Page 90 of 130 FirstFirst ... 408081828384858687888990919293949596979899100 ... LastLast
Results 891 to 900 of 1299
  1. #891
    IT Manager 10,000+ Posts bsm2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Biden 2024
    Posts
    25,990
    Rep Power
    335

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    Trump Administration Battles New Sanctions on Russia
    On Tuesday, President Trump claimed he was tougher on Russia than his predecessor. At the same time, his subordinates strongly opposed a bill imposing new sanctions on Moscow.

    The Trump administration is quietly fighting a new package of sanctions on Russia, The Daily Beast has learned. A Trump State Department official sent a 22-page letter to a top Senate chairman on Tuesday making a wide-ranging case against a new sanctions bill.


    Sen. Lindsey Graham—usually a staunch ally of the White House—introduced the legislation earlier this year. It’s designed to punish Russian individuals and companies over the Kremlin’s targeting of Ukraine, as well as its 2016 election interference in the U.S., its activities in Syria, and its attacks on dissidents.


    Graham said the legislation’s aggressiveness means it is “the sanctions bill from hell,” per Yahoo Finance. Trump World, meanwhile, says it is a mess.


    The administration’s letter says it “strongly opposes” the bill unless it goes through a ton of changes. It argues the legislation is unnecessary and that it would harm America’s European allies–potentially fracturing transatlantic support for current U.S. sanctions on Russia. The bill “risks crippling the global energy, commodities, financial, and other markets,” the letter says, and would target “almost the entire range of foreign commercial activities with Russia.”


    The Trump administration also argues that the bill would sanction Russian companies for starting their own new energy developments in Russia. And it argues the sanctions could target American banks operating in Russia and harm American asset managers.


    A State Department spokesperson declined to comment on the letter but said, “The Administration fully shares the goal of deterring and countering Russian malign influence and aggression.”


    Despite Trump’s strong opposition, the bill passed out of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday morning. Five senators opposed it, all Republicans: Chairman Jim Risch, Sen. Rand Paul, Sen. Johnny Isacson, Sen. John Barrasso, and Sen. Ron Johnson.


    The bill, called the “Defending American Security from Kremlin Aggression Act of 2019” (DASKA) would level new sanctions against Russian oligarchs, against its banking sector, and against its sovereign debt (which the powerful California Public Employees Retirement System has hundreds of millions of dollars invested). It would also open the door to sanctioning Russia’s ship-building industry in response to the Kremlin’s capture of Ukrainian sailors and ships as they sailed through the Kerch Strait late last year. And it would sanction some crude oil development projects in Russia, as well as energy projects outside the country backed by Russian state-owned entities.


    “The administration says it ‘seems impossible’ to certify that the Kremlin isn’t meddling in U.S. elections, noting that the executive branch always opposes requirements that it prove something isn’t happening.”
    It would also aim to bring more transparency to purchases of high-end real estate, which many foreign nationals use to launder money into the U.S. And it would require that the State Department and the Intelligence Community report to Congress every 90 days on whether or not the Kremlin is meddling in U.S. elections.
    That last provision drew pointed criticism from the Trump administration, which said it is “designed for failure.” It “seems impossible” to certify that the Kremlin isn’t meddling in U.S. elections, the letter says, noting that the executive branch always opposes requirements that it prove something isn’t happening.


    The letter also includes a line that could be read as a veiled threat to the Kremlin, and which refers to the administration’s current ability to issue new sanctions.


    “The United States can apply much more economic pain using this powerful range of authorities–and the Administration will not hesitate to do so if Russia’s conduct does not demonstrably and significantly change,” it says.


    Business groups, including the Chamber of Commerce and the American Petroleum Institute, have also raised concerns about the bill. The Chamber said Congress should “refine it further,” while API called for outright opposition, according to Yahoo Finance.


    Democrats and Republicans cheered the passage of the legislation through the committee. “I am committed to working with my colleagues to improve this legislation, but it must be strong to be meaningful,” Graham said in a statement.


    The next step will be a vote on the Senate floor; it is unclear if or when that will happen.


    The legislation is moving as Trump stares down an impeachment vote. The House of Representatives spent Wednesday afternoon debating whether or not to vote to impeach him. Trump’s relationship with Ukraine is at the center of the process; his administration pressured Kyiv to make an announcement on investigations that would have benefited Trump politically. That pressure came while Trump quietly directed his subordinates to withhold military aid that Congress had promised to send to Kyiv. And Trump’s European Union Amb. Gordon Sondland told Congress that the administration specifically conditioned a White House visit for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on his announcement of probes into the Bidens and into claims that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 election.


    And Trump’s relationship with the Kremlin has generated acute concerns on both sides of the Atlantic. Ukrainian officials spent the weekend of Dec. 7 watching Twitter in expectance Trump would announce support for them before they entered peace talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Instead, they got radio silence–and days later, Trump welcomed Russia’s foreign minister to the White House.


    And Russia’s enthusiastic interference in the 2016 election–which the Intelligence Community concluded was designed to help Trump win–precipitated Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation. Trump spent much of his presidency railing against Mueller and trying to get him fired. Democrats considered impeaching him over those efforts, but House Leadership ultimately demurred.

  2. #892
    IT Manager 10,000+ Posts bsm2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Biden 2024
    Posts
    25,990
    Rep Power
    335

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    Russia's Talking Points Sound so familiar I wonder WHO!

    Putin Hints at Holding Power Past 2024, and Defends Trump on Impeachment



    Russia’s president mused about repealing the term limit he faces, and echoed Republican talking points saying that impeachment was a baseless bid to reverse the 2016 election.


    Just hours after President Trump became only the third American leader to be impeached, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Thursday mocked what he described as an attempt by Democrats to reverse the 2016 election, and hinted that he could, himself, stay in power for many more years.


    Taking questions for more than four hours at his annual end-of-year news conference, the Russian president embraced Republican talking points, deriding the impeachment process in Washington as baseless and destined to fail.


    “This is nothing but a continuation of an internal political struggle, with the party that lost the election, the Democratic Party, trying to reach its goal by different means,” Mr. Putin said during the 15th edition of the news conference, a well-worn ritual that the president uses to parade his mastery of domestic policy detail and take swipes at political tumult overseas.


    Mr. Putin was far less emphatic in his take on Russia’s own political affairs, particularly its next presidential election in 2024. He sidestepped a direct question about his future plans, while raising the possibility that Russia’s Constitution, which bars him from seeking another term, might be changed.


    Subscribe for original insights, commentary and discussions on the major news stories of the week, from columnists Max Fisher and Amanda Taub.



    Moscow has been abuzz for months with speculation about whether Mr. Putin, who has been in power for 20 years, will step down at the end of his current and supposedly final term in 2024.

  3. #893
    IT Manager 10,000+ Posts bsm2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Biden 2024
    Posts
    25,990
    Rep Power
    335

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    Russia hacked Ukrainian gas company at center of impeachment inquiry

    Hackers affiliated with the Russian military have taken aim at Burisma, the Ukrainian natural gas company at the center of the impeachment inquiry into President Trump, according to the New York Times.


    Hacking attempts began in early November against the company on whose board former Vice President Joe Biden’s son sat, The Times reported. At the same time the House was investigating a phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during which Trump asked Zelensky to investigate the Bidens.





    Security experts told the Times the hackers’ findings, as well as what they were looking for, remain unclear, but the timing indicates they could have been in search of the same sort of potentially embarrassing material on the family Trump sought when he asked Zelensky to launch the investigation.


    The hackers were affiliated with the G.R.U. military intelligence unit and used phishing emails to target usernames and passwords in a similar manner to the 2016 hack of the Democratic National Committee, according to the Times, in this case establishing mockups of Burisma subsidiaries and sending company employees emails designed to look like internal communications.


    The hackers successfully secured login credentials from some employees and successfully infiltrated one of the company’s servers, according to Area 1, the California-based security company that first caught wind of the hack.


    “The timing of the Russian campaign mirrors the G.R.U. hacks we saw in 2016 against the D.N.C. and [Hillary Clinton campaign chairman] John Podesta,” Area 1 co-founder Oren Falkowitz said, according to the Times. “Once again, they are stealing email credentials, in what we can only assume is a repeat of Russian interference in the last election.”

  4. #894
    Service Manager 5,000+ Posts
    How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    SalesServiceGuy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Nova Scotia
    Posts
    7,730
    Rep Power
    225

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    With the USA Presidential election only nine months away, Russia is rolling out new tools designed to fool the American public into whom they should vote for.

    Artificial intelligence is considered to be one of the prized technological innovations of the 2020s.

    This brings the arrival of very sophisticated "Deep Fakes".

    It has become really obvious in the last few years that information is being weaponized.

    On other Rant threads on CTN, a few members often relay information from very extreme right wing websites that you really have to seek out to find. You have to wonder who is really behind some of these strongly biased websites.

    We are on the verge of what is known as "Synthetic content" where very real looking people or very close copies of actual people seem to move and speak naturally but with the message of a third person. Potentially a cleverly disguised message from Russia's intelligence disinformation Dept.

    How fake faces are being weaponized online - CNN

    Bernie Sanders "Bernie Bros" have recently been accused of very pointed attacks on Republican political figures. Bernie disavows and denounces all ties to this very small fraction of his supporters and suggests that they could possibly be in reality Russian disinformation trolls seeking to discredit his Presidential campaign.

  5. #895
    IT Manager 10,000+ Posts bsm2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Biden 2024
    Posts
    25,990
    Rep Power
    335

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    Russia Backs Trump’s
    Re-election, and He Fears Democrats Will Exploit Its Support
    Intelligence officials warned House lawmakers last week that Russia was interfering in the 2020 campaign to try to get President Trump re-elected, five people familiar with the matter said, a disclosure to Congress that angered Mr. Trump, who complained that Democrats would use it against him.


    The day after the Feb. 13 briefing to lawmakers, Mr. Trump berated Joseph Maguire, the outgoing acting director of national intelligence, for allowing it to take place, people familiar with the exchange said. Mr. Trump cited the presence in the briefing of Representative Adam B. Schiff, the California Democrat who led the impeachment proceedings against him, as a particular irritant.


    During the briefing to the House Intelligence Committee, Mr. Trump’s allies challenged the conclusions, arguing that he has been tough on Russia and strengthened European security. Some intelligence officials viewed the briefing as a tactical error, saying that had the official who delivered the conclusion spoken less pointedly or left it out, they would have avoided angering the Republicans.


    That intelligence official, Shelby Pierson, is an aide to Mr. Maguire who has a reputation of delivering intelligence in somewhat blunt terms. The president announced on Wednesday that he was replacing Mr. Maguire with Richard Grenell, the ambassador to Germany and long an aggressively vocal Trump supporter.


    Though some current and former officials speculated that the briefing may have played a role in the removal of Mr. Maguire, who had told people in recent days that he believed he would remain in the job, two administration officials said the timing was coincidental. Mr. Grenell had been in discussions with the administration about taking on new roles, they said, and Mr. Trump had never felt a kinship with Mr. Maguire.


    Spokeswomen for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and its election security office declined to comment. A White House spokesman did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

  6. #896
    Service Manager 5,000+ Posts
    How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    SalesServiceGuy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Nova Scotia
    Posts
    7,730
    Rep Power
    225

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    The new Acting Director of National Intelligence Richard Grenell is the current Ambassador to Germany. He plans to remain in that post and make the DNI his side gig. He is thought of as a ridiculous incompetent stooge of Donald Trump

    Helping him will be Cash Patell, one of Devin Nunes top level assistants. Another extreme Trump loyalist.

    Both men have zero National Intelligence experience.

    At this moment, Fox News is suppressing this story line.

    The Director serves as the head of the seventeen member National Intelligence Community. This includes the CIA, Office of Naval Intelligence, the Marine Core Intelligence Agency, the National Reconnaissance Agency and 13 other agencies.

    United States Intelligence Community - Wikipedia

    It is clear now that anyone in gov't who opposes Donald Trump cannot speak truth to power if they want to keep their job. Speaking truth to power is a cornerstone of the US Republic and that core value is under attack.

    There is clear concern that President Trump is an intelligence risk.

    Vladimir Putin is now President Trump's 2020 running mate.

    TRUMP/PUTIN2020!
    Last edited by SalesServiceGuy; 02-21-2020 at 04:59 AM.

  7. #897
    IT Manager 10,000+ Posts bsm2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Biden 2024
    Posts
    25,990
    Rep Power
    335

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email




    TRUMP/PUTIN2020

  8. #898
    Service Manager 5,000+ Posts
    How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    SalesServiceGuy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Nova Scotia
    Posts
    7,730
    Rep Power
    225

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    Due to the explosion of outrage on the left and very strong concerns from the Intelligence community, the Ambassador to Germany Richard Grennell will not get the job as acting Director of National Intelligence. A person is to be named shortly by the White House.

    The current Director was scheduled to leave this post on March 12 2020. He was expected to stay on as permanent Director.

    Imagine yourself as a complete rookie sitting across from a Marine 4 Star General and 13 other generals talking about deeply secret state intelligence matters. I expect they would size you up pretty quick.

    Fox News is still suppressing the story.
    Last edited by SalesServiceGuy; 02-21-2020 at 04:28 PM.

  9. #899
    Service Manager 5,000+ Posts
    How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    SalesServiceGuy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Nova Scotia
    Posts
    7,730
    Rep Power
    225

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email

    Quote Originally Posted by SalesServiceGuy View Post
    Due to the explosion of outrage on the left and very strong concerns from the Intelligence community, the Ambassador to Germany Richard Grennell will not get the job as acting Director of National Intelligence. A person is to be named shortly by the White House.

    The current Director was scheduled to leave this post on March 12 2020. He was expected to stay on as permanent Director.

    Imagine yourself as a complete rookie sitting across from a Marine 4 Star General and 13 other generals talking about deeply secret state intelligence matters. I expect they would size you up pretty quick.

    Fox News is still suppressing the story.

    It now appears that the new acting DNI, Richard Grennell, a gay man, will stay on in his post for at least 90 days.

    He has a very caustic style and did little to advance US interests in Germany. Many senior German leaders refused to meet with him.

    On his 1st day on the job, he unceremoniously fired the #2 senior official in his Dept. seriously reducing the talent pool in this key US gov't organization.

  10. #900
    IT Manager 10,000+ Posts bsm2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Biden 2024
    Posts
    25,990
    Rep Power
    335

    Re: How Russia hacked the Democrats email



    TRUMP/PUTIN2020

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Get the Android App
click or scan for the Copytechnet Mobile App

-= -= -= -= -=


IDrive Remote Backup

Lunarpages Internet Solutions

Advertise on Copytechnet

Your Link Here