10:40 AM 12/22/2018 - Trump: "Put down your cell phone and go peacefully into the dark."











Saved Stories - Trump Investigations 
Donald Trump: Celebrities And Lawmakers Flood Twitter With #TrumpResign Tweets
“mueller” – Google News: Marc A. Thiessen: The Mueller probe could turn out to be a disaster — for the Democrats – Denton Record Chronicle
"trump as danger to National Security" - Google News: Trump’s Syria move pleases dictators and hands initiative to Isis - The Guardian
What does it take to become Donald Trump's chief of staff? Jared Kushner and daughter Ivanka's approval - The Digital Globalist
House Intelligence Democrat Swalwell: 'Donald Trump is going to be defeated in 2020' - CNN
"social media in trump campaign" - Google News: Oh, Really: Democratic Operatives Copied Russian Deception Tactics In Alabama Senate Race - Townhall
"roger stone" - Google News: Cleric: 1988 Lockerbie plane bombing will never be forgotten - 13WHAM-TV
"Putin Trump" - Google News: Mattis and Mueller battle Trump and Putin | TheHill - The Hill
Donald Trump | The Guardian: Mattis resignation triggered by phone call between Trump and Erdoğan
Washington once dismissed Kushner – but he keeps racking up victories - The Jerusalem Post - Israel News
6:33 AM 12/21/2018 - The Russian Lessons – С паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок: Trump’s withdrawal from Syria
The Daily 202: Mattis resignation and shutdown saber-rattling signal an even more chaotic Trump presidency in 2019
Mystery disconnects and loop recordings plaguing Israeli-U.S. phone calls - The Jerusalem Post - Israel News
Robert Mueller special counsel operation members have text messages permanently erased, unclear how many are gone - Yahoo News
German police step up security at airports in southwest amid terror scare - The Times of Israel
German mainstream journalist blatantly lied about Americans in fabricated stories - Lifesite
"trump russian ties" - Google News: 'A morning of alarm’: Mattis departure sends shock waves abroad - The Washington Post
Acting US attorney general disregards advice on Russia probe recusal Source: Reuters - WINA AM 1070
Politics: Military defections didn’t determine the Arab uprisings
Donald Trump: Donald Trump's Bonkers Tech Boast Leaves Twitter Users In Stitches
Trump Investigations: 6:33 AM 12/21/2018 – The Russian Lessons – С парши… trumpinvestigations.blogspot.com/2018/12/633-am…
'A wild 12 months': Trump's tumultuous second year - The Canberra Times
Just Security: The Early Edition: December 21, 2018
"trump investigated by the fbi" - Google News: Matthew Whitaker will reportedly not have to recuse himself from overseeing Mueller investigation. - Slate Magazine
"Trump" - Google News: Trump 'at this moment' opposes deal to avert shutdown, wants more border funding - The Washington Post

Saved Stories - Trump Investigations 
Donald Trump: Celebrities And Lawmakers Flood Twitter With #TrumpResign Tweets

"I've been saying for a long time that the one honorable thing Trump could do would be to put down his cell phone and go peacefully into the dark."
 Donald Trump
“mueller” – Google News: Marc A. Thiessen: The Mueller probe could turn out to be a disaster — for the Democrats – Denton Record Chronicle

Marc A. Thiessen: The Mueller probe could turn out to be a disaster — for the Democrats  Denton Record Chronicle
WASHINGTON — All of Washington is focused on the political peril President Trump faces from Robert Mueller’s investigation. But the Mueller probe could very …
 “mueller” – Google News
"trump as danger to National Security" - Google News: Trump’s Syria move pleases dictators and hands initiative to Isis - The Guardian

Trump’s Syria move pleases dictators and hands initiative to Isis  The Guardian
The president's surprise decision to withdraw US troops from Syria and Afghanistan has weakened allies and given a fillip to jihadists.


 "trump as danger to National Security" - Google News
What does it take to become Donald Trump's chief of staff? Jared Kushner and daughter Ivanka's approval - The Digital Globalist

What does it take to become Donald Trump's chief of staff? Jared Kushner and daughter Ivanka's approval  The Digital Globalist
This story is published in a *content* partnership with POLITICO. It was originally reported by Gabby Orr on on December 12, 2018. US President Donald Trump ...
House Intelligence Democrat Swalwell: 'Donald Trump is going to be defeated in 2020' - CNN

House Intelligence Democrat Swalwell: 'Donald Trump is going to be defeated in 2020'  CNN
"You have to wonder if he is capable of surviving all of these investigations and just the stress that continues to be on him," says Swalwell.
"social media in trump campaign" - Google News: Oh, Really: Democratic Operatives Copied Russian Deception Tactics In Alabama Senate Race - Townhall

Oh, Really: Democratic Operatives Copied Russian Deception Tactics In Alabama Senate Race  Townhall
Oh, so while the Left is going insane over Russian interference during the 2016 elections, they also decided to allegedly copy their deceptive social media ...


 "social media in trump campaign" - Google News
"roger stone" - Google News: Cleric: 1988 Lockerbie plane bombing will never be forgotten - 13WHAM-TV

Cleric: 1988 Lockerbie plane bombing will never be forgotten  13WHAM-TV
LONDON (AP) — The tragedy of Lockerbie will never be forgotten, a Church of Scotland minister vowed Friday as memorial services were held in Scotland and ...




 "roger stone" - Google News
"Putin Trump" - Google News: Mattis and Mueller battle Trump and Putin | TheHill - The Hill

Mattis and Mueller battle Trump and Putin | TheHill  The Hill
Let's hope that the Mattis resignation in protest ultimately serves the cause of democracy, if his warning is heeded.


 "Putin Trump" - Google News
Donald Trump | The Guardian: Mattis resignation triggered by phone call between Trump and Erdoğan

US president complied with Turkish leader’s demands and took own advisers by surprise, accounts say
The resignation of US defence secretaryJames Mattis was triggered by a phone conversation between Donald Trump and the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in which Trump abruptly decided to upend previous US policy and withdraw troops from Syria, according to new accounts of the call.
Mattis went to see the president on Thursday afternoon in a last-ditch attempt to change the president’s mind, and argue for standing by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which have take the lead role in ejecting the Islamic State from its Syrian strongholds. strongholds.
Continue reading...

 Donald Trump | The Guardian
Washington once dismissed Kushner – but he keeps racking up victories - The Jerusalem Post - Israel News

Washington once dismissed Kushner – but he keeps racking up victories  The Jerusalem Post - Israel News
Jared Kushner suffered criticism throughout his first two years of public *service* as a senior adviser to his father-in-law, US President Donald Trump. But much ...
6:33 AM 12/21/2018 - The Russian Lessons – С паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок: Trump’s withdrawal from Syria


Russian Lessons – С паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок: Trump’s withdrawal from Syria

с паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок — Викисловарь

Translate this pageДавай, Таткин, давай! ― послышались ободряющие голоса. ― С паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок! Они у нас, гады, без денег все брали, а мы как-никак …‎Русский · ‎Семантические свойства

С паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок – Translation into English …

Translations in context of “С паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок” in Russian-English from Reverso Context: С паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок.
The Daily 202: Mattis resignation and shutdown saber-rattling signal an even more chaotic Trump presidency in 2019

The president predicts a “long” shutdown if Democrats don’t give in to his demands for a border wall.





Mystery disconnects and loop recordings plaguing Israeli-U.S. phone calls - The Jerusalem Post - Israel News

Mystery disconnects and loop recordings plaguing Israeli-U.S. phone calls  The Jerusalem Post - Israel News
Whatever is happening with international calls from Israel has people wondering and speculating in a new world of technology that is used constantly, but few ...
Robert Mueller special counsel operation members have text messages permanently erased, unclear how many are gone - Yahoo News

Robert Mueller special counsel operation members have text messages permanently erased, unclear how many are gone  Yahoo News
Former Department of Justice prosecutor Tom Fitton weighs in on Mueller special counsel operations members erased text messages.


German police step up security at airports in southwest amid terror scare - The Times of Israel

German police step up security at airports in southwest amid terror scare  The Times of Israel
Extremists feared to have tried to scope out operations at Stuttgart airfield; four people reportedly being investigated.


German mainstream journalist blatantly lied about Americans in fabricated stories - Lifesite

German mainstream journalist blatantly lied about Americans in fabricated stories  Lifesite
The 2014 CNN Journalist of the Year concocted characters and events in several award-winning pieces about the United States.
"trump russian ties" - Google News: 'A morning of alarm’: Mattis departure sends shock waves abroad - The Washington Post

'A morning of alarm’: Mattis departure sends shock waves abroad  The Washington Post
Overseas, the former marine was viewed as a steady hand as America's role in the world was thrown into question.


 "trump russian ties" - Google News
Acting US attorney general disregards advice on Russia probe recusal Source: Reuters - WINA AM 1070

Acting US attorney general disregards advice on Russia probe recusal Source: Reuters  WINA AM 1070
By Mark Hosenball. WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Acting U.S. Attorney General Matthew Whitaker has decided not to recuse himself from overseeing the ...


Politics: Military defections didn’t determine the Arab uprisings

Neither the Egyptian nor Tunisian militaries actually defected from the regime. New research busts that myth.







Politics
Donald Trump: Donald Trump's Bonkers Tech Boast Leaves Twitter Users In Stitches

Trump tweeted that he knew tech "better than anyone," which made him a laughingstock on his favorite social media platform.



 Donald Trump
Trump Investigations: 6:33 AM 12/21/2018 – The Russian Lessons – С парши… trumpinvestigations.blogspot.com/2018/12/633-am…

Trump Investigations: 6:33 AM 12/21/2018 – The Russian Lessons – С парши… trumpinvestigations.blogspot.com/2018/12/633-am…

Posted by

mikenov
on Friday, December 21st, 2018 11:26am
'A wild 12 months': Trump's tumultuous second year - The Canberra Times

'A wild 12 months': Trump's tumultuous second year  The Canberra Times
The second year of Donald Trump's presidency was, in many ways, more dramatic than the first. And it's ending in chaos.
Just Security: The Early Edition: December 21, 2018

Signup to receive the Early Edition in your inbox here.
Before the start of business, Just Security provides a curated summary of up-to-the-minute developments at home and abroad. Here’s today’s news.
MIDDLE EAST TROOP WITHDRAWAL AND JIM MATTIS RESIGNATION
U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis resigned yesterday after clashing with President Trump over the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Syria and Afghanistan, writing a resignation letterclaiming that the president deserves someone to lead the Pentagon who is “better aligned” with his views. Mattis’ “surprise” departure came a day after Trump created shockwaves through Congress and the international community by announcing the U.S. departure from Syria and declared victory over Islamic State group (I.S.I.S.,) contrary to the assessments of his own intelligence and security officials. Paul Sonne, Josh Dawsey and Missy Ryan report at the Washington Post.
“My views on treating allies with respect and also being cleareyed about both malign actors and strategic competitors are strongly held,” Mattis wrote in his parting letter, adding “because you have the right to have a Secretary of Defense whose views are better aligned with yours on these and other subjects, I believe it is right for me to step down from my position.” Trump announced that Mattis –the last of his old-guard national security team – will leave at the end of February, and commented that the former Marine was “a great help to me in getting allies and other countries to pay their share of military obligations,” Helene Cooper reports at the New York Times.
Mattis’ resignation letter appears to refute several planks of Trump’s foreign policy, with the outgoing defense secretary stressing the importance of U.S. alliances and of taking an “unambiguous” stance toward adversaries such as Russia and China. Earlier yesterday, a senior administration official told CNN’s Jake Tapper that Mattis was “vehemently opposed” to the Syria decision and his parting letter is notably devoid of any praise for the president, Jeremy Diamond, Barbara Starr and Zachary Cohen report at CNN.
Trump is reportedly planning to withdraw more than 5,000 of the 14,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, with the move following Wednesday’s controversial decision to pull all U.S. troops out of Syria that prompted Mattis’ resignation. One official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, told reporters that a decision had been made and verbal orders had been given to start planning for the drawdown – with exact timelines being discussed, Reuters reports.
The disclosure of the Afghan troop reductions comes as U.S. officials had begun to display greater confidence about negotiations to end to the conflict with the Taliban, but the preemptive move to withdraw troops before a deal is reached risks endangering that process. However, one person familiar with the peace talks claimed it is possible that the Taliban might reciprocate with a goodwill gesture, Gordon Lubold and Jessica Donati report at the Wall Street Journal.
Trump repeatedly publicly advocated leaving Afghanistan before his election to the presidency, describing U.S. involvement in the conflict as a waste of money. However, last year the president suggested he would keep U.S. forces there on the ground indefinitely to prevent the country’s collapse, and said the U.S. would send 3,000 extra troops to the country, the BBC reports.
Afghan officials and the U.S.’ western partners reacted with unease today to reports of the planned withdrawal and Mattis’ departure from government. “The withdrawal will certainly affect overall operations but we will have to wait and see which units are going to go home first … it is too early to say anything for now,” one senior Afghan government official commented; Mattis has been widely seen in Afghanistan as a guarantor of U.S. engagement, and his departure will “inevitability” raise concerns in the minds of many Afghan officials, Reuters reports.
Russia does not want anything to happen that could destabilize the situation in Afghanistan, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said today when asked about the possible U.S. withdrawal of troops from the country. Peskov added that the Kremlin needed to monitor whether the withdrawal would actually happen as a previous U.S. pledge to leave Afghanistan had not translated into action, Reuters reports.
Israel will escalate its fight against Iranian-aligned forces in Syria after the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the nation, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said yesterday. Several hours after he spoke, Netanyahu’s office confirmed he had spoken with Trump about the country and “discussed ways to continue cooperation between Israel and the United States against the Iranian aggression.” Reuters reports.
“We do not share the analyses that the territorial caliphate [of I.S.I.S.] has been annihilated,” French Defense Secretary Florence Parly said yesterday on R.T.L. radio regarding the Syria decision, adding “it’s an extremely grave decision and we think … the job must be finished.” Reuters reports.
Mattis’ departure shook an “already tense” Capitol last night, with lawmakers from both parties anxious about the implications of the development for the Trump administration and the international community. Top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee Sen. Mark Warner (Va.) sent a message on Twitter describing Mattis as “an island of stability amidst the chaos of the Trump administration,” adding “this is scary;” Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.,) characterized the developments as a “national security crisis,” Ali Vitali reports at NBC.
An account of the international reaction to Mattis’ departure is provided by Griff Witte and Isaac Stanley-Becker at the Washington Post.
JIM MATTIS RESIGNATION: OPINION AND ANALYSIS
An analysis of the foreign policy disagreements leading up to the point at which Jim Mattis had simply “had enough,” is provided by Scott Bixby at The Daily Beast.
Mattis’ resignation signals a watershed moment for the Trump administration, Edward Luce comments at the Financial Times, arguing that “regardless of who replaces Mr Mattis, the world has lost a critical lifeline … it can still phone plenty of friends, all of whom will sympathize … it can also ask the audience (ditto) … but it knows that military men do not resign in U.S. politics.”
Mattis’ decision “was a warning that will ring through history about an impulsive President who spurns advice … disdains America’s friends and proudly repudiates the codes of U.S. leadership that have endured since World War II,” Stephen Collinson argues at CNN, forecasting that the Defense Secretary’s departure will embolden Trump to act on his more extreme foreign policy positions.
“For two years … Defense Secretary Jim Mattis slow-walked and stymied President Donald Trump’s most dramatic impulses on military policy …that strategy came to a swift end when it came to Syria,” Wesley Morgan comments at POLTICO.
Mattis’ departure follows that of John Kelly and H.R. McMaster, Vivian Salama notes at the Wall Street Journal, commenting that all three were “viewed by many as the voices of experience in a White House that was known for its turbulence,” and locating the development within “the assertion of the president’s ‘America First’ foreign policy … a skepticism of overseas engagements, disdain for allies that he sees benefiting from America’s vast military spending, and a combination of overture and military muscle for rivals and foes such as China and Russia.”
An Op-Ed considering the combined impact of the Syrian departure and Mattis’ resignation is provided by the New York Times editorial board.
MIDDLE EAST TROOP WITHDRAWAL: OPINION AND ANALYSIS
Trump’s decision to abandon the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (S.D.F.) leaves the group exposed, Asser Khattab, Andrew England and Laura Pitel comment in an analysis at the Financial Times, describing the withdrawal as a “stinging blow” to the group.
“A pullout [of Syria] would harm U.S. interests as well,” Tommy Meyerson argues at the Wall Street Journal, arguing that the move will “shred America’s credibility as a counterterrorism partner world-wide, while abandoning a strategic area and making it harder to check jihadist, Iranian and Russian ambitions … Trump should make clear the U.S. stands with the Syrian Kurds and won’t permit a Turkish invasion …. U.S. interests and honor demand that they stay for now.”
A breakdown of the “winners and losers” arising from Trump’s Syria decision is provided by Megan Specia at the New York Times.
SYRIA: OTHER DEVELOPMENTS
The U.S.’ principle Kurdish allies in Syria – the Syrian Democratic Forces (S.D.F.) – are discussing the release of 3,200 I.S.I.S. prisoners, according to U.K.-based monitor Syrian Observatory on Human Rights and a Western official of the anti-Islamic State coalition yesterday, with the announcement coming a day following President Trump’s order for the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from the country. Top S.D.F. officials allegedly met Wednesday to discuss the possibility of releasing about 1,100 Islamic State fighters and 2,080 relatives of the group’s members, according to head of the Observatory Rami Abdul Rahman; however, S.D.F. spokesperson Mostapha Bali denied that there had been any discussion of releasing I.S.I.S. prisoners, Hwaida Saad and Rod Nordland report at the New York Times.
Outgoing U.N. envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura has acknowledged that the committee tasked with writing a new constitution for the war-torn nation would not be in place by the end of 2018 as was previously hoped.  “We have nearly completed the work of putting in place a constitutional committee to draft a constitutional reform, as a contribution to the political process – but there is an extra mile to go,” De Mistura told the U.N. Security Council yesterday, adding “I deeply regret what has not been achieved, and I am sorry more was not possible,” in what will be de Mistura’s final address to the body before he steps down, Al Jazeera reports.
U.S.-led airstrikes continue. U.S. and coalition forces carried out 208 airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Syria between Dec 9. and Dec. 15. [Central Command]
CHINA
The Trump administration increased its pressure campaign on Beijing yesterday, as the Department of Justice (D.O.J.) indicted Chinese nationals Zhu Hua and Zhang Jianguo – both with ties to China’s ministry of state security – for infiltrating the most significant providers of internet services and compromising government computer systems, including a major Department of Energy laboratory. The unsealing of the indictment came as the U.K. identified the same intelligence operation, often labeled A.P.T. 10 by cybersecurity firms – as responsible for separate attacks in the U.K. and elsewhere, David E. Sanger and Katie Benner report at the New York Times.
China strongly rejected allegations of economic espionage, accusing Washington of “fabricating facts.” In a statement today, the Chinese foreign ministry said it resolutely oppose the allegations and called on the U.S. to drop the charges against the two Chinese nationals; “the Chinese government has never participated in or supported anyone in any way in stealing trade secrets,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said, describing the accusations as “deliberate defamation” pulled “out of thin air,” Al Jazeera reports.
An explainer on the A.P.T. 10 group is provided by Yuan Yang and Ben Bland at the Financial Times.
TRUMP-RUSSIA
The Department of Justice (D.O.J.) yesterday concluded that acting attorney general Matt Whitaker had no legal reason to recuse himself from oversight of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian electoral interference according to a person familiar with the decision. Whitaker had formerly made comments strongly critical of the probe, and despite the D.O.J. determination, an agency ethics adviser reportedly told Whitaker the decision was a “close call,” recommending that he step aside — a recommendation Whitaker has declined to follow, Pete Williams and Dartunorro Clark report at NBC.
U.S. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said yesterday that a memo written by Trump’s attorney general nominee William Barr – criticizing Mueller’s investigation – had no impact on the ongoing probe. “The memo that you made reference to reflects Mr. Barr’s personal opinion,” Rosenstein said during a press conference yesterday after announcing criminal charges for Chinese hackers, adding “lots of people offer opinions to the Department of Justice, but they don’t influence our own decision making,” Rebecca Morin reports at POLITICO.
An in-depth analysis of the legal implications of the Barr memo is provided by Marty Lederman at Just Security.
OTHER DEVELOPMENTS
The Israel Defense Force (I.D.F.) claims it has begun destroying a network of cross-border tunnels built by Iran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah militant group. Israel this month announced the discovery of the tunnels on the Lebanon-Israel Frontier, which it alleges were part of a Hezbollah attack plot; thus far, it has uncovered four tunnels in an “open-ended” operation intended to destroy the entire network, the AP reports.
The U.N. Security Council called a vote for today on a resolution that would authorize the use of U.N. monitors to observe the implementation of a cease-fire in Yemen’s key port city of Hodeidah and the withdrawal of warring forces from the area. U.N. Special Envoy for Yemen Martin Griffiths has urged rapid deployment of U.N. monitors as “an essential part of the confidence” required to help implement the Dec. 13 cease-fire agreement between Yemen’s government-in-exile and Iran-backed Houthi Shiite rebels; the accord also calls for the “phased but rapid mutual withdrawals” of fighters from Hodeidah as well as its main docks and two others in the province, Edith M. Lederer reports at the AP.
Saudi Arabia has claimed it is creating government bodies to enhance oversight of its intelligence operations, in the wake of international outrage over the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi. The kingdom alleges Khashoggi was killed inside its Istanbul consulate on October 2 in a “rogue operation” led by the then-Deputy Intelligence Chief Ahmad al-Assiri and Royal Court Adviser Saud al-Qahtani, both of whom have been removed from their posts; the international community broadly alleges Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was behind the killing, Al Jazeera reports.
An illustrated op-ed on the rise of digitalpolitik –“an emerging tactical playbook for how governments use their political, regulatory, military, and commercial powers to project influence in global, digital markets,” is provided by Sean McDonald and Xiao Mina at Foreign Policy.


 Just Security
"trump investigated by the fbi" - Google News: Matthew Whitaker will reportedly not have to recuse himself from overseeing Mueller investigation. - Slate Magazine

  1. Matthew Whitaker will reportedly not have to recuse himself from overseeing Mueller investigation.  Slate Magazine
  2. Attorney general nominee wrote memo criticizing Mueller obstruction probe  The Washington Post
  3. Trump's Attorney General Pick Criticized an Aspect of Mueller Probe in Memo to Justice Department  The Wall Street Journal
  4. View full coverage on Google News




 "trump investigated by the fbi" - Google News
"Trump" - Google News: Trump 'at this moment' opposes deal to avert shutdown, wants more border funding - The Washington Post

Trump 'at this moment' opposes deal to avert shutdown, wants more border funding  The Washington Post
President Trump will not commit to signing legislation that would avoid a partial government shutdown on Saturday, his press secretary said, further roiling a ...


 "Trump" - Google News

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