These Wikileaks Emails Prove Just What A Monster Hillary …

Its what everyone in the Trump campaign talks about around the pyres of burning books. When you look closely, Hillary Clintons leaked emails show just what kind of person she is: a nasty woman who doesnt know how to print things.

Her heartless thirst for evil and darkness knows no bounds. Just look at some of these real emails released by Wikileaks.

Secretary of the Demonic Underworld Hillary Clinton tries to help a 10-year-old Yemeni girl:

Do you recall Noon i Ali(?), the ten year. old Yemeni girl who got herself divorced? I met her at the Glamour awards last year. There was a CNN story last few days about how unhappy she is, still living at home, not attending school and quite angry that her life is not better. Is there any way we can help her? Could we get her to the US for counselling and education?

2016 Mark of the Beast recipient Hillary Clinton tries to get medical supplies to desperate doctors in earthquake-ravaged Haiti:

Mark, emergency room doc, is w Paul Farmer; Pier is his orthopedic surgeon wife. Is there any way to help asap? This should be the highest priority. Coulc one of the medical teams alreay there move over to help? Could Gen Keen or UN get the supplies and generators they need to them at first light?

But the Dark Lords lust for malice doesnt end there!

Consumer of orphan and puppy souls Hillary Clinton helps raise awareness about child trafficking in Haiti:

That is important. I will work on ittheres a very long and sobering list. Does Jillian have specific ideas?

Beelzebub beer pong partner HITLER-y Clinton comments on the closing of an Illinois group home that helps abused and neglected young boys:

What a sad commentary about our values today. I sound more curmudgeonly everyday but it is hard to see the clock being turned back on so much that matters, especially poor kids. Oh well, I can only hope the tide turns soon.

As Donald Trump preferred presidential candidateof the Ku Klux Klan said during the debates: such a nasty woman.

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These Wikileaks Emails Prove Just What A Monster Hillary ...

Today in History: Puerto Rico becomes self-governing commonwealth of the United States – Santa Ynez Valley News

Today is Saturday, July 25, the 207th day of 2020. There are 159 days left in the year.

Highlight in History:

On July 25, 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named General of the Army of the United States, the first officer to hold the rank.

On this date:

In 1814, the Battle of Lundys Lane, one of the bloodiest battles of the War of 1812, took place in present-day Niagara Falls, Ontario, with no clear victor.

In 1898, the United States invaded Puerto Rico during the Spanish-American War.

In 1952, Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the United States.

In 1956, the Italian liner SS Andrea Doria collided with the Swedish passenger ship Stockholm off the New England coast late at night and began sinking; 51 people 46 from the Andrea Doria, five from the Stockholm were killed. (The Andrea Doria capsized and sank the following morning.)

In 1960, a Woolworths store in Greensboro, North Carolina, that had been the scene of a sit-in protest against its whites-only lunch counter dropped its segregation policy.

In 1972, the notorious Tuskegee syphilis experiment came to light as The Associated Press reported that for the previous four decades, the U.S. Public Health Service, in conjunction with the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, had been allowing poor, rural Black male patients with syphilis to go without treatment, even allowing them to die, as a way of studying the disease.

In 1985, a spokeswoman for Rock Hudson confirmed that the actor, hospitalized in Paris, was suffering from AIDS. (Hudson died in October 1985.)

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Today in History: Puerto Rico becomes self-governing commonwealth of the United States - Santa Ynez Valley News

Today in History: Today is Saturday, July 25, the 207th day of 2020. – wausaupilotandreview.com

By The Associated Press

Todays Highlight in History:

On July 25, 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named General of the Army of the United States, the first officer to hold the rank.

On this date:

In 1814, the Battle of Lundys Lane, one of the bloodiest battles of the War of 1812, took place in present-day Niagara Falls, Ontario, with no clear victor.

In 1898, the United States invaded Puerto Rico during the Spanish-American War.

In 1943, Benito Mussolini was dismissed as premier of Italy by King Victor Emmanuel III, and placed under arrest. (However, Mussolini was later rescued by the Nazis, and re-asserted his authority.)

In 1946, the United States detonated an atomic bomb near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific in the first underwater test of the device.

In 1952, Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the United States.

In 1956, the Italian liner SS Andrea Doria collided with the Swedish passenger ship Stockholm off the New England coast late at night and began sinking; 51 people 46 from the Andrea Doria, five from the Stockholm were killed. (The Andrea Doria capsized and sank the following morning.)

In 1960, a Woolworths store in Greensboro, North Carolina, that had been the scene of a sit-in protest against its whites-only lunch counter dropped its segregation policy.

In 1972, the notorious Tuskegee syphilis experiment came to light as The Associated Press reported that for the previous four decades, the U.S. Public Health Service, in conjunction with the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, had been allowing poor, rural Black male patients with syphilis to go without treatment, even allowing them to die, as a way of studying the disease.

In 1985, a spokeswoman for Rock Hudson confirmed that the actor, hospitalized in Paris, was suffering from AIDS. (Hudson died in October 1985.)

In 1994, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (YIT-sahk rah-BEEN) and Jordans King Hussein (hoo-SAYN) signed a declaration at the White House ending their countries 46-year-old formal state of war.

In 2000, a New York-bound Air France Concorde crashed outside Paris shortly after takeoff, killing all 109 people on board and four people on the ground; it was the first-ever crash of the supersonic jet.

In 2002, Zacarias Moussaoui (zak-uh-REE-uhs moo-SOW-ee) declared he was guilty of conspiracy in the September 11 attacks, then dramatically withdrew his plea at his arraignment in Alexandria, Va.

Ten years ago: The online whistleblower Wikileaks posted some 90,000 leaked U.S. military records that amounted to a blow-by-blow account of the Afghanistan war, including unreported incidents of Afghan civilian killings as well as covert operations against Taliban figures. Alberto Contador won the Tour de France for the third time in four years. Erich Steidtmann, a former Nazi SS officer suspected of involvement in World War II massacres but never convicted, died in Hannover, Germany, at age 95.

Five years ago: President Barack Obama, visiting Kenya, mixed blunt messages on gay rights, corruption and counterterrorism with warm reflections on his family ties during a news conference with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta in Nairobi. First lady Michelle Obama opened the Special Olympics at a star-studded ceremony in Los Angeles. Cole Hamels became the first pitcher to throw a no-hitter against the Chicago Cubs in 50 years while leading the Philadelphia Phillies to a 5-0 win.

One year ago: President Donald Trump had a second phone call with the new Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, during which he solicited Zelenskiys help in gathering potentially damaging information about former Vice President Joe Biden; that night, a staff member at the White House Office of Management and Budget signed a document that officially put military aid for Ukraine on hold. The Justice Department announced that it would resume executing death row prisoners for the first time in nearly two decades. Four major automakers and the state of California announced a deal to toughen standards for gas mileage and greenhouse gas emissions; the agreement bypassed the Trump administrations push to relax mileage standards. A Swedish prosecutor charged rapper A$AP Rocky with assault over a fight in Stockholm; President Donald Trump responded by demanding that Sweden Treat Americans fairly! (The rapper and his bodyguards were convicted but received conditional sentences sparing them prison time unless they committed similar offenses in the future.)

Todays Birthdays: Folk-pop singer-musician Bruce Woodley (The Seekers) is 78. Rock musician Jim McCarty (The Yardbirds) is 77. Rock musician Verdine White (Earth, Wind & Fire) is 69. Singer-musician Jem Finer (The Pogues) is 65. Model-actress Iman is 65. Cartoonist Ray Billingsley (Curtis) is 63.

Rock musician Thurston Moore (Sonic Youth) is 62. Celebrity chef/TV personality Geoffrey Zakarian is 61. Actress-singer Bobbie Eakes is 59. Actress Katherine Kelly Lang is 59. Actress Illeana Douglas is 55. Country singer Marty Brown is 55. Actor Matt LeBlanc is 53. Actress Wendy Raquel Robinson is 53. Rock musician Paavo Lotjonen (PAH-woh LAHT-joh-nehn) (Apocalyptica) is 52. Actor D.B. Woodside is 51. Actress Miriam Shor is 49. Actor David Denman is 47. Actor Jay R. Ferguson is 46. Actor James Lafferty is 35. Actress Shantel VanSanten is 35. Actor Michael Welch is 33. Actress Linsey (cq) Godfrey is 32. Classical singer Faryl Smith is 25. Actor Mason Cook is 20. Actress Meg Donnelly (TV: American Housewife) is 19. Actor Pierce Gagnon is 15.

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Today in History: Today is Saturday, July 25, the 207th day of 2020. - wausaupilotandreview.com

The ‘Primary Subsource’s’ Guide To Russiagate, As Told To The FBI – The Federalist

Much of the Crossfire Hurricane investigation into Donald Trump was built on the premise that Christopher Steele and his dossier were to be believed. This, even though early on Steeles claims failed to bear scrutiny. Just how far off the claims were became clear when the FBI interviewed Steeles Primary Subsource over three days beginning on Feb. 9, 2017. Notes taken by FBI agents of those interviews were released by the Senate Judiciary Committee Friday afternoon.

The Primary Subsource was in reality Steeles sole source, a longtime Russian-speaking contractor for the former British spys company, Orbis Business Intelligence. In turn, the Primary Subsource had a group of friends in Russia. All of their names remain redacted. From the FBI interviews, it becomes clear that the Primary Subsource and his friends peddled warmed-over rumors and laughable gossip that Steele dressed up as formal intelligence memos.

Steeles operation didnt rely on great expertise, to judge from the Primary Subsources account. He described to the FBI the instructions Steele had given him sometime in the spring of 2016 regarding Paul Manafort: Do you know [about] Manafort? Find out about Manaforts dealings with Ukraine, his dealings with other countries, and any corrupt schemes. The Primary Subsource admitted to the FBI that he was clueless about who Manafort was, and that this was a strange task to have been given.

The Primary Subsource said at first that maybe he had asked some of his friends in Russia he didnt have a network of sources, according to his lawyer, but instead just a social circle. And a boozy one at that: When the Primary Subsource would get together with his old friend Source 4, the two would drink heavily. But his social circle was no help with the Manafort question, and so the Primary Subsource scrounged up a few old news clippings about Manafort and fed them back to Steele.

Also in his social circle was Primary Subsources friend Source 2, a character who was always on the make. He often tries to monetize his relationship with [the Primary Subsource], suggesting that the two of them should try and do projects together for money, the Primary Subsource told the FBI (a caution that the Primary Subsource would repeat again and again.) It was Source 2 who told [the Primary Subsource] that there was compromising material on Trump.

And then there was Source 3, a very special friend. She would borrow money from the Primary Subsource that he didnt expect to be paid back. She stayed with him when visiting the United States. The Primary Subsource told the FBI that in the midst of their conversations about Trump, they would also talk about a private subject. (The FBI agents, for all their hardnosed reputation, were too delicate to intrude by asking what that private subject was).

One day, Steele told his lead contractor to get dirt on five individuals. By the time he got around to it, the Primary Subsource had forgotten two of the names, but seemed to recall Carter Page, Paul Manafort, and Trump lawyer Michael Cohen. The Primary Subsource said he asked his special friend Source 3 if she knew any of them. At first she didnt. But within minutes, she seemed to recall having heard of Cohen, according to the FBI notes. Indeed, before long, it came back to her that she had heard Cohen and three henchmen had gone to Prague to meet with Russians.

Source 3 kept spinning yarns about Michael Cohen in Prague. For example, she claimed Cohen was delivering deniable cash payments to hackers. But come to think of it, the Primary Subsource was not sure if Source 3 was brainstorming here, the FBI notes say.

The Steele dossier would end up having authoritative-sounding reports of hackers who had been recruited under duress by the FSB the Russian security service and how they had been using botnets and porn traffic to transmit viruses, plant bugs, steal data and conduct altering operations against the Democratic Party. What exactly, the FBI asked the subject, were altering operations? The Primary Subsource wouldnt be much help there, as he told the FBI that his understanding of this topic (i.e. cyber) was zero. But what about his girlfriend whom he had known since they were in eighth grade together? The Primary Subsource admitted to the FBI that Source 3 is not an IT specialist herself.

And then there was Source 6. Or at least the Primary Subsource thinks it was Source 6.

While he was doing his research on Manafort, the Primary Subsource met a U.S. journalist at a Thai restaurant. The Primary Subsource didnt want to ask revealing questions but managed to go so far as to ask, Do you [redacted] know anyone who can talk about all of this Trump/Manafort stuff, or Trump and Russia? According to the FBI notes, the journalist told the Primary Subsource that he was skeptical and nothing substantive had turned up. But the journalist put the Primary Subsource in touch with a colleague who in turn gave him an email of this guy journalist two had interviewed and that he should talk to.

With the email address of this guy in hand, the Primary Subsource sent him a message in either June or July 2016. Some weeks later, the Primary Subsource received a telephone call from an unidentified Russia guy. He thought but had no evidence that the mystery Russian guy was that guy. The mystery caller never identified himself. The Primary Subsource labeled the anonymous caller Source 6. The Primary Subsource and Source 6 talked for a total of about 10 minutes. During that brief conversation, they spoke about the Primary Subsource traveling to meet the anonymous caller, but the hook-up never happened.

Nonetheless, the Primary Subsource labeled the unknown Russian voice Source 6 and gave Christopher Steele the rundown on their brief conversation how they had a general discussion about Trump and the Kremlin and that it was an ongoing relationship. For use in the dossier, Steele named the voice Source E.

When Steele was done putting this utterly unsourced claim into the style of the dossier, heres how the mystery call from the unknown guy was presented: Speaking in confidence to a compatriot in late July 2016, Source E, an ethnic Russian close associate of Republican US presidential candidate Donald TRUMP, admitted that there was a well-developed conspiracy of co-operation between them and the Russian leadership. Steele writes, Inter alia, yes, he really does deploy the Latin formulation for among other things Source E acknowledged that the Russian regime had been behind the recent leak of embarrassing e-mail messages, emanating from the Democratic National Committee [DNC], to the WikiLeaks platform.

All that and more is presented as the testimony of a close associate of Trump, when it was just the disembodied voice of an unknown guy.

Perhaps even more perplexing is that the FBI interviewers, knowing that Source E was just an anonymous caller, didnt compare that admission to the fantastical Steele bluster and declare the dossier a fabrication on the spot.

But perhaps it might be argued that Christopher Steele was bringing crack investigative skills of his own to bear. For something as rich in detail and powerful in effect as the dossier, Steele must have been researching these questions himself as well, using his hard-earned spy savvy to pry closely held secrets away from the Russians. Or at the very least, he must have relied on a team of intelligence operatives who could have gone far beyond the obvious limitations of the Primary Subsource and his group of drinking buddies.

But no. As we learned in December from Inspector General Michael Horowitz, Steele was not the originating source of any of the factual information in his reporting. Steele, the IG reported, relied on a primary sub-source (Primary Sub- source) for information, and this Primary Sub-source used a network of [further] sub-sources to gather the information that was relayed to Steele. The inspector generals report noted that neither Steele nor the Primary Sub-source had direct access to the information being reported.

One might, by now, harbor some skepticism about the dossier. One might even be inclined to doubt the story that Trump was into water sports as the Primary Subsource so delicately described the tale of Trump and Moscow prostitutes. But in this account, there was an effort, however feeble, to nail down the rumor and speculation that Trump engaged in unorthodox sexual activity at the Ritz.

While the Primary Subsource admitted to the FBI he had not been able to confirm the story, Source 2 (who will be remembered as the hustler always looking for a lucrative score) supposedly asked a hotel manager about Trump, and the manager said that with celebrities, one never knows what theyre doing. One never knows not exactly a robust proof of something that smacks of urban myth. But the Primary Subsource makes the best of it, declaring that at least it wasnt a denial.

If there was any denial going on, it was the FBIs, an agency in denial that its extraordinary investigation was crumbling.

This article by Eric Felten was originally published by RealClearInvestigations.

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The 'Primary Subsource's' Guide To Russiagate, As Told To The FBI - The Federalist

Today in History: Puerto Rico becomes self-governing commonwealth of the United States – Lompoc Record

Today is Saturday, July 25, the 207th day of 2020. There are 159 days left in the year.

Highlight in History:

On July 25, 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named General of the Army of the United States, the first officer to hold the rank.

On this date:

In 1814, the Battle of Lundys Lane, one of the bloodiest battles of the War of 1812, took place in present-day Niagara Falls, Ontario, with no clear victor.

In 1898, the United States invaded Puerto Rico during the Spanish-American War.

In 1952, Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the United States.

In 1956, the Italian liner SS Andrea Doria collided with the Swedish passenger ship Stockholm off the New England coast late at night and began sinking; 51 people 46 from the Andrea Doria, five from the Stockholm were killed. (The Andrea Doria capsized and sank the following morning.)

In 1960, a Woolworths store in Greensboro, North Carolina, that had been the scene of a sit-in protest against its whites-only lunch counter dropped its segregation policy.

In 1972, the notorious Tuskegee syphilis experiment came to light as The Associated Press reported that for the previous four decades, the U.S. Public Health Service, in conjunction with the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, had been allowing poor, rural Black male patients with syphilis to go without treatment, even allowing them to die, as a way of studying the disease.

In 1985, a spokeswoman for Rock Hudson confirmed that the actor, hospitalized in Paris, was suffering from AIDS. (Hudson died in October 1985.)

Original post:

Today in History: Puerto Rico becomes self-governing commonwealth of the United States - Lompoc Record

Remember the Real Collusion Scandal of the 2016 Campaign? – CNSNews.com

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton gives a speech. (Photo credit: DAVID GANNON/AFP via Getty Images)

Four years ago this week, the leftists at WikiLeaks tried to ruin the Democratic convention by posting a trove of emails exposing how the Democratic National Committee blatantly favored Hillary Clinton and tilted against Bernie Sanders.

Buteven then, the media downplayed the juiciest tidbits for conservatives: emails in Clinton aide John Podesta's account that demonstrated how shamelessly reporters and Democrats work hand in hand to shape the "news."Some might even say it sounds fake. For example:

1. ABC's George Stephanopoulos harshly interviewed "Clinton Cash" author Peter Schweizer on his Sunday show on April 26, 2015. In an email, Clinton campaign staffer Jesse Ferguson boasted that Stephanopoulos "refuted" Schweizer and wrote: "Great work everyone. This interview is perfect. He lands nothing and everything is refuted (mostly based on our work)."

Stephanopoulos didn't just donate to The Clinton Foundation. He donated at the office.

2. Maggie Haberman was singled out as a pliant recycler of the Clinton narratives. Podesta wrote: "We have...a very good relationship with Maggie Haberman of Politico over the last year. We have had her tee up stories for us before and have never been disappointed."

Now match that with how Haberman is the heroic challenger of all things Donald Trump for The New York Times. She's not a journalist first; she never disappoints at teeing up stories for Democrats.

3. CNBC anchor Becky Quick who helped moderate the atrocious CNBC Republican primary debate in 2015 made a promise to Podesta after then-President Barack Obama nominated Sylvia Mathews Burwell for health and human services secretary, saying she would "make sure to defend her when things get further along in the nomination process."

4. Before the release of a Clinton profile in July 2016, Mark Leibovich of The New York Times Magazine told Clinton communications director Jen Palmieri, "you could veto what you didn't want." At the end of an email, Palmieri listed her vetoes and then shot back like a demanding boss: "Let me know if that is not clear. Working from an iPhone on the plane so am not able to access the transcript to cut and paste."

The Clinton campaign got cut-and-paste privileges!

Leibovich had quoted Clinton talking about eating moose stew and mocking Sarah Palin on her moose chatter. Palmieri instructed: "Fine to use the moose, but appreciate leaving the mention of Sarah Palin out." She also instructed Leibovich to change a Clinton quote about gay rights.

"Pleasure doing business!" Palmieri oozed.

If you think this sort of collusion isn't happening right now between Biden's aides and the journalists who want Trump bounced from office, then you're dreaming. Even worse, CBS brought on Leibovich to discuss WikiLeaks...and never mentioned any of this!

In February 2016, the website Gawker published a cache of emails between reporters and Clinton PR operative Phillippe Reines. The best example was Marc Ambinder, a longtime ABC and CBS reporter then with The Atlantic.

In July 2009, Clinton was delivering a speech at the Council on Foreign Relations. Ambinder wanted an advance copy of the speech. Reines insisted on conditions.

"You must describe her tone as 'muscular,' and you must note that her most prominent underlings at the State Department (George Mitchell, Richard Holbrooke) would be seated in front of her to convey her command of the staff," he said.

"Got it," Ambinder replied. Later that day, he published a story in which he xeroxed the Clinton spin right at the top, touting a "muscular speech" Clinton would deliver that day in front of her rival "power centers" in the State Department.

This is how reporters are exploited by anonymous "senior administration officials" to set the table for Democrats, whether they are in power or not.

Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center and executive editor of the blog NewsBusters.org.

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Remember the Real Collusion Scandal of the 2016 Campaign? - CNSNews.com

Did Trump Bomb Syria on False Grounds? – The Nation

The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons' headquarters in The Hague, Netherlands. (Yuriko Nakao / Getty Images)

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A series of leaked documents from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) raise the possibility that the Trump administration bombed Syria on false grounds and pressured officials at the worlds top chemical weapons watchdog to cover it up. Two OPCW officials, highly regarded scientists with more than 25 years of combined experience at the organization, challenged the whitewash from inside. Yet unlike many whistle-blowers of the Trump era, they have found no champion, or even an audience, within establishment circles in the United States.Ad Policy

The Trump administrations April 13, 2018, bombing of Syria came days after it accused Syrian forces of killing nearly 50 people in a chemical weapons attack on Douma, a Damascus suburb. Widely circulated video footage showed scores of dead bodies inside an apartment complex and another group of alleged gas attack victims treated at a hospital. Although the White House did not provide evidence for its allegations against Syria, the harrowing images convinced Congress and the media to cheer on military strikes (as they did under similar circumstances the year prior).

Yet there were early grounds for skepticism. The Syrian government was on the verge of retaking the last Douma holdouts of Jaysh-al-Islam, a Saudi-backed militia that was relentlessly shelling the Syrian capital. To suddenly deploy chemical weapons would mean that Syrian forces knowingly crossed the red line that would trigger US military intervention. Subsequent reporting from British journalists Robert Fisk of The Independent, BBC producer Riam Dalati, and James Harkins investigation for The Intercept found evidence that the civilians filmed in the hospital were not exposed to toxic gas.

The US government narrative received a boost in March 2019 when the OPCW issued a long-awaited final report. It concluded that there are reasonable grounds to believe that a chemical weapons attack occurred in Douma and that the toxic chemical was likely molecular chlorine.

The report, however, was not the OPCWs last word. Since May 2019, internal OPCW documents, including a trove published by WikiLeaks, reveal that the Douma investigators initial report reached different conclusions than their organizations published version. They were overruled by senior officials who kept evidence from the public.

The leaks key revelations include:

The OPCW leadership has yet to offer a substantive explanation for why they excluded critical findings and radically altered the original report. Instead, it has denigrated the two members of the Douma fact-finding mission team who challenged the manipulation of their investigation.Current Issue

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The first dissenting inspector is known only as Inspector B (his identity is publicly unconfirmed). B was the Douma missions scientific coordinator, the primary author of the draft report, and subsequent author of the e-mail of protest about the unwelcome editing.

The second inspector, described by the OPCW as Inspector A, is Ian Henderson, a chemical engineering and ballistics expert who authored the study that concluded that the cylinders were likely manually placed. Henderson went to Douma and took detailed measurements at one of the cylinder locations.

In public comments, OPCW Director General Fernando Arias has claimed that the pair committed deliberate and premeditated breaches of confidentiality, but has not accused them of leaking the OPCW material. Arias maintains that Inspector Bs concerns were taken seriously, without meaningfully accounting for why findings in Bs original report were left out of the final version. He has also dismissed the pair as minor players who refused to accept that their conclusions were erroneous, uninformed, and wrong.

Yet the two inspectors are unlikely candidates to go rogue. Henderson and Inspector B have served with the OPCW for 11 and 16 years respectively. Internal OPCW appraisals of their job performance offer effusive praise. In 2005, a senior OPCW official wrote that Henderson has consistently received the highest rating possible. I consider [him] one of the best of our Inspection Team Leaders. Inspector B, an OPCW superior wrote in 2018, has contributed the most to the knowledge and understanding of CW [Chemical Weapons] chemistry applied to inspections. In a different evaluation, another manager described B as one of the most well regarded team leaders, whose experience of the organisation, its verification regime, and judgment are unmatched.

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The internal praise for the inspectors contrasts with what the OPCW leadership now says about them in public. This includes making untrue statements. Arias has said that Henderson was not a member of the FFM [fact-finding mission] in Douma, but leaks that I obtained show that claim to be false. Contemporaneous OPCW documents describe Henderson as an FFM member and list him among the Mission Personnel and the group of inspectors on the Douma mission.

The two inspectors are also not the only ones to raise concerns. Earlier this year, another OPCW official told me, on the condition of anonymity, that they were horrified by the abhorrentmistreatment of the pair. I fully support their endeavours, the official wrote. They are in fact trying to protect the integrity of the organisation which has been hijacked and brought into shameful disrepute.

The treatment of the whistle-blowers by Western media is also due for criticism. Despite the storys explosive nature, it has elicited a collective yawn. Whereas previous WikiLeaks disclosures fueled entire news cycles, no major US media outlets have reported on the organizations Douma archive. CNN and MSNBC, which both supported Trumps decision to bomb Syria, have ignored the OPCW story. The only time a New York Times reporter has mentioned the Douma scandal was in passing. The Times downgraded the extensive OPCW leaks into a mere email from an investigator. (It also deferred to assurances of Syrias culpability from Bellingcat, an open source investigative outlet, without mentioning its Western government funding, including from the United States via the National Endowment for Democracy). Even progressive, adversarial outlets that have traditionally defended whistle-blowers and challenged US wars have shunned this story. The Guardian described the whistle-blowers claims as a Russia-led campaign, rather than as an effort by two veteran inspectors to defend their investigation.

What explains the prevailing silence? It is certainly true that the Syrian government and its Russian ally have vigorously denied allegations of chemical weapons use, including in Douma. But just as was the case when Iraq was falsely accused of possessing weapons of mass destruction, skepticism of Western claims should not be equated with support for the targeted regime. If anything, the Iraq case reminds us that such allegations should not be politicized and are worthy of scrutiny, especially if used to justify military action and other aggressive measures, including crippling sanctions.

The possibility that the United States may have bombed Syria based on falsehoodsand pressured a global investigative body to grant that intervention legitimacy after the factshould break the media blockade. So too should the fact that it was exposed by whistle-blowers who face risk for speaking out.

The US governments own recent past with the OPCW offers a stark reminder. In 2002, the Bush administration forced out the organizations first director general, Jos Bustani. The veteran Brazilian diplomat was negotiating weapons inspections with Baghdad that potentially impeded the Bush administrations drive to launch a war. Bustani has since revealed that John Bolton, then serving as an undersecretary of state, personally threatened him and his family to force him to resign.

Bustani once again finds himself on Boltons opposing side. In his new memoir about his tenure as Trumps national security adviser, Bolton recounts that he oversaw the US strikes on Syria over the Douma allegations, lamenting only that Trump did not authorize a larger attack. Bustani, meanwhile, took part in an October 2019 panel that heard an extensive presentation from one of the Douma whistle-blowers.Related Article

The convincing evidence of irregular behaviour in the OPCW investigation of the alleged Douma chemical attack confirms doubts and suspicions I already had, Bustani wrote. The picture is certainly clearer now, although very disturbing. His hope, he added, is that the outcry over the Douma leaks will catalyse a process by which the [OPCW] can be resurrected to become the independent and non-discriminatory body it used to be.

Bustani is among the prominent signatories of a letter urging the OPCW to let the Douma inspectors discuss their investigation freely. Henderson delivered a statement at a UN session in January, but the United States has thwarted other attempts. (According to Russias envoy to the OPCW, a US representative objected on the grounds that a Douma hearing would encourage the Russian [side] to replicate Stalinist trials, with cross-examinations and intimidations of witnesses.)

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The inspectors just want to be heard. In statements this year to Arias, both whistle-blowers requested an opportunity to air the Douma evidence in a transparent, scientific manner. Our sole duty is to be true to the facts and the science, and once that has been achieved, we will gladly accept the proven and agreed scientific outcomes, Henderson wrote.

Something had gone wrong inside the OPCW sir, B told Arias. And we wanted you to know. Its that simple.

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Did Trump Bomb Syria on False Grounds? - The Nation

Beyond Anonymous: Where Hacktivism is going in 2020 – The Parallax

Hacktivism is alive and well, if a bit weird, in 2020, says Gabriella Coleman, a cultural anthropologist specializing in hacker culture at McGill University.

At the end of June,Twitter banned the accountof the hacker collective Distributed Denial of Secrets (DDoSecrets) and blocked links to BlueLeaks, the groups data trove of 270 gigabytes of data containing internal records from more than 200 police departments.

The hacktivist collective Anonymous also returned to prominence, as its members took actions to support Black Lives Matter protesters, including getting legions of Korean pop-music super fans to participate in social-media disruptions.

Whats Anonymous up to in 2020?Is doxing ever appropriate?When hackers target a conference code of conductA hackers fall fashion line features faux license plates. Heres why

BlueLeaks shows that theres still a lot of interest in activist hacking, Coleman says. In the context of the English-speaking world, DDoSecrets is the hinge between the WikiLeaks and Anonymous era, and the contemporary movement. They created a platform to keep leaking alive. If it wasnt for them, it would be much dimmer. Its still dim because its such a high-risk behavior.

High-Risk BehaviorWhile high-risk technical hacks arent currently dominating headlines, the Twitter hijack and BlueLeaks episodes reveal that hackers are still looking to access secure data and their reasons remain varied.

One thing that might temper planned hacktivist actions could be the hammer of the state, in the form of aggressive law enforcement, says Coleman, author of Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous.

DDoSecrets has said theyre prepared for the U.S. government to come after them, but Coleman isnt so sure. The question is whether BlueLeaks will be stamped out in the next few months. But the blocking and censorship makes them more visible, she says.

This story was originally commissioned by Dark Reading. Read thefull story here.

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Beyond Anonymous: Where Hacktivism is going in 2020 - The Parallax

Saturday History – The Albany Herald

Today is the 207th day of 2020 and the 36th day of summer.

In 1952, Puerto Rico became a self-governing U.S. commonwealth.

In 1978, Louise Joy Brown, the first baby to be conceived via in vitro fertilization, was born in Greater Manchester, England.

In 2005, two major unions, the Teamsters and the Service Employees International Union, withdrew from the AFL-CIO.

In 2010, the website WikiLeaks released the Afghan War Diary, containing more than 75,000 secret documents from the United States war in Afghanistan.

TODAYS BIRTHDAYS: Henry Knox (1750-1806), first U.S. secretary of war; Maxfield Parrish (1870-1966), painter/illustrator; Eric Hoffer (1902-1983), philosopher; Rosalind Franklin (1920-1958), biophysicist; Estelle Getty (1923-2008), actress; Walter Payton (1954-1999), football player; Iman (1955-), model/actress; Thurston Moore (1958-), musician; Matt LeBlanc (1967-), actor; Lauren Faust (1974-), animator.

TODAYS FACT: The Viking Orbiter 1 spacecraft, while searching for potential landing sites for the Viking 2 Lander, snapped the famous Face on Mars photo of the planets surface on this day in 1976.

TODAYS SPORTS: In 1976, American Edwin Moses ran in his first international track and field event at the Montreal Olympics the 400m hurdles and won a gold medal, with a record-setting time of 47.64 seconds.

TODAYS QUOTE: You really have to save yourself because the critic within you will eat you up. Its not the outside world its your interior life, that critic within you, that you have to silence. Iman

TODAYS NUMBER: 4.9 million approximate combined membership of the Teamsters and the Service Employees International unions in 2019.

TODAYS MOON: Between new moon (July 20) and first quarter moon (July 27).

Now, more than ever, the world needs trustworthy reportingbut good journalism isnt free.Please support us by subscribing or making a contribution today.

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Saturday History - The Albany Herald

CIA ‘Obsessed’ With Former UK Envoy Who Will Testify in Spying on Assange Case – Consortium News

Craig Murray says hes been asked to testify in the case of illegal spying against Julian Assange.

By Joe LauriaSpecial to Consortium News

The former British ambassador to Uzbekistan and a close associate of imprisoned WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange says he was the top target of the 24/7 surveillance of Assange at Ecuadors embassy in London by the Spanish security company UC Global, which, according to press reports and court documents, shared the surveillance with the CIA.

Craig Murray said he has been contacted by an attorney in the spying case on Assange and that he will be going to Madrid to testify. The founder of UC Global, David Morales, was arrested over the surveillance (including privileged Assange-lawyer conversations) and is on trial.

Murray told former CIA analyst Ray McGovern in an email, shared with Consortium News with Murrays permission, that the CIA was obsessed with him.

Murray.

Murray told McGovern that he had offered to give evidence to Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who spent $32 million and more than two years investigating an alleged conspiracy between the Russian government and the Trump campaign, including how WikiLeaks obtained emails from the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta.

Mueller concluded there was no evidence of a conspiracy between Moscow and Trump, but maintained Russian agents hacked the emails and delivered them to WikiLeaks for publication.

Murray has said that different persons with legal access to the DNC and Podesta emails were WikiLeaks sources.

I wrote to Mueller offering to give evidence, never received any reply, Murray wrote to McGovern on Wednesday. Never had any request for an interview by any US authorities.

Murray then wrote, BUT I received a message from the lawyer in the case in Madrid about the spying on Assange in the Embassy, contracted by the CIA, which said that I was the top target for the contractors and the evidence shows they were obsessed with me. I shall be going to Madrid to give evidence.

Murray added: Just why the US security services declined my offer of free evidence yet were obsessed with spying on me is an interesting question

Surveillance video that includes Murray visiting Assange:

Joe Lauria is editor-in-chief of Consortium News and a former UN correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, and numerous other newspapers. He was an investigative reporter for the Sunday Times of London and began his professional career as a stringer for The New York Times. He can be reached at joelauria@consortiumnews.com and followed on Twitter @unjoe .

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CIA 'Obsessed' With Former UK Envoy Who Will Testify in Spying on Assange Case - Consortium News