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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/11/2016 1:09:01 AM

Facebook allows postings of ‘napalm girl’ photo after debate


FILE - This is a June 8, 1972 file photo of South Vietnamese forces follow after terrified children, including 9-year-old Kim Phuc, center, as they run down Route 1 near Trang Bang after an aerial napalm attack on suspected Viet Cong hiding places . Norway's Prime Minister Erna Solberg on Friday Sept. 9, 2016 challenged Facebook’s restrictions on nude photos by posting an iconic 1972 image of a naked girl running from an aerial napalm attack in Vietnam. The Pulitzer Prize-winning image by Associated Press photographer Nick Ut is at the center of a heated debate about freedom of speech in Norway after Facebook deleted it from a Norwegian author’s page last month. (AP Photo/Nick Ut, File)

By JAN M. OLSEN

Associated Press

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Facebook on Friday reversed its decision to remove postings of an iconic 1972 image of a naked, screaming girl running from a napalm attack in Vietnam, after a Norwegian revolt against the tech giant.

Protests in Norway started last month after Facebook deleted the Pulitzer Prize-winning image by Associated Press photographer Nick Ut from a Norwegian author's page, saying it violated its rules on nudity.

The revolt escalated on Friday when Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg posted the image on her profile and Facebook deleted that too. The brouhaha is the latest instance in which Facebook's often opaque process for deciding what stays and what goes on its network has spurred controversy.

"It's an interesting dilemma because you've got a newsworthy historical image that has been published by traditional news media that was effectively censored by a social network," said Steve Jones, University of Illinois at Chicago communications professor.

Initially, Facebook stood by the decision, saying it was difficult to create a distinction between allowing a photograph of a nude child in one instance and not others. But late Friday it said it would allow sharing of the photo.

"In this case, we recognize the history and global importance of this image in documenting a particular moment in time," Facebook said in a statement. "Because of its status as an iconic image of historical importance, the value of permitting sharing outweighs the value of protecting the community by removal, so we have decided to reinstate the image on Facebook where we are aware it has been removed."

Politicians of all stripes, journalists and regular Norwegians had backed Solberg's decision to share the image.

The prime minister told Norwegian broadcaster NRK she was pleased with Facebook's change of heart and that it shows social media users' opinions matter.

"To speak up and say we want change, it matters and it works. And that makes me happy," she said.

The image shows screaming children running from a burning Vietnamese village. The little girl in in the center of the frame, Kim Phuc, is naked and crying as the napalm melts away layers of her skin.

"Today, pictures are such an important element in making an impression, that if you edit past events or people, you change history and you change reality," Solberg told the AP earlier Friday, adding it was the first time one of her Facebook posts was deleted.

Solberg later reposted the image with a black box covering the girl from the thighs up. She also posted other iconic photos of historic events, such as the man standing in front of a tank in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in 1989, with black boxes covering the protagonists.

Like its Scandinavian neighbors, Norway takes pride in its freedom of speech. It's also a largely secular nation with relaxed attitudes about nudity.

Several members of the Norwegian government followed Solberg's lead and posted the photo on their Facebook pages. One of them, Education Minister Torbjorn Roe Isaksen, said it was "an iconic photo, part of our history."

Many of the posts were deleted but Isaksen's was still up Friday afternoon. The photo was also left untouched on a number of Facebook accounts, including the AP's.

It would be physically impossible for the company to comb through the hundreds of millions of photos posted each day, so it relies on user reports and algorithms to weed out pictures that go against its terms of service.

A Facebook spokeswoman said that content will not be removed, no matter how many people report it, as long as it does not violate the company's standards. Facebook usually does not proactively remove photos, with some exceptions, such as child pornography.

Facebook sometimes reinstates reported photos after removing them.

It can also adjust its standards depending on the response. Breastfeeding and mastectomy photos used to be deleted, but after much outcry the company adjusted its policy on nude photos to allow most of such photos. In another case, a court ruled Facebook could be sued after a man's account was suspended after he posted "The Origin of the World," by Gustave Courbet, an 1866 French painting of a nude model exposing her genitalia.

The issue in Norway "points out there's very little transparency," Jones said. "We really don't know how these decisions are made so there's not a lot of accountability either necessarily."

Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten published the Vietnam photo on its front page Friday and also wrote an open letter to Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg in which chief editor Espen Egil Hansen accused the social media giant of abusing its power.

Hansen said he was "upset, disappointed — well, in fact even afraid — of what you are about to do to a mainstay of our democratic society."

The uproar also spread outside of Norway, with the head of Denmark's journalism union urging people to share Hansen's open letter. Germany's Justice Minister Heiko Maas, who has previously clashed with Facebook over its failure to remove hate speech deemed illegal in Germany, also weighed in, saying "illegal content should vanish from the Internet, not photos that move the whole world."

Facebook's statement said it will adjust its review mechanisms to permit sharing of the image going forward.

"We are always looking to improve our policies to make sure they both promote free expression and keep our community safe, and we will be engaging with publishers and other members of our global community on these important questions going forward," it said.

Paul Colford, AP vice president and director of media relations, said: "The Associated Press is proud of Nick Ut's photo and recognizes its historical impact. In addition, we reserve our rights to this powerful image."

Before it was published 44 years ago, AP also had a discussion about the image because it violated the news agency's policy on full-frontal nudity.

Hal Buell, then AP's executive news photo editor in New York, said he received a message from Saigon photo editor Horst Faas saying a "controversial picture" was coming up.

"Maybe we discussed it on the desk for 10-15 minutes," said Buell, who is now retired. "But there is nothing about this picture that is prurient. How can we not publish this picture? It captures the horrors of war. It captures the terrible situation of innocents caught in the crossfire of the war."

AP published the image and media worldwide used it, though some chose not to, Buell said.

___

Associated Press writer Karl Ritter in Stockholm and AP Technology Writers Barbara Ortutay and Mae Anderson in New York contributed to this report.


(Yahoo News)

"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?
9/11/2016 1:35:01 AM
Flow of foreign fighters plummets as Islamic State loses its edge

The flow of foreign fighters to the ranks of the Islamic State — once a mighty current of thousands of radicalized men and women converging on Syrian and Iraqi battlefields from nations across the globe — has been cut to a trickle this year as the group’s territory has shrunk and its ambitions have withered.

The decline, officials and experts say, has been dramatic, prolonged and geographically widespread, with the number of Europeans, Americans, North Africans and others joining up to fight and die for the idea of a revived Islamic caliphate falling as precipitously as the terrorist group’s fortunes.

From a peak of 2,000 foreign recruits crossing the Turkey-Syria border each month, the Islamic State and other extremist groups operating in Syria are down to as few as 50, according to U.S. intelligence assessments.

Governments from Britain to Tunisia say their citizens are less likely than they have been in years to heed the Islamic State’s calls for front-line volunteers.

Diminished flows deprive the organization of needed reinforcements and further erode its ability to cast itself as the rebirth of a vast Islamic empire. But they also raise questions about whether the terrorism threat is actually easing or just morphing into a more dangerous new phase.

Libyan forces say they've taken back almost all of Sirte, a city that used to be Islamic State's regional stronghold. (Reuters)

“It’s a massive falloff,” said Peter Neumann, director of the International Center for the Study of Radicalization at King’s College London. “And it’s basically because Islamic State is a failing entity now. The appeal of Islamic State rested on its strength and its winning. Now that it’s losing, it’s no longer attractive.”

The sustained decline marks an important milestone in global efforts to defeat the Islamic State, reflecting measures ranging from a multinational military campaign to, in at least one nation, rules requiring parental permission slips before young men can leave the country.

But Neumann and others said the decline in Islamic State recruiting figures — which has come almost as quickly as the rise following leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s declaration of a caliphate in June 2014 — is hardly an unmitigated success for the United States and its allies.

Instead, it may be the beginning of a new stage, one in which would-be fighters choose to carry out attacks at home rather than travel abroad, and battle­hardened veterans seek out new lands for conflict.

“It’s like after the Afghanistan war in the 1980s,” said Neumann, citing the period after Soviet troops withdrew in 1989 and legions of foreign fighters formed a diaspora of radicalized veterans that subsequently fueled the rise of al-Qaeda. “They’ll be asking themselves, ‘What’s next?’ ”

That peril helps explain why U.S. and other officials have been cautious in trumpeting the declining foreign-fighter numbers.

The Turkish army carries out controlled explosions in Syria's Jarabulus just across the border from Turkey on Thursday, removing mines and booby traps left by Islamic State. (Reuters)

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve announced this week that there was “a fourfold decrease” in the number of French citizens who have traveled to the Islamic State’s domain in the first six months of 2016, compared with the 69 fighters who did so over the same period last year.

Rather than celebrate, however, French officials have been bracing the public for what could happen if some among the almost 700 French citizens or residents who are still fighting in Syria and Iraq decide it is time to come home.

“Their return represents an additional menace for our national security,” said French Prime Minister Manuel Valls, whose country has been hit by repeated terrorist attacks in the past two years.

One European law enforcement official said that although the number of people departing for Syria has been dropping, the security threat may simply be changing, not diminishing.

“If you look at one side, fewer people leaving would also mean fewer people getting radicalized and also being passed out from Syria and Iraq to commit attacks,” said Wil M. van Gemert, the head of the operations department at Europol, the European Union law enforcement agency.

“But if you look at the summer, you see what kind of attacks we’ve had,” he said, listing incidents in France, Germany and Belgium. “We had people who had been radically inspired, and IS took a position where they claimed them to be their soldiers,” he said, using an abbreviation for the Islamic State, which is also known as ISIS or ISIL.

In many cases, however, the Islamic State’s connections with those attackers were tenuous at best.

And as the group fights for its survival amid a U.S.-led assault from the air and Turkish, Kurdish and Iraqi military offensives on the ground, the Islamic State has struggled to draw significant numbers of new foreign fighters under its direct control.

Spiral of decline

As of December, up to 31,000 people from at least 86 countries had traveled to Syria or Iraq to fight alongside the Islamic State or other extremist groups, according to a comprehensive analysis by the Soufan Group, an international security consulting firm.

The extraordinary flows — outpacing those from all other recent conflicts — gave the Islamic State a virtually unending supply of fighters with which to battle the group’s myriad enemies. Even more important than battlefield ranks, however, was the propaganda value of an army that matched the scope of the group’s rhetoric, which called for a global Muslim uprising against infidel regimes.

But since late last year, amid a succession of battlefield losses, that has become a harder case to make as the flows have sharply slowed, creating a self-reinforcing spiral of decline.

The ranks of new fighters have diminished so dramatically that certain countries, such as Belgium and Britain, have not even increased their estimates this year of the number of citizens who have left home to fight.

Olivier Van Raemdonck, a spokesman for Belgium’s Coordinating Unit for Threat Analysis, the country’s main terrorism tracking body, said that Belgian authorities have received information about a few people departing this year but that they have not been able to confirm such tips. Belgium has had the highest per-capita flow of foreign fighters to Syria of any European country. But now “an entire channel has been shut down,” Van Raemdonck said.

In the United States, which has been a far less significant source of fighters than many European nations, the average number of Americans traveling to fight for the Islamic State in Syria dropped from six to 10 per month during the first half of 2015 to just one a month, FBI Director James B. Comey said in May. He cited the group’s lost luster as the cause.

“ISIS, the so-called Islamic State brand, has lost significant power in the United States,” he said.

The group’s reduced international cachet is not the only explanation for the lower numbers. The increasing difficulty of traveling to Islamic State-held territory also has hurt recruitment figures, experts and officials say.

Dramatically stepped-up restrictions, including tanks lined up at 50-yard intervals in some places where fighters are known to cross and walls and ditches constructed in others, have made it far harder to infiltrate along the favored path into Islamic State terrain: the Turkey-Syria border.

Late last month, the group lost its last remaining foothold on that border, cutting off a valuable conduit through which recruits had long passed. “We expect this development to have a positive impact” on further reducing the flow of foreign fighters, said a senior Turkish official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Enhanced intelligence-sharing between Turkey and Western governments also has helped to make what was once a relatively easy journey from Europe to Syrian battlefields far more difficult. The Turkish government says it has added more than 40,000 names to its no-entry list based on intelligence supplied by foreign governments in the past 1½ years, compared with fewer than 5,000 names in 2014. The rise has been accompanied by a sharp increase in the number of deportations, as Turkish authorities intercept would-be fighters and send them home.

The lack of fresh Islamic State manpower is evident on the battlefield. Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasoul, a spokesman for the Iraqi military, said the group has begun to recruit children to plug the gap as adult militants are killed and foreigners leave for Syria or home.

“There is big confusion in their ranks,” said Rasoul. Whereas the Islamic State once used foreign fighters as suicide bombers, it is increasingly tapping young Iraqi boys, he said.

Besieged senior Islamic State officials have begun to acknowledge that there will be no cavalry coming to bolster their ranks.

“If the tyrants have closed in your faces the door of hijrah [migration], then open in their face the door of jihad and make their act a source of pain for them,” he said in a late-May audio recording. “The smallest action you do in the heart of their land is dearer to us than the largest action by us, and more effective and more damaging to them.”

He urged his followers to strike civilian rather than military targets, as hitting the former is “more damaging.”

Reverse flows

Overstretched European security agencies remain ill-prepared to deal with the consequences if that call is heeded by Islamic State sympathizers, or if the flows start to reverse and fighters return home in large numbers.

“It’s a five-letter word, and it’s called intel,” said François Heisbourg, a former member of a French presidential commission on defense and national security. “The only thing you can seriously do is to ramp up the ability to track and keep track of those who are here and those who are coming here.”

In Germany, where the flow of foreign fighters to Syria has been cut from an average of dozens a month to a small handful, the head of the Federal Criminal Police Office, Holger Münch, recently told the Berlin daily Der Tages­spiegel that those who “have already spent a long time with IS, have been exposed to brutal war experiences and established many contacts” represent “a special threat” to German security if they return.

Concern over a reverse flow — or over extremists who decide to strike at home rather than go abroad — is hardly limited to the West.

But the reduced flows have stoked growing worries that the problem of militant extremism will become even more pronounced domestically.

“The battle is shifting from Syria to North Africa,” said Badra Gaaloul, a researcher with the Tunis-based International Center of Strategic, Security and Military Studies.

“There are a lot of ISIS sleeping cells still active in Tunisia, so many that we call them ‘awake cells,’ ” said Gaaloul. “They want to start a caliphate in Tunisia.”

As evidence, Gaaloul cited the assault on the border town of Ben Guerdane by Islamic State militants this year, which Tunisian and regional officials say was an attempt to create a new safe haven as the group faces pressure in its Libyan stronghold of Sirte.

In recent days, senior Tunisian officials — who say there are still 4,000 countrymen fighting for the Islamic State and other extremist groups — have publicly expressed concern that Tunisian fighters fleeing Libya and Syria would return.

“The danger is real. Those who leave Sirte are heading south to eventually join Boko Haram, but some are also going west [to Tunisia],” the country’s defense minister, Farhat Hachani, told journalists, referring to the Nigerian militant group that has pledged support for the Islamic State.

Egypt, too, has seen reduced outflows, having paid off tribes along the Libyan border that run human-smuggling networks to block the path of would-be fighters, according to Mohannad Sabry, an Egyptian journalist and author of a book on the Islamist insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula.

But just because radicalized Egyptians are not formally linking up with the Islamic State does not mean they are not a threat, especially as the government feeds extremism by cracking down on its political opponents.

“The numbers are decreasing,” Sabry said, “but actually the number of wannabes is rising.”

Raghavan reported from Cairo and McAuley from Paris. Liz Sly in Beirut, Loveday Morris in Baghdad, Karla Adam in London, Stephanie Kirchner in Berlin, Michael Birnbaum and Annabell Van den Berghe in Brussels, and Matt Zapotosky in Washington contributed to this report.


(The Washington Post)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/11/2016 11:19:36 AM

15 years after attacks, trial for 9/11 suspects still years away from starting

Liz Goodwin
Senior National Affairs Reporter


Fifteen years after the 9/11 attacks, the military trial of the five men accused of plotting the deaths of nearly 3,000 people has not even begun — and defense lawyers and outside experts estimate there are at least four more years of delays and pretrial motions before it will start.

The delay has left family members of the victims in a heartbreaking and frustrating limbo, as some have begun to doubt they will ever see justice done for the murders of their loved ones. Meanwhile, public attention to the trial has all but evaporated, leaving them isolated in their grief.

“Frustrating is not the word for it. Painful is the word for it,” said Rita Lasar, whose brother, Avrame Zelmanowitz, died while waiting for paramedics to rescue his wheelchair-bound co-worker in the North Tower.

Lasar is turning 85 years old next week and fears that she will not be alive to see the trial begin.

“I feel helpless to do anything. It’s just like having grit in your heart,” said Debra Burlingame, whose brother Charles was the captain of the American Airlines plane that was hijacked and crashed into the Pentagon that morning.

The current military tribunal began four years ago after President Obama abandoned a plan to move the men into the civilian court system, facing fierce political blowback that included opposition from a faction of family members who were worried the men could be acquitted in federal court. Burlingame led the group of 9/11 families who supported a military trial for the defendants, who are being tried together as co-conspirators, while Lasar led a smaller faction that wanted the men tried in civilian court.

While these two groups of family members continue to disagree on a lot, there’s a consensus that the current system has been a disaster.

“I am not of the opinion that the process is failing. I’m of the opinion that it has failed,” Kristen Breitweiser, who became a political activist after she lost her husband in the attacks, said on Friday during a Yahoo News roundtable on the 9/11 anniversary. “We are a nation of laws. If we can’t adequately prosecute the co-conspirators of the 9/11 attacks, then I don’t know what kind of democracy we live in.”

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and the other four suspected co-conspirators were captured just two years after the attacks, but they were kept in CIA custody and subjected to torture before being transferred to Guantánamo Bay in 2006. Those backing a military tribunal feared that the use of torture could get the government’s case against the men thrown out of a civilian court. They thought military commissions would guarantee swift justice.

Rita Lasar, 84, on the balcony of her East Village apartment in New York. Lasar watches the 9/11 pretrial hearings at Fort Hamilton Army Base in Brooklyn. (Photo: Yahoo News/Gordon Donovan)

But the opposite has been true. The tribunals have only successfully convicted eight people on terror charges, and four of those convictions were later thrown out. Meanwhile, hundreds of terrorists have been convicted in the federal system since 9/11. Ahmed Ghailani, who also faced torture in CIA custody after he was suspected of plotting the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings, was successfully convicted in federal court in 2010, though on only one of the 285 counts he faced.

The 9/11 trial has been bogged down in pretrial motion after pretrial motion since it began in 2012, as defense attorneys, lead prosecutor Brig. Gen. Mark Martins and Judge James Pohl, an army colonel, try to figure out a brand-new system. Everything seems up for debate, including whether the Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees a right to a speedy trial, applies in the proceedings. The judge has not yet answered that particular question in a motion by the defense.

“Everyone’s projecting 2020 or 2021 when we might go to trial,” said James Harrington, who defends accused terrorist Ramzi bin al-Shibh. “It’s just kind of being realistic about all the work that’s being done and the time that takes.”

Burlingame, who argued for the trial to take place in Guantánamo Bay, said she blames Pohl, not the tribunal system, for the delays.

“I put it squarely on the judge. He’s the one who controls the courtroom. He does not have to allow an oral argument for every damn motion that comes into his bench,” she said.

But Steve Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas who used to be a defense lawyer at Guantánamo Bay, said he doesn’t think the delays are Pohl’s fault.

“There are two ways to approach this brand-new court system,” says Vladeck. “The first is to walk carefully through every issue, to make sure you’re not skipping a step. And the second is to not care.” The judge and the prosecution care, he added.

Many legal experts believe the five suspects would have already been convicted by now if they had faced trial in federal court.

The government defended the molasses-slow pace of justice in a statement, and called the 2020 estimate of a trial date “speculation.”

“Resolution of remaining or pending motions and completion of discovery are necessary steps in order to hold fair trials that comply with the law, and to seek justice for both the victims and the accused,” said Defense Department spokeswoman Lt. Col. Valerie Henderson. “Prediction of when trial on the merits might start would be speculation at this point. The law requires military commission trials to be deliberate and methodical, free of outside influence.”

Meanwhile, family members of 9/11 victims are growing older as the date of the attacks drifts further into the past. Burlingame says her other brother Brad died of pancreatic cancer in December. “He never got to see justice done for our brother,” she said.

“We feel we’ve been very, very patient with the process, but it’s just overwhelmingly frustrating,” said Colleen Kelly, whose brother, Bill, died in the North Tower. “And you can’t even say there’s not an end in sight … there’s no beginning in sight yet.”

Pretrial hearings are set to begin again in the case on Oct 3.
_____

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(Yahoo News)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/11/2016 11:42:30 AM


(YouTube)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/11/2016 3:17:27 PM

9/11 Suspects: Rudy Giuliani, Christine Todd Whitman, Philip Zelikow, Robert Baer, General Ralph Eberhart …








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