Monthly Archives: May 2014

NATO says it will do whatever it takes to defend its allies Russia aggression – Video

Posted: May 20, 2014 at 12:48 pm


NATO says it will do whatever it takes to defend its allies Russia aggression
NATO says it will do whatever it takes to defend its allies in the Baltic region, amid growing tensions with Russia over the crisis in Ukraine. The spokeswoman for the military alliance, Oana...

By: PressTV News Videos

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NATO says it will do whatever it takes to defend its allies Russia aggression - Video

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Libya’s ongoing violence: ‘Democracy brought on NATO wings’ – Video

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Libya #39;s ongoing violence: #39;Democracy brought on NATO wings #39;
Armed gunmen loyal to rogue General Khalifa Haftar attacked Libya #39;s parliament on Sunday, announcing its suspension. Newly intensified violence in Libya is an example of NATO-exported democracy,...

By: RT

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Libya's ongoing violence: 'Democracy brought on NATO wings' - Video

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Nato Manver JAWTEX Bell UH 1 und Tornado Tiefflug – Video

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Nato Manver JAWTEX Bell UH 1 und Tornado Tiefflug
Manver JAWTEX Stendal-Borstel, Hubschrauber Bell UH1 und Tornado im Tiefflug. Das Luftlandemanver in Klietz wurde wegen Wolken abgesagt, leider ein kurzes Video fr einen ganzen Tag warten.

By: Klaus Schroeder

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Nato Manver JAWTEX Bell UH 1 und Tornado Tiefflug - Video

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NATO disputes Russia’s word on pulling troops from border – Video

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NATO disputes Russia #39;s word on pulling troops from border
The Kremlin announced that Russian President Putin has ordered the 40000 troops massed on the Ukrainian border to retreat to their home bases. However, the NATO secretary general says he sees...

By: PBS NewsHour

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NATO disputes Russia's word on pulling troops from border - Video

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NATO: No Evidence of Russian Troop Withdrawal

Posted: at 12:48 pm

Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered troops deployed in regions near Ukraine to return to their home bases, the Kremlin said Monday.

The move appears to indicate Putin's intention to de-escalate the crisis over Ukraine, the worst in Russia's relations with the West since the end of the Cold War.

But NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen told reporters Monday the military alliance has "not seen any evidence at all that the Russians have started withdrawal of troops from the Ukrainian borders."

He said that NATO remains open to a political dialogue with Moscow, and has proposed holding a meeting at the NATO-Russia Council next week.

If we, one day, see clear evidence of a meaningful Russian withdrawal of troops from the Ukrainian borders, I would be the very first to welcome it, because it would be a step in the right direction.

The West has protested the deployment of 40,000 Russian troops near the border with Ukraine, seeing it as a possible preparation for grabbing more land after the annexation of Crimea in March.

Putin has made similar commitments in recent weeks concerning his troops in the region.

Putin has previously said he has ordered troops to return from the area near the Ukraine border, but the United States and NATO said they saw no sign of a pullout and have threatened more sanctions if Russia tries to derail Ukraine's presidential vote set for Sunday.

The Russian Defense Ministry insisted that there were no buildup near the border, saying that the troops in the regions in western Russia are involved in regular training.

Putin went one step further Monday, ordering Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu to pull out forces involved in such training in the Rostov, Belgorod and Bryansk regions, according to a statement released by the Kremlin.

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NATO: No Evidence of Russian Troop Withdrawal

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Jack Wilshere – What do we think of Tottenham? – Video

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Jack Wilshere - What do we think of Tottenham?
Arsenal Season Review montage 2013/14 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6i38q1uxuE What a guy. https://twitter.com/tcarsenal.

By: goonerted

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Jack Wilshere - What do we think of Tottenham? - Video

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New NSA-proof Anonymous Email, ProtonMail – Video

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New NSA-proof Anonymous Email, ProtonMail
Subscribe: http://lgic.co/yt-sub === SOCIAL http://logiclounge.com http://gplus.to/logiclounge http://twitter.com/logiclounge http://facebook.com/logiclounge.

By: LogicLounge

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New NSA-proof Anonymous Email, ProtonMail - Video

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Fed Spying Damages Tech Companies More Than Chinese Espionage – Video

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Fed Spying Damages Tech Companies More Than Chinese Espionage
Cisco #39;s CEO complains to Obama that NSA physically intercepting and bugging their equipment will/is destroying their business. We can already see this happening in Germany, especially with...

By: TheAlexJonesChannel

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Fed Spying Damages Tech Companies More Than Chinese Espionage - Video

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This NSA history has a familiar ring to it

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The Senate report is called National Security Agency Surveillance Affecting Americans, and describes the results of its investigation into NSAs electronic surveillance practices and capabilities, especially involving American citizens, groups, and organizations.

Among its findings are:

Project MINARET, in which the NSA intercepted and disseminated international communications of U.S. citizens and groups whose names were supplied by other agencies and put on a watch list. Those listed were supposed to be linked to concerns about narcotics, domestic violence and antiwar activities.

It was part of an attempt to discover if there was a foreign influence on them, according to the Senate report. NSA personnel were instructed to keep the agencys name off any distributed reports in order to restrict the knowledge that NSA was collecting such information, the report said.

Operation SHAMROCK involved the collection of millions of international telegrams sent to, from or transiting the United States provided to NSA by the three major international telegraph companies. In some years NSA analysts reviewed 150,000 telegrams a month, according to the committee. What began at the end of World War II as an Army Signals Security Agency project to get access to foreign government messaging morphed into collecting calls from a watch list of Americans whose names were supplied by the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs.

The CIA, the FBI and others joined in. Over one four-year period when the list had 1,200 names the committee said NSA distributed approximately 2,000 reports [the texts or summaries of intercepted messages] to the various requesting agencies as the result of inclusion of American names on the watch lists.

Any of this sound familiar?

This was the 1976 report, one of 14 from the Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, chaired by then-Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho). One direct result of the Church committees activities, which began as a probe into domestic CIA activities in the 1960s and 1970s, was the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). President Jimmy Carter signed the bill into law in 1978.

That law, amended several times, has provided a legal foundation for NSAs operations. It also added judicial and congressional oversight of NSA with the establishment of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and the House and Senate intelligence committees. At the same time, it continued secrecy for operations necessary to carry out electronic surveillance to protect national security. It allowed intercepts abroad of foreign entities and individuals without a warrant when collecting foreign intelligence. When the target became a U.S. citizen or someone known to be in the United States, a warrant was required within 72 hours.

History does at times seem to repeat itself.

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This NSA history has a familiar ring to it

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Report: The NSA records all cellphone calls in the Bahamas

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The U.S. National Security Agency has been recording and archiving virtually every cellphone call in the Bahamas without knowledge and permission from the island nations government, according to a report from The Intercept.

The surveillance is part of an NSA secret system called SOMALGET that tapped into access legally granted to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and opened a backdoor into the countrys cell telephone network, the article states.

The NSA is able to intercept and record cellphone calls made to, from and within the Bahamas, and access the recordings for 30 days, according to the article, whose revelations are based on documents provided by NSA leaker Edward Snowden.

The article, authored by Ryan Devereaux, Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras, describes SOMALGET as a cutting edge tool that gives the NSA access to the content of the calls, not just to their metadata.

SOMALGET is part of a broader program called MYSTIC in which the NSA secretly monitors the telecom systems not only of the Bahamas but of several other countries as well, including Mexico, the Philippines and Kenya, according to the report.

All told, the NSA is using MYSTIC to gather personal data on mobile calls placed in countries with a combined population of more than 250 million people. And according to classified documents, the agency is seeking funding to export the sweeping surveillance capability elsewhere, reads the article.

The Bahamas surveillance is focused on locating international narcotics traffickers and special-interest alien smugglers, according to the story.

The Intercept is published by Pierre Omidyars First Look Media and was co-created by Greenwald, whose groundbreaking coverage last year in The Guardian about NSA surveillance programs helped that newspaper win a Pulitzer Prize this year. The Intercept was founded primarily to report on documents provided by Snowden.

Mondays article states that the Bahamas SOMALGET surveillance raises profound questions about the nature and extent of American surveillance abroad because it isnt driven by anti-terrorism motivations and because the Bahamas is considered a stable democracy that presents no terrorism threat to the U.S.

By targeting the Bahamas entire mobile network, the NSA is intentionally collecting and retaining intelligence on millions of people who have not been accused of any crime or terrorist activity, reads the article, noting that almost 5 million Americans visit the Bahamas every year, and that many prominent U.S. citizens have homes there.

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Report: The NSA records all cellphone calls in the Bahamas

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