Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 11:44 a.m. No.14216149   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6205 >>6229 >>6259 >>6675 >>6737 >>6777 >>6859 >>6872

The US Military Couldn’t Stop the Heroin Trade from Funding the Taliban. But Synthetic Opioid Producers Might.

 

The global drug trade could eventually accomplish what the U.S. military tried and failed to do in Afghanistan: bust up a heroin industry that fuels insurgencies and corruption.

 

A threat to the Afghan heroin market which accounts for anywhere between 10%-30% of that country's gross domestic product looms because of a growing preference among drug producers for far cheaper synthetic opioids, such as fentanyl, according to a new Rand Corp. study.

 

"All told, fentanyl represents an attractive alternative for drug producers and marketers who are looking to reduce their operating costs and risks. Therefore … when comparing the two drugs, it is hard to see how heroin can compete directly or indefinitely with this low-cost, high potency alternative," Rand said in its report that examined the implications for Afghanistan.

 

Since the early days of the war in Afghanistan, U.S. forces sought to curtail the heroin trade in the country. The efforts ranged from attempts to get farmers to shift from poppy to pomegranate trees, to more extreme measures. For example, in 2009, then-NATO Supreme Allied Commander Gen. John Craddock issued a memo stating that troops should shoot on sight those affiliated with the drug industry. The plan caused a stir at NATO headquarters and was eventually rescinded because of a backlash among allies.

 

But over time, market forces could prove to be more of a threat to Afghanistan's opioid industry than NATO forces ever were.

 

Fentanyl is already displacing major heroin markets in the U.S. While fatal overdoses and drug seizures related to heroin have been on the decline, they're rising in connection with synthetic opioid use, Rand said.

 

Fentanyl is similar to morphine, but is 50 to 100 times more potent, the U.S. National Institute for Drug Abuse said on its website. It's used legally to treat severe pain and following some surgeries.

 

Fentanyl can be churned out in laboratories from cheap chemicals, providing quicker turnarounds than harvesting the poppies that are key to the Afghan trade.

 

So far, the Afghan heroin industry does not appear to have taken a serious hit, but that's because most of the trade involves European and Asian markets rather than North America, Rand said. The future of the industry in Afghanistan will hinge on whether Europe and Asia-based illegal drug traders make the same shift as their U.S. counterparts.

 

Historically, the Taliban has been one of the big beneficiaries of the opioid trade, deriving up to $400 million a year in revenue connected to the business, Rand said.

 

If the opiate market were to collapse, filling the revenue gap could be "a heavy lift in just a few years," the report said.

 

"Overall, the loss of opiate revenues for insurgent or other antigovernment groups could be beneficial to the central government if those groups lose strength in relation to the central government, but the government's prospects are highly uncertain," Rand said.

 

A rapid loss of the opioid market could also spur a humanitarian crisis in the rural south, where poppy cultivation is the main industry. Farmers might be forced into urban centers if alternatives sources of income weren't found, the report said.

 

"The government would then be facing not just a rural crisis but also the challenges of accelerated urbanization, including attendant needs for crime control or expanded services," Rand said. "The central government is highly unlikely to have adequate resources to meet such challenges on its own, even with additional tax revenues."

 

https://www.military.com/daily-news/2021/07/28/us-military-couldnt-stop-heroin-trade-funding-taliban-synthetic-opioid-producers-might.html

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 11:44 a.m. No.14216151   🗄️.is 🔗kun

US Continues to Step Up Airstrikes Against the Taliban

 

The US won't commit to ending airstrikes in Afghanistan after the withdrawal

 

Over the past week, the US has significantly stepped up its airstrikes against the Taliban in Afghanistan, with over a dozen strikes reported. On Tuesday, Gen. Frank McKenzie, the head of US Central Command (CENTCOM), warned that these frequent bombings would continue.

 

“The United States has increased airstrikes in the support of Afghan forces over the last several days, and we’re prepared to continue this heightened level of support in the coming weeks if the Taliban continue their attacks,” McKenzie said in a CENTCOM press release.

 

A Pentagon spokesman said the airstrikes were carried out by warplanes and armed drones. “A number of strikes have occurred over the last several days from both manned and unmanned strike platforms,” said Maj. Robert Lodewick.

 

Last week marked the first Afghanistan airstrikes publicly acknowledged by the US since McKenzie Gen. Scott Miller, the former top US commander in Afghanistan, handed his authority over to McKenzie and CENTCOM. With the bulk of US forces withdrawn from Afghanistan, the airstrikes are being carried out by warplanes and drones based outside of the country, most likely from the Gulf region.

 

The Pentagon has dubbed its ability to bomb Afghanistan from outside the country “over the horizon capability.” On Sunday, when asked by reporters, McKenzie wouldn’t say if these airstrikes would continue after August 31st, the date President Biden said the withdrawal would be completed by.

 

https://news.antiwar.com/2021/07/27/us-continues-to-step-up-airstrikes-against-the-taliban/

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 11:45 a.m. No.14216152   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Biden Administration Has No Plans to Pull Troops Out of Syria

 

There are currently about 900 US troops in northeast Syria

 

As the US is pulling troops out of Afghanistan and changing its mission in Iraq, a Biden administration official made it clear in comments to Politico that there are no plans to pull troops out of Syria.

 

“I don’t anticipate any changes right now to the mission or the footprint in Syria,” the official said, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. There are currently about 900 US troops in northeast Syria.

 

“In Syria, we’re supporting Syrian Democratic Forces in their fight against ISIS. That’s been quite successful, and that’s something that we’ll continue,” the official said.

 

While the US claims its presence in Syria is to help fight ISIS, the region where US troops are deployed is where most of the country’s oil fields are. The occupation keeps the vital resource out of the hands of the Syrian government, which is part of Washington’s economic warfare against the country.

 

The US maintains crushing economic sanctions on Syria. The sanctions specifically target the energy and construction sectors, making it difficult for the country to rebuild after 11 years of war and exacerbating the humanitarian crisis. According to the UN, the number of Syrians that are close to starvation is at 12.4 million, or 60 percent of the population.

 

On Monday, President Biden announced the US “combat” mission in Iraq would be coming to an end, but US troops will remain in the country. There are currently 2,500 US troops in Iraq, and it’s not clear if any will be removed as Washington changes its mission to a strictly advisory one. Multiple media reports cited anonymous US officials who said changes to troop levels in Iraq would be minimal. One reason the US wants to hold on to its bases in Iraq is that they support the occupation forces in Syria.

 

https://news.antiwar.com/2021/07/27/biden-administration-has-no-plans-to-pull-troops-out-of-syria/

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 11:47 a.m. No.14216166   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6737 >>6859

NSO Group affair is latest in Israel’s long history of arming shady regimes

 

Aversion to arming human rights violators often trumped by political expediency; only new legislation can keep Israeli firms from selling wares to bad actors, activists say

 

The alleged use of Israeli cyber-surveillance technology to track political dissidents and journalists around the world is the latest in the country’s ignominious history of providing weapons to human rights violators around the world, including at times when other Western countries have refused to make such sales.

 

It is a practice that stretches back decades and crosses political lines, with left-wing governments under Yitzhak Rabin allegedly signing off on sales to South Africa during apartheid and later to Rwanda and Bosnia during genocides there in the 1990s, and to more recent cases of right-wing governments under Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly approving defense exports to Myanmar and South Sudan during ethnic cleansings and massacres there.

 

These weapons deals and precisely what they entail are kept notoriously and deliberately opaque, with neither the companies making the sales nor the government approving them being forced to make the details public in any way, including decades after the fact. Without genuine transparency, Israelis typically only hear of where their country’s weapons have wound up from United Nations and non-government organization’s reports — as is the case with the current NSO Group scandal, which came to light in large part due to the efforts of Amnesty International, who has claimed that its members’ phones have been hacked with the cyber-surveillance firm’s technology.

 

Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Morocco, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Hungary, India and the United Arab Emirates were all said to have purchased the NSO Group’s Pegasus program to target activists, political opponents and journalists, allegedly including French President Emmanuel Macron by Morocco. (Rabat denies this; Macron reportedly personally called Prime Minister Naftali Bennett to ensure Israel was thoroughly investigating the allegations and Defense Minister Benny Gantz flew to Paris on Wednesday to meet with his French counterpart, in part to discuss the claim.)

 

Pegasus is widely considered to be one of the most powerful cyber-surveillance tools available, capable of taking complete control over a target’s phone, sometimes without them even having to open a file or click a link, giving the user access to the device’s files and messages, as well as its cameras and microphones.

 

More

https://www.timesofisrael.com/nso-group-affair-is-latest-in-israels-long-history-of-arming-shady-regimes/

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 11:49 a.m. No.14216178   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6273

Enforcement of Arizona Senate's Maricopa subpoena 'unlikely' with reported GOP holdout

 

County failed to comply with first Senate subpoena; "critical" routers still remain unavailable to auditors.

 

The enforcement of the Arizona Senate's second subpoena of election materials from the state's Maricopa County depends upon achieving a majority vote in the chamber that one Republican senator says is "unlikely" due to a reported GOP holdout.

 

State Senate Republicans this week issued a fresh subpoena to the county, demanding a fresh wave of documents related to the 2020 election there as an ongoing forensic audit of results approaches a conclusion.

 

Key among the requested materials from the second subpoena are routers used by Maricopa County to handle data processing from multiple county departments, including some related to elections. Those routers have been at the center of a months-long battle between Maricopa officials and Senate-commissioned auditors. The county has insisted that the security risks of handing the routers over is too high, while auditors have argued that it is "critically important" to obtain them to ensure a thorough audit.

 

Whether or not the county will comply with the second subpoena is unclear. Also unclear is whether or not the state Senate will enforce the subpoena.

 

State Sen. Kelly Townsend says the enforcement of the order depends upon a unified GOP vote in the chamber, which she claimed is presently just out of reach.

 

"The only way we are allowed to enforce the subpoena is to be in session and take a vote as the entire Senate body who holds the Board of Supervisors in contempt, and we need a majority of 16 to pass," she told Just the News on Tuesday. "We only have 15 votes, so it's unlikely we will be able to enforce this subpoena, either."

 

"The dissenting vote is Sen. Paul Boyer," she added.

 

Boyer did not respond to requests for comment from Just the News. Earlier this year he was the lone Republican in the state Senate to vote against holding the Maricopa Board of Supervisors in contempt.

 

State statute delcares that "if a witness neglects or refuses to obey a legislative subpoena … the senate or the house may, by resolution entered in the journal, commit him for contempt." Individuals who are "neglecting or refusing to attend in obedience to a subpoena may be arrested by the sergeant-at-arms and brought before the senate or house," the statute continues.

 

The audit has been among the most visible and contentious of the Republican-led investigations into the 2020 election since last November.

 

State-level GOP representatives in the months since the election have spearheaded efforts to examine and assess the U.S. election system due to concerns about security vulnerabilities in the voting process.

 

https://justthenews.com/government/state-houses/az-senates-second-maricopa-subpoena-enforcement-may-come-down-senate-master

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 11:58 a.m. No.14216225   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6747 >>6859

PEDO BUN 28 July 21

 

Former Attorney And Therapist Sentenced To 12 Years In Federal Prison For Receiving Child Sexual Abuse Images Using A Popular Online App

https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/former-attorney-and-therapist-sentenced-12-years-federal-prison-receiving-child-sexual

 

District Man Charged With Sending Obscene Material to Minors and Attempting to Produce Child Pornography

https://www.justice.gov/usao-dc/pr/district-man-charged-sending-obscene-material-minors-and-attempting-produce-child

 

Orange Park Man Sentenced To 16 Years In Prison For Sexually Exploiting A Child

https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/orange-park-man-sentenced-16-years-prison-sexually-exploiting-child

 

Tiverton Man Charged with Enticement, Transporting a Minor with Intent to Engage in Criminal Sexual Activity

https://www.justice.gov/usao-ri/pr/tiverton-man-charged-enticement-transporting-minor-intent-engage-criminal-sexual-activity

 

ICE HSI Arizona, multi-agency taskforce, nets 2 arrests in online operation

https://www.ice.gov/news/releases/ice-hsi-arizona-multi-agency-taskforce-nets-2-arrests-online-operation

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, noon No.14216240   🗄️.is 🔗kun

National Leader Of Outlaw Motorcycle Gang Admits Illegally Possessing A Firearm

 

https://www.justice.gov/usao-nj/pr/national-leader-outlaw-motorcycle-gang-admits-illegally-possessing-firearm

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, noon No.14216246   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Eleven People Arrested in Federal Drug and Firearms Case Involving Conspiracy to Distribute Cocaine and Other Drugs

 

Arrests Follow Six-Month Investigation; Drugs and Guns Seized

 

https://www.justice.gov/usao-dc/pr/eleven-people-arrested-federal-drug-and-firearms-case-involving-conspiracy-distribute

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 12:02 p.m. No.14216257   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6737 >>6859

Nine MS-13 Gang Members Indicted in Racketeering and Violent Crime Conspiracy

 

Allegations Include Seven Murders, Five Attempted Murders, Witness Tampering, Numerous Assaults and Drug Distribution

 

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/nine-ms-13-gang-members-indicted-racketeering-and-violent-crime-conspiracy

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 12:03 p.m. No.14216262   🗄️.is 🔗kun

US Sanctions HTS Financers, Turkish-Backed Group In Syria

 

On July 28, the US Department of the Treasury announced a new list of sanctions on Syria, including financers of al-Qaeda-affiliated Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) and for the first time ever a Turkish-backed armed group.

 

In a statement, the Treasury revealed that al-Qaeda factions and HTS, the de-fact ruler of the northwestern region of Greater Idlib, are still raising funds for their operations and recruiting foreign fighters.

 

“Terrorist groups like al-Qaeda and HTS continue to raise funds, recruit online, and exploit the international banking sector to support their ongoing terrorist activities,” said Office of Foreign Assets Control Director Andrea Gacki. “These designations underscore this Administration’s commitment to disrupting support networks of al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups that seek to attack the United States and its allies.”

 

The sanctions targeted Syrian citizen Hasan al-Shban, a Turkey-based al-Qaeda financial facilitator who provided material support for the terrorist group in Syria, and Farrukh Furkatovitch, a Syria-based Tajaki citizen who works as an online fundraiser and recruiter for HTS.

 

US sanctions also targeted, for the first time ever, a Turkish-backed Syrian armed groups, namely Tajammu Ahrar al-Sharqiya [Gathering of Free Men of the East].

 

The US accused the group, which is a part of the so-called Syrian National Army, of committing a series of war crimes, including the unlawful killing of Hevrin Khalaf, a Kurdish politician and Secretary General of the political party Future Syria, as well as her bodyguards in October 2019.

 

“Ahrar al-Sharqiya has killed multiple civilians in northeast Syria, including health workers. The militia has also engaged in abductions, torture, and seizures of private property from civilians, barring displaced Syrians from returning to their homes. Ahrar al-Sharqiya constructed and controls a large prison complex outside of Aleppo where hundreds have been executed since 2018. The group has also used this prison to operate an extensive kidnapping for ransom operation targeting prominent business and opposition figures from the provinces of Idlib and Aleppo. Ahrar al-Sharqiya has also integrated former ISIS members into its ranks,” the Treasury said in a statement.

 

Ahrar al-Sharqiyah leader, Ahmad Ihsan Fayyad al-Hayes, and military commander, Raed Jassim al-Hayes were both targeted by the sanctions.

 

As usual, the new sanctions also targeted the Damascus government. Four senior Syrian officers as well as a pro-government armed group, a prison and seven security entities were sanctioned. The Treasury cited human rights violations and war crimes as the reason.

 

The US new sanctions are surprising, especially that they came at a time when many in the West are working to whitewash HTS and support Turkey’s proxies in Syria.

 

https://southfront.org/us-sanctions-hts-financers-turkish-backed-group-in-syria/

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 12:07 p.m. No.14216287   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6321 >>6737 >>6859

Pfizer Now Sees $33.5 Bn In 2021 Covid-19 Sales, Up From $26 Bn

 

Pfizer sharply increased its 2021 projection for revenues tied to its Covid-19 vaccine on Wednesday, forecasting the delivery of 500 million more doses compared with earlier expectations.

 

The US drugmaker, which has partnered with Germany's BioNTech on the vaccine, estimates delivering 2.1 billion doses, generating $33.5 billion in sales. The company's May forecast was for $26 billion in sales.

 

Pfizer also lifted its full-year profit outlook as well as the expected range for 2021 revenues.

 

Pfizer Chief Executive Albert Bourla said more than a billion doses of the vaccine have been delivered, saying "the speed and efficiency of our efforts with BioNTech to help vaccinate the world against Covid-19 have been unprecedented."

 

Pfizer said the pre-tax profit margin on the Covid-19 vaccine sales was in the "high-20s" in terms of percent, the same as the earlier forecast.

 

Pfizer reported second-quarter profits of $5.6 billion, up 59 percent from the year-ago period on 92 percent increase in revenues to $19 billion.

 

Pfizer has launched clinical studies on a possible third dose of the Covid-19 vaccine as a booster shot. Bourla has said such boosters could amount to a "durable" revenue stream for the company.

 

US health officials have thus far not far backed a third shot for the broad population, but officials are studying the need for a third shot in immunocompromised people.

 

Shares of Pfizer declined 0.5 percent to $41.88 in pre-market trading.

 

https://www.ibtimes.com/pfizer-now-sees-335-bn-2021-covid-19-sales-26-bn-3261582

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 12:10 p.m. No.14216314   🗄️.is 🔗kun

How the Atlantic Council’s “domestic extremism” argument lays the foundations for shadow governance

 

Silber was never a police officer who walked a beat. He established his policy credentials by serving on a task force of the Council on Foreign Relations addressing terrorist financing for 9/11 and then went on to be compensated for his hypocrisy during a gig as expert on “capital markets intelligence” at the Carson Group, a private equity firm that serves the super-rich.

 

In the Atlantic Council report, Silber draws on policy proposals he made previously in his controversial report “Radicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat” for NYPD. That report was condemned (and eventually removed from the NYPD website) by the Brennan Center for Justice because of the radical religious and racial profiling that he proposed for local law enforcement, including the suggestion that common Islamic religious practices indicate extremism.

 

In Silber’s hands, however, the event becomes a justification for big bureaucratic budgets. He explains that this “intelligence failure” means that we need a DVEAU (Domestic Violent Extremism Unit) under the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), an existing bureaucracy that currently reports to the Director of National Intelligence. The timing of the proposal was linked to the announcement by DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on May 11, 2021 that a domestic terrorism branch will be revived within DHS Intelligence & Analysis (I&A).

https://usprovgov.asia/forum/view/176378

 

https://usprovgov.asia/forum/view/176378

Anonymous ID: a971e6 July 28, 2021, 12:14 p.m. No.14216334   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6737 >>6859

'I'll Be Your Sexual Freak': FBI Agents Harassing Colleagues, Abusing Minors & Boozing While on Duty

 

Several senior FBI agents remain unpunished for sexually harassing their subordinates, groping female agents, blackmailing them into sexual encounters, and drinking while on duty. Some FBI employees have even gone further by physically attacking their family members and abusing minors under 13 years old, reports indicate.

 

On 22 July, a report by Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz exposed an unnamed FBI assistant director's inappropriate relationship with a subordinate, which "interfered with the ability of other FBI employees to complete their work."

 

However, the case nailed by IG Horowitz is just the tip of the iceberg, according to investigative journalist John Solomon, who recently listed a series of sexual misconduct episodes engulfing the bureau.

 

One of the cases was an alleged extramarital affair between two "Russia collusion" investigators, namely married counterintelligence agent Peter Strzok and FBI lawyer Lisa Page. Their apparently romantic relations came under the spotlight in 2017 when messages they exchanged before and after the 2016 election were scrutinised. In their communications Strzok and Page lambasted Donald Trump and spoke about some mysterious "insurance policy" allegedly targeting the GOP presidential hopeful.

 

Speaking to The Daily Beast in December 2019, Page dubbed her affair with Strzok "the most wrong thing I’ve ever done in my life." And still the ex-FBI lawyer fell short of offering an apology to "the woman who really [was] a victim in this mess, Strzok’s wife," The Philadelphia Inquirer remarked.

 

https://sputniknews.com/us/202107281083479476-ill-be-your-sexual-freak-fbi-agents-harassing-colleagues-abusing-minors–boozing-while-on-duty/