Friday, May 31, 2013

Syrian rebels need heavy weapons, McCain says

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Syrian rebels battling the forces of President Bashar Assad must receive ammunition and heavy weapons to counter the regime's tanks and aircraft or it will be impossible for them to prevail, Sen. John McCain said days after he quietly slipped into Syria to meet with the opposition.

"They just can't fight tanks with AK-47s," McCain said Friday in a telephone interview.

The Republican lawmaker and 2008 presidential candidate made an unannounced visit to Syria on Monday, traveling across the border near Kilis, Turkey, and spending about two hours meeting with rebel leaders. McCain has been one of the most vocal lawmakers demanding aggressive U.S. military action in the 2-year-old Syrian civil war, calling for establishment of a no-fly zone and arming the rebels.

The Obama administration has been reluctant to provide weapons to the disparate opposition, fearing that they will fall into the wrong hands in a volatile region. McCain said he discussed what types of weapons the rebels need and whether they could ensure their control.

"I'm confident that they could get the weapons into the right hands and there's no doubt that they need some kind of capability to reverse the battlefield situation, which right now is in favor of Assad," McCain said.

McCain, a member of the Armed Services and Foreign Relations committees, was the first U.S. senator to travel to Syria since the civil war began more than two years ago. He said he worked with Deputy Secretary of State William Burns in arranging the trip.

McCain said he spoke with Secretary of State John Kerry "a couple of times. It wasn't that I was hiding it from him; it just didn't seem to come up. I thought Burns was the right guy to go through. They were very important in the trip. We couldn't have done it without their cooperation."

Gen. Salim Idris, chief of the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian Army, accompanied McCain and they met with 19 battalion commanders.

Citing the photo of McCain's meeting, a Lebanese newspaper has reported that McCain unwittingly crossed paths with two men connected to a rebel group responsible for the kidnapping of 11 Lebanese Shiite pilgrims in 2012. McCain said one of the men he reportedly met with is dead and no one in his meeting was identified as the other.

"The people I met with and talked to directly were well-vetted. Their names and their duties were outlined to me. They came from all over Syria," he said.

Two years of violence in Syria have killed more than 70,000 people, according to the United Nations. President Barack Obama has demanded that Assad give up power, while Russia has stood by Syria, its closest ally in the Arab world. Russian officials have said they will support anti-aircraft systems to Syria, and Assad suggested on Thursday that he had received the first shipment.

The United States and Russia are trying to get the Syrian government and opposition forces into peace negotiations. Those talks, initially planned for Geneva next month, have been delayed until July at the earliest.

"It's hard to imagine Bashar Assad negotiating his departure when he has the upper hand on the battlefield," McCain said. "I'm all for a conference, but I think that conference should take place when Bashar Assad knows that he is doomed to defeat if he doesn't negotiate."

Last week, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted to provide weapons to rebels in Syria, as well as military training to vetted rebel groups and sanctions against anyone who sells oil or transfers arms to the Assad regime.

The European Union decided late Monday to lift the arms embargo on the Syrian opposition while maintaining all other sanctions against Assad's regime after June 1, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mccain-syrian-rebels-heavy-weapons-190000613.html

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Boy, 10, finds $10,000 in Kansas City hotel room

(AP) ? A 10-year-old boy who found $10,000 in a drawer at a Kansas City hotel where he was staying with his dad turned the money over to police.

Tyler Schaefer found the neatly stacked bills Saturday in the room where he and his father, Cody Schaefer, were staying at a hotel near the airport, The Kansas City Star reported (http://bit.ly/16sloUJ). Cody Schaefer, a truck driver and mechanic from Rapid City, S.D., meets his former wife in Kansas City every year to get his three children for summer vacation.

Cody Schaefer said Tyler, a Cub Scout, is always on the lookout for clues and treasure.

"He looks for stuff at random," Schaefer said of his son. "He's very observant."

Schaefer said after they checked into their room Saturday, Tyler began opening all the drawers, and it wasn't too long before Tyler announced: "I found money!"

Schaefer thought maybe his son had found a forgotten $10 bill, but when he looked closer he saw the stack of bills totaling $10,000. He wondered if the bills were fake, but saw they had the appropriate watermarks and seemed legitimate.

"We didn't know what to do at first," Schaefer said.

Schaefer told his son they couldn't keep the cash because they didn't know who it belonged to. They handed the money over to two off-duty police officers working security at the hotel. The officers contacted Sgt. Randy Francis, a property and evidence supervisor, who stored the cash at a police facility.

Police said it's unclear how long the money had been there, and they can't track down every guest who stayed in that room recently. Police spokesman Capt. Tye Grant said Thursday no one had claimed the money yet.

According to a Missouri statute, lost money could revert to a finder after about seven months if no one can prove ownership. But the owner then has another year to prove the money is his or hers and claim it from the finder.

"I didn't come there with $10,000 and I didn't leave with $10,000," Cody Schaefer said. "So it was a wash."

___

Information from: The Kansas City Star, http://www.kcstar.com

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-05-30-Boy-Found%20Money/id-6bdf30c6a37d4ef282f4b440a80b0b3b

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Corey Feldman performs live as Michael Jackson

Celebs

50 minutes ago

Fans who follow the metal band Limp Bizkit might not think that the music of Michael Jackson would be a natural fit during one of their live shows. Nor might they expect that former child actor Corey Feldman, dressed up as the late King of Pop, would have a place either.

They would be wrong.

On Friday, Feldman (a longtime friend of Jackson's who went on to appear in such films as "Stand By Me," "The Goonies" and "The Lost Boys") popped up at Bizkit's House of Blues show on Friday wearing a fedora and sparkling white glove reminiscent of Jackson, and launched into "Billie Jean."

"Ladies and gentlemen, Corey Feldman f------ you up tonight," singer Fred Durst announced after the song, reported Radio.com. The band and Feldman later duetted on George Michael's "Faith," a song the band has been known to perform live frequently.

Durst and Co. were clearly happy to have Feldman on hand; afterward they Instragrammed a picture of him in full regalia; Durst wrote: "My old school soldier @corey_feldman busted out tribute to @michaeljackson at our LA concert/party! Classic"

Feldman himself was fully into his act; he tweeted video of the songs, writing "Here as promised is that video of my surprise performance on Fri :)" and later sent out another Tweet from Saturday featuring him at a performance at an outdoor screening of "Stand By Me" in Los Angeles. In the tweet, he noted that Jackson's former guitar tech now works for him.

Feldman's hobby as a Jackson tribute artist would be unusual on its own; based on his history with the singer it borders on bizarre. The pair were friends while Feldman was a young actor, and in 2005 Feldman said that Jackson did inappropriate things when they were friends, such as looking at a book of nudes with the then-teenaged Feldman.

But he denied being abused by Jackson. In 2008, Feldman told People that Jackson had hurt him by abruptly dropping him as a friend as he got older.

"He did real damage in my overall life," Feldman said then. "The biggest thing that Michael's done to children is befriending the ones that are in need and then abandoning them."

But at some point he began appearing as Jackson, showing up at his memorial in costume. He also dedicated a Los Angeles hospital concert with his band Truth Movement to Jackson, telling People at the time, "I don't think I have fully, completely come to terms with (his death) yet. I have waves and flashes. One moment, I feel fine and I'm myself. Then all of a sudden, it hits me, and I go, 'Wow, he's really gone. It's very troubling.' "

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/corey-feldman-does-michael-jackson-impression-limp-bizkit-show-6C10109864

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Fearful Myanmar Muslims shelter in monastery

LASHIO, Myanmar (AP) ? More than 1,000 Muslims who fled Myanmar's latest bout of sectarian violence huddled Thursday in a Buddhist monastery guarded by army soldiers as calm returned to this northeastern city, though burnt out buildings leveled by Buddhist rioters still smoldered.

The army transported terrified Muslim families by the truckload out of a neighborhood in Lashio where overturned cars and motorcycles that had been charred a day earlier left black scars on the red earth.

"We heard things could get worse, so we waved down soldiers and asked them for help," said 59-year-old Khin Than, who arrived at the monastery Thursday morning with her four children and sacks of luggage along with several hundred other Muslims. "We left because we're afraid of being attacked."

The violence in Lashio this week highlights how anti-Muslim unrest has slowly spread across Myanmar since starting last year in western Rakhine state and hitting the central city of Meikhtila in March. President Thein Sein's government, which inherited power from the military two years ago, has been heavily criticized for failing to contain the violence.

In Lashio on Thursday, Buddhist monks organized meals for the newly arrived refugees, who huddled together in several buildings in the monastery compound.

Although a few Buddhist men could still be seen Thursday riding motorbikes with crude weapons such as sharpened bamboo poles, no new violence was reported. Several banks and shops reopened as residents emerged to look at destroyed Muslim shops. Trucks of soldiers and police crisscrossed main roads. They guarded the ruins of Muslim businesses that were reduced to ashes on Tuesday and Wednesday, erecting roadblocks from twisted debris.

At one corner, where the charred remains of a three-story building still smoldered, Muslim residents sorted through rubble for anything salvageable. One family packed electronics from their shop into the back of a truck.

A woman who had fled a mob a day earlier was still in a state of shock.

"These things should not happen," said the woman, Aye Tin, a Muslim resident who slept overnight in a local Red Cross compound. "Most Muslims are staying off the streets. They're afraid they'll be attacked or killed if they go outside."

The rioting began Tuesday after a Muslim man splashed gasoline on a Buddhist woman and set her on fire. Buddhist mobs responded by burning down several Muslim-owned shops, a mosque and an Islamic orphanage. Roving motorcyclists continued the violence on Wednesday, leaving one person dead and four injured.

Presidential spokesman Ye Htut said 25 people had been detained so far. He said all those arrested were from Lashio.

The violence is casting fresh doubt over whether Thein Sein's government can or will act to contain the racial and religious intolerance plaguing a deeply fractured nation still struggling to emerge from half a century of military rule. Muslims, who account for about 4 percent of Myanmar's roughly 60 million people, have been the main victims of the violence since it began last year, but so far most criminal trials have involved prosecutions of Muslims, not members of the Buddhist majority.

___

Associated Press writer Aye Aye Win contributed to this report from Yangon, Myanmar.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fearful-myanmar-muslims-shelter-monastery-103014793.html

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Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini specs

GS4 MiniGS4 Mini

Looking for the full list of Galaxy S4 Mini specs? We've got you covered.

Samsung has announced the Galaxy S4 Mini, a downsized, mid-range version of its 2013 flagship, the Galaxy S4. Like that phone, there are a lot of technical details and software features to get to grips with, so check down below for the full, official Galaxy S4 Mini specification sheet.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/8Q-4M4vddbo/story01.htm

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Nietes-Fuentes II set in Mexico

MANILA, Philippines ? Boxing champion Donnie Nietes is set to battle his Mexican nemesis, Moises Fuentes, in a rematch that is scheduled to take place in Mexico.

According to Philippine Star columnist Joaquin Henson, Nietes manager, ALA president Michael Aldeguer, has already come to terms with Fuentes? handler, Zanfer Promotions.?

The rematch will take place in Mexico, eight months after the boxers fought to a controversial majority draw at the Waterfront Hotel Pacific Ballroom in Lahug, Cebu.

At stake in the fight is Nietes? WBO junior flyweight title.

Nietes? camp earlier turned down the rematch offer when Fuentes demanded that no Filipino judge be assigned to score their second fight.

In their first bout, Filipino judge Danrex Tapdasan scored it 115-113 for Nietes, while San Diego?s Pat Russell and Las Vegas? Adalaide Byrd saw it 114-all.

Aldeguer cited that Nietes never complained when he was assigned a Mexican judge in two of his three title defenses as WBO minimumweight champion in Mexico.

However, it is not yet clear if the WBO will assign a Filipino or a Mexican for the rematch.

Meanwhile, Aldeguer said Nietes will make a title defense first before battling Fuentes again.

?His next fight will be on Aug. 24 in Cebu. It will be a voluntary defense before the rematch with Fuentes,? he said.

Source: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/sports/05/28/13/nietes-fuentes-ii-set-mexico

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

As budget cuts hit S.C., a congressman is surprised at constituents? reactions (Washington Post)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/308948776?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Spiritual Awakening Process: Attachment Versus Engagement: How ...

One of the most commonly confused spiritual terms is that of attachment. Because society has confused attachment as a kind of commitment and not being attached as a kind of passive, laissez-faire attitude, the idea of letting go of attachment sounds like lunacy. It sounds like you'd stop caring for your kids and go run out and join a traveling circus.

Once again, we need to pause and look at our definitions. On the spiritual path, we look to see what definitions and strictures we've constructed around us. We always have to ask ourselves if this definition is helping me to better engage and know my inner and outer worlds. Or is this definition limiting my perspective and my view of myself and others? If you take nothing else from this spirituality blog post, then just take that suggestion from the last two sentences. It will serve you very well.

Definitions of Attachment and Engagement


While I don't mean to hold onto any definitions too tightly, here are two definitions of mine to help you along on your path.

Attachment

The quality of needing people, situations, and other things to adhere to a certain way of acting and producing certain types of outcomes. Often, this is a future-focused attitude or an attitude that is focused on what an individual can get out of it. At it's simplest level, attachment is about control.

Example: You are attached to your kids getting good grades so that they eventually get into to good colleges. More truthfully, you are afraid of the judgment other people would have of you if your kids failed because you are afraid of being judged a failure yourself.

?

Engagement

The quality of interacting fully in the present moment without needing any particular outcome. Engagement is flexible and able to change as the present moment presents new information or opportunities.

Example: You are engaged and committed with your kids to help them succeed in school. However, failure or success in classes doesn't change how you feel about them, the school, or other parts of the situation. By staying fully engaged with them, you may instead better see what path is appropriate for them, and perhaps college isn't that path. You stay flexible to change with your kids and to change how you guide them.

The Open Hand That Receives and Flexibility

In the examples, you can already see a big difference: flexibility. Attachment tends to have a rigid quality to it. You HAVE to have things go a certain way, and you HAVE to get a certain feeling or outcome. With engagement, you are fully present and committed, and in so being, you can adjust to changing situations without getting lost in trying to impose your idea of things onto others around you. You are flexible. That agility allows you to grow, and it allows others to grow. It allows you to have a certain level of dexterity with life that is required in a world that is ever-changing. Without it, we become increasingly miserable as we see how little we can control on the spiritual path. Engagement is the path of the open hand.

In life, things are always in flux. The best things that I have often enjoyed are those that are freely given. In this way, I receive with an open-hand, and I keep that hand open. I can protect this hand by using my other hand as a shield if necessary--which is often a lot less necessary than we think--but I don't close my receiving hand into a fist. That suffocates and crushes the gift. In turn--especially if this is a relationship--it often makes the gift want to run away. How often have some of you felt this in relationships? You felt crushed or suffocated, or you felt like the other person was somehow trying to running away from you. Pause now and think if you were receiving that relationship with an open hand or were you crushing it with expectations and smothering it in general.

The Dark Path of Attachment

Attachment is everywhere. Everywhere you look people are attached to things; it's why people think of this as the norm, not the exception. It's why it's so easily confused with commitment. But as you may have noticed in my early comments, being engaged implies a full commitment to the moment, and the present moment is the only moment in which we can be fully committed. We don't know what the future holds, and we don't live in those moments because they are purely conceptual. They don't exist outside of this moment (and please, let's not get into theoretical banter about the nature of time at this juncture; it's just an escape). The reality is that we are right here, right now.

However, so many people try to control the rest of the moments of life. They try to ensure that profit margins are high for years to come. They try to ensure that they'll be in a relationship for the rest of their lives. They try to ensure that they have the best car, the right social group, and so many other things. Again and again, attachment rears its head to try and enforce some kind of outcome onto EVERYTHING. It is quite exhausting. That's part of the reason many of you find yourself quite exhausted by the time you get to the spiritual path as you look for some kind of soothing nectar or salve. But the solution is not on an external path, a form of self improvement, or a spiritual high-state experience. The solution is in you, and it starts by letting go.

Letting Go, Letting Go, and Staying Engaged

Here is the crux of the problem most people have. They don't understand how to let go and stay engaged. But this is actually not a difficult thing. Usually the first thing that has to be let go of (and also the last thing--it comes around numerous times) is control. The illusion of control is the only way that attachment can truly exist. If we don't think we can control the outcomes at some level, then there is no reason to be attached to anything. It's impossible. It's impossible because we quickly see that all is change. Even if we are completely out of control and think that life "does" everything to us, this victim mentality is also another type of control. The ego thinks that it has found an attitude that thinks can explain its life. Just go and show a victim how powerful they are, and they will want to run from you. They want to run from it because this attitude is a subtle level of control over their view of life, and seeing their true power is disrupting that control. And most people are more attached and committed to their illusions and pain than they are to being free.

With all that said, we practice letting go, and we stay engaged with life. We let go of our attachments and goals for our kids, but we stay engaged with them during their growth. We set boundaries as is necessary, but we know at times that those boundaries will be challenged or ignored. We open our hearts to our children, but we know at times that that love will be spurned. We still continue to stay open, and in this way, we also delve deeper into our attachments. We find out where we are attached to getting love back from our children. We find out where we are attached to getting social approval for raising "good" children. We find out a lot of things in this particular example, and we grow tremendously. Seriously, being engaged is hardly being uncommitted or unreliable. Actually it is the most reliable and loving way we can be.

The Releasing of Old Patterns

What we find out as we go down this path is that we really haven't been engaged with our lives. We've been trying to steer the cart towards some kind of direction or outcome, but we also never really knew what was down that road. How many sports athletes strive for some kind of trophy or goal? How many more never reach that despite enduring great pain and difficulty? While pain and difficulty aren't necessarily signs of going down the wrong path, we do pay attention to how much we suffer. Where pain and suffering converge is when we simply are perpetuating pain again and again for no reason. Of course, the ego always thinks it has a reason that we should be in pain if nothing else because it thinks "the world is cruel." But part of releasing attachments will include releasing old patterns and unhealthy habits. We begin to see how we've been the architects of the vast majority of our suffering, and this is where the importance of forgiveness begins. In staying engaged with our lives, how we interact begins to radically change. But we have to choose to do this and make a commit to learn new behaviors. If we were always yelling at our children for not getting good grades, then we now have to choose a new way of interacting with them. That will lead to times of transition and uncertainty. That will lead many of you into your fears of the unknown, which is part of why many attachments got created in the first place.

Trying to Make the World a Safe Place

First off, the world is not a safe place. Secondly, we can never MAKE it a safe place. It is as it is. Even if we weren't so lost in ego games and creating wars within ourselves and against each other, there would be diseases, hurricanes, and a vast majority of other tragic things that can happen. The world is not safe, and it never will be. With that said, attachment and our idea of control have come about precisely to try and make the world around us safe. We believe that certain outcomes are better than others, and we create the attachments around us that we think will do us the most good. Many times, we are dead wrong. Familiarity is often linked into attachments, and what is familiar for many of you is actually full of pain. That goes for a lot of people who have had difficult and abusive upbringings. This isn't a bad thing perse, but it is important to claim your power to change your old habits and the internal dialogue that says, "Such and such people are safe and others aren't," because in abusive upbringings these internal dialogues are wrong. It's because love and abuse got linked together, and then attachments were born out of that. It is all a very sticky spider web at times, but you can get out of it. However, you have to stay aware and engaged with all of it to see it for what it truly is.

The Lasting Game-Changer of Engagement

Being engaged with life helps you to be in this world fully. You aren't running away or avoiding things by becoming detached. Instead, you are taking a step back within the very moment. Right when things are triggering you to be attached to someone (holding onto a relationship that wants to transition because you are afraid that transition means it will end), you have to pause. Breathe in. One conscious breath at the right time can make the difference between a hugely painful choice and a hugely helpful decision. It really is that small of a thing and that profound of a thing. That's one way that we can become better engaged with life.

Anywhere that we let others make choices for us, we have to take back the reins. That can cause upheavals at times. For those who are healing victim identities, stepping into engagement and reclaiming your power may be messy. But it is necessary for you to live your life fully and not be lost in the games of your own attachments to being a victim and the whims of what others would do to you. It is a game changer to truly engage in your own life.

Releasing Attachments, Reclaiming Your Life

Again and again, you will have to let go. I often say that the spiritual path is initially a path of loss. While ultimately, nothing is lost in life, it can feel that way at first. This will pass. It passes because as we let go of attachments we feel a lot lighter. The more attachments to things and people we give up, it's like we cutting away the spider webs that have restricted our movements for our entire lives. Pretty soon, you have more freedom than you truly know what to do with. In this way, the spiritual path can become a little addictive, but freedom is the best kind of addiction you can have. From this space, you can fully engage with your life, and whatever arises, arises. Whatever is in your heart, now has the freedom to fully emerge, and that is a beautiful sight to behold indeed.

This picture is gift from Becky Stiller. You can see more of her photography on this Flickr link.

Source: http://www.spiritualawakeningprocess.com/2013/05/attachment-versus-engagement-how-we.html

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US-ARTS Summary

Venice Biennale seeks to capture the "unruly" world of art

LONDON (Reuters) - Blocks of ice from the Bahamas, cardboard bed clothes from Iraq and a thumping Vatican heartbeat will help the 2013 Venice Biennale attempt to capture the "unruly" world of art. The rich diversity of unexpected sights and sounds at the world's largest non-commercial art exhibition are partly a result of sheer numbers, with shows from 88 countries installed across the canal city in time for this week's opening.

Giant garbage patches of the sea become "national" art in Venice

VENICE (Reuters) - Five huge patches of rubbish floating in seas around the world will have their own unofficial national pavilion on the sidelines of the world's largest non-commercial art fair in Venice this week, thanks to artist Maria Cristina Finucci. These "garbage patches" are areas of high marine debris concentrated in the North Pacific Ocean, the exact size and content of which are hard to define, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Uruguay's Torres-Garcia tops Sotheby's NY Latam art sale

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Pioneering South American abstract artists, led by Uruguay's Joaquin Torres-Garcia, Brazilian Sergio Camargo and Venezuelan Carlos Cruz-Diez, were the top sellers at Sotheby's Latin American art auction. Torres Garcia's 1931 "Composition Constructive," fetched $1.4 million in the Tuesday evening sale, which totaled $14.7 million with records set for works by Venezuelan artists.

Viennese artist and convicted pedophile Otto Muehl dies

VIENNA (Reuters) - Otto Muehl, one of Austria's most provocative artists who was jailed for sexual offences against minors in 1991, died on Sunday aged 87, the Austria Press Agency said. He was best known as a co-founder of Viennese Actionism, an avant-garde movement that caused outrage with its graphic images of paint-daubed, naked bodies, blood and violence.

Artist Kapoor draws on Berlin's dark history in new show

BERLIN (Reuters) - Blood-red bricks of wax are shifted by conveyor belts up metal chutes towards the centre of an atrium before thudding down and splattering like entrails, in a monumental new installation created by artist Anish Kapoor for his new show in Berlin. A giant, dark sun-like red disk hovers above the ever-growing heaps of wax splodges in "Symphony for a Beloved Sun", which opens Kapoor's first major exhibit in Berlin, running until November 24 in the Martin Gropius Bau exhibition hall.

Rare "Harry Potter" first edition fetches record auction price

(Reuters) - A unique first edition of "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" annotated by author J.K. Rowling has sold for a record 150,000 pounds ($227,421) at a London charity auction, Sotheby's said on Tuesday. The 1997 book, featuring handwritten notes, 22 original illustrations and a 43-page "second thoughts" commentary by the author, fetched the highest price to date for a printed book by Rowling, Sotheby's said in a statement.

China's Ai Weiwei launches musical career with heavy metal "Dumbass" single

BEIJING (Reuters) - Dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei made his first foray into the musical world on Wednesday with the release of the top single from his debut album, a song called "Dumbass" that takes inspiration from his detention in 2011. The video for the heavy metal song, which was directed by Ai with cinematography by acclaimed filmmaker Christopher Doyle, depicts Ai's 81 days in secretive detention in 2011, which sparked an international outcry.

Britain's Tate museum sets $34 million record for Constable painting

LONDON (Reuters) - The Tate Britain museum bought 19th century English painter John Constable's masterpiece "Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows" for 23.1 million pounds ($34.75 million), making it one of the most expensive British paintings ever sold. The painting, dated 1831, of the towering cathedral in the middle distance under an overcast sky shot through with a rainbow had been at risk of being sold abroad and its sale sets a record for Constable, the Tate said on Thursday.

NY art dealer tied to alleged forgeries charged with tax fraud

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Federal prosecutors on Tuesday charged a New York art dealer with tax fraud in connection with the sale of paintings she claimed to be the works of celebrated abstract expressionists, but some of which the government said were fakes. Glafira Rosales, 56, faces three counts of filing false tax returns and five counts of concealing a Spanish bank account from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service.

DiCaprio's wildlife charity auction brings in $38.8 million

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Actor Leonardo DiCaprio and Christie's auction house raised $38.8 million through a charity art auction and donations, Christie's said on Tuesday, with proceeds to benefit environmental and conservation causes. The 33 works in The 11th Hour Auction organized by the star of the new film "The Great Gatsby" sold for $31.74 million on Monday evening and set 13 records for artists including Carol Bove, Joe Bradley, Mark Grotjahn, Raymond Pettibon and Mark Ryden among others.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-arts-summary-161258562.html

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How America's Biggest Bike Share Will Turn NYC into a Cycling City

How America's Biggest Bike Share Will Turn NYC into a Cycling City

CitiBike has landed. Yesterday, amid a scrum of politicians and reporters, city officials introduced the system poised to transform New York street life. But keeping track of 6,000 new bikes?not to mention their riders?will be no small chore. And to do it, the city is implementing a handful of smart systems, ranging from modular docking system to solar-powered tail lights.

The program is a long time coming. Other cities, like Boston, D.C., and Chattanooga (who knew?), have been there first. But New York poses its own unique problems: There?s the simmering culture war between cyclists and pretty much everyone else. There?s the vastly understaffed accident investigation squad, which has fumbled the cases of several cyclists killed over the past year. There?s the infrastructural shortcomings of a densely-populated city where roads are vital economic lifelines?and where the use of those roads by cyclists is often viewed as nothing short of aggressive.

CitiBike, then, represents a massive experiment. It will put thousands of new cyclists on the road. It will introduce New York to cycling as a mode of transportation, rather than the rarified subculture of Freds, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and David Byrne. For drivers and longtime cyclists alike, this is a watershed moment, fraught with anxiety. At the same time, for all of the hand-wringing and political backtracking it's incurred, CitiBike represents the culmination of some pretty remarkable technologies.

How America's Biggest Bike Share Will Turn NYC into a Cycling City

The Docks

CitiBike is being funded by a $41 million sponsorship from?you guessed it?Citibank. But the system itself was designed and built by Public Bike System Company (PBSC, also known as Bixi), a privately-held nonprofit that was formed by the city of Montreal after the successful installation of their bike share system, in 2009. Since then, Bixi has installed similar systems in a host of other cities.

How America's Biggest Bike Share Will Turn NYC into a Cycling City

Bixi has surprising origins. The system was created by Charles Khairallah, a Canadian robotics engineer, who designed the docking system from scratch. Khairallah is well-known for his ideas about modular robotics?using a simple series of robotic components, his company has designed complex systems for everything from aerospace engineering to HVAC cleaning. "To build traditional robots you might need 100 different kinds of parts," he said in an interview last year. "With ours, you might need many of only one type of part. This technology is a genetic family of products. We can create different products from mass-produced, identical modules which are scalable for larger or smaller robots."

That ethos?of durable, simple components that interlock to create a responsive system?is the basis for the CitiBike dock. Each dock is made up of a simple set of parts, which can be assembled in minutes and moved at the drop of the hat. The system is completely wireless and self-sufficient, and its few moving parts are designed to be easily replaced. A photovoltaic array sprouting from the RFID-based payment tower supplies all the power needed to send signals back to the system hub, which keeps track of when a bike is checked out and returned.

The bikes themselves?45-pound tanks, with nitrogen-filled tires, three-speed gears, and solar-powered LED lights?are simple by comparison. The real intelligence of Khairallah?s system is embedded in the docks themselves.

How America's Biggest Bike Share Will Turn NYC into a Cycling City

The Wayfinding Signage

Last year, a Department of Transportation study revealed that most pedestrians, including locals, are basically wandering through the city in a state of perpetual confusion. Well, not quite. But nearly 30% of visitors, plus 10% of locals, admitted to having been lost within a week of being questioned. In fact, many of those interviewed couldn?t say which direction was north. It?s actually shocking those numbers aren?t larger, considering the meager signage options available to lost pedestrians (ask a street vendor? Go back down into the subway to peer at the map? Find some moss?).

How America's Biggest Bike Share Will Turn NYC into a Cycling City

On the heels of that study?and in anticipation of CitiBike?the DoT tapped their longtime collaborators, the graphic design firm Pentagram, to create a $6 million comprehensive wayfinding system for pedestrians. The new signs rolled out in March, and they?re an essential part of the CitiBike docking system. Based loosely on Massimo Vignelli?s classic signage for the MTA, the signs orient cyclists and pedestrians with easy, obvious cues. For example, a transparent overlay of landmark buildings. Or a dotted circle that shows scale in terms of walking time.

It?s not the most glamorous part of the bike share system, but it might be one of the most important. The only bigger liability than a lost, distracted pedestrian is a lost, distracted cyclist.

The App

Every CitiBike docking station has a limited number of parking spaces. And because there?s a strict time cap on each rental, giving cyclists a guaranteed place to return their bikes is an important part of the system. That?s where the CitiBike app comes in. Developed by Publicis Kaplan Thaler, the Manhattan mega-agency, the app sits atop the Google Maps API, showing nearby stations as pin icons. The shading of each pin represents the fullness of each dock?that way, you can skim the map and know, immediately, where you?ll be able to dock your rental. You?re also able to favorite stations, route maps, and check in on your membership.

How America's Biggest Bike Share Will Turn NYC into a Cycling City

Eventually, according to the CitiBike website, the data culled from the app will be shared with the public. That may be a few months down the line?for now, the CitiBike team is sharing basic user information on their blog. How are things shaping up? After only a single day of operation, there are already 16,463 annual members.

How America's Biggest Bike Share Will Turn NYC into a Cycling City

A major goal of the Bloomberg administration has been to make the city ?smarter,? either through design competitions to retrofit pay phones, by naming a Chief Digital Officer, or by asking developers to parse the city's deep well of data though the annual BigApps competition. CitiBike, though it hasn?t really been couched as such, is the first full-scale implementation of these ideas. Beneath all of the teeth-gnashing and turmoil lies a glimpse at the future of our city's smart urban infrastructure.

[Lead image by Dmitry Gudkov of #BikeNYC, via the CitiBike blog]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/how-americas-biggest-bike-share-will-turn-nyc-into-a-c-510074816

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Grimes Would Give McConnell Strong Challenge (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Iraq officials say car bombings kill at least 4

BAGHDAD (AP) ? Iraqi officials say two car bombings in Baghdad have killed at least four civilians and wounded 19 others.

Two police officers say the deadliest of the Monday afternoon attacks came in the busy commercial Sadoun Street in central Baghdad, where a car bomb killed three civilians and wounded 10 others.

They added that another car bomb exploded in the capital's eastern New Baghdad area as police were waiting for explosives experts to dismantle it. A civilian bystander was killed and nine others were wounded.

Two medical officials confirmed the causality figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release information.

Although violence has decreased sharply in Iraq since the height of insurgency, militants are still capable to carry out lethal attacks nationwide.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraq-officials-car-bombings-kill-least-4-135825399.html

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Helping or hovering? When 'helicopter parenting' backfires

Amanda Lucier / The Virginian-Pilot via AP file

As the first generation of kids who have "helicopter parents" graduates into the world, some some studies show that the parenting style may have backfired.

By JoNel Aleccia, Senior Writer, NBC News

The father who called to dispute the C grade his adult son got on a college exam had good intentions, Chris Segrin knows. He only wanted what was best for his kid, and if that involved lobbying the University of Arizona professor for a change, so be it.

?Somehow, his dad just seemed to know that the exam was worth a grade of a B,? says Segrin, a behavioral scientist who studies interpersonal relationships and mental health.

But what the dad didn?t know is that the phone call actually undermined his son, leaving the young man feeling insecure and incapable, not empowered and supported, a casualty of what researchers like Segrin describe as an epidemic of ?overparenting.?

?When it was all done, the son came in. He was actually a nice kid who apologized profusely,? Segrin recalls. ?Sometimes this type of parenting is imposed on children against their will.?

Whether it?s called overparenting or the better-known ?helicopter parenting,? the style of overly attentive, competitive child-rearing popular since about the mid-1990s may have backfired.

As the first generation of overparented kids continues to graduate into the world, a slew of studies, including Segrin?s, now show that youngsters whose parents intervene inappropriately -- offering advice, removing obstacles and solving problems that kids should tackle themselves -- actually wind up as anxious, narcissistic young adults who have trouble coping with the demands of life.

?The paradox of this form of parenting is that, despite seemingly good intentions, the preliminary evidence indicates that it is not associated with adaptive outcomes for young adults and may indeed be linked with traits that could hinder the child?s success,? concludes Segrin?s latest study, set to be published next month in the Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology.

Other recent studies also have found that too much help can create undesired outcomes, including a paper by California sociologist Laura T. Hamilton that says that the more money parents spend on their child?s college education, the worse grades the kid gets. Another study by Virginia psychologist Holly H. Schiffrin finds that the more parents are involved in schoolwork and selection of college majors, the less satisfied their kids feel with their college lives.?

Courtesy Studio One to One

C. Lee and Khris Reed write the blog "Helicopter Parenting and Just Plane Dad," in which they chronicle their attentive efforts to parent 16-year-old Hailey. They defend their "extremely overprotective" style of parenting and disagree with studies that show that so-called helicopter parenting hampers young adults' coping skills.

That news doesn?t sit well with parents like C. Lee and Khris Reed of Seffner, Fla., who are the producers of a blog dubbed ?Helicopter Mom and Just Plane Dad: Tales from the Not-So-Darkside of Parenting.? In it, they proudly chronicle their all-too attentive parenting of their only child, 16-year-old Hailey, dubbed ?Beloved? on the blog, and they don?t apologize for it.

?We are extremely overprotective and overbearing,? says mom C. Lee Reed, 42, an executive assistant at a large orthopedic practice. ?I know at every second where she is and who she?s with. I will monitor every bit of technology. She knows the rule is we know every password.?

The Reeds are familiar with research on helicopter parenting and, in short, they don?t buy it. Good parents naturally are invested in every aspect of their children?s lives, they contend.

?I don?t agree that just because we?ve been that way, we hamper her,? says C. Lee.

Adds Khris Reed, 41, a general manager for a local auto parts store: ?When people say ?helicopter parent? or ?helicopter mom,? in general, it?s the idea of the mom standing in the bushes with binoculars. The far extreme has put a bad rap on it.?

They believe that Hailey, who attends an online high school and doesn?t drive yet, is developing the life skills and self-sufficiency she?ll need to flourish at college in a few years, and later on her own, while still maintaining close ties with Mom and Dad.

For her part, Hailey thinks so, too.

?They teach me a lot of things that I?ll need to know in the real world so that I?m not lost and I know how to take care of myself,? she says.

Helicopter parenting sprang up in the era of ?Baby on Board? signs, mandatory car seats and bicycle helmets and police department fingerprinting sessions to prevent child abduction. There was a greater sense of anxiety, combined with a greater sense of competition, as the children of the massive Baby Boom generation reached high-school and college age, says Margaret Nelson, author of the 2010 book ?Parenting Out of Control: Anxious Parents in Uncertain Times.?

?Parents have become constantly more involved in their children?s lives than they were a decade or two ago,? says Nelson, a professor of sociology at Middlebury College, a top liberal arts college in Vermont.

There was a push, especially among educated working professionals, to provide youngsters with every opportunity to succeed, from homework tutors and lacrosse camps at age 8 to college application essay assistance at age 18, the experts say. Parents became fierce advocates for their children, intervening with teachers, coaches -- even employers.

The problem with all that help, says Segrin, is that when it?s overdone, it keeps children from developing their own age-appropriate strengths and skills.

?When we do not give the child the freedom to try on his or her own and maybe fail on his own, he doesn?t develop the competency that children who fail learn,? he says.

Segrin?s latest papers relied on interviews with more than 1,000 college-age students and their parents from across the nation. They found that many of the young adult kids are in touch with their parents constantly, with nearly a quarter communicating by text, phone or other means several times every day and another 22 percent reaching out once a day.

?There?s this endless contact with parents,? says Segrin, who doesn't have children. ?I don?t think it?s just calling to socialize. A lot of it is, ?How do I?? ?Will you?? ?Can you?? They are still quite reliant on their parents.?

The studies showed that parents who felt more anxiety about their children and more regret about their own missed goals led to greater overparenting. At the same time, they found that kids who were overparented were more likely be anxious and narcissistic and to lack coping skills.

That makes sense to Elizabeth May, 22, a recent University of Arizona graduate who participated in Segrin?s research with her mom, Suzanne May, 55. She says her parents were not the helicopter type, but she knows of plenty who were.

In one instance, the house where May lived with roommates was broken into and things were stolen. May called the landlord to ask that an alarm system be installed, but before she could finish the negotiations, her roommate?s mother rushed in and demanded action.

?I felt like it kind of undermined my communication with our landlord,? she says. ?I feel like we could have gotten it done ourselves.?

Separating harmful overparenting from appropriate parenting isn?t easy.

?There?s no sure 100-percent fault-free parenting guidebook,? observes Suzanne May.

In this culture, helicopter parenting is almost contagious, observes Nelson, the Middlebury College professor, with parents vying with each other to prove how engaged and attentive they are.

It would be better, suggests Segrin, for parents to put that energy into helping children -- especially late adolescents and young adults -- learn to handle problems and setbacks on their own

That can be challenging because different kids can handle responsibility at different ages, experts say. But it starts with parents actively choosing to let children experience the consequences of their actions instead of rushing to intervene. Suzanne May, an elementary school teacher who left the workforce while she raised her three kids, recalls a time when one child forgot crucial homework and called to ask May to bring it to school.?

"I told her, 'No, it's your responsibility. I'm not at your disposal to say, 'Hey, Mom, I forgot this,'" May says. That was a hard stance at the time, but her daughter learned that she needed to remember her work.?

In the short run, letting kids suffer discomfort or failure is tough, Segrin says. Most parents want to help their children if they can.?

?Overparenting is motivated with the idea of doing good things,? Segrin says. ?But it does the exact opposite in the long run. In the long run, parents are impairing their child?s coping skills. They?re winning the battle, but actually losing the war.?

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Monday, May 27, 2013

On Memorial Day, Obama pays tribute to fallen

By Jeff Mason

ARLINGTON, Virginia (Reuters) - President Barack Obama paid tribute on Monday to fallen men and women of the U.S. armed services during a Memorial Day ceremony in which he reminded Americans that the country was still at war.

During a solemn visit to Arlington National Ceremony, the resting ground for many military casualties, Obama noted in remarks to visitors that next year would mark the last Memorial Day of the U.S. war in Afghanistan.

"But even as we turn the page on a decade of conflict, even as we look forward, let us never forget, as we gather here today, that our nation is still at war," Obama said.

Unlike World War Two or the Vietnam War, conflicts that touched nearly every American, today most U.S. citizens were not directly affected by the military conflicts overseas, the president noted.

"As we gather here today, at this very moment, more than 60,000 of our fellow Americans still serve far from home in Afghanistan," Obama said.

"They're still going out on patrol, still living in spartan forward operating bases, still risking their lives to carry out their mission. And when they give their lives, they are still being laid to rest in cemeteries in the quiet corners across our country, including here in Arlington."

Most U.S. combat troops are slated to exit Afghanistan by the end of 2014. Obama formally ended the U.S. war in Iraq earlier in his White House tenure.

In a major policy speech last week, Obama said the United States would shift its focus away from a "boundless global war on terror" that began under his predecessor, Republican President George W. Bush.

After his remarks on Monday, Obama and his wife, first lady Michelle Obama, visited Section 60 of the cemetery, where the newly slain are buried.

"Today, just steps from where these brave Americans lie in eternal peace, we declare, as a proud and grateful nation, that their sacrifice will never be forgotten," Obama said.

"And just as we honor them, we hold their families close. Because for the parents who lose a child; for the husbands and wives who lose a partner; for the children who lose a parent, every loss is devastating. And for those of us who bear the solemn responsibility of sending these men and women into harm's way, we know the consequences all too well."

The first lady has made helping military families one of her primary causes, along with fighting childhood obesity.

During the ceremony, Michelle Obama leaned forward to watch as an Air Force singer delivered a powerful rendition of "America the Beautiful."

Earlier, the president laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, placing his hand over his heart while taps was played.

Entering and exiting the cemetery, Obama's motorcade snaked down a street lined with uniformed military members while the boom of a ceremonial canon sounded off in the background. It passed rows of white gravestones with small American flags planted beside them, along with onlookers and family members who had come to visit fallen loved ones.

(Editing by Philip Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/memorial-day-obama-pays-tribute-fallen-175529828.html

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Astronaut packs crafts for space station trip

Karen Nyberg / @AstroKarenN / NASA

NASA's Karen Nyberg sits in the Soyuz spacecraft that is scheduled to launch her and two other astronauts to the International Space Station on May 28. Image released on May 17, 2013.

By Miriam Kramer, SPACE.com

An American astronaut is about to get seriously crafty in space.

When NASA's Karen Nyberg, the European Space Agency's Luca Parmitano and Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin officially launch on board a Russian Soyuz spacecraft to the International Space Station on Tuesday, the American astronaut will bring a few key creative items with her.

"I actually enjoy sewing and quilting and I am bringing some fabric with me and thread and I'm hoping to create something," Nyberg said. "I don't know yet what it will be but that's part of creativity is that it comes with the feeling of the day so I have the supplies in my hands to create if I get the opportunity and the creative notion to do so." [Women in Space: A Gallery of Firsts (Photos)]

Although the six-month-stint will be Nyberg's longest in space, it is not her first time visiting the International Space Station.

"I'm looking forward to the most this time actually living there," Nyberg told SPACE.com. "I visited space station in 2008 on the space shuttle Discovery, and it was a very, very quick trip, only 14 days and honestly, I don't really remember a lot of it because it just flew on by so fast."

Nyberg, 43, is planning on sharing her experiences on board the station with the world using social media, although she has only be using Twitter (where she posts from the account @AstroKarenN) for a little over a month. She is also on Pinterest with the handle: knyberg.

Nyberg follows in a line of female astronauts who have spent time on board the International Space Station.

"The females that have lived on space station before me are incredible people and have given me a lot of advice on living there and also dealing with having a child at home while living there," Nyberg said. "So it's just fantastic to follow in their footsteps."

The Minnesota native admits that she will miss a few things about life back on Earth aside from her family.

NASA/Victor Zelentsov

NASA's Karen Nyberg, the European Space Agency's Luca Parmitano and Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin are scheduled to launch to the International Space Station on May 28, 2013.

"I also will definitely miss coffee in the morning out of a cup," Nyberg said. "It's just not quite the same when you drink your coffee from a bag."

Nyberg, Parmitano and Yurchikhin will complete the space station's Expedition 36 crew when they join NASA's Chris Cassidy and Russian cosmonauts Alexander Misurkin and Pavel Vinogradov on the orbiting laboratory at the end of the month.

The $100 billion International Space Station was constructed by 5 space agencies representing 15 different countries.

Follow Miriam Kramer on Twitter and Google+. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook?and Google+. Original article on SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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US intelligence embraces debate in security issues

WASHINGTON (AP) ? In the months leading up to the killing of Osama bin Laden, veteran intelligence analyst Robert Cardillo was given the nickname "Debbie Downer." With each new tidbit of information that tracked bin Laden to a high-walled compound in northern Pakistan ? phone records, satellite imaging, clues from other suspects ? Cardillo cast doubt that the terror network leader and mastermind was actually there.

As the world now knows well, President Barack Obama ultimately decided to launch a May 2011 raid on the Abbottabad compound that killed bin Laden. But the level of widespread skepticism that Cardillo shared with other top-level officials ? which nearly scuttled the raid ? reflected a sea change within the U.S. spy community, one that embraces debate to avoid "slam-dunk" intelligence in tough national security decisions.

The same sort of high-stakes dissent was on public display recently as intelligence officials grappled with conflicting opinions about threats in North Korea and Syria. And it is a vital part of ongoing discussions over whether to send deadly drone strikes against terror suspects abroad ? including U.S. citizens.

The three cases provide a rare look inside the secretive 16 intelligence agencies as they try to piece together security threats from bits of vague information from around the world. But they also raise concerns about whether officials who make decisions based on their assessments can get clear guidance from a divided intelligence community.

At the helm of what he calls a healthy discord is Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, who has spent more than two-thirds of his 72 years collecting, analyzing and reviewing spy data from war zones and rogue nations. Clapper, the nation's fourth top intelligence chief, says disputes are uncommon but absolutely necessary to get as much input as possible in far-flung places where it's hard for the U.S. to extract ? or fully understand ? ground-level realities.

"What's bad about dissension? Is it a good thing to have uniformity of view where everyone agrees all the time? I don't think so," Clapper told The Associated Press in an interview Friday. "...People lust for uniform clairvoyance. We're not going to do that."

"We are never dealing with a perfect set of facts," Clapper said. "You know the old saw about the difference between mysteries and secrets? Of course, we're held equally responsible for divining both. And so those imponderables like that just have to be factored."

Looking in from the outside, the dissension can seem awkward, if not uneasy ? especially when the risks are so high.

At a congressional hearing last month, Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., read from a Defense Intelligence Agency report suggesting North Korea is able to arm long-range missiles with nuclear warheads. The April 11 disclosure, which had been mistakenly declassified, came at the height of Kim Jong Un's sabre-rattling rhetoric and raised fears that U.S. territory or Asian nations could be targeted for an attack.

Within hours, Clapper announced that the DIA report did not reflect the opinions of the rest of the intelligence community, and that North Korea was not yet fully capable of launching a nuclear-armed missile.

Two weeks later, the White House announced that U.S. intelligence concluded that Syrian President Bashar Assad has probably used deadly chemical weapons at least twice in his country's fierce civil war. But White House officials said the intelligence wasn't strong enough to justify sending significant U.S. military support to Syrian rebels who are fighting Assad's regime.

Because the U.S. has few sources to provide first-hand information in Syria, the intelligence agencies split on how confident they were that Assad had deployed chemical weapons. The best they could do was conclude that the Syrian regime, at least, probably had undertaken such an effort. This put Obama in the awkward political position of having said the use of chemical weapons would cross a "red line" and have "enormous consequences," but not moving on the news of chemical weapons use, when the occasion arose, because the intelligence was murky.

Lamborn said he welcomes an internal intelligence community debate but is concerned that the North Korean threat was cavalierly brushed aside.

"If they want to argue among themselves, that's fine," said Lamborn, a member of the House Armed Services Committee. However, he also said, "We should be cautious when evaluating different opinions, and certainly give credence to the more sobering possibilities. ... When it comes to national security, I don't think we want to have rose-colored glasses on, and sweep threats under the rug."

Clapper said that, in fact, U.S. intelligence officials today are more accustomed to predicting gloom and doom. "We rain on parades a lot," he said.

Current and former U.S. intelligence officials say the vigorous internal debate was spawn from a single mistake about a threat ? and an overly aggressive response.

Congress demanded widespread intelligence reform after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, to fix a system where agencies hoarded threat information instead of routinely sharing it. Turf wars between the CIA and the FBI, in particular, were common. The CIA generally was considered the nation's top intelligence agency, and its director was the president's principal intelligence adviser.

The system was still in place in 2002, when the White House was weighing whether to invade Iraq. Intelligence officials widely ? and wrongly ? believed that then-dictator Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. By December 2002, the White House had decided to invade and was trying to outline its reasoning for doing so when then-CIA Director George Tenet described it as "a slam-dunk case."

The consequences were disastrous. There were no WMDs, but the U.S. wound up in a nearly nine-year war that killed nearly 5,000 American soldiers, left more than 117,000 Iraqis dead, and cost taxpayers at least $767 billion. The war also damaged U.S. credibility throughout the Mideast and, to a lesser extent, the world. Tenet later described his "slam-dunk" comment as "the two dumbest words I ever said."

Two years later, Congress signed sweeping reforms requiring intelligence officials to make clear when the spy agencies don't agree. Retired Amb. John Negroponte, who became the first U.S. national intelligence director in 2005, said if it hadn't been for the faulty WMD assessment "we wouldn't have had intelligence reform."

"It was then, and only then that the real fire was lit under the movement for reform," Negroponte said in a recent interview. "In some respects it was understandable, because Saddam had had all these things before, but we just allowed ourselves to fall into this erroneous judgment."

To prevent that from happening again, senior intelligence officials now encourage each of the spy agencies to debate information, and if they don't agree, to object to their peers' conclusions. Intelligence assessments spell out the view of the majority of the agencies, and highlight any opposing opinions in a process similar to a Supreme Court ruling with a majority and minority opinion.

The result, officials say, is an intelligence community that makes assessments by majority vote instead of group-think, and where each agency is supposed to have an equal voice. In effect, officials say, the CIA has had to lean back over the last decade as officials have given greater credence to formerly marginalized agencies. Among them is the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research, which warned before the 2003 Iraq invasion that the CIA had overestimated Saddam's prospects to develop nuclear weapons.

Also included is the DIA, which has increased its ability during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars to gather ground-level intelligence throughout much of the Mideast and southwest Asia. In an interview, DIA director Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn would not discuss his agency's debated assessment on North Korea, but described a typical intelligence community discussion about "ballistic missiles in name-that-country" during which officials weigh in on how confident they feel about the information they're seeing.

"In the intelligence community we should encourage, what I would call, good competition," Flynn said. He added: "The DIA, in general, is always going to be a little bit more aggressive. ...As a defense community, we're closer to the war-fighting commanders; it may be in that part of our DNA."

Without the all the varying strands of information pieced together from across the intelligence agencies, officials now say the bin Laden raid would not have happened.

The CIA was running the manhunt, but the National Security Agency was contributing phone numbers and details from conversations it had intercepted in overseas wiretaps. The National Geospatial Agency provided satellite imagery of the Abbottabad compound ? from years past and more recently ? to get a sense of who might be living there. And it produced photos for a tall man walking the ground inside the compound ? even though they were never able to get a close look at his face.

One of the compound's balconies was blocked off by a seven-foot wall, Cardillo said, raising questions about who might want his view obscured by such a tall barrier. Officials also were keeping tabs on the people who lived in the compound, and trying to track how often they went outside.

Cardillo was vocal about his skepticism in each strand of new information he analyzed during the eight months he worked on the case, prompting colleagues to rib him about being a "Debbie Downer."

"I wasn't trying to be negative for the sake of being negative," Cardillo, a deputy national intelligence director who regularly briefs Obama, said in an interview Friday. "I felt, 'Boy, we've got to press hard against each piece of evidence.' Because, let's face it, we wanted bin Laden to be there. And you can get into group-think pretty quick."

To prevent that from happening, officials encouraged wide debate. At one point, they brought in a new four-man team of analysts who had not been briefed on the case to independently determine whether the intelligence gathered was strong enough to indicate bin Laden was there.

Their assessment was even more skeptical than Cardillo's. In the end the call to launch the raid was so close that, as officials have since said, it might as well have come down to a flip of a coin.

In most intelligence cases, the decisions aren't nearly as dramatic. But the stakes are always high.

Over the last four years, the Obama administration has expanded the deadly U.S. drone program in its hunt for extremists in terror havens. The drones have killed thousands of people since 2003 ? both suspected terrorists and civilian bystanders ? among them four U.S. citizens in Pakistan and Yemen.

The Justice Department this week said only one of the four Americans, Anwar al-Awlaki, who officials believe had ties to at least three attacks planned or carried out on U.S. soil, was targeted in the strikes. The other three were collateral damage in strikes aimed at others.

Though policy officials make the final call on when to strike, the intelligence community builds the case. Analysts must follow specific criteria in drone assessments, including near certainty of the target's whereabouts and the notion that bystanders will not be killed. They must also look at the likelihood of whether the terror suspects can be captured instead of killed.

In these sorts of life-and-death cases, robust debate is especially necessary, Clapper said. And if widespread doubts persist, the strike will be canceled.

"It is a high bar, by the way, and it should be," Clapper said. "If there is doubt and argument and debate ? and there always will be as we look at the totality the information we have on a potential target ? we damn well better have those debates and resolve those kinds of issues among ourselves the best we can."

Few have been more skeptical of the decision-making behind the drone strikes than Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat who has sat on the Senate Intelligence Committee since 2001. Earlier this year, he threatened to block Senate confirmation of CIA Director John Brennan until the White House gave Congress classified documents outlining its legal justification for targeting American citizens in drone strikes. The documents were turned over within hours of Brennan's confirmation hearing.

Generally, Wyden says, spy assessments have become far more reliable over the last decade, and especially since the flawed Iraq intelligence. But he maintains Congress should be given greater access to classified documents to independently verify intelligence analysis and assessments ? and safeguard against being misled.

"Certainly, solid analysis from the intelligence community is one of the most important sources of information that I have," Wyden said in an interview this month. "And if you look back, and the analysis is incorrect or if it's written in a way that portrays guesses at certainties, that can contribute to flawed decision-making.

"That's why I felt so strongly about insisting on actually getting those documents with respect to drones," Wyden said. "I've got to be able to verify it."

Clapper, who has been working on intelligence issues for a half-century, is well aware of how jittery many Americans feel about the spy community. The internal debates, he believes, should bolster their confidence that intelligence officials have thoroughly weighed all aspects of some of the world's most difficult security issues before deciding how high a threat they pose.

"I think it'd be very unhealthy ? and I get a lot of pushback from people ? if I tried to insist that you will have one uniform view and this is what I think, and that's what goes. That just wouldn't work," he said. "There is the fundamental tenet of truth to power, presenting inconvenient truths at inconvenient times. That's part of our system."

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Follow Lara Jakes on Twitter at https://twitter.com/larajakesAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-intelligence-embraces-debate-security-issues-122715492.html

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