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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2013 4:57:05 PM

Buffett: Debt limit is 'weapon of mass destruction'

By Alex Crippen | CNBC3 hours ago

Warren Buffett said Wednesday the threat to not raise the nation's debt limit "after you've already spent the money" is a "political weapon of mass destruction" comparable to poison gas and shouldn't be used by either party.

"I know it's been used in the past, but we used the atomic bomb back in 1945 but we decided we weren't going to do something like that again," he said hours before the government's midnight deadline to raise the debt limit or possibly default.

Buffett called on both sides to pledge not to use the debt limit as a weapon. "There are plenty of weapons that can be used," like filibusters, he said.

In a live interview on CNBC's "Squawk Box, the Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-A) chairman said he doesn't expect the U.S. will do anything to damage its 237-year reputation of paying its bills on time, but if it does it would be a "pure act of idiocy" and "asinine."

Buffett said Berkshire owns short-term Treasury securities but he isn't worried about getting paid.

(Read more: Berkshire Hathaway's 15 Biggest Stock Holdings )

He also said the ongoing crisis in Washington over spending and the debt limit is no reason to avoid buying securities, pointing out that Berkshire subsidiary Marmon Group just paid $1.1 billion for a British drinks dispensing business. "We did not buy it with a condition that we could call off the deal" if there was no vote to raise the debt limit, he said. (Read more below the video.)

Related video


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He added that in his long career, he has never put off a deal by a few weeks to see what might happen in Washington.

When it was pointed out to him that he may be "unique" because he is a long-term investor, he replied that "most people are."

"If you take the people I meet in Omaha, you take the people who own farms, you take the people who own apartment houses, most people are long-term investors, thank heavens," he said.

Buffett also said Berkshire's spending rate on acquisitions this year is as "high as ever."

He told Becky Quick he had been working on a big acquisition, a $12 billion " elephant ," but the deal didn't come together.

Moments after Bank of America (BAC) announced better than expected earnings , Buffett said "the banks are in the best shape I can remember."

He also defended JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie DImon amid the bank's many legal problems, some of which are the result of its acquisition of Washington Mutual at the height of the financial crisis in 2008. "If a cop follows you for 500 miles, you're going to get a ticket. And believe me, you've had a lot of cops" following JPMorgan, he said.

Responding to activist investor Carl Icahn's public calls for a large Apple (AAPL)stock buyback, Buffett said, "I think Apple's management has done a pretty good job of running the company... and my vote would be with them." He joked, "I just wish I'd bought the stock many years ago."

"I do not think companies should be run primarily to please Wall Street and largely shareholders who are going to sell. I believe in running Berkshire for the shareholders who are going to stay and not for the ones who are going to leave," he added.

Buffett said he has a "rooting interest" for the troubled retailer J.C. Penney (JCP) because he worked in one of their stores when he was younger, but acknowledged it's "very, very tough" to compete against competitors who are always moving. "Coming from behind in retailing is just plain tough," he said.

Berkshire companies are still selling a "significant" amount of goods to Penney under "normal terms," he said and he's not worried about the retailer's survival.

On the economy, Buffett said he continues to see slow improvement and pointed out that "two percent a year growth with less than one percent population gains means one percent real growth per capita. In 20 years that's 20 percent. If every generation lives 20 percent better than the generation before them, that's not terrible."

Buffett wouldn't comment on reports the CEO of Berkshire subsidiary Benjamin Moore was fired due to sexual harassment. "Recently we had to make a change for reasons I can't get into," he said, but pointed out the paint company is still making a lot of money.



The multibillionaire calls on both sides to pledge not to use the debt limit as a weapon, saying there are other tools.
'Pure act of idiocy'




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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2013 5:21:05 PM

Ground employee arrested in LA airport ice blasts

Associated Press

In this framegrabbed image from APTN the entrance to the Tom Bradley International Terminal in Los Angeles can be seen Tuesday Oct. 15, 2013. A baggage handler was arrested Tuesday in connection with dry ice explosions Sunday and Monday at Los Angeles International Airport after police stepped up patrols and increased its checks on employees. Dicarlo Bennett, a 28-year-old employee for the ground handling company Servisair, was booked for possession of a destructive device near an aircraft. (AP Photo\APTN)


LOS ANGELES (AP) — A baggage handler has been arrested following a police investigation into two dry ice explosions at Los Angeles International Airport.

Dicarlo Bennett, a 28-year-old employee for the ground handling company Servisair, was booked Tuesday for possession of a destructive device near an aircraft. He is being held on $1 million bail.

Police had stepped up patrols and increased its checks on employees after the blasts took place Sunday night and then again Monday night.

Bennett took the dry ice from a plane and placed it in an employee restroom Sunday night and another device that was found on a tarmac outside the international terminal, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation who wasn't authorized to speak publicly.

Police had previously said they didn't believe the explosions were an act of terror because of the locations of the devices and because people weren't targeted.

No one was injured in either incident, although some flights were delayed Sunday.

The incidents could be the work of a disgruntled employee due to an internal labor dispute, said Los Angeles Police Department Deputy Chief Michael Downing, who heads the department's counter-terrorism and special operations bureau.

Swissport recently agreed to acquire Servisair and the transaction is expected to close by the end of the year. An afterhours message seeking comment from Servisair was not immediately returned.

It wasn't immediately known what Bennett's motives were, but he was riding in a van with several others, including a supervisor, when he decided to plant one of the dry ice bombs, the official told The Associated Press. Those in the van were aware of the dry ice, the official said, but no other arrests have been made.

The bombs were made by putting dry ice in 20-ounce plastic bottles and could have caused serious injury to anyone in close proximity, Downing said.

One device exploded in an employee men's room Sunday night in Terminal 2. Remnants of an exploded bottle also were found that night on the tarmac area near the Tom Bradley International Terminal, but an employee threw it away. The same employee found an unexploded bottle Monday evening and then reported what he found the previous day.

While there are cameras in some of these restricted-access areas, Downing said there isn't as much camera coverage as in the public-access areas and investigators had been reviewing available video.

Dry ice is widely used by vendors to keep food fresh.


Airport worker arrested in LAX dry ice blasts


A 28-year-old baggage handler is being held on $1 million bail after allegedly planting explosives in a restroom and on a tarmac.
No ties to terrorism



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2013 5:31:05 PM
Senate makes shutdown deal

Senate leaders announce bipartisan deal


Photographers take pictures of U.S. House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) (R) as he appears before reporters after a Republican caucus meeting at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, October 15, 2013. House Republicans hope to pass their own legislation to reopen the federal government, rejecting the deal that emerged from Senate negotiations. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Just a day before the federal government reaches its borrowing limit, Senate leaders announced Wednesday that they have struck a deal to re-open the government and avert a potentially cataclysmic default on American debt payments.

The final package, unveiled by Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on the Senate floor, would fund the government through Jan. 15 and raise the debt ceiling thorough Feb. 7. The bill also would strengthen income verification requirements for those who sign up for insurance under Obamacare and it would provide time for both parties to appoint lawmakers to a conference committee to reconcile a broad budget resolution, which would be led by Budget Committee heads Republican Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Democratic Sen. Patty Murray of Washington. The panel would be required to announce the result of their negotiations by Dec. 13.

“This has been a long challenging few weeks for Congress and for the country," McConnell said. “It’s my hope that today we can put some of the most urgent issues behind us."

The deal drew a quick, warm welcome from President Barack Obama, who "applauds" Reid and McConnell "for working together to forge this compromise" and hopes Congress will pass it "as soon as possible," spokesman Jay Carney said.

“He looks forward to congress acting so that he can sign legislation that will reopen the government and will remove this threat from our economy," Carney told reporters at his daily briefing.

With the guidelines of the deal set, congressional officials are still puzzling over the next procedural steps. While the deal was being crafted almost entirely by Senate staff, aides underlined that it is still very possible that the House would end up casting the first votes of the day.

It the House did act first, it was not clear whether it wouldl vote on the Reid-McConnell deal or on legislation that would serve as a “vessel” for a final compromise, helping to strip away potential parliamentary procedural roadblocks.

But any House vote is expected to rely heavily on the lion’s share of Democrats’ 200 votes to secure passage. Depending on the legislation, that could leave the Senate to strike the final blow to a crisis that already has rattled bond markets and left observers around the world shaking their heads at Washington’s enthusiastic dysfunction.

Washington is watching Republican House Speaker John Boehner to see how he will tackle a process that has left many tea party-affiliated GOP lawmakers unhappy. Those lawmakers precipitated the crisis by initially insisting that any vote to raise the debt ceiling be coupled to measures rolling back Obamacare. Those demands faded in the face of ironclad opposition from Senate Democrats (displaying surprising unity) and President Barack Obama.

There was concern earlier Wednesday that Sen. Ted Cruz, the Texas Republican who staged a 21-hour speech on the Senate floor to protest the federal health care law, would use a procedural tactic to block a vote on the bill. But after the announcement of the deal, Cruz told reporters that he would not move to deter the bill's progress through the chamber.

"I have no objections to the timing and the reason is simple. There's nothing to be gained from delaying this vote one day or two days," Cruz said. "The outcome will be the same. Every senator, every member of the House is gonna have to make a decision where he or she stands, but there's no benefit. I've never had any intention of delaying the timing of this vote."

The Treasury Department says the U.S. government is close to running out of borrowing authority, which it says will take place at midnight Thursday into Friday.

Because the cash-strapped U.S. government needs to borrow cash to pay for existing programs, failure to raise the debt limit means that not long after Thursday the government will not be able to pay all of its bills.

That raises the prospect of a default on America’s public debt as well as on other obligations such as Social Security payments, which would send a shock wave through the fragile global economy. Independent economists have warned that the international financial system’s reliance on the American economy (and U.S. Treasury bills) mean that the global economy could face a fresh contraction, possibly a severe recession.


Senators reach bipartisan deal, move deadlines


An 11th-hour pact to avert a federal default and end the partial shutdown must also pass the House.
Details



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2013 8:59:17 PM

Another Steubenville?

Dan Wetzel
Yahoo Sports

View gallery

.

Nodaway County Courthouse in downtown Maryville, Mo. (AP)

Maryville, Mo., is just like Steubenville, Ohio.

That's what so many are saying, and if that doesn't concern the prosecutor's office of Nodaway County in the far northwest part of the state, then perhaps it doesn't know what has just begun, or fathom what is still to come.

Steubenville was thrown into the international spotlight over the past year after members of the local high school football team sexually assaulted a drunken 16-year-old girl. It was a horrific crime made even worse by the gutter behavior of onlookers, which included crude jokes on social media, a cellphone filming of one of the acts and a complete lack of concern for the well being of the victim.

Yet in Steubenville, authorities not only charged two players, they handed the case over to the state's attorney general's office to run the prosecution. Both boys were convicted last March and are in the juvenile justice system to this day.

Even still, the city was brought to its knees by allegations of corruption, cover-up and favoritism. Local bloggers printed wild, unproven allegations. The Internet hacking group Anonymous tormented some locals and staged street protests that washed the city out. It focused pressure to make sure the case was pushed – and continues to be pushed – forward. It was devastating and divisive to Steubenville. Even locals freely repeated the most outlandish of rumors.

And, again, it's worth repeating: The two defendants weren't just charged; they were convicted.

In Maryville, the main suspect, a one-time, high-profile local high school athlete, is accused of assaulting a drunk 14-year-old girl before dumping her passed-out body on her front lawn in sub-freezing weather. He isn't even standing trial; all his charges dropped earlier this year by a local prosecutor.

Like Steubenville?

No, what is likely to come for Maryville – fair or not, reasonable or not – is probably going to be far more intense.


Until the Kansas City Star published a lengthy story about the case on Sunday, the details of what happened on Jan. 8, 2012, weren't well known outside this 12,000-person town about 100 miles north of K.C.

The story went viral over the next 24 hours, attracting additional media attention, including national outlets such as the Associated Press and CNN. The state's lieutenant governor, Peter Kinder, chimed in on Tuesday, saying "the appalling facts in the public record shock the conscience and cry out that responsible authorities must take another look." The case has also grabbed the attention of Anonymous, which immediately began an action campaign against local officials. A street protest demanding justice is already scheduled for Oct. 22.

You could call it the next battle in the fast-changing way in which online groups have put significant pressure on communities, particularly in cases involving sexual assault and bullying.

"If Maryville won't defend these young girls, if the police are too cowardly or corrupt to do their jobs, if justice system has abandoned them, then we will have to stand for them," Anonymous said in a statement. "Mayor Jim Fall, your hands are dirty. Maryville, expect us."

According to the Star, on the winter night in question a then-14-year-old girl named Daisy Coleman, along with a 13-year-old girlfriend, Paige Parkhurst, convened at Coleman's house for a sleepover. They hung out in her bedroom watched movies, drank some stolen booze and texted with an older football player.

By 1 a.m. they snuck out, got picked up by two boys, 17-year-old Matthew Barnett and a friend, and returned to a small party at Barnett's home. They had to climb through a basement window to get in without his parents knowing. A few older boys were there, all popular, prominent athletes at Maryville High School.

It was then, according to court records and media accounts, Barnett handed Coleman a glass of clear liquid. She drank it and maintains that's about the last thing she remembers. What happened next isn't apparently of much dispute. Barnett and Coleman wound up in a bedroom and had sex. At one point a friend filmed part of it on an iPhone. In another room, Parkhurst had sex with another 15-year-old boy even though she testified that she repeatedly said no.

"And after he was done, he made me go back out into the living room with him, and we sat and waited until Matt was done with Daisy," Parkhurst, now 15, said in an interview on Aljazeera America. "And I had walked into Matt’s room, and she was incoherent. She couldn't walk, couldn't talk, and just was talking like a baby pretty much."

According to Parkhurst, Coleman was eventually dragged out of Barnett's bedroom window and into a car. On the drive to Coleman's house, Parkhurst says the boys were "freaking out, trying to think of how they were going to drop us off without any of her brothers waking up. And they took her and carried her to the back corner of her house and left her there. And they told me to go inside, that all she needed to do was to sober up, and that she would be okay, and they were gonna be there and watch her."

However, instead of waiting for her to sober up or getting her help, they dumped Daisy off, shoeless and coatless in temperatures that dipped to 22 degrees. The guys left.

At about 5 a.m., Coleman's mother, Melinda, heard a scratching noise at the front door. She opened it to find a shocking sight: her daughter lying there, having crawled up to knock, her hair frozen, her feet turned red. Melinda is a veterinarian, so she brought her confused daughter in and drew a cool bath to warm her up, worried about potential frostbite. As she undressed Daisy, Melinda noticed marks on her genitalia.

"Immediately," Melinda Coleman told the Kansas City Star, "I knew what happened."

There was a call to 911, then a trip for both girls to the local hospital, where vaginal tears were found and Daisy's blood alcohol level, even at 9 a.m. – seven hours after drinking that clear liquid in the basement – was 0.13.

Nodaway County Sheriff deputies arrived soon after and went to work. The story was obvious. The boys were brought in immediately to talk and later put in custody. A search warrant of the Barnett house was executed, and blankets, underwear, booze and other items were seized. Cell phones were culled. It was quick and seemingly thorough.

Sheriff Darren White has repeatedly told the media he was certain there would be prosecutions.

"I was actually pretty happy with it because we had what I considered to be a very serious crime and within a matter of a few hours, we had warrants for their arrest and they'd been arrested," White told KCUR-TV out of Kansas City last summer. "… Did a crime occur? Hell yes, it occurred. Was it a horrible crime? Yes, it was a horrible crime. And did these boys need to be punished for it? Absolutely."

Only, it didn't turn out that way.


The then 15-year-old boy who had sex with the then 13-year-old girl was punished, via the juvenile judicial system, which keeps all names private.

Barnett was charged as an adult for sexual assault and endangering the welfare of a child. He never denied having sex with Daisy Coleman or that he knew she had been drinking. He just said it was consensual. In Missouri, statutory rape is defined as either having sex with someone under 14 or if a person is 21 and the victim is less than 17 years of age. Neither distinction applies here, an important legal bullet dodged.

The case would largely hinge on whether Coleman was incapacitated by alcohol and thus incapable of consent.

Meanwhile, then 17-year-old friend Jordan Zech was charged as an adult with the sexual exploitation of a minor for videotaping part of the encounter on his iPhone. The video was later deleted and unrecoverable.

(While Yahoo generally doesn't release the names of sexual assault victims, the Coleman family, including Daisy, now 16, have given the media consent to do so in an effort to publicize the case. They have given multiple on-camera interviews. Parkhurst has also given at least one television interview.)

The charges brought little relief. The Coleman children, who include Daisy and two siblings, say they were harassed at school and online. The family was new to Maryville, having moved from Albany, about 40 miles to the east, after the death of their father in an automobile accident.

The boys involved, including the Barnetts, are prominent long-time residents in a community where almost everyone knows everyone. Many locals rallied around Barnett, who was facing a potentially long prison sentence.

Soon Melinda Coleman was fired from her job, which she believes was related to the alleged assault. Daisy went into depression, including, the family said, multiple failed suicide attempts. When the Colemans moved back to Albany seeking a fresh start, the old home they owned and sat unoccupied in Maryville suspiciously burnt to the ground.

It was something out of Hollywood.

Making matters more difficult, the charges against Zech and Barnett were dropped by local prosecutor, Robert Rice.

Melinda Coleman said she's never gotten an explanation why. Rice has said little, although he did disclose to the Kansas City Star that there wasn't enough evidence.

"There wasn't any prosecuting attorney that could take that case to trial," Rice told the paper. "It had to be dismissed. And it was. … They were doing what they wanted to do, and there weren't any consequences. And it's reprehensible. But is it criminal? No."


The case may have drifted off into history if not for the Colemans' pursuit of the media. Most notably, an extensive story by Dugan Arnett of the Star that blew it up.

The spotlight has zoomed immediately on the town and prosecutor Rice, who, if nothing else, has done a dreadful job explaining why he didn't at least take the case to a grand jury or hand it over to the state's attorney general's office. His defiance hasn't played well.

Instead, the narrative has been left to snowball across the Internet.

The obvious and first reaction here is one of anger. A young girl taken advantage of, raped, discarded in the frost grass by callous older boys, who because of their athletic ability and family connections are protected by the powers that be in this small backward town.

That may be a true version, although to make that immediate conclusion is to engage in stereotyping. It is to assume that in Maryville no one cares about sexual assault or young girls. It is to conclude that judgments have been blinded by loyalty to a local powerhouse high school football team. It is to presume the possibility of some political muscle – Barnett's grandfather is a former state representative –– trying to make this go away and a prosecutor bending to it.

Those are huge leaps to make here. At least at this point with what is currently known.

Yet these cases aren't necessarily about perspective and patience. Anonymous, for one, is demanding that the state's attorney general reopen the case, even if the AG says it doesn't have the legal power to step in and overrule a county prosecutor. It isn't just Anonymous that's confused, though. The lieutenant governor along with a number of prominent state officials have asked for the same thing.

"I hope that responsible officials will join me in this call for a grand jury to make the final call on whether criminal charges should or should not be filed," Kinder said in his statement.

And consider Anonymous' statement calling for action, which declared the city's mayor has "dirty hands." He clearly has no authority over the county sheriff, which conducted a seemingly swift and thorough investigation, or the county prosecutor.

He was listed by name anyway. He might as well get used to it.

It wasn't all that different in Steubenville, where much of the initial speculation about cover-ups has yet to pan out with actual fact. The police, by all current public accounts, did a proper job. Meanwhile, a state-convened special grand jury is still investigating pretty much all aspects of the night in question in an effort to alleviate concerns. It has delivered one indictment, a school official, although the details aren't likely to be made public until a pretrial hearing on Oct. 25.

Regardless, the damage was done.

In Maryville, it's just beginning. This is not all bad. While it has its negative aspects, online vigilantism does bring attention and a relentless force that can create action. There are reasonable questions here to be answered. How did the charges just get dropped? How could this not be enough to at least take in front of a grand jury? How could a girl who passed out not have been incapacitated?

Rice is refusing to talk to the media or make any public declarations beyond a prepared statement that answers virtually nothing. He says a state law prevents him from discussing a closed case.

He's making a huge mistake, however, if he thinks that is going to satisfy anyone.

"The article recently published in the Kansas City Star did not include all the facts as to what transpired in a 2012 criminal case," Rice said in the statement released Tuesday. "There was insufficient evidence to prove a criminal charge beyond a reasonable doubt. The State's witnesses refused to cooperate and invoked their 5th Amendment privilege to not testify.

“The personal attacks made against me are malicious, wrong, and never happened.

“Law enforcement authorities and I are prohibited from commenting on the facts of a closed criminal case.”

Perhaps they are, but Sheriff White keeps giving interviews. And conflicting reports remain over whether the Fifth Amendment rights were invoked. (Coleman told the Associated Press she didn't; her former attorney, bizarrely, says she did.)

It's all enough to continue to spark the outrage, even if there should be an equal amount of confusion.

We're a long way from knowing exactly what happened that night in the Barnett basement, but the details are too powerful, the pain too obvious, the anger too pronounced for anyone to think it just fades off now.

Anonymous doesn't back down and whether that's a good thing or not, it's completely changed the game. This is a new day for these old cases, which, pretty much everyone would agree, in the past were too often swept under the rug.

Robert Rice thinks the personal attacks and insinuations of corruption against him are malicious, wrong and never happened.

He may be right. But they aren't going to stop. They have hardly even begun.

The entire community would be well served reopening that case and handing it over to someone in Jefferson City for fresh perspective and real answers. It's the only way to move on.

The scars are still deep in Steubenville, the resentment against the attacks still real, the case and fallout still going, but even they knew early on to walk away and let outsiders handle the justice. Even Steubenville understood that.

Anyone with more information about this story, please email us at MaryvilleTips@yahoo.com.




A Missouri town is being scrutinized after sexual assault charges were dropped against an ex-athlete.
Dan Wetzel: Far more intense




"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2013 9:44:53 PM
Strain between Egypt, U.S.

Egypt: Relations with United States in 'turmoil'

Associated Press

FILE - This undated file photo provided by the General Dynamics Land System shows the production of an Abrams tank in Lima, Ohio. The U.S. decision to suspend delivery of tanks, helicopters and fighter jets to Egypt is more of a symbolic slap than a punishing wound to the military-backed government for its slow slog toward a return to democratic rule. (AP Photo/General Dynamics Land System, File)


CAIRO (AP) — Egypt's foreign minister said Wednesday that relations between his country and the United States are in "turmoil" following Washington's decision to suspend delivery of tanks, helicopters and fighter jets to Egypt.

The suspension, announced last week, came in response to the unrest in the wake of the July 3 military coup that ousted Mohammed Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected president, and that led to the deaths of hundreds in police crackdowns.

In an interview with state-owned Al-Ahram newspaper, Egypt's Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy said that there is "unrest in relations" between the two countries, warning that the strain could affect the whole Middle East region. The interview was published Wednesday.

However, Fahmy said he was "not worried about this turmoil in relations," because it's also a chance for the two to "better evaluate their relationship in the future."

The Obama administration's decision to cut off military aid was meant as a warning that it no longer can be "business as usual" with Cairo, as President Barack Obama put it last week.

In announcing the decision, the State Department did not say how much of the $1.5 billion in annual military and economic aid to Egypt was affected. It held up the delivery of Apache helicopters, F-16 fighter jets, M1A1 Abrams tank kits, which are put together in Egyptian factories, and Harpoon anti-ship missiles.

But the U.S. decision is more of a symbolic slap than a punishing wound to Egypt's new military-backed government for its slog toward a return to democratic rule.

The military-backed government enjoys the support of wealthy Gulf Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. These oil-rich states have poured billions of dollars into Egypt's anemic coffers and to continue the common fight against Islamists.

The U.S. also is withholding $260 million in cash assistance to the government in Cairo until "credible progress" is made toward an inclusive government set up through free and fair elections.

The U.S. said it will keep providing support for health and education and counterterrorism, spare military parts, military training and border security and security assistance in the volatile Sinai Peninsula.

Near-daily attacks against Egyptian security forces and soldiers in Sinai have increasingly resembled a full-fledged insurgency.


Relations with U.S. 'in turmoil,' says Egypt


America's suspension of tank, helicopter, and jet deliveries isn't going over well with top officials.Symbolic slap



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