May 24, 2013

U.S.-born al-Qaeda cleric Anwar al-Awlaki killed in Yemen

f34c057d33113302dfb18acd323daa64 U.S. born al Qaeda cleric Anwar al Awlaki killed in Yemen

SANAA, Yemen (AP) – Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S.-born Islamic militant cleric who became a prominent figure in al-Qaida’s most active branch, using his fluent English and Internet savvy to draw recruits to carry out attacks in the United States, was killed Friday in the mountains of Yemen, American and Yemeni officials said.

The Yemeni government and announced al-Awlaki’s death, but gave no details. A senior U.S. official said supports the claim that he had been killed. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss .

Yemeni and local said the was killed in an on his convoy that they believed was carried out by the Americans. They said pilotless drones had been seen over the area in previous days.

STORY: From our archives: al-Awlaki dubbed ‘bin Laden of Internet’
MORE: ‘Underwear bomber’ trial revives security debate
BLOG: Obama’s day: Death of a terrorist

Al-Awlaki would be the most prominent al-Qaida figure to be killed since Osama bin Laden’s death in a U.S. raid in Pakistan in May. In July, U.S. Defense Secretary said the Yemeni-American was a priority alongside Ayman al-Zawahri, bin Laden’s successor as the ’s leader.

The 40-year-old al-Awlaki had been in the U.S. since his killing was approved by President in April 2010 — making him the first American placed on the CIA “kill or capture” list. At least twice, airstrikes were called in on locations in Yemen where al-Awlaki was suspected of being, but he wasn’t harmed.

Al-Awlaki, born in New Mexico to Yemeni parents, was believed to be key in turning al-Qaida’s affiliate in Yemen into what American officials have called the most significant and immediate threat to the Untied States. The branch, led by a Yemeni militant named Nasser al-Wahishi, plotted several failed attacks on U.S. soil — the botched Christmas 2009 attempt to blow up an American airliner heading to Detroit and a foiled 2010 attempt to main explosives to Chicago.

Known as an eloquent preacher who spread English-language sermons on the internet calling for “holy war” against the United States, al-Awlaki’s role was to inspire and — it is believed — even directly recruit militants to carry out attacks.

U.S. officials believe he went beyond just being an inspiring spiritual leader to become involved in operational planning for al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, as the Yemen branch is called. Yemeni officials have said al-Awlaki had contacts with Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the accused would-be Christmas plane bomber, who was in Yemen in 2009. They say the believe al-Awlaki met with the 23-year-old Nigerian, along with other al-Qaida leaders, in al-Qaida strongholds in the country in the weeks before the failed bombing.

In New York, the Pakistani-American man who pleaded guilty to the May 2010 Times Square car bombing attempt told interrogators he was “inspired” by al-Awlaki after making contact over the Internet.

Al-Awlaki also exchanged up to 20 emails with U.S. Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, alleged killer of 13 people in the Nov. 5, 2009, rampage at Fort Hood. Hasan initiated the contacts, drawn by al-Awlaki’s Internet sermons, and approached him for religious advice.

Al-Awlaki has said he didn’t tell Hasan to carry out the shootings, but he later praised Hasan as a “hero” on his Web site for killing American soldiers who would be heading for Afghanistan or Iraq to fight Muslims. The cleric similarly said Abdulmutallab was his “student” but said he never told him to carry out the airline attack.

In a statement, the Yemeni government said al-Awlaki was “targeted and killed” 5 miles (8 kilometers) from the town of Khashef in the Province of al-Jawf. The town is located 87 miles (140 kilometers) east of the capital Sanaa.

The statement says the operation was launched on Friday around 9:55 a.m. It gave no other details.

The Yemeni Defense Ministry also reported the death, without elaborating, in a mobile phone SMS message.

Local tribal and security officials said al-Awlaki was travelling in a two-car convoy with two other al-Qaida in Yemen operatives from al-Jawf to neighboring Marib province when they were hit. They said the other two operatives were also believed dead. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the press.

Yemen, the Arab world’s most impoverished nation, has become a haven for hundreds of al-Qaida militants. The United States has been deeply concerned that militants will take advantage of the country’s political turmoil to strengthen their positions. In recent months, militants have seized control of several cities in Yemen’s south.

A previous attack against al-Awlaki on May 5, shortly after the May raid that killed Osama bin Laden, was carried out by a combination of U.S. drones and jets.

The operation was run by the U.S. military’s elite counterterrorism unit, the Joint Special Operations Command— the same unit that got bin Laden. JSOC has worked closely with Yemeni counterterrorism forces for years, in the fight against al-Qaida.

Top U.S. counterterrorism adviser John Brennan says such cooperation with Yemen has improved since the political unrest there. Brennan said the Yemenis have been more willing to share information about the location of al-Qaida targets, as a way to fight the Yemeni branch challenging them for power. Other U.S. officials say the Yemenis have also allowed the U.S. to fly more armed drone and aircraft missions over its territory than ever previously, trying to use U.S. military power to stay in power. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss matters of intelligence.

Hurricane Ophelia intensifies in the Atlantic

36daee2d95b3865bb29a63f67131e727 Hurricane Ophelia intensifies in the Atlantic

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Ophelia becomes a Category 2 hurricane
The storm became a hurricane Thursday
It is about 695 miles south-southeast of Bermuda
Tropical Storm Philippe, meanwhile, is churning through the eastern Atlantic

() — Ophelia strengthened into a Category 2 hurricane early Friday, packing winds of 100 mph as it swirled across the Atlantic far from land, the said.

The system had appeared to be weakening several days ago, only to regroup and intensify.

At 5 a.m. ET, Ophelia was about 695 miles south-southeast of Bermuda. It was heading north-northwest at an hour, the Miami-based center said.

Some strengthening is forecast during the next 48 hours, according to the hurricane center. The extended forecast map shows Ophelia passing east of Bermuda, where a tropical storm watch is in effect.

Hurricane-force winds extended about 30 miles from the storm’s eye, center said. Tropical storm-force winds have been recorded 175 miles away.

“A turn to the north with an increase in forward speed is expected later today,” according to the hurricane center.

Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Philippe was churning farther east in the Atlantic, with its eye some 1,850 miles east-northeast of the .

“Some strengthening is possible today…but weakening is likely to begin late Saturday or Sunday,” the hurricane center said. The storm had of 45 mph.

Philippe was heading northwest at around 13 mph, with a shift to the west-northwest forecast for Friday night and Saturday. No land areas have been affected or are in the storm’s path through the forecast period, which now extends into Wednesday morning.

Civilians flee Sirte battle, fighting hampers aid: U.N.

573407c3e8ca02235d2f202fe2d128c4 Civilians flee Sirte battle, fighting hampers aid: U.N.

() – Civilians fled Sirte on Friday as forces pounded the coastal city in an effort to dislodge fighters loyal to ousted leader Muammar Gaddafi.

The prolonged battle for Gaddafi’s hometown, besieged from three fronts, has raised mounting concern for civilians trapped inside the city of about 100,000 people, with each side accusing the other of endangering them.

Cars streamed out of Sirte from the early hours. Shelling and continued from both sides on the eastern and , black smoke rose from the center of town and NATO planes flew overhead.

“There are no shops for food, everything is closed,” a resident who gave his name only as Mohammed told Reuters on Friday. “There is no medicine, we have a shortage of everything.”

Doctors at a field hospital near the eastern front line said an died from malnutrition on Friday morning and they had seen other cases.

Some families leaving from the west told Reuters they had not eaten for two days.

A man with a wound to his left arm said the hospital in Sirte had no power and few supplies. A doctor had tried to patch up his wound by the light of a mobile phone.

“I was injured in my garden at one p.m. but I stayed home until the evening because of the heavy fire,” Mohammed Abudullah said at a field hospital outside the city.

Gaddafi loyalists and some civilians blaming and shelling by the forces of the National Transitional Council () for killing civilians.

NATO and the NTC deny that. They and some other civilians coming out of the town say pro-Gaddafi fighters are executing people they believe to be NTC .

“It is not the Gaddafi people and not you people,” one shouted, gesturing toward NTC fighters at a checkpoint as he left the city.

“It’s the that are hitting us night and day. They knocked the roof off our house. Is this how we’re supposed to die?”

Ahmad Mohammed Yahya told Reuters street fighting was erupting in the town most nights and that pro-Gaddafi fighters were aggressively recruiting local people.

“Sometimes they offer to give you a weapon,” he said. “And sometimes they take people and force them to fight.”

HUMANITARIAN DISASTER

The NTC is under pressure to strike a balance between a prolonged fight that would delay its efforts to govern and a quick victory which, if too bloody, could worsen regional divisions and embarrass the fledgling government and its foreign backers.

Aid agencies said this week that a humanitarian disaster loomed in Sirte amid rising casualties and shrinking supplies of water, electricity and food.

Libya’s interim government has asked the United Nations for fuel for ambulances to evacuate its wounded fighters from Sirte, a U.N. source in Libya said on Thursday.

The U.N. is sending trucks of drinking water for the civilians crammed into vehicles on the road from Sirte, heading either toward Benghazi to the east or Misrata to the west, he added.

But fighting around the city and continuing insecurity around Bani Walid, the other loyalist hold-out, are preventing the world body from deploying aid workers inside, he said.

“There are two places we’d really like access to, Sirte and Bani Walid, because of concern on the impact of conflict on the civilian population,” the U.N. source in Tripoli, speaking by telephone on condition of anonymity, told Reuters in Geneva.

The NTC says efforts to form a new interim government have been suspended until after the capture of Sirte and Bani Walid.

“There are no negotiations at the moment to form a transitional government after the NTC decided to keep the current formation to facilitate the (country’s) affairs until the land is liberated,” Libya’s de facto Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril said in Tripoli on Thursday

“There are two fronts, Sirte and Bani Walid. I hope those two areas would be liberated soon so that we can start forming a new interim government,” he said, ruling out any role for himself in a future government.

There has been speculation that divisions are preventing the formation of a more inclusive interim government.

More than a month after NTC fighters captured Tripoli, Gaddafi remains on the run, trying to rally resistance to those who ended his 42-year rule.

(Additional reporting by William MacLean in Tripoli and Emad Omar in Benghazi; Writing by Barry Malone; editing by Andrew Roche)

What’s she saying about you?

18c58f68d5db6bb5ba33f9b0c7b210ea What’s she saying about you?

(Phatforums News / Match.com) — My friend Julie and I were chatting at the gym after a . (Yes, even girls engage in talk.) In fact, Julie was telling me some intimate details about her new relationship. Apparently her is scared of her cat and it’s a real turn-off. Our friend Kara walked up in the middle of the story and said, “Oh, are you telling her about how Brandon runs out of the room when Poofta comes in?” We all had a hearty laugh at the idea of this image in our heads. As we walked out, Julie took a call on her from her and proceeded to relate the tale of Brandon’s feline .

As I drove away chatting to my sister about the Brandon/Julie/Poofta love triangle, I started to feel a little guilty. Wouldn’t Brandon be mortified if he knew that his dark secret was now heating up our cell-phone signals? Definitely. But then again, don’t all guys know by now that their have ? Oops, maybe you missed that.

Be careful what you reveal to her
In that case, I better give you some advice: don’t tell her anything you don’t want her to know. Or her mom. Or her coworkers. Or even Sheri down at the , for that matter.

Women talk. And most of the time, we don’t know when to stop. There are two reasons for this:

1. Most of us were born with a very small “filtering” gene. This is the mechanism that stops us from saying inappropriate things like, “Wow, that really makes you look like a mushroom.” Since we’re lacking in that area, we sometimes talk without stopping to breathe, let alone consider that we should not divulge information about you to the people we know.

2. We like to get strong reactions from others when we tell a story. It doesn’t matter if it’s shocked, amused or disgusted, we love them all. And we’ll tell any story necessary to get a good reaction out of the right person.

Staying silent won’t necessarily stop gossips
Even if you play the silence game with her, she could still be chatting with her friends about some quirky habit you have. Sheila, 30, is a recovering gossiper who went down this road. She explains, “I was having some downtime with my girlfriends and I told them that when my boyfriend, Steve, kisses my ear, he always slobbers all over me. I told them how I had to wipe down the entire side of my face every time he did this. Then we all laughed and shared other, similar stories.”

Sheila thought it was harmless fun… until it got back to Steve. He was embarrassed, but relieved to know why Sheila’s girlfriends always feigned wiping down their faces when he was around. Steve handled the situation perfectly: Instead of running and telling his friends something equally embarrassing about Sheila, he confronted her. He said he’d stop slobbering if she’d stop gossiping. Both are improving, but still working on their respective vices.

How to confront her
If your girlfriend is airing your dirty laundry all over town, you’ve got to tell her how you feel. You’ll also have to realize that she’ll still share some unflattering stories about you with her best friend and her mom. And of course, Sheri from the dry cleaners can’t be completely off-limits. Sometimes, men just provide such great material. I mean, really — scared of a cat named Poofta? We just can’t help ourselves.

Elsa K. Simcik is a freelance writer in Atlanta. Her work has appeared in newspapers and magazines such as The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Dallas Morning News, Texas Parks and Wildlife Magazine and CNN.com.

Is the Number of Guys You’ve Slept With Any of Your Man’s Damn Business?

bfaf41ca7f3c1d8062767f6ff8dae4b1 Is the Number of Guys Youve Slept With Any of Your Mans Damn Business?

(Phatforums News / The Stir) — Commercials for What’s Your Number? have been in heavy rotation — rivaling only those feelin’ good Jennifer Hudson Weight Watchers ads, which filter through about twice an hour. The concept of the movie alone makes it look good, from both the entertainment and the pro- standpoint. Naturally, I’m interested in both.

We all know there’s a double standard in play for women to cling to our virtuousness. I can’t think of one culture, one religion, one social convention that encourages us to explore our sexuality. Guys, on the other hand, are slapped and become the heroes of the or barbershop for knocking off as many as they can possibly seduce. It’s a badge of honor for a man to be a ho. They laugh about it. It’s a mark of shame for a woman. No giggles there.

But these are knockin’ boots with somebody, and they’re not all gay, sooo ….

That means just as many chicks are gettin’ it in as they are, but ain’t nobody in the beauty salon or the spa giving them pats on the back for nailing X (or XX or XXX) amount of .

In a typical context, is almost like a burden that guys can’t wait to offload. I know somebody who lost his at 8. That one boggles my mind (and grosses me out a little bit, honestly). I was over there playing with my Barbies and soaking up The Smurfs and this guy, who grew up not that far away from me, was whipping out his baby man part for naughty purposes. Ugh. His mother couldn’t possibly know or I can almost guarantee she would try her best to give him a retroactive beating, more than 20 years after the fact.

So whenever you get into a relationship, you’re already assuming that your guy is not going to be fresh-out-the-box new, especially since, the older you are, the more off-putting it would be for a man to confess that he’s 42 and never been deflowered. Eventually there’s probably going to be conversation about how many people each of you has been with in the past. He’ll proudly unveil his, maybe laugh off your shock if his Wilt Chamberlain-like number makes your jaw drop or clutch your chest like Fred Sanford. Whether it’s sky-high or more average, there’s no ramification for him. You two will go on as planned, lovey dovey and all.

But your past might be the one to throw a monkey wrench in the smooth progression. As the saying goes, when a woman tells her current boo how many previous boos she’s been with, he should multiply that number by two to get the actual figure. So do you stay true to tradition and edit your numbers? Or do you just give him the unadulterated, take-it-or-leave-it truth? And maybe more importantly, is it really any of his business?

Certainly the information isn’t necessary. It doesn’t say anything about who the woman is as a person any more than looking at her bank account balance does. And with the standards of purity and spotlessness imposed to make us be “good girls,” anything more than four, maybe five is going to seem like way, way too many for a dude to digest.

Some guys don’t even want to know at all for that very reason. Why muss up a potentially good thing with the knowledge that your girl has sexed up the equivalent of a small college town population? It’s a comparison most guys don’t want to make, even if they boast the same kinds of numbers on their romantic resume.

I think, even if they don’t want to readily admit it, that men are a little intimidated by a woman who knows her ish in the bedroom because she’s been through enough partners and experiences to know what’s supposed to go down. There’s no margin for error, and some guys need that. Hence why virgins are so darn popular. Not only do they get to be the first to conquer her, but they don’t have to worry about performance issues because, hey, what does she know? She’s new at it. But get to a gal who’s got 20, 30 fellas under her belt, and she knows how to work the system — and when the system isn’t working. There’s room to make comparisons, too, and that’s enough to make the fragile male ego break out in a cold sweat.

Mind Of Man: Why Men Cheat Redux

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(Phatforums News / The Frisky) — Haven’t I written about why men cheat before? Can’t I write about anal sex? Again? For the third or fourth time in my career as a hack? If it weren’t for the perpetually of “why men cheat,” the entire gender- would collapse.

Men cheat because people are . Selfishness is the default setting of the human race. You know how there are people out there who say that they believe, deep down, everyone is good? I am not one of those folks. Right now, as I write this, a husband is lying to his wife. A woman is betraying a friend she’s known for years. A neglected baby wails and an old man to remember the last time anyone visited him. Another woman feels justified in sleeping with her lover because her husband has stopped touching her. A calls up his , a powerful senator who has groomed him since he was an intern, and lies to him, as he lied to his staff, and to the public who elected him.

Over the past two weeks, there’s been an of opinion on the topic of , as if it’s an . Which it isn’t. The story of human civilization is a simple one: people are terrible to one another, and then someone isn’t, someone loves without condition or forgives without exacting a price, and that one person redeems, briefly, the species, who immediately return to their scheming.

But that doesn’t mean I believe that the human spirit is a base singularly concerned with its and survival. What makes humans special on our little bubble floating in space is our ability to defy our nature. If everyone were faithful, faithfulness would have no value. We should be asking why men are faithful or why women are courageous.. Because those small moral decisions shine brighter than all the combined dark acts of men and women.

I’m not defending men. Men cheat. Women cheat. People suck. But the question is not why men cheat. The real question is why are so many of us surprised? Are we all naive? Has our education failed to teach us that emotional and physical brutality are abstractions? We’re surprised by true stories of moral failing because we can’t admit that people suck, and that we suck by association.

I just can’t exploit the silly armchair psychology being passed off as opinion by the fair-weather feminists, and the Sensitive Guy Action Squad and those moralizing scribblers at Search Engine Optimization Depot. Men cheat because they’re narcissists or adolescents or because they’re just so damn sexy. Yes. Yes. Yes. Men also cheat because they can. Because they do and will. We want what we can’t have. We punt on our responsibilities and pray that, just once, our actions will have no consequences. Which is like jumping out of a plane without a parachute and hoping that gravity has the day off.

These easy diagnoses don’t reach for any kind of truth. They just reinforce tribal prejudices. The readers are allowed to smugly sit back and not take any responsibility for the the things that actually bind and unite all humanity: our propensity for sin, self-destruction and vanity. As they, or you, or me, are immune to our own potential for moral failure. Any astrophysicist will tell you that space is a violent mess of imploding stars, swirling gases and colliding rocks. On a cosmic level, the center doesn’t hold. The universe is imperfect, so why should we think we’re any different?

Asking “Why Men Cheat” is asking “Why Conservatives Are Racists” is asking “Why Are Those People So Inferior To Me.” These are not thoughtful questions. These statements are brain filler at best, and at worst, dehumanizing exercises in fear-mongering. Because fear sells. Domesticated fear is, actually, the original anti-anxiety medicine. Nothing soothes quite like a nice dose of “us” versus “them.”

Men cheat. People fail. This is an immutable fact of life. I think we think we’re defined by our successes like weddings, and promotions, and crazy vacations. But I think it’s our disappointments that make us who we are. The way we emotionally adapt to a world that won’t give us what we want is the secret to human uniqueness. Some of us negotiate this chaos and behave exactly as expected — we claw, we hoard, we deceive. Some of us surrender to our lot and find that love is forgiving someone for the embarrassment of being human. Those people are special, and no one writes opinion columns about them.

I’m not a good man. But I try.

Follow John DeVore’s preening narcissism on Twitter.

Pakistan says U.S. pressure on militants must end

bd613de6a0ed372d6473d35a14501a67 Pakistan says U.S. pressure on militants must end

() – The United States must stop blaming Islamabad for regional instability, Pakistan’s prime minister told a gathering of the country’s political leaders on Thursday, as Washington stepped up pressure on the South Asian nation to tackle militancy.

“The should end, and Pakistan’s sensitive national interests should be respected,” Yusuf Raza said in comments carried live on .

Pakistani military officials, who set security and foreign policy, were expected to brief the meeting, where the possibility of unilateral U.S. military steps against militants in Pakistan could be discussed.

“Solutions to issues based on perceptions should be sought through . Pakistan cannot be pressurized to ‘do more.’” Gilani told officials including the head of Pakistan’s military spy service, Lieutenant-general Ahmad Pasha, and General Kayani, arguably the most powerful man in Pakistan.

“Our national interests should be respected in all circumstances. From our side, all doors for negotiations are open. We desire the international community’s cooperation.”

Pakistan says it has made more sacrifices than any other country in the war on militancy, losing about 10,000 soldiers and security forces.

SUPPORT FOR U.S. MILITARY ACTION GROWING

But support is growing in Congress for expanding American military action in Pakistan beyond the drone strikes that already militants, a senior said.

The comments by Senator Lindsey Graham, an influential Republican voice on foreign policy and military affairs, follow remarks by the top U.S. military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, accusing Pakistan last week of supporting the militant network’s September 13 attack on the U.S. embassy in Kabul.

Islamabad, which has received billions of dollars of U.S. aid despite its reluctance to go after the Haqqani network, faces the most intense pressure to tackle militancy since it joined the U.S. “war on terror” a decade ago.

Pakistan’s military faced withering public criticism after the United States’ unilateral raid that killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani garrison town in May.

A similar U.S. operation against militant leaders in North Waziristan on the Afghan border, where American officials say the Haqqanis are based, would be another humiliation for the powerful military.

Graham said in an interview with Reuters that U.S. lawmakers might support military options beyond drone strikes that have been going on for years inside Pakistani territory.

Those options may include using U.S. bomber planes within Pakistan. The South Carolina Republican said he did not advocate sending U.S. ground troops into Pakistan.

“I would say when it comes to defending American troops, you don’t want to limit yourself,” Graham said. “This is not a boots-on-the-ground engagement — I’m not talking about that, but we have a lot of assets beyond drones.”

Graham said U.S. lawmakers will think about stepping up the military pressure. “If people believe it’s gotten to the point that is the only way really to protect our interests, I think there would be a lot of support,” he said.

REVIEWING AID

Pakistan was designated a major non-NATO ally by the United States for its support of coalition military operations in Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

But their relationship is marred by mistrust. Pakistan, regarded as critical to U.S. efforts to stabilize Afghanistan, is often described as an unreliable partner.

Following U.S. accusations that some in the Pakistani government have aided anti-U.S. militants, Congress is re-evaluating its 2009 promise to triple non-military aid to Pakistan to a total of $7.5 billion over five years.

The non-military aid came on top of billions in security assistance Washington has provided since 2001, and is now rethinking as well.

Any unilateral U.S. military action would deepen anti-American sentiment which already runs high in Pakistan over drone strikes and other issues.

Many people question why thousands of Pakistani soldiers have died fighting what they believe is strictly America’s war on militants since the September 11, 2001 attacks.

Pakistani politicians will have those sentiments in mind when they formulate a message for the United States in the all-party talks.

The Haqqani network is allied with Afghanistan’s Taliban and is believed to have close links to al Qaeda. It fights U.S. and NATO forces in eastern Afghanistan.

The group’s leader says it is no longer based in North Waziristan and feels secure operating in Afghanistan after making battlefield gains.

Pakistan has vowed to help all sides create peace in Afghanistan, but Kabul has been deeply distrustful of Islamabad’s objectives.

(Additional reporting by Zeeshan Haider and Augustine Anthony in Islamabad, Mirwais Harooni in Kabul and Missy Ryan and Susan Cornwall in Washington; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by John Chalmers and Sanjeev Miglani)

US ambassador Robert Ford pelted with tomatoes in Syria

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(Phatforums News / BBC News) — Supporters of Syrian al-Assad have pelted US ambassador with tomatoes as he met an in Damascus.

Veteran politician Hassan Abdul Azim said about 100 protesters tried to get into his office as Mr Ford arrived and then surrounded it, trapping him.

Mr Ford, who has been accused of inciting protests, was still awaiting a two hours later.

Meanwhile, Syria has accused the US of inciting violence against its military.

“Recent statements from American … clearly indicate that the United States is involved in encouraging armed groups to practice violence against the Syrian Arab Army,” a foreign said.

It is thought the statement was referring to comments made by US state department spokesman , who said on Tuesday that it was “not surprising” that the opposition were using violence against the military.

Mr Ford has angered Damascus in the past, notably by visiting the central city of Hama with his in July.

It led to both the French and US embassies coming under attack from supporters of the Assad regime.

International pressure

Mr Abdul Azim, who heads the outlawed Arab Socialist Democratic Union party, said the ambassador’s arrival at his office on Thursday led to a demonstration.

“As soon as the ambassador came in at around 11:00 (08:00 GMT), we heard a noise outside and hostile slogans being chanted. The demonstrators tried to attack the office,” he told .

Syria is under international pressure to stop using force to suppress protests that began six months ago.

The UN estimates that more than 2,700 people have been killed across Syria since the crackdown began.

And the UN Security Council is set to vote on a Europe-led resolution which demand an “immediate end to all violence” by the state, and threatens more sanctions against and his if they do not comply.

The EU and US both already have sanctions in place.

Man, 26, charged in plot to bomb Pentagon using model airplane

1892a077a16c8ce78ec2ae7f77d1cc61 Man, 26, charged in plot to bomb Pentagon using model airplane

Model planes used as ?
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Rezwan Ferdaus, 26, a U.S. citizen, is charged in plot to bomb Pentagon and Capitol
He was allegedly going to use a $6,500 remote-controlled plane laden with explosives
He is accused of pledging jihad against the United States
But authorities say he had no real ties to al Qaeda and wasn’t a real threat

() — A 26-year-old Massachusetts man with a physics degree was arrested and charged Wednesday with plotting an attack on the Pentagon and the U.S. Capitol with a remote-controlled model aircraft, authorities said.

Rezwan Ferdaus, a U.S. citizen from Ashland, Massachusetts, planned to use model aircraft filled with C-4 , authorities said.

As a result of an undercover , Ferdaus, who has a physics degree from Northeastern University in Boston, was charged with attempting to provide and resources to al Qaeda for attacks on U.S. soldiers overseas, authorities said.

His federal public defender couldn’t be reached immediately for comment.

A law enforcement official said Ferdaus posed no immediate danger to the public because undercover operatives kept in close contact with him.

“There is no information to indicate he was connected to a . It appears he was radicalized watching videos on the internet. He was given the opportunity to back down, but he never wavered” from his intention to carry out the attacks, the source said.

Analysis: Model planes as weapons of terror

The investigation also involved a cooperating witness, and authorities began recording conversations between that witness and Ferdaus in January, authorities said.

Ferdaus began planning a violent “jihad” against America in early 2010, authorities said, and he began supplying the FBI undercover agents with cell phones rigged to act as electric switches for improved explosive devices, intended to be used to kill U.S. soldiers overseas.

Undercover federal agents also gave Ferdaus 25 pounds of fake C-4 explosives. Only a very small amount of it was the real thing, the source said.

The FBI agents also gave Ferdaus six AK-47 assault rifles and three grenades, but they weren’t functional, the source said.

Between May and this month, Ferdaus also ordered and acquired a $6,500 remote-controlled aircraft, an F-86 Sabre, that he kept in a rented storage facility in Framingham, Massachusetts, that he maintained under a false name, authorities said. He also planned to use other remote-controlled models of military aircraft, authorities said. The models he planned to use are about one-tenth the size of the actual aircraft.

Despite coming into possession of the plane, another law enforcement official said, “The person was never really a threat.”

Ferdaus is unmarried with no children, authorities said.

A federal magistrate in Worcester, Massachusetts, on Wednesday ordered Ferdaus to be held until Monday, when a detention hearing is scheduled, authorities said.

Can you read your partner’s mind?

a37af8e0e72f43f0cafa3fd1533b4029 Can you read your partner’s mind?

(Phatforums News / Match.com) – Mind reading isn’t just for psychics on cable TV. It isn’t easy, but with the help of some learned scientists, you might just guess correctly the next time you try to see what’s going on behind your partner’s eyes.

First, the : on the whole, people are pretty poor at reading each other’s minds. We can figure what a stranger is thinking a mere 20 percent of the time, and that number only goes up to 35 percent when it’s a close friend or , according to an article titled “Mind Reading” published in .

Furthermore, women are not any better at thought-sleuthing than men. They are just more motivated to try. The good news, however, is that there are ways to improve your empathic accuracy, and they don’t require you to spend a week in at a retreat trying to describe the color of your aura. Read on for some tips to help your get the job done.

Pay attention to the top half of your honey’s face We are more apt to display social emotions (meaning, “I’m being polite and looking interested”) with our smiles and the lower part of our faces. This leaves our eyes and to tell the real story. “Think about a giving a party who has a splitting headache, trying to look like she is enjoying herself,” explains Ross Buck, Ph.D., from the Communication Sciences and Psychology department of the . “Her ‘true’ feelings might be displayed by a flicker of a ‘distress ’ — bringing the eyebrows together and up at the midline, so that there are often vertical wrinkles between the eyebrows and horizontal wrinkles in the center of the . This can occur even while the person is smiling.” By keeping an eye on the top half of your ’s face, you’ll learn more about what’s going on in his or her head.

Ask directly for feedback — the right way
It’s better to ask, “Do you feel a little nervous?” than to aggressively say, “You look nervous.” Dr. William Ickes, Professor of Psychology at the University of Texas at Arlington, explains: “The presumptuous way to seek feedback would be: ‘I’ll bet that you are thinking X.’ [This] is more likely to lead to a put-down or a flat denial, regardless of whether you are right or wrong.” Being an accurate mind-reader, it seems, won’t help you very much if you don’t use your power sensitively.

One last tip: Be expressive yourself — in your words, gestures, and your expressions. Other people tend to match their conversational partner’s level of expressiveness, so the more information you give, the more you’ll get in return!

Laura Schaefer is the author of Man with Farm Seeks Woman with Tractor: The Best and Worst Personal Ads of All Time.