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In a two-hour raid on a migrant camp in Dunkirk, French riot police arrested the three alleged people smugglers, understood to be British men of Middle Eastern origin, and seized a BMW and two Fords.
EXCLUSIVE: Our reporter was able to buy a Syrian passport, identity card and driving licence from a forger in a Turkish border town. Our reporter was given the identity of a Syrian man killed last year.
U.S. military says only a handful of trained Syrians are still on the battlefield fighting ISIS
US Secretary of State John Kerry said Wednesday that Russia has proposed holding "military-to-military" talks on Syria, amid US concern about Moscow's continued build-up of equipment in the war-ravaged nation.
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AP investigation prompts rescue of more than 2,000 slaves, plus arrests, lawsuits, legislation
UK domestic intelligence chief uses rare interview to warn of threats, seek more surveillance
Russian Pleads Guilty In Massive Computer Hacking Scamby support@pangea-cms.com (RFE/RL)
A Russian man has pleaded guilty for his role in a massive computer hacking scheme, the second such plea this week stemming from what authorities say was the largest such hack in the United States.
Putin Sees Syria as Russia’s Path Back Into Good Graces of West by NEIL MacFARQUHAR and ANDREW E. KRAMER
The Russian president unleashed a diplomatic offensive this week, pushing to meet with President Obama, and planning a big rollout for a Syrian peace plan at the United Nations.
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РБК |
На военной базе в Сирии обнаружены российские вертолеты
Газета.Ru На авиабазе в Сирии обнаружено несколько российских вертолетов, передает Reuters со ссылкой на источники среди американских чиновников. Один из источников на условиях анонимности сообщил, что на авиабазе присутствуют не менее четырех вертолетов, в том числе боевых. В сирийской Латакии засняли российские военные вертолетыNEWSru.com В Генштабе ВС РФ не исключили возможности создания базы в Сирии"Воронежский курьер" - онлайн газета Генштаб РФ не планирует создавать военно-воздушную базу в СирииРИА Новости ТВОЙ ГОРОД Псков-РБК-BBC Russian Все похожие статьи: 71 » |
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Estonia Tackles Improves NATO’s Cyber Defensesby webdesk@voanews.com (Carla Babb)
These days, it seems like nowhere in the cyber realm is safe. Hacks have infiltrated all walks of cyber life, from the email system used by the Joint Chiefs of Staff’s office at the Pentagon, to the cheating spouses on the Canada-based Ashley Madison website. But the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence, in the tiny country of Estonia, is trying to make the cyber world safer for all of NATO. “When it comes to the NATO networks and how we fight together, there are 28 doors to this alliance. If one of those doors is wide open, the alliance is wide open,” General Phil Breedlove, the commander of U.S. European Command, told VOA Saturday at a NATO defense meeting in Istanbul. Defense Center role The Cyber Defense Center provides cyber security defense and policy advice to participating members of NATO and a handful of other partner countries, academia and even private businesses. “The private sector is the one that owns most of the real stuff, right? All the network cables, usually the server rooms, and more," said Lauri Aasmann, Law and Policy Branch chief for the Center. The Center is not funded by NATO, but by volunteer nations. Although it is not responsible for NATO’s cyber security, officials say its work has played a significant role in improving the alliance’s cyber defense capabilities. Its annual exercise, dubbed Locked Shields, is a multi-national war game in which participants try to protect a fictitious country from a cyber attack. The center provides the fictitious country’s network, which participating nations must patch up and strengthen. Aasmann said the attack creators on the red team, a mix of tech wizards from different NATO allies, are critical to defense building. “We strongly believe that in order to build or have a good defense, you should understand how the attack works, how the offense works,” said Aasmann. Why Estonia? Estonia is among the best in the world for Internet access, with WiFi available almost everywhere, even in uncommon places like inside buses and vans or on a public beach. It’s second globally for Internet freedom, according to the latest Freedom House report. In comparison, the United States ranks fifth on that list. Banking is done mostly online, with locals saying they rarely carry cash. Most of the government is run electronically as well. “Even if little green men came over and took over everything, people could still pay their taxes online; they could still vote online; you could have a complete government in exile,” said one U.S. official based in Estonia, referring to the term used for Russian military men seen in Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula during Russia’s annexation of the region. Russian attack But Estonians know from experience that a cyber attack on their Internet utopia could prove catastrophic. A massive cyber attack in 2007 knocked out Internet access to banks, ministries, parliament and several other organizations for days. The attack hit during Estonia’s spat with Russia about the relocation of a Soviet-era grave marker called the Bronze Soldier of Tallinn, and many blamed the attack on Estonia’s eastern neighbor. “Most people say this is the first actual state-sponsored cyber attack that came from Russia,” the U.S. official said. Since the “wakeup call,” as Aasmann called it, the country remains dedicated to efforts to prevent and defeat cyber war against Estonia and its allies.
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Sources claim Moscow plans to extend its support of Assad regime and could end up running the war
A large convoy of Russian vehicles was reportedly on the move through central Syria on Wednesday, sparking new claims that renewed Russian support for the ailing Assad regime could lead to Moscow effectively running the war.
Syrian opposition groups claimed the convoy contained Russian troops who were heading for the outskirts of the country’s third city, Hama.
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Putin in Syria by Liveblog Team
Over the last few days there have been numerous reports that the Kremlin is deploying military force to prop up the Assad regime in Syria, under the pretence of combating ISIS.
The Interpreter will now cover these developments on a daily basis on our Putin in Syria blog.
Russia Proposes Talks With U.S. Over Syriaby By MICHAEL R. GORDON
Foreign Minister Sergey V. Lavrov made the proposal to Secretary of State John Kerry amid tensions over Moscow’s military buildup in Syria.
Hotels and restaurants are already straining from an upsurge of tourism, and experts say many more U.S. visitors could soon follow.
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Nepalese lawmakers on Wednesday voted overwhelmingly to approve a new constitution that will turn the former Himalayan monarchy into a secular, multiparty democracy.
The U.S.’s Syria strategy came under a scorching attack in the Senate on Wednesday as lawmakers questioned the Pentagon’s claims of progress against Islamic State.
Colombia’s President Santos is willing to meet with his Venezuelan counterpart to resolve a border crisis that has led more than 20,000 undocumented Colombian immigrants to flee Venezuela and fueled a bitter row between the two countries.
The new, leftist leader of the U.K.’s opposition party, Jeremy Corbyn, on Wednesday made his debut at the weekly grilling of the prime minister in Parliament, and called for a more demure atmosphere.
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KANIJZA, SERBIA: In a small Serbian town, three young Iraqis wait at a bus stop next to a small park.
“We are going to Croatia,” says Alaa Kamal, who hails from Baghdad. Over the summer, this park in the center of Kanijza, which is just a few kilometers from the Hungarian border, served as a gathering point for refugees attempting to cross the frontier. Groups would meet here and set off on foot toward Hungary. Now the park is mostly empty.
Kamal and his friends tried to cross into Hungary on Monday night around 11 pm, using the railway tracks near the Hungarian town of Rozske, but found the way already blocked.
“We heard it will close on Tuesday,” says Kamal. Their hopes were dashed. “The women were crying.”
Hungary has sealed its frontier with Serbia, using a 110-mile long fence lined with layers of razor wire and units of army and police. Now hundreds of migrants—mostly Syrians, Iraqis, Afghanis and Pakistanis—wait at the Horgos border crossing in Serbia, hoping to be let in. Today, clashes erupted there between the refugees, who threw rocks and burning tires, and police who lobbed tear gas and sprayed water cannons on the crowd.
At one point a rumor spread that Hungary had opened the gates. Parents grabbed their children and belongings and ran to the front, only to be met with more tear gas. “What is happening? Is it open or what?” asks one man as he ran away from the tear gas carrying a toddler.
By evening refugees begin leaving the Horgos border crossing. Busses arrived to take people to a camp in Kanijza. From there, they are told, they will be able to take the bus on to Croatia. Dozens boarded free busses provided by Serbian authorities, others got in taxis. Some stayed behind.
“My group left about an hour ago,” says Nour a woman from Damascus. “I have a baby…And I don’t know anything about this road.”
Thousands of Syrians have taken the journey through Hungary, reporting back to family and friends about the best routes and the potential dangers. But this route through Croatia is new and uncharted. Nour says her group will go ahead and if it’s safe, she will follow with her child.
This land has known war before. Already, people are posting on social media warning of the dangers of minefields on the Serbian-Croatian border.
“No, no, now Hungary is closed,” Michel Nawfal, from Syria, tells his friend standing a few hundred yards from the border. They discuss their plans. The only option left is Croatia, and the two say the Serbia police told them they would able to reach the border. “They gave us a map,” he says.
“This reminds me now of Syria,” his friend says, laying on the ground near where the clashes took place earlier.
“He thought the road to Europe would be made of flowers,” says Nawfal. “Now he discovers the road.”
Nawfal says they are less worried about landmines and more concerned that Slovenia may close its border. While Croatia has said it will allow free passage of refugees through its territory, Slovenia is promising an approach more similar to that of Hungary, tightening its frontier.
“The border with Croatia is… a Schengen external border,” Slovenian Police Commissioner Marjan Fank, told AFP, “and for that reason, under strong police control.”
If that happens, and Hungary reinforces its border with Croatia, the refugees will again be trapped.
“They don’t know what they doing,” says Robert Valdec, a Croatian journalist, of his government, after watching the scene at the border today. “It’s just a competition in political correctness.”
Croatia is a member of the European Union, but it has one of the weakest economies in the EU, and it may be trying to garner favor with Germany.
And while the country may be prepared for the few thousands currently stuck in Serbia, it has no way of being ready for the thousands and thousands more who will come every day if refugees spread the word about a safe route through Croatia.
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US has trained only 'four or five' Syrian fighters against Isis, top general testifies by Spencer Ackerman in New York
Senators appear incredulous and call for a new plan after hearing news that US military’s $500m effort has resulted in training of only a handful of fighters
A $500m effort to train Syrian forces against the Islamic State has resulted in only a handful of fighters actively battling the jihadi army, the top military commander overseeing the war has testified.
“We’re talking four or five,” General Lloyd Austin, commander of US Central Command, told a dissatisfied Senate armed services committee on Wednesday.
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