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Monthly Archives: February 2021
Feb 28, 2021 – National Storage Affiliates Trust (NSA) Files 10-K for the Fiscal Year Ended on December 31, 2020 – GuruFocus.com
Posted: February 28, 2021 at 10:21 pm
National Storage Affiliates Trust (NYSE:NSA)(30-Year Financial) files its latest 10-K with SEC for the fiscal year ended on December 31, 2020. National Storage Affiliates Trust is a real estate investment trust. The company makes investments in self-storage properties located in the United States. National Storage Affiliates Trust has a market cap of $2.75 billion; its shares were traded at around $38.550000 with a P/E ratio of 78.67 and P/S ratio of 6.60. The dividend yield of National Storage Affiliates Trust stocks is 3.50%. National Storage Affiliates Trust had annual average EBITDA growth of 27.00% over the past five years. GuruFocus has detected 4 severe warning signs with National Storage Affiliates Trust. .
For the last quarter National Storage Affiliates Trust reported a revenue of $114.1 million, compared with the revenue of $100.6 million during the same period a year ago. For the latest fiscal year the company reported a revenue of $432.2 million, an increase of 11.4% from last year. For the complete 30-year financial data, please go here.. For the last five years National Storage Affiliates Trust had an average revenue growth rate of 25.9% a year.
The reported diluted earnings per share was 53 cents for the year, an increase of -453.3% from previous year. The National Storage Affiliates Trust enjoyed an operating margin of 34.04%, compared with the operating margin of 32.7% a year before. The 10-year historical median operating margin of National Storage Affiliates Trust is 29.28%. The profitability rank of the company is 6 (out of 10).
At the end of the fiscal year, National Storage Affiliates Trust has the cash and cash equivalents of $18.7 million, compared with $20.6 million in the previous year. The long term debt was $1.8 billion, compared with $1.6 billion in the previous year. The interest coverage to the debt is 2.4, which is not a favorable level. National Storage Affiliates Trust has a financial strength rank of 3 (out of 10).
For the complete 20-year historical financial data of NSA, click here.
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Feb 28, 2021 - National Storage Affiliates Trust (NSA) Files 10-K for the Fiscal Year Ended on December 31, 2020 - GuruFocus.com
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NSA’s pre-history turns out to be a love story – Reason
Posted: at 10:21 pm
This episode features an interview with Jason Fagone, journalist and author of The Woman Who Smashed Codes: A True Story of Love, Spies, and the Unlikely Heroine Who Outwitted America's Enemies. I wax enthusiastic about Jason's book, which features remarkable research, a plot like a historical novel, and deep insights into what I call NSA's "pre-history" the years from 1917 through 1940, when the need for cryptanalysis was only dimly perceived by the US government. Elizebeth and William Friedman more or less invented American cryptanalysis in those years, but the full story was never known, even to NSAers. It was protected by a force even stronger even than classification J. Edgar Hoover's indomitable determination to get good press for the FBI even when all the credit belonged elsewhere. And, at all its crucial stages, that prehistory is a love story that lasted, literally, right to the grave. Don't miss this (long!) interview with Jason Fagone, or his book.
Meanwhile, in the news roundup. Dmitri Alperovitch covers the latest events in what we just can't call the SolarWinds hack any more. There's no doubt that Microsoft code is at the center of the hack, though not because of unintended flaws; the hackers showed great interest in Microsoft's code and took full advantage of its most easily abused features. Dmitri predicts multiple executive orders from Anne Neuberger's review of the matter, and he hopes it means more centralization of federal civilian security monitoring and policy under CISA.
Dmitri and I agree that the Congressional effort to turn the cybersecurity director position into a Senate-confirmed White House office is more trouble than it's worth.
The Maryland law taxing Google and Facebook ad revenue is ground-breaking, and for that reason is will also be heavily litigated. First time caller, first time listener David Fruchtman explains the tax and the litigation it has already spawned.
Which came first, China's dream of a rare-earth boycott or U.S. nightmares of a rare-earth boycott? We ask Jordan Schneider, who suggests that neither the dream nor the nightmare is likely to come true any time soon.
Is Australia going to war with Big Tech? I take on Oz's link fee and end up siding, improbably, with Mike Masnick and Facebook and against the fee. Meanwhile, the Australian infrastructure protection bill is drawing fire from Microsoft. Dmitri leans toward Microsoft's view that the law should not give government authority to intervene when a private sector entity is unable or unwilling to respond to an attack. I lean toward the government's position.
Jordan Schneider reviews the latest stories of tech companies getting a little too close for comfort to the Chinese surveillance state. The ByteDance censorship story is compelling but not new. The Oracle story is compelling, new, and a clever piece of journalism by another alumna of the podcast, Mara Hvistendahl.
Finally, in a series of quick bites, we cover:
And more!
Download the 350th Episode (mp3)
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NSA's pre-history turns out to be a love story - Reason
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The Once-Classified Tale of Juanita Moody: The Woman Who Helped Avert a Nuclear War – Smithsonian Magazine
Posted: at 10:21 pm
On the morning of Sunday, October 14, 1962, Juanita Moody exited the headquarters of the National Security Agency, at Fort Meade, Maryland, and walked the short distance to her car, parked in one of the front-row spaces reserved for top leadership. The sky was a crystalline blue, a most beautiful day, she recalled later. Moody had just learned that the U.S. Air Force was sending a U-2 spy plane over Cuba to take high-altitude photographs of military installations across the island. Moody was worried for the pilottwice already in the past two years a U-2 spy plane had been shot out of the sky, once over the Soviet Union and once over China. She was also worried for the country. Tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union were worsening by the day. President John F. Kennedy, American military leaders and the intelligence community believed that the Soviet military was up to something in Cuba. Exactly what, no one could say. I went out and got into my old convertible at the precise moment I had been told this pilot was going to get into his plane, Moody said.
What unfolded over the next two weeks was arguably the most dangerous period in the history of civilization. Close to 60 years later, the Cuban Missile Crisis is still considered a nearly catastrophic failure on the part of Americas national security apparatus. How Americas top agents, soldiers, diplomats, intelligence analysts and elected officials failed to anticipate and uncover the buildup of a nuclear arsenal on Americas doorstep, less than 100 miles off the coast, is still being studied and debated. At best, the story of American intelligence activities before and during the crisis is far from complete. One of the most extraordinary omissions to date is the central role played by Moody, a 38-year-old code-breaking whiz and the head of the NSAs Cuba desk during the perilous fall of 1962. Even today her name is largely unknown outside the agency, and the details of her contributions to the nations security remain closely guarded.
Of medium height, with lightly curled brown hair and a round face, Moody was not a spy in the secret agent sense. Her world was signals intelligence, or sigintradio messages, radar data, electronic communications, weapons systems readings, shipping manifests and anything else that could be surreptitiously intercepted from friends and foes alike. Her only brief turn in the spotlight came more than a decade after the Cuban Missile Crisis, when she found herself caught up in the domestic surveillance scandals that engulfed Washington after Watergate. But who was this woman? Ive spent several years trying to find out, digging through government archives and reviewing formerly classified documents, including internal NSA reports and performance reviews obtained using the Freedom of Information Act, as well as interviewing historians, current and former NSA staff and Moodys surviving relatives, who provided personal letters and photographs. Now the story of this spy service pioneer and key figure in the nations response to Soviet encroachment in the Western Hemisphere can be told for the first time.
* * *
Juanita Moody (Ne morris) was born on May 29, 1924, the first of nine children. Her father, Joseph, was a railroad worker turned cotton-and-soybean farmer, and her mother, Mary Elizabeth, a homemaker. The family lived in the hamlet of Morven, North Carolina, in a rented house with no bathroom, no electricity and no running water.
Moody was a leader from an early age. I felt I had to do what Juanita said, her sister Virginia Dare Marsh, 90, told me on a call last spring. To her siblings, Juanitas authority was on a par with that of their parents, yet her brothers and sisters didnt resent her. She was always sweet lovin and fair to me, Marsh said. There was also a sense that Juanita was special. I felt at times like my parents looked up to her as well. The school superintendent in Morven saw a spark in her, too, and recommended her for Western Carolina Teachers College, in Cullowhee.
Juanita borrowed money and enrolled, but then came the war. All of the sudden there were practically no men left on the campus, Moody recalled later, in one of a series of interviews with NSA historians that were declassified in 2016. I felt that it was wrong to be spending my time in this beautiful placeclear blue skies, going around campus and studying and going to classes at leisure, when my country was in a war. At the Army recruiting office in Charlotte, she said she wanted to volunteer. What do you want to do? the recruiter asked. Id like to get into intelligence work, she said.
It was spring 1943. Moody took a few tests and was sent to Arlington Hall, in Virginia, headquarters of the Signal Intelligence Service, the precursor to the NSA. She was trained quickly in what was known as cryptanalysis, and was soon part of a group that used ciphers to crack encrypted Nazi communications. When she finished work for the day, she and a few other obsessives stayed late into the night, working illicitly on an unsolved one-time pad, a code that could only be cracked with a key provided to the messages recipient ahead of time. She recalled working every waking moment and subsisting on buns made by a sympathetic local baker who left them for her to pick up on her way home in the middle of the night.
The painstaking nature of code breaking in those days, when teams of analysts sifted through piles of intercepted texts and tabulated and computed possible interpretations using pencil and paper, made a deep impression on Moody. Eventually, she and a colleague, a linguist and mathematician who had worked at Bletchley Park, Britains code-breaking headquarters, persuaded agency engineers to custom-build a machine for the one-time pad problem based on Alan Turings work that could generate cipher keys automatically, using the agents inputs. It was a very clumsy thing, Moody recalled. But it worked, helping the Americans decode secret messages sent to Berlin from the German ambassador in Tokyo. It was the first of many times in her long career that Moody, who would herself become a familiar face at Bletchley Park and at the IBM campus in New York, helped advance intelligence work by pushing for an ambitious and innovative use of new technologies.
After Japans surrender, Moody told her superior at the SIS that, with the war done, she planned to return to college. Although he himself had earned a PhD, he told her that she was making a big mistake. This is your cup of tea, and there are going to be other targetsother secrets to uncover in defense of the nation. This effort is not going to stop today. This is just the beginning.
* * *
Moody stayed with the SIS, as a staff cryptanalyst focused on signals collection in Eastern Europe. In 1947, she was promoted to chief of the Yugoslavia section. Five years later, on October 24, 1952, President Harry Truman signed a secret memorandum, and the National Security Agency was born. Since the NSAs inception, its role was unambiguous: snoop, scoop, filter, deliver. The agencys responsibility ended at gathering information. Analysis was the purview of the brains at CIA.
During the 1950s, Moody took on several new leadership roles at the NSAchief of European satellites, chief of Russian manual systems, chief of Russian and East European high-grade manual systems. She also fretted over technical inefficiencies. At a time when computing technology was advancing quickly, she viewed the NSAs use of handwritten decryptions, memos and top-secret communications as anachronistic. Where she excelled was not high-level mathematics or engineering but the application of new technologies to distill huge amounts of data and make it available to decision makers as quickly as possible. She was an advocate for using big data long before the concept had taken hold, and she pushed the agency to adopt the latest toolsTeletype, Flexowriter, early IBM computers, an intranet precursor and a searchable database called Solis.
She managed whole teams of peopleher troops, as she called them. As a leader, she was impolitic by her own measure, occasionally calling meetings to order by whacking a hockey stick on the table. She established a system she called Show and Tell. Each morning, while she sipped her coffee, the division heads under her command would come by her office one by one to present highlights from the previous days intelligence haul. Moody would then grill them about when the intercepts were made and when the information had been sent to the NSAs customersthe White House, congressional leadership, military brass, the other intelligence agencies. When she judged the lag time to be substantial, she said so. You people are doing a tremendous job producing beautiful history, shed tell them. Youre not producing intelligence.
When it came to being a woman in a male-dominated world, Moody had a simple outlook. I never had much of a problem, she told an NSA historian in 2001. She credited the men in her family for bringing her up not to question her own worth. They always made me feel that I could conquer the world if I wanted to, she said. At the same time, she was convinced that on more than one occasion she had been passed over for a promotion because she was a woman. As the only woman present at NSA stag parties she was treated like a spectacleone time the men had fed her with a spoonyet she would only say, That stood out a little bit.
She was also aware of harassment. One NSA director (Moody wouldnt name him) employed several young women in the offices in Fort Meade, whom the director, believing himself to be witty, called NSAs paint and body shop. Moody ran into three of these women one time in the restroom. Through tears, they described what theyd been subjected to, which Moody did not specify, but which appears to have been inappropriate sexual comments or behavior, perhaps even solicitation. Moody chose not to do or say anything. Until this day, she told the NSA interviewer, I wish I had done something, you knowbut I didnt.
When she wasnt working, Moody and her husband, Warren, an executive at Eastern Airlines, would escape the Beltway for the Shenandoah Valley, where they had a mountain cabin nicknamed Hoot n Holler. Life away from Washington was about cocktails, lawn games, music, tracking turkeysanything but national security. Officials from Washington, friends from around the globe, military generals, even the occasional MI6 agent were guests. Moodys favorite pastimes were listening to jazz, working in the garden, fishing, and hunting deer with a Ruger .44-caliber carbine. Shed be singing Roger Miller songs and had a drink and was all happy, Moodys nephew William Peter Jacobsen III told me.
In 1961, having been attached to the so-called Soviet problem for several years, Moody moved up again, becoming chief of a section known as G-Group, which was responsible for overseeing NSAs operations nearly everywhere excluding China and the Soviet Unionsome 120 countries. On the way home the night of her promotion, she stopped at a store and bought maps of Africa and South America. She wanted to learn what all the countries were, she recalled.
* * *
On April 17, 1961, paramilitary soldiers stormed Cubas Playa Girn, launching the brief and doomed attempt to overthrow Fidel Castro that became known as the Bay of Pigs. The surprise attack, carried out by Cuban exiles trained and led by the CIA, was in disarray almost from the start, and the blundering operation set in motion a rapid escalation between the United States and the Soviet Union that led directly to the Cuban Missile Crisis. Before the Bay of Pigs, Castro had been lukewarm about Soviet overtures and support. When the superpower next door tried to oust him, he changed his mind. For those in the American intelligence community, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchevs vow to help the Cubans defend themselves made it imperative to focus more attention on the Caribbean, a new front in the Cold War.
That spring, the NSA reorganized its operations, shifting resources to Cuba, which fell squarely under Moodys command. There might have been the equivalent of two people on the problem at that point, Moody recalled. One of the first things her team detected was Cubas improved communication security, which had until then been relatively unsophisticated, as Moody put it. Now it was strengthened with the introduction of a microwave system across the whole island. The technology provided a high level of secrecy because land-based microwave antennas relay information in a chain, and the only way to intercept a message was to be close to an antenna. U.S. military and intelligence agencies knew about the towers but couldnt intercept the signals being transmitted.
The NSA responded by establishing new intercept facilities in Florida and flying surveillance aircraft around Cuba. But that wasnt enough, so the Navy deployed the Oxford, the Liberty and the BelmontWorld War II-era ships newly outfitted with surveillance equipmentwhich sailed along the edge of the islands territorial waters. Over the next few months, Moodys team discovered that the microwave towers were the least of Americas worries. Sigint revealed increased maritime traffic from Soviet naval bases to Cuba. Cargo manifests intercepted from Soviet ships docking in Cuba were sometimes blank. Other times, declared cargo didnt match weights reported in port. Through intercepted conversations, the NSA learned of clandestine unloading at night, as well as the delivery of Soviet tanks. Things were getting hotter and hotter, Moody recalled.
Around this same time, intercepted communications in Europe contained Spanish-language chatter at air bases in Czechoslovakia: The Soviets were training Cuban pilots. Also, the Americans learned, the USSR was sending MIG jets and IL-28 bombers to Cuba. Moody traveled to London at least once during this period, most likely to coordinate with her counterparts at Britains Government Communications Headquarters.
By the fall of 1961, the Soviets had backed out of a bilateral moratorium on nuclear-weapons testing; in late October, they detonated a 50-megaton hydrogen bomb in the Arctic Sea, producing a blast equivalent to 3,800 Hiroshima bombs.
A few weeks later, Louis Tordella, deputy director at the NSA, showed up at Moodys office with two high-ranking officials from the Kennedy administration, one of whom was Edward Lansdale, an assistant secretary of defense. They stepped into a small conference room, where Tordella closed the door and drew the blinds.
We want to know what you know about Cuba, Moody recalled Lansdale telling her. Even if its a hunch, or a thought, or a guess, I want to know everything thats on your mind when you think Cuba. Moody started in on a highlight reel of interceptsthe blank cargo manifests, the bogus port declarations, conversations that mentioned tanks, radar and antiaircraft guns, the Soviet money and personnel flowing to the island. At one point, Lansdale interjected, Now, come on! as if Moody was exaggerating. She was unfazed. I dont have to have any hunches, she said. It was all in the sigint.
Impressed by her expertise, alarmed by what she had to say, and perhaps concerned that no one was providing the White House with this level of detail about an aggressive military buildup in Cuba, Lansdale asked Moody to write up her findings. Along with a few colleagues, she spent the next three days and nights compiling wheelbarrow loads of material into what she called a special little summary for the assistant secretary of defense. When she was done, Moody urged Tordella to publish her report, meaning circulate it among the intelligence agencies, the White House, the State Department and the military. Cautious not to step outside NSAs prescribed role, Tordella rebuffed her, but he did send it to Lansdale, who sent it to President Kennedy, who returned it with his initialssignaling hed read it. I told my troops, Keep this updated, Moody said of her report. If you get anything to add to it, do it immediately and tell me.
Over the next few months, Moody repeatedly, and unsuccessfully, pleaded with Tordella to release her updated report. By early 1962, she said she was really getting scared. The amount of military equipment piling up in Cuba didnt square with the Soviets repeated assertions that it was all defensive. Details about Soviet technicians moving around in Cuba were especially worrisome, and by this point the NSA likely knew the Soviets had moved surface-to-air missiles (not to be confused with ballistic nuclear missiles) to Cuba as well.
In February, not long after the NSA learned that a general from the USSRs Strategic Rocket Forces arrived in Cuba, Moody went to Tordella once more.
Look, lets publish this, she said.
We cant do that, Tordella replied. It will get us in trouble, because it would be considered outside of our charter. It was the same rationale hed been giving since November. Moody persisted.
It has reached the point, she told him, that I am more worried about the trouble were going to get in having not published it, because someday were going to have to answer for this. And if we do....
Tordella relented. It was the first such NSA report distributed to the wider intelligence community, and it quickly made the rounds. Before long, an old CIA friend of Moodys showed up at her office. He wanted to congratulate her, he said. Everybody knows that you were responsible for getting that serialized report on whats happening in Cuba out, and I want you to know that was a good thing you did, she recalled him saying. But he also warned her that not everyone was thrilled about her initiative; he had just come from a high-level meeting at the CIA during which officials tried to decide what to do about NSA for overstepping their bounds.
Even today, in spite of the fact that so much about the Cuban Missile Crisis has been made public, Moodys groundbreaking report, dated February 1962, remains classified. Nevertheless, its possible to track the crucial impact it had on American decision-making as the Cuba situation pushed closer to disaster. By springtime, it was clear that the Cubans had established an air defense system similar to one in the Soviet Union and manned, at least in part, by native Russian speakers. In a little over a month, the NSA and its partners had tracked 57 shipments of personnel and military equipment from the USSR to Cuba. MIG fighter jets were soon buzzing U.S. naval aircraft venturing near the island.
The CIA, meanwhile, was hearing from spies and double agents about missiles, but what kind of missiles was still unknown. In an August 22 meeting, CIA Director John McCone updated President Kennedy about Soviet ships that had recently delivered thousands of Russian troops plus substantial quantities of military materiel as well as special electronic equipment, many large cases, which might contain fusillade for fighter airplanes or it might contain missile parts, we do not know. What he did know came, at least in part, from sigint reports by Moody and her team.
This was two months before the apex of the crisis. If anyone was worrying about the possible presence of nuclear missiles specifically, they didnt say so. But McCone was closest to guessing the nature of the threat. The CIA director grew convinced that the Soviets had placed surface-to-air missiles on the island to keep prying eyes away. His deputy at the time later recalled McCone telling his team: Theyre preventing intrusion to protect something. Now what the hell is it?
The Americans stopped conducting U-2 reconnaissance flights over Cuba in early September out of concern that the planes might be shot down. Later that month, armed with intelligence from Moodys G-Group and information from sources on the ground, McCone persuaded the president and the National Security Council to restart U-2 flyover missions to get answers. Poor weather and bureaucratic holdups delayed the first mission. Finally, on Sunday, October 14, after a so-called photo gap of more than five weeks, a U-2 spy plane took off from Californias Edwards Air Force Base for the five-hour flight to Cuba. That same morning, Moody sat in her convertible at Fort Meade, staring at the sky.
* * *
Because of the danger, the pilot spent only a few short minutes in Cuban airspace before landing in Florida. The next day, a group of intelligence experts huddled over tables in the Steuart Building in downtown Washington, D.C., the secret headquarters of the CIAs National Photographic Interpretation Center, to pore over 928 images that the U-2 had taken of several military sites. Examining one set of photographs, an analyst named Vince Direnzo paused when he saw what appeared to be six unusually long objects obscured by a covering, possibly canvas. He determined that these objects were much larger than Soviet surface-to-air missiles the Americans already knew were in Cuba.
Direnzo checked photographs of the same site taken during flyover missions weeks earlier and saw that the objects had been placed there in the intervening time. In the archives he compared the images with photographs of May Day celebrations in Moscow, when the Soviets paraded military equipment through Red Square. He became convinced that the objects spotted in Cuba were SS-4 medium-range ballistic missiles, weapons that could carry nuclear payloads and had a range of more than 1,200 milescapable of striking a large portion of the continental United States. Further photographic evidence from other sites revealed missiles with a range of 2,400 miles.
Direnzo and his colleagues spent hours checking and rechecking their measurements and looking for ways they might be wrong. When they shared their assessment with the centers director, he concurred, adding that this was most likely the biggest story of our time. The findings were soon verified by a Soviet colonel secretly working for MI6 and the CIA.
Faced suddenly with an unprecedented threat, Kennedy ordered a maritime quarantine of Cuba, to block any further transport of weapons to the island, and declared that noncompliance by the Soviet Union would mean war. The hope was the line-in-the-sea strategy would demonstrate force and readiness to attack while providing both sides with breathing room, so they could begin inching away from the ledge.
With the discovery of nuclear weapons in Cuba, the mission at the NSA shifted abruptly from uncovering secrets to assessing the enemys war footing in real time or as close to it as possible. Gordon Blake, the NSA director, established an around-the-clock team to churn out sigint summaries twice a day as well as immediate updates as needed. Moody was put in charge of this effort; she spent many nights sleeping on a cot in her office. She later recalled the solidarity throughout the agency, with staff members from other groups showing up at Moodys office to volunteer their help. Late one night, Blake himself stopped by and asked how he could lend a hand. Moody gave him a list of names. Blake picked up the phone, and Moody overheard him rousing people from their sleep: This is Gordon Blake. Im calling for Juanita Moody. She wonders if you can come in. They need you.
Listening and watching for new activity on and near the island, sigint collectors relied on land-based electronic surveillance, a net of underwater hydrophones, spy planes, listening devices on Navy ships, and other, still-classified tools. The USS Oxford continued its near-shore mission, despite being well within range of a Soviet attack. It wasnt long before sigint indicated that radar systems at the newly discovered missile sites had been activated.
Of paramount concern was figuring out how Soviet ships would respond to the quarantine. Using intercepted radio and radar information, maritime traffic analyses and location data provided by the Navy, Moodys team kept close tabs on Soviet ships and nuclear-armed submarines as they made their way from the North Atlantic toward Cuba. One critical intercepted correspondence, from the Soviet naval station at Odessa, informed all Soviet ships that their orders would now come directly from Moscow. But whether this meant Moscow was planning a coordinated challenge to the blockade, or a standdown, no one knew.
Then, on October 24, two days after Kennedy announced the quarantine, there was a glimmer of hope: Sigint confirmed that at least one Soviet ship headed toward Cuba had stopped and changed direction, and appeared to be rerouting back toward the Soviet Uniona sign the Soviets werent intending to challenge Kennedys quarantine. Yet it was also crucial that American officials feel confident in that assessment. This close to the ledge, there was simply no room for miscalculation.
Nobody understood that better than Moody. Although the intelligence about the ship redirecting its course came in the middle of the night, Moody felt the higher-ups needed to know about it right away. She made an urgent call to Adlai Stevenson, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, who was slated to address the Security Council about the crisis the following day. When State Department officials refused to put her through, she dialed the number for his hotel room directly. I called New York and got him out of bed, she recalled. I did what I felt was right, and I really didnt care about the politics. (She also noted that later he sent up congratulations to the agency.)
The intelligence provided the first positive signs of a peaceful exit from the standoff, but it was hardly over. At one point, Navy destroyers and the aircraft carrier USS Randolph tried to force a nuclear-armed Soviet submarine just outside the quarantine zone to the surface by detonating underwater explosives, nearly provoking all-out war. Then, on October 27, the Soviets shot down a U-2 plane over Cuba, killing Air Force pilot Rudolf Anderson Jr. In Washington, the plan had been to strike back in the event that a U-2 was downed, but Kennedy ultimately decided to refrain. Finally, on the morning of October 28, after the United States secretly offered to remove its nuclear missile bases in Turkey and Italy, Khrushchev agreed to dismantle the missile sites in Cuba.
A few weeks later, in a letter of thanks addressed to the NSA director, the commander of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet, Adm. Robert Dennison, wrote that the intelligence coming from NSAs Cuba desk was one of the most important single factors in supporting our operations and improving our readiness.
Moodys use during the crisis of what were known as electrograms, essentially top-secret intelligence reports sent to the highest levels via Teletype, forever reshaped how the agency handled urgent intelligence, according to David Hatch, the senior NSA historian. Juanita was a pioneer in using this capability, he told me. Before Moodys innovation, he went on, most product was released via slower means, even in a crisishand-carried by courier, by interoffice mail, or even snail mail, to cite a few examples. The importance of having the ability to disseminate sigint in near-real-time was clearly demonstrated during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
The information Juanita and her team produced was very important in the decision to launch U-2s, Hatch said. The United States would not have learned what it did, when it did, about offensive nuclear weapons in Cuba without Moody, a civilian woman in a male and military-dominated agency.
Moody would later say the work she did in the 1940s and 50s had prepared her for the Cuba standoff. I felt at the time, while it was happening, that somehow I had spent all of my career getting ready for that crisis, she said of those tense weeks in the autumn of 1962. Somehow, everything that I had done had helped point me to be in the best position possible, knowledge-wise, to know how to proceed in that crisis.
* * *
Moody would go on to lead management training courses within the agency, and she helped establish a permanent position for an NSA liaison in the White House Situation Room. The deaths of U-2 pilots had troubled her deeply, and she worked to improve the system for warning pilots when enemy aircraft made threatening course corrections. And she continued to work closely with IBM engineers to improve the NSAs technical capabilities. Within the agency, she reached legendary status. One of her Fort Meade colleagues told me that a gaggle of young staffers, nearly all of them men, could frequently be seen trailing Moody down the halls, scribbling notes while she spoke.
In 1971, Moody received the Federal Womans Award, established to honor leadership, judgment, integrity, and dedication among female government employees. During the Cuba emergency, Moodys citation noted, when the provision of intelligence to the highest authorities was of utmost importance, Ms. Moody displayed extraordinary executive talent. In his nomination letter, Tordella, the deputy NSA director, whom Moody had clashed with about the Cuba report, called her brilliant, and wrote that no one in a position to know can but affirm that so far as this Agency contributed to the successful U.S. effort in a critical period, Mrs. Moody must be given credit for a significant share in that success.
At the banquet dinner, Moody, dressed in a pink gown, sat next to Henry Kissinger, then the U.S. national security adviser. She brought her parents from North Carolina, as well as her sister Dare. Afterward, congratulatory letters and cables came from the White House, the British Embassy, the U.S. Mission in Vietnam, the CIA, the Navy. Yet the broader American public, at that point unaware even of the existence of the National Security Agency, had no idea who she was.
That changed in 1975, when a bipartisan congressional investigation launched in the wake of Watergate found that the NSA had intercepted conversations that included U.S. citizens. More than that, the NSA was supporting federal agencies, namely the CIA, FBI and Secret Service, in their efforts to surveil American citizens put on secret watch lists.
An outcry ensued. The maelstrom would cause lasting damage to the American peoples perception of the trustworthiness of the countrys national security apparatus. Moody, as the liaison between the NSA and other federal agenciesmemos to the NSA from FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover were addressed Attention: Mrs. Juanita M. Moodywas caught in the middle.
In September 1975, NSA Director Lew Allen Jr. sent Moody to Capitol Hill to testify in hearings about the agencys surveillance. She had never been trained to testify or speak to a general audience about NSA work, but she accepted the assignment without protest. Frank Church, the Idaho senator who chaired the committee investigating abuses of power by U.S. intelligence agencies, told Moody that she would have to testify in an open and televised session. Moody refused. I took an oath to protect classified information and never to reveal it to those who are not authorized and have the need to know, she told him. I dont know of any law that would require me to take an oath to break an oath. Is there such a thing, Senator? There was not, and it was closed sessions for her week on Capitol Hill.
At one point, Senator Walter Mondale, of Minnesota, demanded that Moody bring everything NSA hadmeaning all the material gathered that might relate to American citizens. Practically speaking, it was an absurd demand; NSA was already collecting enormous amounts of information, much of it superfluous. Very little of it would be of value to the committees investigation. Moody tried to explain to Mondale that he misunderstood the nature of the information he was requesting, but he cut her off. I dont give a good goddamn about you and your computers, Mrs. Moody, Mondale barked. You just bring the material in here tomorrow.
The next day a truck dumped hundreds of pounds of paper at Mondales office. Mondale, having learned in a hurry how ill-informed his request had been, tried to make nice with Moody the next time they met. Putting his hand on her shoulder, he thanked her for being so cooperative. I wasnt too pleased or happy about that, she said later, referring to Mondales hand on her shoulder, his change in tone, or both.
During her testimony, Moody explained that lists of names were given to her group at the NSA. When the names appeared in their intercepts, NSA flagged it. She maintained to the last that the NSA had never done anything wrong. We never targeted Americans, she told an NSA interviewer in 2003. We targeted foreign communications. NSAs own tribute to Moody in the agencys Hall of Honor says the congressional hearings incorrectly identified [her] with some possible abuses of government power.
Still, Moody kept cool throughout the hearings. She even savored the opportunity to teach committee members about the sigint process. She considered it a great privilege to help educate the men down on Capitol Hill. It was the only thing I enjoyed down there, she said.
Two months later, in February 1976, Juanita Moody retired. If she was ever upset about the way she had been treated during the wiretapping scandal, she kept it to herself. She and Warren made frequent trips to Hoot n Holler, their Shenandoah getaway, and to North Carolina, where Moodys parents and many siblings still lived. All the years I was working, my sisters and brothers were the ones who took care of my parents, she told a friend. Now its my turn.
After Warren became ill, in the 1980s, the Moodys relocated to a seaside town in South Carolina. When not caring for her husband, Juanita planned renovations and real estate ventures and hunted antiques and secondhand jewelry. She was a delightful lady, Fred Nasseri, a former Iranian diplomat who moved to the U.S. after the Iranian Revolution, told me recently. Nasseri had opened a Persian rug business in nearby Litchfield, and he and Moody became friends. We would discuss art, politics, diplomacy.
But even in retirement Moody, who died in 2015, at age 90, and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, was discreet. When asked about her past, she would deflect. As one friend remembered her saying, Oh, Ive done lots of interesting things for a country girl from North Carolina.
This story was produced in partnership with Atellan Media.
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Idea to occupy heights around Pangong Tso emerged in meetings led by NSA Ajit Doval – India Today
Posted: at 10:21 pm
File photo of National Security Advisor Ajit Doval. (Photo: PTI)
The idea that Indian forces should occupy the strategic heights on the southern bank of Pangong Tso during the standoff with China, emerged during meetings led by National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval in August last year, government sources have told India Today TV.
Terming it to be a 'game changer' idea, the sources said this move has helped in resolving the crisis in the northern borders.
It was during these meetings led by the NSA where a suggestion was given to occupy the southern bank heights, including Rezang La, Rechen La, Helmet top and Aqi La. This helped in bringing the Chinese to the talking table to ensure disengagement from the heights along Pangong Tso.
The meetings led by the NSA included Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat and Army chief General Manoj Mukund Naravane.
Air Force chief Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria also continued briefing to the NSA on the aggressive stance taken by the Indian Air Force to counter the Chinese threat in the northern borders area.
It was during these meetings that the idea to occupy the heights came up and was precisely implemented by special frontier force and army troops under close monitoring of the NSA and India's top military brass.
"What we have achieved so far is very good. We had a number of meetings, and in these, the advice given by our NSA also came in extremely handy. His insight into strategic affairs and matters definitely helped us in chalking out our response," Army chief General MM Naravane said while speaking about NSA Ajit Doval's role in helping resolve the standoff with China.
In the past, the NSA and his team is said to have played a key role in handling the security situation during the attack on Patahankot airbase and the Doklam crisis.
ALSO READ | NSA Ajit Doval's security beefed after arrested Jaish terrorist confesses to recceing house
ALSO READ | Retired Pak Air Force officer targets NSA Ajit Doval, accuses him of 'destabilising' Balochistan
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Idea to occupy heights around Pangong Tso emerged in meetings led by NSA Ajit Doval - India Today
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National Storage Affiliates Trust Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2020 Results – Business Wire
Posted: at 10:21 pm
GREENWOOD VILLAGE, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--National Storage Affiliates Trust ("NSA" or the "Company") (NYSE: NSA) today reported the Companys fourth quarter and full year 2020 results.
Fourth Quarter 2020 Highlights
Full Year 2020 Highlights
Highlights Subsequent to Quarter-End
Tamara Fischer, President and Chief Executive Officer, commented, "We closed out 2020 on a positive note with excellent operating results despite the continued economic stress resulting from the pandemic. Our fourth quarter same store revenues grew by 4.8% year-over-year and same store occupancy numbers remain at record levels. Our acquisition volume also accelerated during the fourth quarter with the addition of over a quarter of a billion dollars of self storage properties to our wholly-owned portfolio. These favorable trends continued into the first quarter, marking a strong start to 2021."
Financial Results
($ in thousands, except per share and unit data)
Three Months Ended December 31,
Year Ended December 31,
2020
2019
Growth
2020
2019
Growth
Net income
$
24,517
$
18,826
30.2
%
$
79,478
$
66,013
20.4
%
Funds From Operations ("FFO")(1)
$
46,184
$
36,218
27.5
%
$
166,911
$
139,151
19.9
%
Add back acquisition costs
743
534
39.1
%
2,424
1,317
84.1
%
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NSA wants farmers’ views over increased sheep worrying news – Border Counties Advertizer
Posted: at 10:21 pm
THE National Sheep Association (NSA) is seeking the views of its members and farmers over increasing numbers of devastating dog attacks on livestock continuing to be reported.
The NSA launched its 2021 sheep worrying by dogs survey on Monday, inviting all UK sheep farmers to contribute to this important piece of research.
The survey aims to gather data and inform policy direction on the topic that appears to have been growing in case numbers and severity over the past year.
NSA chief executive Phil Stocker said that for the NSA, it is been an issue for many years. trying to engage in highlight the seriousness of sheep worrying attacks by dogs.
He added: "This has seen NSA involved in many discussions with rural police forces, animal welfare charities, the veterinary sector and of course government as we have, alongside others, called for changes in legislation to protect sheep farmers and their stock.
To facilitate this work NSA is appealing to all sheep farmers in the UK to supply the most up to date information and experiences they may have had with attacks on their flocks in this survey.
The 2021 NSA survey includes many new elements seeking information on sheep farmers experiences and their thoughts on how the issue could be resolved.
Through completing the survey respondents are helping to ensure the best possible voice can be put forward supporting calls for legal and cultural changes.
Devastatingly NSA hears from many sheep farmers experiencing problems with dogs chasing and attacking sheep on a weekly basis with case numbers appearing to have increased while the nation has been in lockdown during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Mr Stocker added: As one of the few leisure activities that the population has still been able to enjoy in the past year an increased number of walkers often accompanied by their pet dogs have been passing through farmland.
"Although thankfully the majority are responsible there is a small number that still allow their dogs to run through fields of livestock under little or no control, the resulting effect can be devastating, from extremely distressed sheep to severe injury and sadly, far too often death.
All survey data will be collected anonymously with the information gathered forming part of NSAs 2021 Sheep Worrying by Dogs campaign which is scheduled to run throughout 2021 to promote responsible dog ownership.
The survey is open now and available to complete until Monday, April 19 at http://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/sheepworrying2021
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Its done: The 3.45 am call to NSA Doval after Balakot was hit and Operation Bandar was competed – Oneindia
Posted: at 10:21 pm
India
oi-Vicky Nanjappa
| Published: Friday, February 26, 2021, 8:47 [IST]
New Delhi, Feb 26: On February 26 2019, the Indian Air Force hit a Jaish-e-Mohammad training facility in Balakot, Pakistan to avenge the Pulwama attack in which 40 CRPF jawans were martyred.
In a daring pre-dawn operation the IAF took down the training facility that had been mapped by the intelligence years ago. Former officer with the Research and Analysis Wing, Amar Bhushan told OneIndia that while the facility had been mapped over one and half decades back, it required a strong leadership with guts to hit the facility.
It was at 3.45 am on February 26 2019 that the then Air Chief, B S Dhanoa made call on a special RAX number to National Security Advisor, Ajit Doval to inform that the IAF had successfully completed the operation. The NSA in turn immediately informed Prime Minister about the same.
300 terrorists died in Balakot airstrike: Former Pak Diplomat
Officials tell OneIndia that this operation was a highly guarded secret known to only a very few. The sensitivity was such, the officer also explained. The same was code named Operation Bandar to maintain utmost secrecy.
While there was no specific reason to chose this name, monkeys have had an important place in Indian culture. In the Ramayana, Lord Ram's most trusted lieutenant Lord Hanuman destroys the entire capital of Lanka.
The Indian Air Force (IAF) had done a detailed assessment of both positives and negatives of the Balakot air strike. The report deals with various aspects of the strike on a Jaish-e-Mohammad terrorist camp at Balakot, despite Pakistan being on very high alert.
One of the key aspects listed in the report is about the strategic surprise. It says that the strategic surprise was so complete that Pakistan scrambled its jets only after the Mirage-2000s delivered the weapons package and turned back.
Another major positive was the accuracy of the intelligence and the target selection. The proficiency and the skill of the pilots' part of the mission has been listed as top class and they would be rewarded for the same.
A hit at Balakot ensured JeM set aside plan for another Pulwama attack
The high level of secrecy maintained during the mission also finds a mention. 6,000 men and officers were involved in the operation and there was absolutely no leakage. Speaking more about the element of surprise, the IAF said that the Russian Su-30s flying towards the JeM's headquarters at Bahawalpur forced Pakistan to divert its resources and other capabilities in a separate sector.
During the strike, the IAF used Spice 200 precision guided munitions to hit the target. Five of the six designated targets were hit at the Jaish-e-Mohammad training facility in Balakot.
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Its done: The 3.45 am call to NSA Doval after Balakot was hit and Operation Bandar was competed - Oneindia
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25 trips of a lifetime in Asia, Oceania and Antarctica, from swimming with sharks to breathing fire – iNews
Posted: at 10:18 pm
In the final instalment of our 100 Trips of a Lifetime series, which also covers Africa, the Americas and Caribbean, and the UK and Europe, we offer inspiration for future escapes that could take you to Australia, Uzbekistan, Antarctica and beyond.
Ticking off Sri Lankas key sights Dambulla cave temple, Sigiriya rock fortress, Buddha relics in Kandy can be combined with leisurely pedalling through out-of-the-limelight hill country in the middle of the island. Cycling through tea plantations, villages and vivid forest scenery gives a memorably rounded picture of the country. Fifteen days from 2,599pp, including flights, exodus.co.uk
The McLaren Vale region produces reliably world-class shiraz wines. Cellar doors range from humble family-run affairs to the five-storey, psychedelic dArenberg Cube (above). Alternate sampling sessions with kayaking on the pelican-packed Coorong lagoon system and catching waves on the Fleurieu Peninsulas beaches. Twelve days from 1,338, including campervan and flights, travelbag.co.uk
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Despite the overwater bungalows and pampering clichs, much of the Maldives tourist appeal is under the water. The Lhaviyani atoll has 50 dive sites, and the teardrop-shaped Kuredu Island Resort is best placed for exploring them. One week from 1,995pp, including flights and six days unlimited diving, diversetravel.co.uk
The largely forgotten Wat Phu Khmer temple complex in southern Laos is designed to be intimidating, climbing steeply up the slope of Mount Phou Khao. Nearby, the 4,000 islands of the Mekong River are made for hammock-based chilling in riverside bungalows. Sixteen days from 2,295pp, excluding flights, explore.co.uk
On Western Australias North West Cape, rumpled red outback gives way to Indian Ocean beaches and the multicoloured Ningaloo Reef is just 100m offshore. The worlds biggest fish hang out here, and boat tours drop snorkellers in the water next to the gentle giant whale sharks. Nineteen days along the west coast from 2,699pp, including flights, austravel.com
South East Asias under-the-radar cuisine is often the surprise of staple temple-touring itineraries, so ramp up the focus on fish amok and beef loc lac. Food tours, Khmer cooking lessons, rice wine-making sessions and beach barbecues can be laced between the traditional Angkor and islands holiday. Twelve days from 2,198pp, including six food experiences, excluding flights, insideasiatours.com
The furiously evolving world of Chinese contemporary art burns brightest in Shanghais M50 gallery district. Political pop art and realism rarely seen outside of the country help tell the complex tale of modern China. Expert gallery curator guides are best placed to help unpick it. Two-hour private tours 187,contexttravel.com
By day, the islands near Phuket are all about snorkelling jaunts in warm, shallow bays and cruising past towering limestone cliffs. But sleeping under the stars on board a catamaran, before moving on to the next days island, adds a sprinkle of magic. Visitor numbers will be capped in Maya Bay once tourism restarts but those who linger until night falls will be treated to a mesmerising, bioluminescent show in the water. One week from 934pp, excluding flights, gadventures.com
The oft-overlooked, north-eastern Isaan region is where Thai food doesnt get toned down for tourists tastes. Keep plenty of water at hand at mealtimes, then spend the days flitting between weaving workshops, Khmer temples and the prehistoric cliff paintings in the Pha Taem National Park. Ten days from 1,529pp, excluding flights, eastravel.co.uk
Perfectly-formed Rarotonga, with a mountainous green interior and white sand beaches around the edge, takes an hour to drive around. Aitutaki, meanwhile, is one big lagoon with outrageously white sand bars juttinginto it. Snorkel and crack open coconuts at will. Eight nights from 2,599pp including flights, hayesandjarvis.co.uk
Its all about being close to the water in Indonesias Komodo National Park. Gliding above bounteous reefs, pulling up on deserted beaches, stopping for a snorkel and poking around coastal grottoes should warm up intrepid kayakers for an encounter with 3m-long Komodo dragons. Ten days from 1,795pp, excluding flights, pioneerexpeditions.com
Amid Palaus archipelago of green-topped rock islands in Micronesia and some of the greatest snorkelling conditions on Earth lies a lake swarming with jellyfish. These jellyfish have evolved not to sting, so breaststroking through them is like plunging into a freakish aquatic ball pool. Day tour 121pp, viator.com
With all that snow on the mountains, there is usually plenty of fast-flowing water barrelling down Nepals rivers. Single-day and multi-day rafting adventures with a Himalayan backdrop on the gorge-lined Trisuli River hit that fun, but not recklessly dangerous, sweet spot. Thirteen days from 2,399pp, including flights, familiesworldwide.co.uk
New Zealands third island is one big wildlife sanctuary. Ferny national parkland covers 85 per cent of the island and the normally elusive kiwi feels comfortable enough to appear during the day. The penguins save their cameo on the beach for dusk, however. Six days from 1,270pp around South Island and Stewart Island, excluding flights, intrepidtravel.com
Creating a bust or animal sculpture out of ice is impressive. Creating an entire townscape, with detailed skyscrapers and temples, is another altogether. Harbin turns its agonisingly cold winter temperatures into a feature, transforming the ice into a giant canvas. Six days from 1,595pp, including flights, jasmineholidays.co.uk
An 8th-century, Edo-era walking route through the mountains from Kyoto to Tokyo is the perfect excuse to explore rural Japan. Stays in guesthouses and ryokans, bathing in thermal onsens and mooching around outrageously well-preserved historic towns such as Nara intersperse the hikes. Five days from 1,155pp, responsibletravel.com
There are several tent-peg experiences in northern India Jaipur palaces, the Taj Mahal, tiger-spotting in Ranthambore National Park. Stitching them together by train adds a sense of journey. The journey is particularly impressive on the narrow-gauge Himalayan Queen, which conquers 864 bridges and 102 tunnels on its way through the Himalayan foothills. Two weeks from 1,995pp including flights, greatrail.com
New volcanic cones keep emerging on eastern Russias tumultuously wild Kamchatka peninsula. Lava fields, geysers, fumaroles and hot springs line the peninsula as landscapes alternate from barren moonscape to peaceful forest. Dodge acid lakes to climb the Mutnovsky volcano one day, raft along the Kamchatka River looking for salmon-catching bears another. Eleven days from 1,870pp, excluding flights, regent-holidays.co.uk
Not all Antarctic cruises get as faras the Weddell Sea. Amid the wildlife-spotting sessions, expect icebergs the size of shopping malls. Drifting through puts your ship in the middle of an elaborate dance of giant sculptures and slow-moving megabergs. Eleven days from 5,882pp, excluding flights, swoop-antarctica.com
It is possible to take a boat tour through the Waitomo Caves on North Island. But its much more fun to abseil down into them, zipwire across them in the dark, then float down the river in inflatable tubes through a tunnel of twinkling glowworms. Tour 103pp, waitomo.com
Every evening on Selingan Island,green and hawksbill turtles struggle up the beach, dig a hole in the sand, thenlay eggs in it. Watching these hardymums in action ends up being just as thrilling as Borneos better-known wildlife encounters with orangutans.Two weeks from 2,199pp, including flights, freedomdestinations.co.uk
The north of Vietnam is all about mountains, homestay accommodation and if you are on a motorbike gleefully splashing across small rivers. Dirt roads through thatched-roof villages and tracks hugging hillsides provide regular lashings of adventure. Nine days from 1,995pp, excluding flights, rideexpeditions.com
Between all the blue-tiled mosques, this unashamedly romantic route through Uzbekistan reads like a shot list for an Indiana Jones movie: the walled city of Khiva, the enormous Chorsu bazaar, the Emir of Bukharas summer palace and Tamerlanes mausoleum in Samarkand Eleven days from 2,299pp, including flights, rivieratravel.co.uk
There are few weirder places in the world than the Demilitarised Zone between North and South Korea. You can peek into the reclusive North from the Dora Observatory, visit the park built as a commemoration to the displaced, and view the tunnels North Korea planned to invade through. Seven days from 1,675pp, excluding flights,onthegotours.com
The ascent of Luzons active Pinatubo stratovolcano starts off with a bumpy 44 ride through an astonishing valley of ash. But from the devastation of the 1991 eruption comes beauty, and the reward at the end of the trek is a dazzling crater lake. Day tour 128,barontravel.ph
To read about more amazing trips, take a look out our installments on the Americas and the Caribbean, the UK and Europe and Africa
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Welcome to FIFA.com News – Dire Wolves, 25eSports and ELS Torneios Online crowned best FIFA esports clubs in their regions – FIFA.com
Posted: at 10:18 pm
An explosive day of FIFAe Club World Cup action has seen the first three zone winners being crowned, with Dire Wolves, 25eSports and ELS Torneios Online securing victory and ensuring they walk away with a share of the $350,000 competition prize pool as well as the bragging rights of being the best EA SPORTS FIFA 21 esports team in their region.
Following a scintillating three days of group stages and knockout rounds earlier this week, the first day of the final weekend saw an action-packed competition schedule that showcased the most elite and skilful teams remaining in the tournament. Atlantide Wave and Dire Wolves kicked off the days proceedings, going head-to-head in the Zone 1 (Oceania) final. 25eSports and Tuwaiq eSports Club then battled it out for victory in Zone 3 (Africa & Middle East) before ELS Torneios Online and Team FW BR fought to win the title of best team from Zone 5 (South America).
The following three teams came out on top in their zone and can name themselves the best FIFA esports club in their respective region:
Zone 1 (Oceania): Dire Wolves Dylan Campbell (Australia) & Joshua King (New Zealand)
Zone 3 (Africa & Middle East): 25eSports Abdulaziz Alsabyani (Saudi Arabia) & Ziad Alghamdi (Saudi Arabia)
Zone 5 (South America) ELS Torneios Online Paulo Henrique Chaves (Brazil) & Matheus Henrique (Brazil)
The penultimate day of competition at the FIFAe Club World Cup has been the most entertaining yet with three mouth-watering finals that kept us all on the edge of our seat. We cant wait to see how tomorrows competitors come out and top that! said Christian Volk, Director of eFootball and Gaming at FIFA.
Attention now turns to the three remaining finals that will take place tomorrow, as the remaining two teams from Zone 2 (Asia), Zone 4 (Europe) and Zone 6 (North America) prepare to pit themselves against each other to walk away victorious. FIFAe fans across the globe can expect yet another day of compelling viewing and those wanting to catch the finals can tune into FIFA.gg from 10am CET on 28 February to watch the action unfold.
Zone 1 (Oceania): Atlantide Wave vs. Dire Wolves (3:9)
Zone 3 (Africa & Middle East): 25eSports vs. Tuwaiq eSports Club (9:3)
Zone 5: (South America): ELS Torneios Online vs. Team FW BR (9:6)
Zone 2 (Asia) 10:00 CET: Blue United eFC vs. WICKED ESPORTS
Zone 4 (Europe) 14:00 CET: Astralis vs. Mkers
Zone 6: (North America) 18:00 CET: Complexity Gaming vs. New York City esports
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North America And Oceania Industrial Hemp Market 2021 Global Industry Size, Reviews, Segments, Revenue, and Forecast to 2027 – NeighborWebSJ
Posted: at 10:18 pm
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The Following Companies are Major Contributors to the North America And Oceania Industrial Hemp Market Research Report:
North America And Oceania Industrial Hemp Market Segmentation:
North America And Oceania Industrial Hemp Market, By Application (2016-2027)
North America And Oceania Industrial Hemp Market, By Product (2016-2027)
Based on the Region:
North America (USA, Canada and Mexico) Europe (Germany, France, Great Britain, Russia and Italy) Asia Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India, and Southeast Asia) South America (Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, etc.) Middle East and Africa (Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Nigeria, and South Africa)
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North America And Oceania Industrial Hemp Market Report Comprises:
North America And Oceania Industrial Hemp Market [Current market size forecast until 2027 with CAGR] Regional breakdown [North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, South America, and the Middle East and Africa] Market Size Breakdown by Country [Major Countries With Significant Market Share] Breakdown of Market Size by Type of Product / Service [] Market Size by Application / Industry / End User [] Market share and turnover/turnover of the top 10-15 market participants If applicable, the production capacity of the main actors Market Trends New Technologies / Products / Startups, PESTEL Analysis, SWOT Analysis, Porters Five Forces, etc. Price Development Average pricing across regions Ranking by the brand of the most important market players in the world
The report examines the details of Global North America And Oceania Industrial Hemp Marketing and offers a detailed analysis of the various factors that promote or hinder the growth of the market. It relies on the most modern explanatory tools to measure openings by anticipating the actors. It also profiles the leading companies that work there and collects information about their income. Your item offers will be taken into account when deciding on the advertising department.
Table of Contents:
Part 01:Executive Summary
Part 02:Scope of the Report
Part 03:Research Methodology
Part 04:Market Landscape
Part 05:Pipeline Analysis
Part 06:Market Sizing
Part 07:Five Forces Analysis
Part 08:Market Segmentation
Part 09:Customer Landscape
Part 10:Regional Landscape
Part 11:Decision Framework
Part 12:Drivers and Challenges
Part 13:Market Trends
Part 14:Vendor Landscape
Part 15:Vendor Analysis
Part 16:Appendix
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