airports in Trump strongholds would be eliminated. It would also shut down Amtrak's money-losing long-distance routes and kill off a popular $500 million per-year "TIGER Grant" program for highway projects created by Obama.

1 released in ongoing bank hostage situation in Duisburg, Germany.





        Police are responding to a hostage situation at a Sparkasse bank in Duisburg, Germany. One person has been released while at least one other is being held by an unknown number of armed assailants.

        Initial reports indicated that a male and a female, understood to be husband and wife bank employees, were being held by an armed individual in the savings bank in the Rumeln district, police said, according to Der Westen.

        Police confirmed via Twitter that two people have been arrested in the vicinity of the bank and that authorities are trying to ascertain if those arrested are connected to the hostage situation.

        A tweet from police said the hostage who left was a bank employee, reportedly a woman. It’s understood she exited the bank at around 11am local time, some two hours and 20 minutes after police were called to the scene.

        A statement from police said the area has been sealed off and that officers from neighboring areas are assisting. A helicopter was also reported to be at the scene along with police snipers. Photographs from the area show a heavy police presence.

        It is unclear at this stage how many perpetrators are involved. "We have to assume that there is at least one armed perpetrator and several people in the branch," a police spokesman told N24, according to Neue Presse, adding that authorities have described the raid as an "untypical bank robbery,” as it took place before the bank opened to the public.

        RP online reported that employees of the bank heard voices coming from a vault when they arrived this morning. Police were alerted to the situation at 8:40am local time. The bank was due to open at 9am.



Trump to ask Congress for initial $4 billion for border wall.







        President Donald Trump will ask Congress for just over $4 billion to start building a wall on the U.S. border with Mexico in a pair of budget requests to be submitted on Thursday.

        Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney said Trump is asking for $1.5 billion for the wall in a broader request for supplemental funds for fiscal 2017, which ends Sept. 30. Trump is also asking lawmakers for $2.6 billion in his fiscal 2018 budget proposal, Mulvaney told reporters. The overall cost of the wall is expected to be far greater than the initial requests. Mulvaney said a more-detailed budget in May would request money beyond fiscal 2018. Estimates of the total cost of the wall range from $12 billion to more than $21 billion.

        Building a wall — and having Mexico pay for it — was a regularly repeated campaign pledge of Trump’s. Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has said his country won’t pay for the wall. Trump has responded by telling Americans Mexico will reimburse the U.S

        The money for the wall in fiscal 2018 is part of a wider budget request that envisions beefed-up border security and defense spending, to be paid for by reduced outlays for the State Department and elsewhere. Trump’s proposals on Thursday will be his most detailed stab yet at remaking the federal government after winning his upset victory over Hillary Clinton.

        “This is the America-first budget,” Mulvaney told reporters at the White House. “We wrote it using the president’s own words...you have an America-first candidate; you have an America-first budget.”

        Trump’s fiscal 2018 blueprint won’t be a complete budget that shows revenue projections or proposals for mandatory spending for programs like Medicare. Mulvaney has said that a “full-blown” budget will come in May.

        Still, the fiscal 2018 blueprint will outline Trump’s priorities by proposing funding levels for federal agencies. Mulvaney reiterated that defense spending will get a boost of $54 billion, to be paid for by reductions of the same amount elsewhere. That includes a 28% reduction in funding for the State Department and eliminating the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

        Mulvaney said the administration hasn’t settled on a number of details concerning the proposed border wall, including where to start building. He said the funding would allow the administration to start the program.



Rabu, 15 Maret 2017

Twitter accounts hacked with messages against Netherlands, Germany.







Lates News [ 3/15/17 ] 16.43.00
       


            Hundreds of Twitter accounts from media outlets to celebrities including popstar Justin Bieber, were hacked Wednesday, branded with the Turkish flag and messages being sent out in Turkish.

        One tweet appears to show a swastika – a symbol adopted by Adolf Hitler and the Nazis in Germany. There were also two hashtags, which translated mean Nazi Germany and Nazi Holland. The tweet appears to be in favor of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Tweets showed that a large number of Twitter accounts were hacked with the same message being posted. This included Forbes, World Meteorological Organization, bitcoin wallet Blockchain, Germany soccer club Borussia Dortmund, Justin Bieber's Japanese account, and the U.K. Department of Health.

        The tweet links to a video of Erdogan. It also mentions the date of April 16, which is when Turkey will hold a referendum seeking to give more power to the President.

There has been rising tensions between Turkey and the Netherlands. Last week Erdogan branded the Dutch government "Nazi remnants and fascists". A Turkish minister was blocked from visiting the country's consulate in Rotterdam. Erdogan responded by warning the Netherlands it would "pay the price" for its actions.

The war of words continued on Tuesday when Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte told CNBC that Erdogan was "totally off the mark" when he compared the Dutch to Nazis and had behaved in an "increasingly hysterical" manner.



Many of the accounts that were hacked have seemed to have taken back control from hackers. A number of Twitter users are claiming that a third party analytics app called Twitter Counter was compromised, which allowed hackers to send out loads of tweets from anyone using that software.

Twitter Counter has not responded to a request for comment when contacted by CNBC

Europe midday: Stocks slightly higher as investors eye Dutch election.






Lates News [ 3/15/17 ] 16.05.00



       European equity markets were slightly higher on Monday as investors looked to the Dutch election, while oil prices continued to fall.
At midday, the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 index was up 0.21% to 374.03, Germany’s DAX rose 0.14% to 11,979.67 and France’s CAC 40 was 0.21% firmer at 5,003.94.
In currency markets, the euro was flat against the dollar at 1.0672 and down 0.5% versus the pound at 0.87317.
Investors were eyeing Wednesday’s election in the Netherlands, although polls showed far-right candidate Geert Wilders’ Freedom Party (PVV) losing ground and unlikely to be the next Dutch prime minister, and with rival parties vowing to not join a coalition with him, events at the weekend have raised some concern.
Two Turkish ministers were barred from campaigning in the Netherlands for a referendum to boost Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s power, which analysts at Monex Europe said appeared to be another attempt by Erdogan to destabilise the European Union, as the Netherlands is now on a blackout period before voting starts.
“Diplomatic tensions flared, with Erdogan claiming that the ban shows ‘Nazism is alive in the west’, comments which were met with criticism from both the Dutch Prime Minister and Germany’s foreign minister,” Monex Europe said.
Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG said that the diplomatic spat between Turkey and the Netherlands gives the Freedom Party a new lease of life.
“The complex nature of Dutch politics means that markets are not unduly concerned at present, but it will be a worrying signal ahead of the French first round next month."
Elsewhere, European Council president and former Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has been summoned for questioning on Wednesday by Warsaw for a case concerning ex-secret service officials. Tusk was recently reappointed for a second term with Poland, the only country to vote against his extension.
The pound rose as it seemed likely that British Prime Minister Theresa May will trigger Article 50 this week, with MPs expected to vote down amendments by the House of Lords for a “meaningful” final vote on the deal reached with Brussels and to protect EU residents’ rights in Britain post-Brexit.
European Central Bank president Mario Draghi is scheduled to speak in Frankfurt at 1330 GMT.
Meanwhile, oil prices traded lower after Baker Hughes reported on Friday that the number of US oil rigs rose by eight to 617, the highest since September 2015, showing that the OPEC and non-OPEC deal to curb production is having little effect on the glut, with three of the last four weeks showing substantial inventory increases.
Craig Erlam at Oanda said: “Of course, these changes take time to have an impact and non-OPEC compliance is still a little low but with an extension to the deal in doubt, prices are reverting back towards pre-deal levels, although I doubt we’ll get close to the lows any time soon."
Brent crude was down 0.21% to $51.26 a barrel and West Texas Intermediate was 0.35% weaker at $48.32.
In corporate news, Amec Foster Wheeler climbed 13.9% as it agreed the terms of an all-share offer from oilfield services company Wood Group that values the engineer at around £2.2bn.
HSBC was up 0.9% after it hired ex-Prudential boss Mark Tucker to replace Douglas Flint as chairman after 22 years at the world's fourth largest bank.

European markets close lower as sterlings falls; Dutch election in focus; RWE up 6.4%



Lates News [ 3/15/17 ]15.21.00


       European markets closed lower on Tuesday as investors digested political events across the continent and awaited a probable interest rate hike from the U.S. Federal Reserve.


The pan-European Stoxx 600 ended more than 0.3 percent lower with most sectors and major bourses trading in negative territory.

Swiss drugmaker Galenica announced it was expecting the flotation of one of its units to be concluded in the second quarter of 2017. The company also announced a 19 percent fall in its 2016 profits and as a result, the stock was near the bottom of the European benchmark, down by over 5.1 percent.

The British retailer Marks and Spencer also moved lower on Tuesday following reports that it is pulling out of the Chinese high street this month. Its shares dropped 2.1 percent.

Energy firm RWE closed at the top of the European benchmark, up by 6.4 percent, after reporting earnings amid talks of a potential merger of one of its divisions. Paris-based energy firm Engie was said to be considering a stake in RWE's subsidiary Innogy, according to a Bloomberg report. However, French outlet BFM TV cited an unnamed source on Tuesday who had declared the gas and power company had no interest in making any such bid. Engie shares closed over 1.3 percent lower.

Shares of the online supermarket Ocado pared gains from earlier in the session to close 0.7 percent lower, on comments from its chief financial officer that he is confident the company will secure international deals.

The British insurer Prudential rose 3 percent after posting an operating profit of £4.3 billion ($5.16 billion), beating expectations, thanks to growth in its Asian business.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average and broader S&P 500 both continued to move lower as investors eyed the first day of the Federal Open Market Committee's two-day meeting.

Brexit focus

However, the market's main focus is likely to be Brexit. Prime Minister Theresa May won the right to trigger negotiations with the EU on Monday evening. However, with Scotland asking for a new independence referendum before the U.K. leaves the EU in 2019, several media reports suggest the prime minister will wait until the end of March to formally begin negotiations. Sterling reached an eight-week low on Tuesday morning.

Elsewhere, in the Netherlands, Prime Minister Mark Rutte told CNBC on Tuesday that Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan was "totally off the mark" when he recently compared the Dutch to Nazis and had behaved in an "increasingly hysterical" manner.

The Dutch prime minister urged voters they shouldn't succumb to the "domino effect" of populism after the Brexit vote and the election of Donald Trump. Polls to elect a new government open Wednesday.

In terms of data, the latest euro zone industrial production figures showed a weaker than expected output. Production rose 0.9 percent in January from its previous month, but economists were expecting a 1.4 percent increase.

Selasa, 14 Maret 2017

Prosecutors summon Park over corruption scandal.





Lates News [ 3/15/17 ] 14.24.00


      South Korean prosecutors on Wednesday ordered ousted president Park Geun-Hye to appear before them next week for questioning over the corruption scandal that triggered her dramatic downfall.

Park, who was dismissed by the Constitutional Court last Friday, will be required to attend a prosecutors' office in Seoul next Tuesday, a spokesman said.

A criminal suspect in the scandal, Park had repeatedly refused to make herself available for questioning by the prosecutors before the country's highest court confirmed a parliamentary impeachment motion against her.

Friday's final ruling stripped her of power and executive privileges, including protection from criminal indictment, and she left the presidential palace at the weekend.

Park's lawyer said Wednesday she would "cooperate" with the probe.

She is set to become the fourth former South Korean leader to be questioned by prosecutors over corruption scandals.

Two former army-backed leaders who ruled in the 1980s and the early 1990s -- Chun Doo-Hwan and Roh Tae-Woo -- both served jail terms for bribery after they retired.

Another ex-president, Roh Moo-Hyun, killed himself by jumping off a cliff in 2009 after being questioned by prosecutors over suspected bribery.

The latest corruption and influence-peddling scandal is centred on Park's close confidante Choi Soon-Sil, who is on trial for abuse of power and coercion.

Choi is accused of using her presidential ties to force local firms including Samsung to "donate" nearly $70 million to non-profit foundations she allegedly used for personal gain.

Park -- the 65-year-old daughter of the late former strongman Park Chung-Hee -- has been named as Choi's accomplice who helped her extract money from the firms.

The scandal that rocked the nation has also seen the heir to electronics giant Samsung, Lee Jae-Yong, arrested and charged with bribery for offering millions of dollars to Choi in return for policy favours from Park.

The former president is also accused of letting Choi, who has no title or security clearance, handle a wide range of state affairs including nomination of top officials and diplomats.

Park voiced defiance over the court ruling, saying "the truth will eventually be revealed" through her spokesman after returning to her private home on Sunday.

The ouster of Park -- who had commanded a huge following among older, conservative South Koreans who benefited from the rapid growth under her father's 1961-79 rule -- has sparked angry, sometimes violent protests by her supporters.



- Election date -

The presidential poll to choose Park's successor will be held on May 9, the public administration ministry announced Wednesday.

The scandal has left Park's conservative party in tatters -- it has changed its name in an effort to relaunch itself -- and fanned the popularity of liberal opposition parties.

Moon Jae-In, former head of the main opposition Democratic Party, holds a commanding lead in opinion polls.

His most likely conservative challenger after former UN chief Ban Ki-moon bowed out last month had been seen as Hwang Kyo-Ahn, Park's prime minister who has been standing in as acting president since her parliamentary impeachment in December.

But Hwang said Wednesday he would not stand, leaving the Liberty Korea party with no clear standard-bearer.

"I am aware of the voices of people who want me to join the presidential race," said Hwang said, who would have to step down as acting president if he was to become a candidate.

"I have concluded that it is inappropriate for me for stable governing and fair management of the election process," he told a cabinet meeting.

"I will only focus on carrying out my duties as acting president."

Asian stocks mixed as traders await Fed's rate decision.







Lates News [3/15/17 ] 13.22.00


        Asian stocks were mixed in early trading Monday as investors looked for fresh leads while they awaited economic and corporate earnings reports and Fed meeting minutes due out this week.

KEEPING SCORE: Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 index lost 0.1 percent to 19,207.30 and South Korea's Kospi dipped 0.1 percent to 2,078.08. Hong Kong's Hang Seng added 0.4 percent to 24,128.37 and the Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.4 percent to 3,216.08. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 shed 0.3 percent to 5,788.80.

WEEK AHEAD: Markets await the Federal Reserve's release Wednesday of minutes from its January policy meeting, which might provide new insight in the U.S. central bank's views on interest rates. Last week, Fed chief Janet Yellen indicated the Fed is likely to speed up the pace of its interest rate rises if the job market remains healthy and inflation stays on track. Also due this week: a German business confidence index on Tuesday, U.S. new home sales on Friday and earnings from big companies such as British bank HSBC.

PRESIDENTS' DAY: U.S. financial markets will be closed for a long weekend holiday, leaving trading in Asia muted.

ANALYST VIEW: "Asian markets look set for a soft start to the week with a lack of leads over the weekend, a phenomenon we have probably been less accustomed to since the U.S. election," said Jingyi Pan of IG Markets in Singapore. "As U.S. indices flicker along year-end forecast ranges, jitters have also evidently picked up."

KRAFT CANCELS: Ketchup maker and packaged food giant Kraft Heinz said Sunday it is dropping its $143 billion offer to buy Unilever, in a decision that the two companies jointly described as amicable. Unilever, which makes mayonnaise, tea and seasonings, had rejected the bid as too low.

WALL STREET: Major U.S. benchmarks inched ahead to record highs last week. The Dow Jones industrial average edged up less than 0.1 percent to 20,624.05. The S&P 500 rose 0.2 percent to 2,351.16. The Nasdaq rose 0.4 percent to 5,838.58.

ENERGY: Benchmark U.S. crude oil slipped 3 cents to $53.75 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 3 cents to settle at $53.78 a barrel on Friday. Brent crude, the international standard, fell 2 cents to $55.79 a barrel in London.

CURRENCIES: The dollar rose to 113.13 yen from 112.85 yen on Friday. The euro fell to $1.0610 from $1.0615.

Saudi Arabia : Trump meeting is " turning point ".







Lates News [ 3/15/17 ] 12.19.00



        Saudi Arabia hailed a "historical turning point" in U.S.-Saudi relations after a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman highlighted the two leaders' shared view that Iran posed a regional security threat.

The meeting on Tuesday appeared to signal a meeting of the minds on many issues between Trump and Prince Mohammed, in a marked difference from Riyadh's often fraught relationship with the Obama administration, especially in the wake of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

"This meeting is considered a historical turning point in relations between both countries and which had passed through a period of divergence of views on many issues," a senior adviser to Prince Mohammed said in a statement.

"But the meeting today restored issues to their right path and form a big change in relations between both countries in political, military, security and economic issues," the adviser said.

Saudi Arabia had viewed with unease the administration of U.S. President Barack Obama, whom they felt considered Riyadh's alliance with Washington less important than negotiating the Iran nuclear deal.

         Riyadh and other Gulf allies see in Trump a strong president who will shore up Washington’s role as their main strategic partner and help contain Riyadh's adversary Iran in a region central to U.S. security and energy interests, regional analysts said.

The deputy crown prince viewed the nuclear deal as "very dangerous", the senior adviser said, adding that both leaders had identical views on "the danger of Iran's regional expansionist activities". The White House has said the deal was not in the best interest of the United States.

Iran denies interference in Arab countries.

PRAISE FOR TRUMP

The meeting was the first since Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration with the prince, who is leading the kingdom's efforts to revive state finances by diversifying the economy away from a reliance on falling crude oil revenues.

Under the plan, which seeks to promote the private sector and make state-owned companies more efficient, Riyadh plans to sell up to 5 percent of state oil giant Saudi Aramco in what is expected to be the world's biggest initial public offering.

The two leaders, who discussed opportunities for U.S. companies to invest in Saudi Arabia, kicked off their talks in the Oval Office posing for a picture in front of journalists.

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, Trump's senior adviser and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, chief of staff Reince Priebus and strategist Steve Bannon were also present at the Oval Office meeting with Prince Mohammed.

               The meeting also appeared to illustrate support for some of the most contentious issues that Trump has faced since taking office on Jan. 20.

On a travel ban against six Muslim-majority countries, the adviser said Prince Mohammed did not regard it as one that was aimed at "Muslim countries or Islam".

Earlier this month Trump signed a revised executive order on banning citizens from Yemen, Iran, Somalia, Syria, Sudan and Libya from traveling to the United States but removed Iraq from the list, after his controversial first attempt was blocked in the court

Trump's travel ban has come under criticism for targeting citizens of several mainly Muslim countries. The senior adviser said Prince Mohammed "expressed his satisfaction after the meeting on the positive position and clarifications he heard from President Trump on his views on Islam".

The senior adviser said the leaders discussed the "successful Saudi experience of setting up a border protection system" on the Saudi-Iraq border which has prevented smuggling.

Trump has vowed to start work quickly on the barrier along the nearly 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border to prevent illegal immigrants and drugs from crossing to the north.

TRUMP REVIEWING PGM SALE

        Obama late last year suspended the sale of U.S.-made precision-guidance munitions to the Saudis, a reaction to thousands of civilian casualties from Saudi-led air strikes in Yemen.

U.S. officials said Trump was considering ending that ban and approving the sale of guidance systems made by Raytheon Co. The State Department has approved the move, which awaits a final White House decision, the officials said.

A source close to the issue, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said a main topic of the meeting would be Saudi investment in the United States, which could help the U.S. president fulfill his promises of job creation.

"It's the creation of jobs through investments - President Trump wants results and statistics matter for him," said Ingrid Naranjo, an expert in U.S.-Saudi relations. "It makes a lot of sense for the diversification strategy of Saudi to invest abroad and especially in the U.S."

Gregory Gause, a Gulf expert at Texas A&M University, said that while Saudi Arabia might find the “atmospherics” of its relations with Trump better than those with Obama, it might find less change than it hopes on key issues.

For example, he said, Trump is unlikely to mount a major, costly effort to counter Iranian influence in Iraq, or to launch a full-scale campaign to oust Syrian President Bashar al Assad, as Riyadh might wish.

“I think they’re going to find rhetorically that the new administration says things and uses language they like more,” said Gause. “But I think on the ground, we’re not going to see an enormous difference.”



Trump earned $150 million in 2005, paid $38 million in Texas.







Lates News [ 3/15/17 ] 10.55.00



           President Donald Trump made more than $152.7 million and paid $38.4 million in federal taxes in 2005, according to two pages of his federal income tax return for that year that were broadcast by MSNBC and posted online.

The White House confirmed those amounts in an emailed statement after the network said it planned to release the returns. The amounts reported on MSNBC suggested Trump paid an effective tax rate of roughly 24 percent to 25 percent in 2005. Trump has refused to make his tax returns public.

During an appearance on “The Rachel Maddow Show,” veteran tax journalist David Cay Johnston said he got the returns when they “came in the mail over the transom” but doesn’t know who sent them. The tax returns that Maddow displayed on air revealed a stamp that read "Client Copy."

The documents show that Trump and his wife, Melania, paid roughly $5.3 million in federal income tax along with more than $31 million in alternative minimum tax. Trump has proposed to abolish that tax in the official tax reform blueprint he released during the campaign. He also paid self employment taxes of about $1.9 million that brought his effective tax rate to about 25 percent.

Trump also reported “negative income” of roughly $103 million that year, Johnston said -- though that amount isn’t explained on the 1040 form that MSNBC posted online. Johnston said it was related to a tax loss of $916 million from 1995 that the New York Times first reported on last year. The White House said in a statement that in 2005, Trump had taken “large scale depreciation for construction.”

By comparison, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney disclosed an effective tax rate of 13.9 percent on a 2010 tax return that he released during his 2012 presidential campaign. Last year, billionaire investor Warren Buffett said he paid an effective tax rate of 16 percent in 2015: $1.85 million in federal income taxes on adjusted gross income of $11.6 million.




          “Frankly, I think this disclosure may take the wind out of the sails of many of the critics who have been insisting on disclosure of the tax returns,” said John Klotsche, a former chairman of the executive committee of law firm Baker & McKenzie and a former senior adviser to the Internal Revenue Service commissioner from 2003-2008. “While the information is very sketchy, it does show that he paid significant income taxes, albeit as a result of the alternative minimum tax.”

The two pages that MSNBC posted online don’t reveal anything about Trump’s actual sources of income. They do reflect the types of income he received: almost $1 million in wages; $9.5 million in taxable interest; $42.4 million in business income; $32.2 million in capital gains and $67.4 million from “rental real estate, royalties, partnerships, S corporations, trusts, etc.”

The White House statement called MSNBC "desperate for ratings" for being willing to risk violating the law by releasing Trump’s returns. While federal law appears to make the unauthorized publication of a U.S. tax return a felony punishable by up to 5 years in prison and a $5,000 fine, specialists said the network won’t face any legal issues.

“It would be illegal for the IRS or an IRS employee to release the tax return, as there are criminal laws that prohibit any disclosure by the IRS,” said Jeffrey Neiman, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice as a white-collar criminal defense lawyer focused on tax. “But it is not a crime for a private citizen to publicly disclose a tax return.” Asked if there were criminal rules surrounding the publication of the document, Neiman said it’s “perfectly OK.”

Added Klotsche: “The fact that the return is stamped ‘client copy’ dispels any notion that it came from the IRS.”

Maddow said the First Amendment’s guarantee of a free press “gives us a right to publish this return.” Johnston said "there is absolutely nothing improper” about journalists publishing the documents if they haven’t solicited them.

Trump has also paid tens of millions of dollars in other taxes such as sales and excise taxes and employment taxes, the White House statement said.


        During his campaign, Trump departed from roughly 40 years of tradition for major-party presidential nominees by keeping his returns secret, saying his lawyers advised him not to release returns while he’s under audit. He said last February that he had been under continuous audit for the past 12 years. His lawyers released an unusual letter in March that said the years 2009 forward remained under review. There’s no law or rule that prevents people under audit from making their returns public.

Trump and his aides have argued that the general public doesn’t care about seeing his tax returns. A Washington Post-ABC News poll released in January showed that 74 percent of Americans -- including 53 percent of Republicans -- think Trump should make his tax records public.

The timing of the leak left some Democrats urging their peers not to be distracted from the Obamacare debate, which has left Republicans fighting among themselves as they seek to quickly approve legislation to unwind the Affordable Care Act.

"Dems should return focus to Trumpcare tomorrow & the millions it will leave uninsured, not get distracted by two pages from ’05 tax return," Brian Fallon, a former national spokesman for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, wrote on Twitter.
       

South Korea's Park willing to cooperate with prosecutors.





Lates News [3/15/17 ] 09.40.00



         Ousted South Korean leader Park Geun-hye is willing to cooperate with prosecutors who want to question her about a corruption scandal that led to her dismissal as president last week, the Yonhap news agency reported on Wednesday.

The Constitutional Court dismissed Park from office on Friday when it upheld a parliamentary impeachment vote over an influence-peddling scandal that has shaken South Korea's political and business elite. Park has denied any wrongdoing.

Prosecutors were due to notify Park of a summons date as a suspect later on Wednesday, an official in the prosecutors' office said earlier.

One of her lawyers, Sohn Beom-gyu, told Yonhap Park would "actively cooperate with the investigation as long as her situation allows".

Park had said when she was president she would cooperate with prosecutors wanting to question her but later declined.

She is South Korea's first democratically elected president to be removed from office.

          South Korean President Park Geun-hye speaks during an interview with Reuters in Seoul. Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters

Park left the Blue House presidential compound in Seoul on Sunday to return to her private home in the capital as an ordinary citizen, stripped of her presidential immunity that had shielded her from prosecution.

She said through a spokesman on Sunday she felt sorry about not being able to complete her term but, striking a defiant tone about the prospect of facing an investigation, also said the truth would come out.

Park has not made any public comment since then and her lawyers were not available for comment on Wednesday.

A special prosecution team had accused Park of colluding with a friend, Choi Soon-sil, to pressure big businesses into contributing to foundations set up to support her policies and allowing Choi to influence state affairs.

Choi also denied wrongdoing.

Jay Y. Lee, the head of Samsung Group, South Korea's biggest conglomerate, is on trial on bribery, embezzlement and other charges in connection with the scandal.

Lee, who is being held in jail, denies all the charges against him. Samsung also denies any wrongdoing.

WTI falls around 2% on OPEC data worries.





Lates News [ 3/15/17 ] 01.25.00




        Energy price continued to trade in the red on Tuesday, extending losses from earlier in the day after the monthly report published by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries ( OPEC ).indicated the case is weak for record inventories worldwide to deflate with the current balance in the market. As investors continued to digest worst-than-expected global oil supply data, West Texa Intermediate went on to trade over 2% lower.

       Since the beginning of 2017, marketwatchers have been increasingly worried about the constant rise of  the US inventories which have partially offset OPEC's effort to cap global oil production. Earlier in December, the OPEC members and other major oil producers led by Russia agreed to cut crude output by as much as 1.8 million barrels per day in order to battle the prevailing market oversupply.

       WTI for April delivery decline 1.98% to trade for $47.44 per barrel, sliding future below the weakest level since the end of November at 8.24 am CET. Meanwhile, international benchmark Brent for settlement in May lost 1.52%, changing hands for $50.57 per barrel at 8.25 pm CET.

Senin, 13 Maret 2017

Facebook stops developers for using data for spying.







        Facebook Inc. barred software developers from using its data to create surveillance  tools on Tuesday. Last year the social network, along with Instagram and Twitter, was criticized by privacy advocates after the American Civil Liberties Union said in a report that police were using data from the companies to spy on protesters.

        Facebook's deputy chief privacy officer Rob Sherman said " Our goal is make our policy explicit," mentioning previous,implicit, actions taken by the social network to curb such intrusions.

       The change would help build " a community where people can fell safe making thier voices heard," Sherman said.








Lates news [3/14/17 ] 10.05.00

Trump give CIA new power to launch drone strikes.







        US President Donald Trump give the Central Intelligence Agency ( CIA ) secret new authority to conduct drone attacks against suspected militants, the Wall Street Journal reported late on Monday, citing US official.

        The new authority represents a strong shift from the standard practice up to then, which was that the CIA used drones and other intelligence resources to locate suspected terrorists and then the military conducted the actual strike.

        The CIA first used its new power in late February in strike on a senior Al-Qaeda leader in Syria, according to the report. The newspaper quoted US officials as saying that Trump's action specifically to operate in Syria.









Lates news [14/3/17]  08.52.00  

Trump gives CIA new power to launch drone strikes.






        The US Department of Justice requested more time to respond to a congressional request for evidence about President Donald Trump's assertion that former President Barrack Obama wiretapped him. The request was issued on Monday, hours before the deadline.

        "This afternoon, the Department of Justice placed calls to representatives  of the Chairman and Ranking Member of the United State House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence to ask for additional time to review the request in compliance with the governing legal authorities and to determine what if any statement from the department.






       House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes confirmed the request and said that the new deadline is the date of the committee's open hearing, scheduled for March 20. If a response is not received by then, "the Committee will ask for this information during the March 20 hearing and may resort to a compulsory process if our questions continue to go unanswered," Nunes warned.





Lates news [ 3/14/17] 07.30.00

Justice Department seeks more time on wiretapping inquiry.






        The US Department of Justice requested more time to respond to a congressional request for evidence about President Donald Trump's assertion that former President Barrack Obama wiretapped him. The request was issued on Monday, hours before the deadline.

        "This afternoon, the Department of Justice placed calls to representatives  of the Chairman and Ranking Member of the United State House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence to ask for additional time to review the request in compliance with the governing legal authorities and to determine what if any statement from the department.






       House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes confirmed the request and said that the new deadline is the date of the committee's open hearing, scheduled for March 20. If a response is not received by then, "the Committee will ask for this information during the March 20 hearing and may resort to a compulsory process if our questions continue to go unanswered," Nunes warned.





Lates news [ 3/14/17] 07.30.00