NEW DELHI (AP) — An unprecedented security lockdown is keeping people
in Indian-administered Kashmir indoors for a ninth day Tuesday. Indian
troops patrolling the disputed region had allowed some Muslims to walk
to mosques to mark the Eid al-Adha festival Monday and shops had been
opened briefly on previous days. But residents were running short
of essentials under the near-constant curfew and communications blackout
as India tried to stave off a violent reaction to the government’s
decision Aug. 5 to strip Kashmir of its autonomy. Witnesses
described hundreds of people chanting “We want freedom” and “Go India,
go back” during a brief protest Monday. Officials said the protest ended
peacefully. The lockdown is expected to last at least through Thursday, India’s independence day. Kashmiris
fear India’s moves bringing the region under greater New Delhi control
will alter its demographics and cultural identity. India said its
decisions to revoke Kashmir’s special constitutional status and
downgrade it from statehood to a territory would free it from
separatism. Rebels have been fighting Indian rule for decades.
Some 70,000 people have died in clashes between militants and civilian
protesters and Indian security forces since 1989. Most Kashmiris want
either independence or a merger with Pakistan. India and Pakistan
both claim Kashmir and have fought two wars over it. The first one ended
in 1948 with the region divided between them and a promise of a
U.N.-sponsored referendum on its future. It has never been held. Islamabad
has denounced the changes as illegal and in response has downgraded its
diplomatic ties with New Delhi, expelled the Indian ambassador and
suspended trade and train services with India.
Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, answers questions after the
second of two Democratic presidential primary debates hosted by CNN
Thursday, Aug. 1, 2019, in the Fox Theatre in Detroit. (AP Photo/Paul
Sancya)
Presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard will take a two-week hiatus from the campaign trail to report for active duty in Indonesia with the National Guard, the Democrat announced on Monday. "I'm
stepping off of the campaign trail for a couple of weeks and putting on
my army uniform to go on a joint training exercise mission in
Indonesia," Gabbard said during an interview with CBS News. "I
love our country. I love being able to serve our country in so many
ways including as a soldier," the U.S. congresswoman said. "And
so while some people are telling me, like gosh this is a terrible time
to leave the campaign, can't you find a way out of it? You know that's
not what this is about." "I'm
not really thinking about how this will impact my campaign. I'm looking
forward to being able to fulfill my service and my responsibility,” she
added. Gabbard, 38, is a major in the Hawaii Army National Guard
and served in Iraq in 2004. She also completed a tour in Kuwait in 2008,
according to Hawaii News Now. The
presidential hopeful is set to depart for Indonesia on Wednesday, where
her unit will participate in training exercises that include
counterterrorism and disaster response. Gabbard is one of three Democratic candidates with military experience.
An unverified video of CNN anchor Chris Cuomo went viral Monday night, showing him cursing and threatening a man who apparently taunted the host by calling him "Fredo." In the video that was originally surfaced on the Youtube channel
"That's The Point with Brandon," begins amid the confrontation, which
allegedly took place on Sunday, with the man telling Cuomo, "I thought
that was who you were." "No, punk-ass b----es from the right call
me 'Fredo.' My name is Chris Cuomo. I'm an anchor on CNN," a heated
Cuomo responded. "'Fredo' was from 'The Godfather.' He was a weak
brother and they use that as an Italian slur- are any of you Italian?...
It's a f---ing insult to your people. It's an insult to your f--kin'
people. It's like the n-word for us. Is that a cool f---ing thing?" After
the man sarcastically told him, "You’re a much more reasonable guy in
person than you seem to be on television," Cuomo reacted, "If you want
to play, we'll f---ing play." "If you've got something to say
about what I do on television, then say it, but you don't have to call
me a f---in' insult," Cuomo continued. "Hey man, listen, I don't want any problems," the man, who appears to be holding the camera from below, told Cuomo. "Well, you're gonna have a big f---in' problem," Cuomo shot back. The
man, who has been described on social media as a "Trump supporter,"
repeatedly claimed he thought Cuomo's name was "Fredo," which the anchor
responded by calling him a "liar" and told him to "own what you said"
and "stand up like a man." WARNING: THIS VIDEO CONTAINS EXPLICIT LANGUAGE Then things quickly escalated when the CNN anchor suggested he would throw him "down these stairs." "I don't want to have a problem with you, man," the man repeated. "You're gonna have a f---in' problem," Cuomo said. "What, what you gonna do about it?" the man asked. "I'll
f---ing ruin your s---," the "Cuomo Prime Time" anchor replied. "I'll
f---in throw you down these stairs like a f---in' punk." "Please do," the man said. "So
you can f---in' sue?" Cuomo asked. "Then take a swing at me... You
wanna call me 'Fredo,' take a f---in' swing... I'm f---in' right here.
I'll f---in' wreck your s---." The video ends with multiple people attempting to separate the two men. In a statement to Fox News, CNN expressed its full support for its primetime anchor. “Chris
Cuomo defended himself when he was verbally attacked with the use of an
ethnic slur in an orchestrated setup. We completely support him,” a
CNN spokesperson told Fox News. The video instantly went viral, catching the attention of Donald Trump Jr. "Hey
@ChrisCuomo, take it from me, 'Fredo' isn't the N-word for Italians, it
just means you're the dumb brother," Trump Jr. wrote with a winky face,
suggesting he knows critics of the Trump family often call him and his
brother Eric Trump "Fredo." The president's son then slammed CNN's
response to the video for claiming that Cuomo was called an "ethnic
slur" by sharing a clip of a Cuomo panel where CNN contributor Ana
Navarro referred to Trump Jr. as "Fredo." Others on Twitter pointed out that CNN anchor Jake Tapper depicted Trump Jr. as Fredo in his political cartoon segment back in December and a CNN guest called Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., the "Fredo of the Republican Party" in March. This
isn't the first time Cuomo had compared an insult to the N-word. In
2017, he claimed on his radio show that the term "fake news" is "the
equivalent of the N-word for journalists." He later apologized, saying "Calling a journalist fake -nothing compared to the pain of a racial slur." Cuomo announced Monday afternoon, hours before the video went viral, that "Cuomo Prime Time" would be back on-air next week.
Newly obtained documents confirm that James Comey’s
FBI was running a secret and corrupt counterintelligence operation
against the Trump campaign in the summer of 2016 and repeatedly
deceiving the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) thereafter
in order to wiretap a Trump campaign associate. The disclosure was
the result of a federal lawsuit and a year of litigation. Despite
efforts by FBI Director Christopher Wray to obstruct, a federal court
issued an order that forced the FBI and Department of Justice to produce
the records known as “302 reports.” They are a summary of interviews
FBI agents conducted with Bruce Ohr, a top DOJ official. These 302s show that the FBI and DOJ were warned repeatedly by Ohr that ex-British spy Christopher Steele was virulently biased against the target of their investigation, Trump. That
bias tainted the credibility of the “dossier” Steele composed and upon
which officials in the Obama administration relied when they officially
launched their counterintelligence investigation on July 31, 2016. The
“dossier” was also the basis for the surveillance warrant against former
Trump campaign adviser, Carter Page. The FBI and DOJ ignored the
warnings of bias and actively concealed it from the FISC. They never
advised the judges that the information contained in the “dossier” was
“unverified.” They hid from the judges that it was all funded by the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee (DNC). The
court was never told that Ohr’s wife helped cultivate some of the
researched used against Trump. Having fired Steele for leaking to the
media and lying about it, the FBI and DOJ represented to the judge that
Steele was “reliable” when they knew he was not. They continued to rely
on him months after his termination. An apparent fraud was
perpetrated on the court not once, but four times in successive warrants
through June of 2017. These are dishonest, if not felonious acts. Secret Meetings On July 5, 2016, Comey stood before television cameras and microphones at a nationally watched news conference. By
mangling the law and contorting the facts, he announced that he was
exonerating Hillary Clinton of any crimes for her mishandling of
thousands of classified documents.
More from Opinion
At
roughly the same time, some 3,660 miles away from Washington, Comey’s
FBI was meeting in a London building with Steele who conveyed the
contents of his initial “dossier” memo dated June 20, 2016, with agent
Michael Gaeta. When the FBI agent read the document, he was stunned and
remarked, “I have to report this to headquarters.” Thus, on the same
day, Comey cleared Clinton, the witch hunt against Trump began in
earnest. On July 30 Steele met with Ohr at 9 a.m. at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington. Steele shared his “dossier” but added that the FBI already had it in its possession. Immediately
thereafter, Ohr convened a meeting with FBI Deputy Director Andrew
McCabe and the FBI lawyer who worked for him directly, Lisa Page. The 302 reports corroborate Ohr’s congressional testimony behind closed doors that was made public in February of this year. He
told lawmakers that he specifically warned McCabe and Page that the
information in the “dossier” was highly dubious and driven by a biased
author who despised Trump. He also advised that it was
commissioned by Fusion GPS where his wife worked because, “I wanted the
FBI to be aware of any possible bias.” Page 125 of Ohr’s
congressional transcript is especially revealing. “I told them that
Steele was desperate that Donald Trump not get elected,” he stated. He
pointedly informed McCabe and Page that Trump’s political rival, the
Clinton campaign, was financially underwriting the “dossier,” which
would call into question its veracity because the campaign had a motive
to distort or fabricate in order to damage its opponent. Ohr testified that he cautioned the FBI, “These guys were hired by somebody relating to –who’s related to the Clinton campaign.” In
truth, the funding wasn’t merely “related” to the campaign, it was the
campaign, along with the DNC. Ohr also disseminated the “dossier” to
Peter Strzok and Joe Pientka at the FBI. But Ohr wasn’t done. Shortly
after the July 30 breakfast with Steele, Ohr gave the same improbable
intelligence to three prosecutors at the Justice Department during
another meeting. Two of those individuals, Andrew Weissmann and
Zainab Ahmad, were later hired by Robert Mueller to be a part of his
assembled team of special counsel prosecutors that escalated the
investigation of Trump beyond the FBI and DOJ. They, too, were informed
by Ohr that the Clinton campaign and Democrats had paid for
the “dossier” and that Steele was severely biased against Trump. Instead
of investigating Clinton and her confederates for conspiring with
foreigners to defraud the U.S. government or violate campaign finance
laws, the FBI used the Clinton-Russian “dossier” to target Trump despite
a dearth of evidence that any of it was true. Information Laundering Scheme Even
though Steele was fired by the FBI as a confidential informant, the new
302 reports confirm that Comey’s FBI kept returning him as a source.
By using Ohr as a conduit, they continued to receive information from
Steele. This continued even after Trump was elected and
inaugurated as president. Indeed, Steele kept feeding the bureau his
phony information through May of 2017. To circumvent the rules
they were breaking, the FBI set up an “information laundering scheme.”
Steele would feed information to Ohr, who would pass it to his “handler”
Joe Pienka, who would feed it to his partner Peter Strzok, who would
give it to Andrew McCabe, who would deliver it to Comey. Similar
to a “money-laundering scheme,” the complex transfer cleansed the dirty
information to obscure the original source –Steele. But the
information, of course, was largely fabricated and/or the product of
Russian disinformation. It
should be remembered that a counterintelligence investigation is
designed to collect evidence of foreign threats to U.S. national
security. Normally, the president is the beneficiary of such
information. Here, Comey’s FBI was abusing its counterintelligence
authority by using it against Trump. Moreover, Comey appears to have
been lying to the president about it. In
early 2017, he kept assuring Trump he was not being investigated. These
documents show that he obviously was, well into his presidency. And
yet, the FBI had no evidence that corroborated any of Steele’s
“collusion” allegations. As John Solomon of the Hill has reported,
the FBI developed a “spread-sheet like document” that was 90 percent
empty of any proof. This did not deter them. They continued to
investigate Trump. And when Comey was fired, he helped engineer part two
of the witch hunt --the special counsel investigation.
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The
latest round of talks between the Taliban and the United States on a
deal to withdraw thousands of U.S. troops from Afghanistan has ended and
now both sides will consult with their leadership on the next steps, a
Taliban spokesman said Monday. The eighth round of talks in the
Gulf Arab nation of Qatar concluded after midnight and was “long and
useful,” Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement. He made no statements on the outcome of the talks. Last
week, another Taliban spokesman had said a deal was expected to follow
this round as both sides seek an end to the nearly 18-year war,
America’s longest conflict. An
agreement — if reached — is expected to include Taliban guarantees that
Afghanistan would not be a base for other extremist groups in the
future. However, both the Islamic State group’s affiliate and al-Qaida
remain active in the country. The Taliban stage near-daily attacks
across Afghanistan, mainly targeting Afghan forces and government
officials but also killing many civilians. The deal also could
include a cease-fire and stipulate that the Taliban would negotiate with
Afghan representatives, though the insurgent group has so far refused
to negotiate with Kabul representatives, dismissing the Afghan
government as a U.S. puppet. There was no immediate comment on
Monday from U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, who on Sunday tweeted that “I
hope this is the last Eid where #Afghanistan is at war.” Sunday
was the first day of the Muslim holiday of Eid-al-Adha, which unfolded
without any major violence reported in Afghanistan. Khalilzad
later added that “Many scholars believe that the deeper meaning of Eid
al-Hadha is to sacrifice one’s ego. Leaders on all sides of the war in
Afghanistan must take this to heart as we strive for peace.” Some in Afghanistan saw it as a response to President Ashraf Ghani, who on Sunday declared
that “Our future cannot be decided outside, whether in the capital
cities of our friends, nemeses or neighbors. The fate of Afghanistan
will be decided here in this homeland. ... We don’t want anyone to
intervene in our affairs.” While Ghani insists that the upcoming
Sept. 28 presidential election is crucial for giving Afghanistan’s
leader a powerful mandate to decide the country’s future after years of
war, Khalilzad is seeking a peace deal by Sept. 1, weeks before the
vote. The Taliban control roughly half of Afghanistan and are at
their strongest since the U.S.-led invasion toppled their five-year
government in 2001 after the group had harbored al-Qaida leader Osama
bin Laden. More than 2,400 U.S. service members have died in Afghanistan
since then. The U.S. and NATO formally concluded their combat
mission in Afghanistan in 2014. The some 20,000 American and allied
troops that remain are carrying out airstrikes on the Taliban and IS
militants, and are working to train and build the Afghan military. ___ Gannon reported from New York.
Sen. Chuck Schumer on Sunday proposed new legislation to require the FBI to sign off on body armor sales to civilians. The announcement comes one week after mass killer Connor Betts — clad in body armor — opened fire in a trendy Dayton, Ohio, neighborhood and killed nine people before he was gunned down by police. Schumer
said anyone can now buy a bulletproof vest for $185 and a tactical mask
for $10 under current law, Schumer said at a press conference at his
Midtown office. “With the click of a mouse, scroll of a thumb,
dialing of a phone, someone up to no good can get this,” he said. “What
we have learned is that a good number of those intent on mass shootings
buy body armor,” the Senate minority leader said. “They want to kill as
many people as possible.” The restrictions would not apply to law enforcement personnel.
Disgraced former cyclist Lance Armstrong bragged online about passing Vice President Mike Pence on a bike path in Massachusetts on Saturday — quickly drawing criticism for what he described as a joke. Armstrong, 47, tweeted about his supposed encounter with the vice president, who was in Nantucket for a fundraiser to benefit the Republican National Committee and President Trump's reelection campaign. "I
can’t drop many people on a bike these days but I just blew the f-----'
doors off Mike Pence on a Nantucket bike path," Armstrong tweeted. "Day. Made."
Lance Armstrong tweeted he passed Vice President Mike Pence on a bike path in Nantucket, Mass., on Saturday.
(Twitter/@lancearmstrong)
The tweet swiftly received negative attention. "He's
13 years older than you and was never a professional cyclist," one
person wrote, while another tweeted: "Wow, a pro athlete whooped an
elderly man in the sport of his choice!! Such a bad-- you are!! Pence's
spokeswoman, Alyssa Farah, tweeted: "Couldn’t quite hang onto those
Tour de France titles, but hey, at least you beat Karen & Mike Pence
on a leisurely bike ride! Congrats?"
Alyssa Farah, a spokeswoman for Pence, responded to Armstrong's claim.
(Twitter/@Alyssafarah)
Armstrong
acknowledged the string of tweets he received, writing hours later that
"some people can’t take a joke or even having a little fun on twitter.
Lightin’ the f--- up people. But seriously, I did blow his doors off!!"
Lance Armstrong later said his tweet about Vice President Mike
Pene was a joke and that people need to "lightin' the f--- up."
(Getty Images)
Many social media users
noted that Armstrong was caught cheating in his quest to be the fastest
cyclist. The founder of the "Livestrong Foundation" — who won his first
title after recovering from testicular cancer that spread to his brain
— was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles by for International Cycling Union in 2012 for doping. In May, Armstrong told NBC Sports he "wouldn't change a thing" about his cheating scandal. "I
wouldn’t change the way I acted. I mean I would, but this is a longer
answer,” Armstrong said. “Primarily, I wouldn’t change the lessons that
I’ve learned. I don’t learn all the lessons if I don’t act that way. I
don’t get investigated and sanctioned if I don’t act the way I acted.” He
added: “If I just doped and didn’t say a thing, none of that would have
happened. None of it. I was begging for, I was asking for them to come
after me. It was an easy target.” Fox News' Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.
Not even the "paper of record" could resist the left’s big lie: Donald J. Trump is America’s “racist-in-chief.” After last weekend’s deadly mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton, Democrats and other Trump haters demanded that the president denounce white nationalism, which apparently propelled the alleged Texas gunman. President Trump did exactly that. “The shooter
in El Paso posted a manifesto online consumed by racist hate,” Trump
said Monday. “In one voice, our nation must condemn racism, bigotry, and
white supremacy. These sinister ideologies must be defeated. Hate has
no place in America. Hatred warps the mind, ravages the heart, and
devours the soul.” The Old Gray Lady’s page-one, online headline reflected these remarks: “TRUMP URGES UNITY VS. RACISM” But those accurate words enraged Democrats. They disproved the leftist lie that Trump is a divisive bigot.