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@Osint613: RT by @mikenov: General Michael Kurilla, the Commander of U.S. Central Command, is scheduled to arrive in Israel tomorrow. He will be accompanied by Defense Minister Gallant and other Israeli military and defense officials. The purpose of their visit is to coordinate the defense of Israel… x.com/i/web/status/1…


General Michael Kurilla, the Commander of U.S. Central Command, is scheduled to arrive in Israel tomorrow. He will be accompanied by Defense Minister Gallant and other Israeli military and defense officials. The purpose of their visit is to coordinate the defense of Israel… pic.twitter.com/o5pTfEheuw

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) April 10, 2024

The post @Osint613: RT by @mikenov: General Michael Kurilla, the Commander of U.S. Central Command, is scheduled to arrive in Israel tomorrow. He will be accompanied by Defense Minister Gallant and other Israeli military and defense officials. The purpose of their visit is to coordinate the defense of Israel… x.com/i/web/status/1… first appeared on The Ocean Avenue News – The News And Times.


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@starsandstripes: RT by @mikenov: A U.S. Air Force veteran who fled a charge of possessing sexually explicit images of a child told his lawyer he joined Russia’s army, and video appears to show him signing documents in a military enlistment office in Siberia. stripes.com/theaters/us/20…


A U.S. Air Force veteran who fled a charge of possessing sexually explicit images of a child told his lawyer he joined Russia’s army, and video appears to show him signing documents in a military enlistment office in Siberia. https://t.co/wRO2MRQnbf

— Stars and Stripes (@starsandstripes) April 10, 2024

The post @starsandstripes: RT by @mikenov: A U.S. Air Force veteran who fled a charge of possessing sexually explicit images of a child told his lawyer he joined Russia’s army, and video appears to show him signing documents in a military enlistment office in Siberia. stripes.com/theaters/us/20… first appeared on The Ocean Avenue News – The News And Times.


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@Jerusalem_Post: RT by @mikenov: Iran’s Mehr news agency removed a report on Wednesday from its official channel on X that had said Iran was closing its airspace over the capital, Tehran, and denied in a new post that it had published any such news. jpost.com/breaking-news/…


Iran’s Mehr news agency removed a report on Wednesday from its official channel on X that had said Iran was closing its airspace over the capital, Tehran, and denied in a new post that it had published any such news.https://t.co/zSK7DkI6AC

— The Jerusalem Post (@Jerusalem_Post) April 10, 2024

The post @Jerusalem_Post: RT by @mikenov: Iran’s Mehr news agency removed a report on Wednesday from its official channel on X that had said Iran was closing its airspace over the capital, Tehran, and denied in a new post that it had published any such news. jpost.com/breaking-news/… first appeared on The Ocean Avenue News – The News And Times.


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@DrJulesGomes: RT by @mikenov: My latest column for @Streamdotorg on #PopeFrancis’ latest declaration on #HumanDignity (#DignitasInfinita). The latest #Vatican word salad provides one service. It explodes the myth of an unchanging #magisterium and the fiction of Catholic unity. stream.org/new-vatican-do…


My latest column for @Streamdotorg on #PopeFrancis‘ latest declaration on #HumanDignity (#DignitasInfinita). The latest #Vatican word salad provides one service. It explodes the myth of an unchanging #magisterium and the fiction of Catholic unity. https://t.co/V99nTJTVfb

— Dr Jules Gomes (@DrJulesGomes) April 10, 2024

The post @DrJulesGomes: RT by @mikenov: My latest column for @Streamdotorg on #PopeFrancis’ latest declaration on #HumanDignity (#DignitasInfinita). The latest #Vatican word salad provides one service. It explodes the myth of an unchanging #magisterium and the fiction of Catholic unity. stream.org/new-vatican-do… first appeared on The Ocean Avenue News – The News And Times.


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VOA Newscasts


Give us 5 minutes, and we’ll give you the world. Around the clock, Voice of America keeps you in touch with the latest news. We bring you reports from our correspondents and interviews with newsmakers from across the world.

The post VOA Newscasts first appeared on The News And Times.


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Once a swing state, Ohio now seems to lean more conservative


For years, the U.S. state of Ohio was a solid indicator of American political opinion, choosing the winning presidential candidate in every election from 1964 to 2016. VOA Correspondent Scott Stearns reports that Ohio now appears more conservative, presenting a challenge for a Democratic Party trying to re-elect President Joe Biden and keep control of the U.S. Senate.

The post Once a swing state, Ohio now seems to lean more conservative first appeared on The News And Times.


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Greene, Johnson to meet amid ouster threat


Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) is set to meet with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) late Wednesday morning, as the Georgia Republican threatens to force a vote on ousting the GOP leader — a move Johnson warned would cause “chaos in the House.”

The conversation will mark the first time the two have spoken since Greene filed a motion to vacate against Johnson late last month — the pair only exchanged text messages over the two-week Easter recess. They were slated to speak Friday, but that plan fell through, a source familiar told The Hill.

“Marjorie and I are going to visit later today, and look forward to the conversation. And I’m not gonna discuss it anymore, discuss it with you all; I’ll discuss it with her,” Johnson said Wednesday.

“She’s a colleague. I’ve always considered her a friend,” Johnson added of Greene. “Marjorie and I don’t disagree, I don’t think, on any matter of philosophy. We’re both conservatives, you know. But we do disagree sometimes on strategy and with regard to what we put on the floor and when and those things.”

Greene also confirmed the scheduled meeting, telling reporters she would meet with Johnson at 11:45 a.m. EDT.

The conversation comes as Greene has upped her criticism against Johnson amid frustrations over his handling of government funding, Ukraine aid and the reauthorization of the U.S.’s warrantless surveillance powers.

On Tuesday, she sent a five-page letter to House Republicans laying out a list of grievances she has against the Speaker and accusing him of performing a “complete and total surrender” to the Democrats’ agenda.

“With so much at stake for our future and the future of our children, I will not tolerate this type of Republican ‘leadership,’” she wrote.

Greene has not disclosed when she plans to force a vote on her motion to vacate, but said Johnson’s next steps on Ukraine aid and reauthorization of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) will play into her thought process.

“How he handles the FISA process and how he handles funding Ukraine is going to tell our entire conference how to handle the motion to vacate,” Greene told reporters Wednesday.

But she said Johnson does not have support from the House GOP conference.

“It’s pretty clear and obvious and being whispered among the conference, Mike Johnson does not have the support of the conference,” she said.

Johnson responded to Greene’s motion to vacate effort Wednesday morning, warning that an ouster vote would not help Republicans politically as they look to increase their majority in November.

“Nor does a motion to vacate help us in our regard either,” Johnson said of picking up seats in November. “It would be chaos in the House.”

Greene filed the motion to vacate against Johnson as the House was voting on a $1.2 trillion spending package that hard-line conservatives strongly opposed. They argued the legislation did not include enough spending cuts or conservative policy riders.

Johnson, however, defended his handling of the appropriations process, arguing that shutting down the government would have been harmful — both practically and politically — and noting the House GOP’s razor-thin majority.

“It doesn’t serve our interests, I didn’t think, to not fund the government and shut it down at this critical time because imagine a scenario where border patrol agents aren’t being paid, TSA agents aren’t being paid, flights start getting canceled, we’re not paying the troops, you know all the things that the government does would come to a grinding halt. That would put a lot of pressure on the American people, the American economy at a very desperate time,” he said.

“So that just wasn’t an option. And I don’t think that would be helpful to us from a political standpoint, for the Republican Party to continue to govern, to maintain, keep and then grow our majority in November. I thought that would’ve been a great hindrance to it, and so that wouldn’t be helpful,” he added.

The post Greene, Johnson to meet amid ouster threat first appeared on The News And Times.


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Biden Administration Fears Iran Might Target U.S. Forces Over Israel Strike


The White House is worried that Iran might strike a U.S. target as part of a potential retaliation for Israel’s April 1 attack on its embassy in Damascus, Syria, according to notes from a meeting involving National Security Council officials earlier this week. Tehran has vowed that “Israel will be punished” for the Syria strike and the killing of Quds Force commander Mohammad Reza Zahedi. 

New concern about a potential Iranian strike comes even though the Biden administration has sought to distance itself from the Israeli airstrike, stressing that it had no advance knowledge of the operation.

“I don’t have anything more to say about the strike in Damascus, except that we weren’t involved in any way whatsoever,” NSC spokesperson retired Adm. John Kirby said on Monday. 

On Monday night, Iran conveyed to the Biden administration that if it involved itself in defending Israel were Tehran to undertake a retaliatory strike, it would consider the United States a viable target as well. The issue was discussed at a Tuesday NSC meeting, according to notes reviewed by The Intercept. (The NSC did not respond to a request for comment.)

At the Tuesday meeting, an NSC official conveyed high-level concerns that the administration did not want to publicly appear to be in any official dialogue with Tehran, with whom the U.S. does not have formal diplomatic relations.

Last Friday, four days after the Israeli airstrike, over a dozen Republican senators signed a letter accusing the Biden administration of undertaking a “strategy of appeasement” with Iran. 

Despite an-ever widening and escalating military action since the Gaza war began, the Biden administration has insisted that the war remains contained to Israel, despite attacks by Israel in Syria and Lebanon; despite repeated attacks by Houthi forces in Yemen and the retaliatory strike that have followed; and despite attacks and responses against U.S. forces in Iraq, Syria, and Jordan. The strikes by the U.S. (and its coalition partners) are always described as taking place against “Iran-backed” organizations and militias.

In January, three American Army soldiers were killed by a kamikaze drone launched by an Iranian-backed militia at a U.S. base in Jordan called Tower 22. There have been over 150 attacks on U.S. Middle East forces since the Israel–Hamas war began. U.S. Central Command, the Pentagon’s Middle East combatant command, has launched a seemingly endless barrage of strikes on Iranian-backed targets throughout the region, as well as undertaken naval and air attacks in and around Yemen.

The position of the Biden administration has consistently been that it doesn’t see any of this as escalation. “We don’t seek a wider war with Iran,” Deputy Pentagon press secretary Sabrina Singh said the day after the three U.S. troops were killed in Jordan. “We don’t seek further conflict, we don’t want to see this widen out into a regional conflict.”

Since then, the U.S. has quietly conducted talks with Iranian officials to seek to avoid direct confrontation between the two countries’ armed forces, according to CNN and other media reports. On Sunday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said that Biden and his team are working to prevent escalation with Iran in the Middle East.

On Wednesday, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said that Israel “must be punished and it shall be.” That same day, Israeli Foreign Affairs Minister Israel Katz said his country would respond with a direct attack. “If Iran attacks from its own territory, Israel will respond and attack in Iran,” Katz posted on X. Since April 2023, the U.S. and Israel have been in close cooperation in sharing and building common Iran contingency plans.

The post Biden Administration Fears Iran Might Target U.S. Forces Over Israel Strike appeared first on The Intercept.

The post Biden Administration Fears Iran Might Target U.S. Forces Over Israel Strike first appeared on The News And Times.


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‘This is not your house’: Anti-Israel protester disrupts Berkeley law dean’s backyard dinner, refuses to leave


This article originally appeared in J Weekly.

What was meant to be a congratulatory spring dinner for graduating students at the home of UC Berkeley’s law school dean turned confrontational last night when a pro-Palestinian protester stood up with a microphone and began making a speech.

Erwin Chemerinsky and his wife, law school professor Catherine Fisk, were hosting the event for third-year law students in their backyard and asked the protester, who was a student and one of the registered guests, to leave.

According to a statement released today by Chemerinsky, around 60 students signed up to attend and were eating dinner when the disruption occurred.

Erwin Chemerinsky Courtesy of J Weekly

“While guests were eating, a woman stood up with a microphone, stood on the top step in the yard, and began a speech, including about the plight of the Palestinians,” Chemerinsky said. “My wife and I immediately approached her and asked her to stop and leave. The woman continued. When she continued, there was an attempt to take away her microphone. Repeatedly, we said to her that you are a guest in our home, please stop and leave. About 10 students were clearly with her and ultimately left as a group.”

Video has circulated on social media that shows a woman identified as Malak Afaneh, who is a Berkeley law student and co-president of Berkeley Law Students for Justice in Palestine. She is also a law clerk at the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

The student group had called for a boycott of Chemerinsky’s dinner with a disturbing cartoon that showed the law school dean holding a fork and knife covered in blood.

“No dinner with Zionist Chem while Gaza starves,” it read.

‘You are guests in our house’

In the video clip, which shows 20 seconds of the incident, she is standing with a microphone and reading from her phone. Fisk approaches and grabs at her phone and the mic while putting her arm around her shoulder in what appears to be an attempt to move her aside.

“Leave,” Fisk says. “This is not your house, this is my house.”

Chemerinsky also intervenes. “Please leave our house,” he says loudly. “You are guests in our house.”

According to one student present at the event, the video doesn’t paint the whole picture. A Jewish third-year law student who was at the dinner said that the protesters, including Afaneh, were speaking and disrupting the event for quite a while before things escalated. They were at first politely asked to leave their home by Chemerinsky and Fisk, he said. The video shows only the end of the incident, after the protesters had been speaking there for three or four minutes, the student said.

“They did not leave when they were asked the first 20 or 30 times,” he said. He added that they finally left after Fisk said that while she was reluctant to call the police, she would do so if needed.

“I am enormously sad that we have students who are so rude as to come into my home, in my backyard, and use this social occasion for their political agenda,” he said.

He said students at the dinner were already on edge, as they expected some kind of protest — but outside, on the public sidewalk. Instead, it was in front of them.

“We mostly stared in a combination of awkwardness and disbelief,” he said. “I think people weren’t quite sure how they should respond.”

Another student who was present said she was not entirely surprised that something like this happened, considering that one of the tables had students she knew to be part of Berkeley Law Students for Justice in Palestine. She told J. she felt bad for Chemerinsky and Fisk.

“They’re just such good people and kind people, and don’t deserve this,” she said.

The Instagram posts calling for a boycott of the event and depicting Chemerinsky included a caption that read, “This dinner is the prime example of a normalization PR event that hopes to distract students from Dean Chem’s complicity and support for the genocide of the Palestinian peoples.”

“I never thought I would see such blatant antisemitism, with an image that invokes the horrible antisemitic trope of blood libel and that attacks me for no apparent reason other than I am Jewish,” he said in his statement.

Chemerinsky lamented the disruption of what was meant to be a welcoming, positive evening.

“I am enormously sad that we have students who are so rude as to come into my home, in my backyard, and use this social occasion for their political agenda,” he said.

“I am appalled and deeply disturbed by what occurred at Dean Chemerinsky’s home last night,” said Chancellor Carol Christ in a statement sent to J. “I have been in touch with him to offer my support and sympathy. While our support for Free Speech is unwavering, we cannot condone using a social occasion at a person’s private residence as a platform for protest.”

A free speech stalwart

Chemerinsky has largely been supportive of the rights of his students to voice their criticisms of Israel.

He spoke out against the trucks sent by the right-leaning Jewish organization Accuracy in Media, which drove around UC Berkeley in February displaying the names and photos of people that the organization accused of holding antisemitic views.

Chemerinsky also defended the right of law school clubs to bar Zionist speakers, although he disagreed with the policy.

In a 2022 op-ed in J., Chemerinsky wrote about the student groups at Berkeley Law that had added motions to their bylaws condemning Israel. “It is crucial that I stress that students have the right to take a position on this, like all issues, even if I disagree with them or find their views offensive,” he wrote at the time.

In that op-ed, however, he expressed concern over the idea of clubs banning Zionist speakers.

“It is very troubling to broadly exclude a particular viewpoint from being expressed,” he said. “Indeed, taken literally, this would mean that I could not be invited to speak because I support the existence of Israel, though I condemn many of its policies.”

His views on free speech at school were broad enough to include the posters targeting his April 9 dinner.

“I felt that though deeply offensive, they were speech protected by the First Amendment,” he said in the statement.

However, he drew the line at protests in his home.

“The dinners will go forward on Wednesday and Thursday,” he wrote. “I hope that there will be no disruptions; my home is not a forum for free speech. But we will have security present. Any student who disrupts will be reported to student conduct and a violation of the student conduct code is reported to the Bar.”

This article originally appeared in J Weekly.

The post ‘This is not your house’: Anti-Israel protester disrupts Berkeley law dean’s backyard dinner, refuses to leave appeared first on The Forward.

The post ‘This is not your house’: Anti-Israel protester disrupts Berkeley law dean’s backyard dinner, refuses to leave first appeared on The News And Times.


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Georgian opposition demands probe ex-PM’s property / JAMnews – JAMnews


The post Georgian opposition demands probe ex-PM’s property / JAMnews – JAMnews first appeared on The South Caucasus News – The News And Times.