May 24, 2013

Obama to give counterterrorism speech Thursday

81c58ab992fccf1d3af92373e96bfe7c Obama to give counterterrorism speech Thursday

(PhatzNewsRoom / USA Today) — President delivers a counterterrorism speech Thursday that may also be a defense of two much criticized programs: strikes and the terrorism prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The speech is a follow-up to Obama’s State of the Union pledge to “continue to engage Congress to ensure not only that our targeting, detention and prosecution of terrorists remains consistent with our laws and , but that our efforts are even more transparent to the American people and to the world.”

The president speaks Thursday at the in Washington, D.C.

The speech may also touch on a more recent controversy: The Justice Department seizure of of journalists from the Associated Press, part of an investigation into national .

Civil libertarians have also attacked the administration over drone strikes against terrorist suspects, and the continued existence of the prison at Guantanamo Bay, which Obama had pledged to close during his first year in office.

Obama has not said much about the drone program, but aides have said that attacks have been carefully planned and specifically targeted on members of terrorist groups.

As for Gitmo, Obama and aides note that have blocked efforts to transfer some suspects to the United States for confinement and trial.

As Obama prepares his speech, the Washington Post reports:

“A White House official … said Obama will ‘discuss our broad counterterrorism policy, including our military, diplomatic, intelligence and legal efforts.’

“‘He will review the state of the threats we face, particularly as the al-Qaeda core has weakened but new dangers have emerged,’ the official said. ‘He will discuss the policy and under which we take action against terrorist threats, including the use of drones. And he will review our detention policy and efforts to close the at Guantanamo Bay.’ …

“The address will serve as a second-term bookend to his National Archives speech in 2009, when he argued that U.S. national security interests do not have to conflict with the country’s commitment to human rights and the rule of law.

“Since then, though, Obama has found it difficult at times to balance his counterterrorism policies with the values he has said are essential to restoring the U.S. image abroad.”

Breaking News: Monster Oklahoma tornado kills 51

 Breaking News: Monster Oklahoma tornado kills 51
A woman carries her child through a field Monday near the collapsed Plaza in Moore, Okla. A tornado as much as a mile wide, with winds up to 200 mph roared through the Oklahoma , flattening entire neighborhoods, setting and landing a direct blow on an elementary school. Sue Ogrocki, AP

Story Highlights

Students rescued from of elementary school in suburb of Moore
Massive twister was on ground for 40 minutes
Winds estimated at up to 200 mph

(PhatzNewsRoom / AP / USA Today) — A massive, mile-wide tornado with winds up to 200 mph killed at least 51 people Monday afternoon during 40 terrifying minutes of destruction across southern Oklahoma City and its suburbs.

The state ’s office confirmed the number of deaths and said the toll was expected to rise.

was reported in Moore, where two were destroyed, including one that took a direct hit. Several children were pulled alive from the rubble of Plaza Towers Elementary, but there were no immediate reports of rescues or casualties at Briarwood Elementary.

Three hospitals reported treating at least 120 injured, including about 70 children, some from the Plaza .

At Integris Southwest Medical Center, 10 of 37 patients were in critical condition, a spokeswoman told the . The hospital was treating five children, including two rescued from the elementary school. The OU Medical Center was treating 20 patients, including eight children.

More than 60 patients were being treated at Norman Regional Medical Center, some in critical condition, said spokeswoman Kelly Wells.

One patient was 9-year-old Kaileigh Hawkins, who was at one of the schools destroyed by the twister, Wells said. She is doing fine, have been unable to locate her parents.

The twister heavily damaged Moore Medical Center, ripping off its roof but causing no injuries. Staff had to relocate 30 patients to nearby Norman and another hospital.

A water treatment was knocked offline, and residents and businesses in southeastern Oklahoma City were advised to stop using water.

The preliminary rating of the tornado that hit Moore at 3:17 p.m. CT (4:17 p.m. T) is at least an EF-4, which means wind speeds from 166 to 200 mph, the National Weather Service said.

On May 3, 1999, a record-setting EF-5 tornado obliterated the city of 55,000 with winds measured at 318 mph, the highest ever on the earth’s surface. The storm killed 36 people, injured hundreds, and caused about $1 billion in damages.

The National Weather Service in Norman, Okla., said a tornado warning was in effect Monday afternoon for 16 minutes before the twister developed.

VIDEO: Time lapse of tornado

Rescuers are “going house to house and block to block to try and find any survivors that are out there and trapped,” said state emergency management spokesman Jerry Lojka.

“We can only imagine that there are still many others there that are unaccounted for,” he said.

Lojka said emergency management officials were working from an underground command center in Oklahoma City and did not yet know how many students were in the two elementary schools in Moore that were destroyed.

Earlier in the day, Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, Arkansas and Missouri had been under a tornado watch, meaning that conditions were favorable for tornadoes to develop within the next few hours.

The National Weather Service said it was tracking “a large and extremely dangerous tornado” just west of Moore, The storm was moving to the northeast, and forecasters said they expected “large, destructive hail up to tennis ball size.”

Video aired by KFOR-TV showed a massive, dark funnel-shaped cloud over the area and, later, scenes of massive destruction. Entire neighborhoods were flattened.

On Sunday, a tornado packing winds as high as 200 mph, left two people dead in Oklahoma. Tornadoes and high winds injured more than 20 in the region.

More than 60 million Americans are at risk of severe storms Monday, with the primary targets including Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas, the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center warned.

“Damaging wind gusts, large hail and tornadoes are possible in all areas,” Weather Channel meteorologist Kevin Roth said.

Besides Oklahoma City, other cities at risk from severe weather Monday included Tulsa, St. Louis, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Minneapolis, said AccuWeather meteorologist Meghan Evans. Chicago, Detroit, Dallas and Indianapolis also are in the danger zone.

Sunday, there were 24 reports of tornadoes in five states, the Storm Prediction Center said. “In what has otherwise been a quiet spring for tornadoes, May 19 appeared to have been the second-most active day for tornadoes in the nation so far in 2013,” Weather Channel meteorologist Jon Erdman said.

So far this year — not including this most recent five-day outbreak — severe storms have caused $3.5 billion in economic losses in the USA, says meteorologist Steve Bowen of global reinsurance firm Aon Benfield. Bowen says. Of that $3.5 billion, at least $2 billion was covered by insurance.

“By the time the current storm system finally winds down by the middle of this week, I wouldn’t be surprised if this ends up as the costliest U.S. natural disaster event we’ve seen so far in 2013,” said meteorologist Steve Bowen of global reinsurance firm Aon Benfield.

“Recent full-year severe weather-related insured losses were roughly $27 billion in 2011 and $15 billion in 2012 – the two costliest years on record,” Bowen said. By this definition, “severe” weather means damage from thunderstorms or tornadoes, and does not include damage from hurricanes.

The storms in Oklahoma on Sunday that ripped off roofs and tossed big trucks like toys were part of a severe weather outbreak that stretched from Texas to Minnesota. Twisters were also reported Sunday in Iowa and Kansas.

The killer tornado that flattened portions of Shawnee, Okla., had wind speeds that were estimated as high as 200 mph, according to the National Weather Service.

Across Oklahoma, 21 people were injured, not including those who suffered bumps and bruises and chose not to visit a hospital, said Keli Cain, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management. Booth said six at Steelman Estates were hurt.

Gov. Mary Fallin declared an emergency for 16 Oklahoma counties.

Interstate 40 was closed by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol after winds overturned semi-tractor trailer trucks and other vehicles, Newsok.com reported.

KFOR-TV showed footage of homes damaged and cars and trucks flipped from highways near Shawnee. Other video showed flashes from electrical transformers blowing out as they were hit by high winds or debris from the tornado near Edmond.

A tornado touched down in Golden City, Mo., early Monday morning and tore through two counties, Barton County Emergency Management Director Tom Ryan told CNN.

Meteorologist Kurt Kotenberg said a large low-pressure system is parking itself over the middle of the country and “really isn’t going to move much over the course of the next few days. … It’s basically going to keep pulling up that nice Gulf (of Mexico) moisture that keeps fueling everything.”

The threat of twisters comes less than a week after tornadoes left six dead, dozens injured and hundreds of homes destroyed in Texas and just shy of the two-year anniversary of the Joplin, Mo., twister.

Contributing: Doug Stanglin , USA TODAY; The Associated Press;

NASCAR’s All-Star Race suffers from predictability

0a7b9b30b82f637719035fbfeab38f74 NASCAR’s All Star Race suffers from predictability

Story Highlights

Repave at eight years ago has taken edge out of event
, Matt Kenseth, and also leading for Coke 600 win
Busch was last driver to sweep All-Star Race and Coke 600, in 2010

(PhatzRadio / ) — CONCORD, N.C. — Once hailed as the most distinctive and exciting of any showcase in , ’s Sprint All-Star Race actually has become the most predictable.

Put yourself on the front row entering the , seize the lead early in the 10-lap shootout and put your car in the wind for a $1 million payday.

It’s how won the event for the second – and a record fourth overall – and even he concedes the spectacle at Charlotte Motor Speedway – which has one lead change during the final five laps in eight All-Star Races since the 1.5-mile oval was repaved — needs fixing.

A solution is tricky.

“I really don’t know what to do at this point,” Johnson said. “I felt the four segments beforehand there’s a lot of guys on different strategies, (and) that made for . You’re pinned in on a 1.5-mile track with a 10-lap shootout, your options are limited to create multiple passes for the win.”

There was plenty of upside for Johnson, who positioned himself as the favorite to win his first Coca-Cola 600 since 2005 by breaking a tie with and for most all-star wins.

Just as Charlotte’s fresh asphalt – which produces heavy grip, high speeds and minimal tire wear – hasn’t been conducive to the fender-banging billed as an All-Star Race staple, it also hasn’t been kind to Johnson’s No. 48 Chevrolet, which once ruled the track in winning five of six races from 2003-05.

“The track is just so different now, and we had it (figured) out,” he said. “We knew literally what time in the afternoon, what the adjustment needed to be made to the car, and it was like clockwork. We feel like we can find it again, and we’re knocking on the door, but we’re one of five (drivers) that can make something happen here now, where before we had a pretty strict advantage.”

Other drivers who stamped themselves as 600 contenders over the weekend were Kasey Kahne (whom Johnson outdueled on the final restart), Matt Kenseth, pole-sitter and Kurt Busch, whose No. 78 Chevrolet might have been the most dominant Saturday.

Busch was the most recent driver to sweep the All-Star/Coke 600 doubleheader (in 2010), but the All-Star Race isn’t necessarily a precursor for the longest race in ’s premier series. By virtue of being split into five segments – none longer than 20 laps, or less than half a fuel run – it features none of the strategy plays that often determine the winner of Sunday’s Coke 600.

“It’s a lot different,” said Chad Knaus, Johnson’s crew chief. “You know when the cautions are coming (in the All-Star Race). You can kind of sit back and strategize. In a normal race, we have no idea what’s going to happen. Having a fast car clearly and fast pit stops makes a huge difference, so if we can translate what we had in this race car (to) next week, I think we’ll have a good shot at it.”

Though the All-Star win was another testament to a history-making career that also includes five championships (and counting), Johnson admitted he likely wouldn’t have won if his pit crew’s swift work on a mandatory four-tire stop before the hadn’t put him beside Kahne for the final green flag.

Johnson and many drivers had warned of this scenario, and many postrace comments centered on how to solve it. Via an informal survey he conducted on Twitter, Clint Bowyer concluded Sunday that fans would like the event moved to Bristol Motor Speedway. A venue change might seem drastic for an event that has been held at Charlotte for 28 of its 29 editions, but myriad format changes haven’t addressed the lack of late-race drama.

Knaus had another radical solution: Bringing an alternate tire compound that would be softer, which would wear more quickly on a Charlotte surface that has aged slowly and is much less abrasive than most tracks.

“When those tires fall off, that’s when you’re going to start to see some passing, and I think it could be very exciting to see who plays the tire strategy,” Knaus said. “I don’t foresee it because Goodyear is in a tough spot. They have to build a tire that’s going to last. I’m just saying it would make it exciting, because the only way you’re going to get passing is to have tire (wear).”

NASCAR’s All-Star Race suffers from predictability is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NASCAR’s All Star Race suffers from predictability  NASCAR’s All Star Race suffers from predictability  NASCAR’s All Star Race suffers from predictability  NASCAR’s All Star Race suffers from predictability  NASCAR’s All Star Race suffers from predictability

 NASCAR’s All Star Race suffers from predictability

Top adviser defends White House in IRS scandal

bbac1bf48cb619a3265144675a63865f Top adviser defends White House in IRS scandal

Story Highlights

Senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer calls actions “outrageous and inexcusable”
Administration will work with Congress on “legitimate
plans a hearing Wednesday

(PhatzNewsRoom / )
— President and his team are looking to move past last week’s parade of scandal stories, but it won’t be easy.

White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer hit the talk show circuit Sunday, but faced more questions about the than about the economy and national security, and made clear they won’t let the issue fade away.

Pfeiffer said the White House did not know about IRS targeting of conservative groups until it was recently alerted about an on-going Inspector General investigation.

The IRS admitted May 10 that it had a separate process for reviewing applications for tax-exempt status submitted by groups with “Tea Party” and related terms in their names. In some cases it also sent intrusive and inappropriate questionnaires to those groups. The inspector general issued a report about the matter last week.

Calling IRS actions “outrageous and inexcusable,” Pfeiffer told ABC’s This Week that the administration would work with Congress on “legitimate oversight” — but “what we’re not going to participate in is partisan fishing expeditions designed to distract from the real issues at hand.”

Regardless of when the president first learned of the investigations, Pfeiffer said, the president wants to ensure such activities were not repeated. “It was stopped and it needs to be fixed to ensure it never happens again,” Pfeiffer said.

On NBC’s , Pfeiffer said Republicans are trying “to drag Washington into a swamp of partisan fishing expeditions, trumped-up hearings and .”

Republicans are gearing up for more , trying to find out if any high-ranking Obama administration or knew about the targeting of conservative groups.

“This is just the beginning of this investigation,” said Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., on Fox News Sunday.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told NBC that the recent allegations reflect a “culture of intimidation” within the Obama administration.

“What we’re talking about here is an attitude that the government knows best,” McConnell said. “And if we start criticizing, you get targeted.”

The Senate Finance Committee has scheduled a hearing Tuesday featuring the first appearance by former IRS commissioner Douglas Shulman since the scandal broke.

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform plans a hearing Wednesday that is scheduled to include Shulman and Lois Lerner, director of exempt organizations for the IRS. Lerner is the official who first announced 10 days ago the targeting had taken place.

In his string of Sunday interviews, Pfeiffer noted that Obama has installed a new temporary director of the IRS, and authorized a 30-day review of agency operation. He told Fox that there will be “a top-down review of the IRS, and everything will be looked at.”

That’s not sufficient, said Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, on ABC’s This Week. “I think a special counsel is going to wind up being necessary,” he said.

As Obama tries to move past the scandal, his schedule this week includes a meeting with the president of Burma, a speech on counterterrorism and a commencement address at the U.S. Naval Academy.

Contributing: The Associated Press

Syrian rebel leader: U.S. will act if conflict widens

50316f5c9c7bc2c78b8caf57d70ad61f Syrian rebel leader: U.S. will act if conflict widens

Story Highlights

Syrian activists say as many as 94,000 people have died in the two-year conflict
SNC plagued by , tepid international backing, the involvement of rebels in
Analyst: SNC leader just a for the true powers running the agenda

(PhatzNewsRoom / ) — The leader of the Syrian opposition says the conflict engulfing the country will draw in neighboring states before international players such as the U.S. move in to help bring about its end.

In his first sit-down interview since being named of the for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces (SNC) last month, George said only when the wider region is pulled into the war will the U.S. government change its stance on arming rebels and establishing a “no fly” zone. And, he says, it’s looking increasingly likely that the conflict will widen.

“Now there is one country with 23 million people involved,” he said. “In time, if the situation continues, there will be five countries and 80 million people involved in this conflict. When this happens, and when Israel is involved, then America will act.”

Syrian activists say as many as 94,000 people have died in the two-year conflict, which has turned increasingly violent and sectarian in recent months.

Hilal Khashan, a professor of political studies at the American University of Beirut, blames the lack of a response from Western governments for allowing the conflict to deteriorate.

“It was the nonchalant approach of the West to the Syrian conflict that, among other factors, has contributed to the of the conflict and the spread of gruesome practices,” he said. “After all, the regime got away with its own brutality.”

Despite attempts by figures in the CIA and to get the U.S. more actively involved in supporting rebel groups, the White House remains wary of becoming embroiled in another .

The conflict has already destabilized fragile political activities in neighboring Lebanon, and last week 51 people were killed in two car bombs in Turkey that officials blamed on supporters of Syrian President Bashar al Assad.

Sunni-Shia divisions in the region have been exacerbated by the role played by the Shia-Lebanese group Hezbollah, which experts say is currently fighting on the side of the Syrian regime in the western part of the country.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar, two Sunni monarchies, have been instrumental in providing cash and weapons to the mostly Sunni rebel groups fighting the Syrian government. With Assad backed by Iran and Hezbollah, and rebels by Gulf states, Sabra says he believes a long, sectarian war involving all sides may be imminent.

The SNC itself has been plagued by resignations, tepid international backing and, recently, the involvement of rebels in atrocities against government soldiers.

This week, footage emerged of a rebel fighter in Homs province cutting out and eating the body parts of a dead government soldier. In the audio accompanying the video clip and obtained by Time magazine, the rebel spoke with a vicious sectarian hatred directed at Assad and Syria’s Alawite community.

Sabra admitted he hadn’t seen the video but said the SNC has given direction to rebel groups to help combat extremist activities and will provide instruction to mid-level fighters on the laws of war.

Sabra was named interim chief of the SNC following the resignation of Sheikh Moaz al-Khateeb in March. Al-Khateeb cited outside forces seeking to control the activities of the opposition — a veiled reference to Saudi Arabia and Qatar — as a main reason for stepping down. Sabra said he doesn’t see al-Khateeb — a charismatic figure popular among many Syrians — returning to the SNC.

“Sheikh al-Khateeb didn’t come from politics — he thinks with his heart and has little time for politics.”

Sabra, who fled Syria in December 2011 after spending time in prison for his activities during the revolt, is skeptical of a peace initiative drawn up by Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov this month.

Sabra said opposition figures won’t attend a U.N. meeting in Geneva in June, where the initiative is expected to be set in place, without first seeing an agenda and the names of those invited.

Damascus — also invited to send representatives even as a U.N. resolution passed Wednesday condemning its use of heavy weapons in the conflict — has similarly asked for more details about the conference before committing.

On Thursday, Syrian opposition leaders will gather in Istanbul to elect a new president of the council, and Sabra is one of several front-runners.

David Butter, analyst and former fellow at the London-based think tank Chatham House, said

“(Sabra’s) advantage internally for opposition figures is that he’s much more reliable — al-Khateeb went off message,” Butter said. “But whoever’s going to lead the opposition is always going to be just a frontman.”

Suspected U.S. drone in Yemen kills 4 militants / In Turkey, anger as Syrian conflict spills over

3e2d63d9818e43c88785eed1760bf872 Suspected U.S. drone in Yemen kills 4 militants / In Turkey, anger as Syrian conflict spills over

Story Highlights

A Yemeni official said the attack took place in the Abyan province
attacks in Yemen have spiked since the new U.S.-backed president took power last year
Al-Qaeda in Yemen is considered one of the most active and dangerous branches

SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Yemeni say a suspected U.S. drone strike killed four al-Qaeda militants in the country’s south.

The officials say the attack took place around dawn Saturday in an area called Deyfa in Abyan province. Officials spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to brief the media.

Yemeni forces battled al-Qaeda in Abyan province last year, routing out militants from major cities that al-Qaeda had overrun during the country’s 2011 . The militants fled to surrounding mountainous areas.

According to several research groups and the Associated Press’s own reporting, there has been a in such drone strikes in Yemen since the country’s new U.S.-backed president assumed power early last year.

Washington says al-Qaeda in Yemen is among the group’s most dangerous and active branches worldwide.

7f23f57575a98c752c182b46d681af6d Suspected U.S. drone in Yemen kills 4 militants / In Turkey, anger as Syrian conflict spills over
Riot policemen face protesters Saturday in Reyhanli, Turkey, during funerals for victims of a that went off May 11.(Photo: AFP/)

In Turkey, anger as Syrian conflict spills over

Story Highlights

believes Mihrac Ural is behind the Reyhanli attacks
Opposition groups hope to capitalize on diminishing support for Erdogan’s policy on Syria
Reyhanli serves as a corridor for going into Syria and refugees coming out

(PhatzNewsRoom / ) — REYHANLI, Turkey — It almost looked like a normal day for the mayor of Reyhanli as Hüseyin Can Sanverdi wore a three-piece suit while sitting in his stately city hall office where the phone rang off the hook.

But it was anything but normal: All windows in the room had been blown out by a car bomb three days earlier, the first of two attacks that claimed some 50 lives and injured hundreds more in the deadliest attack on Turkish soil in more than 20 years.

Reyhanli sits at the border with Syria, where an increasingly brutal civil war has spilled over in an action that, many Turks say, demands international response.

“The international community and the U.S. definitely have to help Turkey with the situation,” said Sanverdi, raising his voice to be heard over the bulldozers that worked frenetically scraping rubble from the blast into piles for disposal. The building would be fully functional again in a week, he said, but Turkey could no longer handle the problem on the other side of the border alone.

President and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan met at the White House on Thursday, emerging later to say they remain opposed to the regime of Syrian President Bashar al Assad and want his removal. But neither offered any initiatives to make that happen.

Turkey has endured several attacks by Syria and many are concerned the attacks will only increase.

“They attacked us because Reyhanli cooperates so much with the Syrian people and sends so much aid,” Sanverdi says. “For two years there have never been any problems here.”

The Turkish government believes that Mihrac Ural — a fugitive Turkish Alawite who found asylum in Syria in 1980 — is behind the Reyhanli attacks.

Officials have also implicated Ural in a massacre in the coastal town of Baniyas, Syria, two weeks ago. “Those who committed the Baniyas massacre are also responsible for these attacks,” Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on May 12, referring to the twin car bombings here.

At the site of the more powerful second bombing, a busy street corner at a roundabout known for its artificial tree, tensions remain high less than a week after the explosion. A minor traffic snafu turns into a man getting beaten violently, but police intervene quickly.

Some Turks have become violent, but many others simply want to stop playing such a large role in Syria’s war. Political opposition groups hope to capitalize on diminishing public support for Erdogan’s policy on Syria.

Semih Iseri, a 21-year-old international relations student, came to Reyhanli from Ankara to see for himself what is happening in his country. As he paces around on shattered glass and bloodstains near the top floor of a building that overlooks the bomb site, he blames the Free Syrian Army (FSA) for the attack, and Erdogan’s government for supporting the rebels, whom he calls “terrorists.”

“There is an Arab Spring, or whatever you want to call it, but that’s Assad’s business. It’s Syria’s business. It’s not our business, but we are intervening because Erdogan wants to make another Ottoman Empire. The West says we should declare war on Syria, but we don’t want war. We are not a strong country.” says Iseri, a member of the ADD (Kemalist Thought Party), an opposition group.

Gesturing toward the taped-off wreckage — where beds in bedrooms are visible after entire sides of the buildings were torn off by the blast — Iseri says, “That’s the Ottoman Empire.”

Reyhanli sits at the Syrian border, serving as a corridor for humanitarian aid going into Syria and refugees coming out. Atmeh, just over the border on the Syrian side, is also known for its high number of foreign fighters and mujahideen, Muslims who come from elsewhere in the world to pursue jihad in Syria.

The town has one main strip and three roundabouts. Its pre-Arab-Spring population of 60,000 has nearly doubled as some 40,000 Syrians have escaped the increasingly brutal civil war at home.

As the circle of players in Syria’s civil war continues to grow, the questions surrounding the Reyhanli attacks — who did it, what their goals were, why they chose Reyhanli, and why so many Turks and so few Syrians perished — are significant for determining the future of the Syrian conflict and the role of Turkey in it.

While Reyhanli’s Turks — as well as the Syrians who have found refuge here — are nearly 100% Sunni, Reyhanli is in Hatay province, which has many Alawites as well. Not far away is Syria’s Latakia city, the homeland of the Alawites, the Shia offshoot sect to which the ruling Assad family belongs.

As Syria’s civil war has grown more and more sectarian, with largely Sunni rebels pitted against an Alawite regime, ordinary citizens have succumbed to anger and hatred based on sect as well.

Antakya, the seat of Turkey’s Hatay province, which used to be part of Syria, is about 30% Alawi.

Reyhanli’s economy has taken off as a result of its proximity to the Syrian border.

Houses that used to be rented out for $100 a month now go for $700, said Yasir Alsyed, an attorney who used to defend political prisoners before military courts in Syria.

Alsyed left Aleppo nearly a year and a half ago and has lived for eight months in Reyhanli, where he directs a rehabilitation center for disabled Syrians. In Antakya, most merchants are Alawi, he explained, and as all the aid organizations began basing themselves in Reyhanli, the trade for Sunnis went up, and the trade for Alawis in Antakya went down.

Then, Alsyed said, as the civil war in Syria took an increasingly sectarian tone, “now Sunnis always look for Sunni shops; they won’t buy from Alawis in Antakya. It wasn’t like this before.”

“Three days ago, the situation here became terrible. I haven’t left home since then,” said Hassan Abu Hamzi, a 25-year-old aid worker and former FSAfighter, as he sat in the apartment he has lived in for the last six months with his brother, sister and mother.

Syrians have walled themselves up inside their homes since the bombings spurred Turks in Reyhanli to attack Syrians in the streets and target cars with Syrian license plates. “It’s not everybody,” Abu Hamzi said, “just some violent people.”

Concerning the future of Syria, Abu Hamzi said, “there’s no choice. It’s either us [the Sunnis] or the Alawis.”

General: Threat from homemade bombs here to stay

fc80361876630195bb9cb675faa6fbda General: Threat from homemade bombs here to stay
An Army team transfers the remains of Spc. Thomas P. Murach May 7 at Dover Air Force Base, Del. Murach, 22, of Meridian, Idaho, died of injuries sustained when an IED struck his vehicle in Afghanistan’s .(Photo: Steve Ruark, AP)

Story Highlights

General who led the Pentagon’s anti-IED command is retiring
bombing showed how easy the devices are to make
Pakistan doing better at helping cut fertilizer shipments to Afghanistan

(PhatzRadio / )
— WASHINGTON — The threat from — the top killer of U.S. and Iraq — will persist for decades and likely become a more prevalent menace domestically, according to the top Pentagon officer charged with fighting improvised explosive devices.

Lt. Gen. Michael Barbero, who retired Friday, talked about IEDs and the threat they pose to U.S. citizens, their toll in Afghanistan, Syria and elsewhere in a recent interview.

“This is here to stay,” said Barbero, who leads the (JIEDDO). “It’s too cheap, too readily available, a whole generation of . Boston is not an anomaly.”

The homemade bombs detonated at the Boston Marathon killed three people and wounded more than 200 others, many of whom had limbs severed by the shrapnel of bombs cobbled together with and nails.

The United States ranks in the top five among countries reporting IED attacks, Barbero said. Most of the domestic attacks involve pipe bombs on timers, he said. The attempted attack on New York’s Times Square in 2010 involved a Nissan Pathfinder filled with propane, gasoline and fertilizer. Passersby alerted police, and the bomb failed to explode. Faisal Shahzad is serving a life sentence for the attempted attack.

“We were lucky,” Barbero said. “A couple hundred pounds in the middle of Times Square? Very bad, very bad. But he screwed up the fusing, and we had good police work.”

The best way to fight the IED threat is to dismantle bomb-making networks by tracing them to IEDs through forensic evidence such as fingerprints and DNA, Barbero said. He worries that lessons learned in Iraq and Afghanistan will be lost if JIEDDO is allowed to wither.

“It removes the adversaries’ greatest advantage: anonymity,” he said. “I’m concerned that’s not sufficiently funded. Basic forensics, labs. That’s a game changer at the tactical level.”

JIEDDO analysts helped analyze the Boston bombs, Barbero said. The organization also probes social networks — the command-and-control vehicle for bomb-making networks.

Peter Singer, director of the Center for 21st Century Security and Intelligence at the Brookings Institution, said Barbero’s concern about the long-term threat of IEDs is on target. “Unfortunately, the past data and likely future trends show that IEDs are here to stay, both on battlefields abroad and in terror cases at home,” he said.

Capabilities that JIEDDO has will continue to be in demand. Officials will have to decide if JIEDDO remains in place or its expertise is parceled out to other parts of government, Singer said.

Elsewhere, IEDs continue to kill and maim:

• Afghanistan. A homemade bomb killed five U.S. soldiers May 4 in a Stryker combat vehicle. The bomb was big, “a couple hundred pounds,” and well placed, Barbero said. “Smart enemy,” he said. “They know capabilities we have.”

• Syria. Al-Qaeda in Iraq has shared IED tactics with fighters in Syria, Barbero said. Other are spreading bomb-making materials and techniques with militants in North Africa. “As I look at every global hot spot, it is the weapon of choice,” Barbero said. “In Syria we should not be surprised.”

• Pakistan. Efforts to stem the flow of fertilizer — the main ingredient in homemade explosives used in Afghanistan — have started to pay off, Barbero said. Last April, 86% of IEDs in Afghanistan used homemade explosives, almost all of which could be traced to plants in Pakistan. That has dropped to 80% this year, according to JIEDDO. He credited better relations with the Pakistani military.

Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history

b2ba7c9a5d2afba6aff3e2a09be90056 Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history

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hasn’t had a since Affirmed in 1978
Trainer had not Triple Crown in his thoughts
No. 1 post position has not been kind to Preakness runners

(PhatzRadio / ) — BALTIMORE – Trainer Shug McGaughey spent most of his adult life dreaming and working toward someday winning the in his home state. The Lexington product did not fantasize about sweeping the Triple Crown.

Hey, even dreams have their limits.

Two weeks ago at , on a gloomy day in the slop, McGaughey’s long-time desire came to fruition as Orb and jockey Joel Rosario came from almost 20 lengths back to power to a 2 1/2 over longshot Golden Soul.

In the 138th , they will try to stay on course to become the to sweep racing’s Triple Crown since Affirmed in 1978 – the longest gap ever between horses pulling off the parlay of the Derby, Preakness and New York’s .

If Orb prevails over the field of nine 3-year-olds, the 1 ½-mile final leg of the Triple Crown comes June 8 over McGaughey’s home base of Belmont Park.

“The Kentucky Derby was on my list. I’m not sure the Triple Crown was,” said McGaughey, whose last of two prior Preakness starters was , who lost here by a nose to 1989 . “In Louisville I said ‘what will happen will happen.’ And what will, did. I’m looking at it that way.

“I asked Reeve if that Orb sign was still up there when he was at Churchill the other day,” he said of his son who works for trainer Charlie LoPresti. “He said, ‘Still there. I guess it will be there until there’s no more Churchill Downs.’ That was a pretty good feeling.”

The forecast is for a chance of showers and high of 72, with a crowd exceeding 100,000 expected.

After the Derby, rival trainers suggested that the Preakness might be Orb’s toughest race, given the shortening of distance from the Derby’s 1 ¼ miles to 1 3/16 miles, with cavernous Belmont Park and the Belmont Stakes distance seemingly up his alley.

However, in the past 16 years, eight Derby winners repeated in the Preakness, a run starting with Silver Charm in 1997 through I’ll Have Another last year. None could seal the deal in the Belmont, with I’ll Have Another not even running after being retired with a tendon injury the day before the race.

In fact, the last to capture the Belmont was Thunder Gulch in 1995.

“This is always the easiest,” said Bob Baffert, looking to win a sixth Preakness with Sunland Derby winner Govenor Charlie and whose prior victories include his three Derby heroes. “Because they’re in the zone. You can’t really mess them up in two weeks.”

“Everybody kind of knocks the two weeks, but that form is strong from the Derby to the Preakness,” said trainer Al Stall Jr., whose once-beaten Illinois Derby winner Departing is among three who did not run in the Kentucky Derby. “I know Orb is going to run his race, no doubt about that. It’s not like I’m thinking he’s going to take a step backward. We’ll just have to take a forward step also.”

As Orb seeks his sixth straight triumph, McGaughey is as “quietly confident” of a big performance as he was in Louisville. Making the Preakness possibility more poignant is that co-owner and breeder Stuart Janney III is from nearby Butler, Md.

“There are a lot of ways to lose; freaky things can happen,” McGaughey said. “I think we’re in the position where we can kind of dictate the race and hope that he can make his run and then see what happens. We hope he doesn’t get in trouble. We hope he handles the track. We hope he handles the kickback of dirt. We hope he handles the day.

“If he does all that, I would have to think it’s going to take a pretty darn good horse to beat him.”

Orb will break from the No. 1 post, which since 1960 has produced only one Preakness winner, though most of the horses starting from the rail were longshots. McGaughey said he expects a cleanly run race, with rival jockeys not ganging up on the even-money favorite.

That doesn’t mean they won’t pay close attention.

“Shug said he wanted a target on his back. He got his wish,” Stall said cheerfully, adding while moving his head to the left, “There will be eight heads doing this coming out of the gate. They’ll just keep an eye on him.”

Brian Hernandez Jr. rides Departing, the Churchill Downs’ jockey’s first mount in a Triple Crown race.

History could break out on other fronts:

Rosie Napravnik, who started her fast-ascending career at Pimlico, could be the first female jockey to win the Preakness with the Tom Amoss-trained Derby fifth-place finisher Mylute.

Trainer D. Wayne Lukas sends out the triumvirate of Derby sixth-place finisher Oxbow, eighth-place finisher Will Take Charge and the Paul Hornung-co-owned Derby Trial fourth-place horse Titletown Five.

If one should win, Lukas will break out of a tie with the late “Sunny” Jim Fitzsimmons for the most combined Triple Crown race victories, a standard now at 13. It also would be Lukas’ sixth Preakness, trailing only R. W. Walden’s seven in the late 1800s.

Doug O’Neill, who trained I’ll Have Another, is back with his second straight Santa Anita Derby winner, Goldencents, in whom Louisville basketball coach Rick Pitino is a minority owner. Goldencents finished 17th in the Derby, one of the poor performances attributed to the wet and sticky surface (15th-place Itsmyluckyday being another).

Goldencents – the only Grade I winner in the field besides Orb — now attempts to become the Preakness winner with the worst Derby placing. Louis Quatorze, 16th in the 1996 Derby, holds that distinction.

Goldencents’ jockey, Kevin Krigger, also would be the first African-American to take the Preakness since 1902.

But they’ve got to beat Orb, whom Baffert calls “a freak.”

“Right now everybody should be rooting for Orb,” he said, “except the connections of the other horses.”

Jennie Rees also writes for The Louisville Courier-Journal

Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history  Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history  Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history  Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history  Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history

 Horse Racing Recap: Orb trying to stay on course to make Triple Crown history

NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test

78694373083aba7b2316b511d7f369f9 NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test
Seahawks defensive end won’t appeal his four- for failing a test for .(Photo: Steven Bisig-US PRESSWIRE US PRESSWIRE)

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Irvin said in a statement he will not appeal his suspension
Irvin will miss games against the Panthers, 49ers, Jaguars and Texans
With Irvin out, free agent Cliff Avil should have winning the starting job

(PhatzRadio / ) — The once again have lost a key defensive player because of a failed test for performance enhancing drugs.

Defensive end Bruce Irvin, Seattle’s first-round pick last year, will miss the first four games of 2013, the announced Friday. Irvin said in a statement he would not appeal.

“I want to apologize to my teammates, coaches and for making a mistake when I took a substance that is prohibited in the NFL without a . I am extremely disappointed in the I showed and take full responsibility for my actions,” Irvin said in the statement.

The Seahawks had to games late last season without starting cornerback Brandon Browner after he tested positive for Adderall, which is considered a banned substance without a medical prescription. Cornerback won an appeal for his own four- for a positive test for Adderall.

Irvin was not a starter as a rookie, but had eight sacks as part of the Seahawks’ rotation. He is expected to compete for a starting job this season. Irvin will be allowed to participate in offseason workouts and training camp before starting his suspension the first week of the regular season.

With Irvin out, free agent addition Cliff Avril should have little trouble winning the starting job at right defensive end.

Irvin will miss games against the , , and Houston Texans.

“I will not appeal the discipline and instead will focus my energy on preparing for the season so I can begin earning your trust and respect again,” Irvin said in his statement. “I look forward to contributing to the team the moment I return.”

Irvin posted a tweet that said in part: “It’s crazy to see your name run across the ticker for negative things. I messed up and I feel so bad and have been depressed for weeks now. I’ve had sleepless nights because I knew when this came out, I would let so many people down, including myself. I have worked so hard to rebuild my image and it takes another blow. I see the negative comments and the positive and both drive me to come back and have an incredible season.”

NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test  NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test  NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test  NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test  NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test

 NFL: Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended for failed PED test

Benghazi e-mails show ‘no conspiracy,’ expert says

986229f96e88496f5d884de8171e1ea5 Benghazi e mails show no conspiracy, expert says

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say editing process misled Americans
Former ambassador Thomas Pickering has been called to testify
Four people died in the attack in Libya

(PhatzNewsRoom / ) — E-mails released by the White House that describe how the CIA’s assessment of the Benghazi attack was edited to exclude any mention of terrorism appear to be part of a routine process by Washington bureaucrats, says a former CIA agent who used to take part in such processes.

“There’s no conspiracy here that I can see,” said Reuel Marc Gerecht, now an analyst at the . “It’s just how the U.S. government works.”

But Republicans say the editing process wound up misleading Americans when the final version of the CIA assessment made no mention that the attack was a pre-planned assault by al-Qaeda-linked terrorists.

The intelligence agency’s assessment was alluded to by the administration in claims now proved false that the attack was not terrorism but sprang from a over an anti-Islam video on the Internet.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, a member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, says the editing represented “grappling” between the and the CIA, which wanted it known that it warned the Obama administration of terror threats in the region. State Victoria Nuland said in the e-mails that her “leadership” didn’t want to appear to have ignored the warnings.

“That resulted in more inaccuracies,” Chaffetz said. “It’s right before the election, nobody wants to take the blame, and the casualty is the truth. Truth was not the primary or we wouldn’t have gotten this fiction.”

In the latest news, chairman Rep. , R-Calif., issued a subpoena Friday for former ambassador Thomas Pickering to testify about his role in the of its actions before, during and after the Sept. 11 attack.

Pickering co-chaired the Accountability Review Board, which Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton appointed to look into allegations that State failed to protect its staffers and refused added security in the weeks leading up to the attack.

In a letter to Pickering, Issa called the board’s investigation process “opaque” and says he had to subpoena Pickering because he refused to submit documents requested by the committee or appear before committee staffers for a transcribed interview.

House Republicans want to know how the White House and State Department came up with a false narrative about an attack by al Qaeda-linked terrorists in Benghazi that killed Chris Stevens, the U.S. ambassador to Libya, and three others. The narrative wound up in talking points given to Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, who insisted the attack was a protest gone awry.

The CIA’s first unclassified assessment of the Benghazi attack said “we believe… the attacks in Benghazi were spontaneously inspired by the protests at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo,” which occurred on Sept. 11. That wording, which proved to be false, was kept in the final CIA memo on the attacks. But references to the attack being the work of al-Qaeda-linked terrorists, which U.S. counterterrorism officials say is what happened, were removed.

The editing process shows administration officials, such as Nuland, questioning the basis of that and other assertions in the CIA assessment. They show White House officials, such as Ben Rhodes and Tommy Vietor, then-spokesman for the national security adviser, insisting that State’s concerns be addressed.

At least 16 named officials and 13 unnamed officials or offices in the departments of Justice, State, CIA, the National Directorate of Intelligence and the White House participated in the process.

“They’re deleting references to Ansar al Sharia,” a Libyan al-Qaeda affiliate whose members the CIA said it knew were involved in the attack “because that’s what government bureaucrats do,” Gerecht said. “They’re trying to be precise, to be overly meticulous. Unless you know for sure you don’t say it.”