Categories
US

Suspected drones over Taiwan, cyber attacks after Pelosi visit

  • Suspected drones fly over outlying Taiwanese islands
  • Defense ministry says its website attacked, briefly offline
  • Chinese military exercises, involving live-fire, set to begin
  • China says it’s an internal affair

TAIPEI, Aug 4 (Reuters) – Suspected drones flew over outlying Taiwanese islands and hackers attacked its defense ministry website, authorities in Taipei said on Thursday, a day after a visit by US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi that outraged China.

China was to begin a series of military exercises around Taiwan on Thursday in response to Pelosi’s visit, some of which were to take place within the island’s 12-mile sea and air territory, according to the defense ministry in Taipei.

That has never happened before and a senior ministry official described the potential move as “amounting to a sea and air blockade of Taiwan”.

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China, which claims Taiwan as its own territory, said on Thursday its differences with the self-ruled island were an internal affair. read more

“Our punishment of pro-Taiwan independence diehards, external forces is reasonable, lawful,” China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said.

China’s Xinhua news agency has said the exercises, involving live fire drills, will take place in six areas which ring Taiwan and will begin at 0400 GMT.

On Wednesday night, just hours after Pelosi left for South Korea, unidentified aircraft, probably drones, had flown above the area of ​​the Kinmen islands, Taiwan’s defense ministry said. read more

Major General Chang Zone-sung of the army’s Kinmen Defense Command told Reuters that the drones came in a pair and flew into the Kinmen area twice on Wednesday night, at around 9 pm (1300 GMT). and 10 p.m.

“We immediately fired flares to issue warnings and to drive them away. After that, they turned around. They came into our restricted area and that’s why we dispersed them,” he said.

The heavily fortified Kinmen islands are just off the southeastern coast of China, near the city of Xiamen.

The defense ministry also said its website suffered cyber attacks and went offline temporarily late on Wednesday night, adding it was working closely with other authorities to enhance cyber security as tensions with China rise. read more

Pelosi, the highest-level US visitor to Taiwan in 25 years, praised its democracy and pledged American solidarity during her brief stopover, adding that Chinese anger could not stop world leaders from traveling there.

China summoned the US ambassador in Beijing and halted several agricultural imports from Taiwan.

Security in the area around the US Embassy in Beijing remained unusually tight on Thursday as it has been throughout this week.

Although Chinese social media users have vented fury on Pelosi, there were no signs of significant protests or calls to boycott US products.

‘WILL NOT LEAVE TAIWAN’

Taiwan scrambled jets on Wednesday to warn away 27 Chinese aircraft in its air defense zone, the island’s defense ministry said, adding that 22 of them crossed the median line separating the island from China. read more

Pelosi arrived with a congressional delegation on her unannounced but closely watched visit late on Tuesday, defying China’s repeated warnings and amid sharply deteriorating US-Chinese relations.

“Our delegation came to Taiwan to make unequivocally clear that we will not abandon Taiwan,” Pelosi told Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen, who Beijing suspects of pushing for formal independence – a red line for China. read more

“Now, more than ever, America’s solidarity with Taiwan is crucial, and that’s the message we are bringing here today.”

China considers Taiwan part of its territory and has never renounced using force to bring it under its control. The United States and the foreign ministers of the Group of Seven nations warned China against using the visit as a pretext for military action against Taiwan.

“Sadly, Taiwan has been prevented from participating in global meetings, most recently the World Health Organization, because of objections by the Chinese Communist Party,” Pelosi said in a statement issued after her departure.

“While they may prevent Taiwan from sending its leaders to global forums, they cannot prevent world leaders or anyone from traveling to Taiwan to pay respect to its flourishing democracy, to highlight its many successes and to reaffirm our commitment to continued collaboration,” Pelosi added . read more

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Reporting by Yimou Lee; Additional reporting by Tony Munroe; Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Categories
Technology

Western Star 57X Has Been Included In American Truck Simulator

You can currently drive the new Western Star 57X highway truck from Daimler Truck in American Truck Simulator.

A brand-new Daimler Truck model that emerged in the truck game and on American roadways almost simultaneously is the latest addition to American Truck Simulator.

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Thanks to a collaboration between the Western Star 57X and the game’s creator, SCS-Software, you can now include it in your fleet of American Truck Simulator vehicles. The Western Star 57X is a part of the company’s “trilogy of tough” series.

The Western Star® 57X consists of a combination of both worlds. It takes the X Series’ DNA of bold design and dependability and combines it with Daimler Truck North America’s best road platforms, which have been tested over millions of thousands to bring you the most cutting-edge and creative road truck Western Star has ever produced.

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There are various settings and combinations available for the Western Star® 57X. This consists of a day cab and a 72″ sleeper cab, three short chassis options and two long chassis options, five interior trim options, proprietary Detroit® drivetrain options, and a plethora of other enhancements and extras to make your iconic truck stand out!

In its digital rendition of the 57X, SCS has replicated many of the slick-looking high-tech features, such as the computerized dashboard and C-bracket side-view mirrors with integrated turn signals.

In American Truck Simulator, it is now accessible at any Western Star dealer. The base price for the day cab configuration is $118,765, while the level 25 minimum requirement and the base price for the sleeper cab configuration are $189,530 and $189,530, respectively.

We would like to extend a sincere appreciation to our friends at Western Star® for letting us collaborate closely with them and include this truck in American Truck Simulator just after its official debut.

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Categories
Sports

Twomey’s update on Taranto, Banfield, Rioli and more

AFL Media’s Cal Twomey has provided an update on the future of a number of players at various clubs.

One of the biggest names that will be prominent in this year’s trade period is that of GWS midfielder Tim Taranto.

Twomey was asked on SEN Breakfast – Will Taranto be at the Giants next season?

“I think it’s highly unlikely, at this point,” he said.

“The way that things are moving, he’s had offers in front of him, a two-year deal, a four-year deal, longer and shorter-term options there for him.

“The way that Victorian clubs, particularly Collingwood and Richmond, are coming for him, I think it’s unlikely for him to be at the Giants next year.”

He then updated listeners on a number of other players.

Callum and Tyler Brown (Collingwood)

“That’s been a little bit of a holding pattern for those two guys.

“Tyler’s played some more footy this year and Cal’s been in and out as well.

“The most likelihood is that they remain at Collingwood but yet to receive new deals the both of them.”

Xavier Duursma (Port Adelaide)

“He’s contracted for another couple of years.

“I know he’s been in and out of the side at Port Adelaide but I think he’s pretty happy there from all accounts and is a part of that future.

“He’s had some more midfield time this year, whether he goes back to half-back next year we wait and see.

“His sister has just joined the AFLW side and has moved in with Xavier over there. His brother of him is coming through the draft next year.

“I’d be very surprised if we see Xavier Duursma move in the off-season given he’s contracted and an early pick from a couple of years ago.”

RIVAL CLUB FLAGS INTEREST IN DONS SKIPPER AS COLLINGWOOD BIG MAN HITS GAMES TRIGGER

Willie Rioli (West Coast)

“Weighing up a multi-year offer to stay at West Coast where he’s obviously a premiership player.

“You have been in no rush to make a call on his future. Clearly the Eagles want to keep him and have put that deal in front of him.

“Willie has had a tragic few weeks with the death of his father, but even before that had been waiting until deeper into the season on what he does.

“Rival cubs looking for forward line class are watching though.

“He’s got links to Victoria where he went to school and also in South Australia where he was drafted from.

“So there’s a few clubs watching that space but the Eagles have a deal in front of him.”

James Stewart (Essendon)

“He returned to the side on the weekend and booted three goals.

“He’s gone back to playing as a forward.

“He’s in negotiations on a two-year extension at the Bombers.

“They see him as a good player at both ends of the ground.”

Bailey BanfieldFremantle

“Fremantle free agent Bailey Banfield hasn’t been offered a new deal yet, but he’s keen to stay at the Dockers.

“He’s been a regular sub this season.”

Robbie Fox (Sydney)

“He’s been an interesting one. He has come into the Swans line-up over the past six weeks or so and they’ve been winning.

“They’ve been in really good shape since he’s been in.

“He struggled to break into the side in the first half of the season. He’s out of contract and fighting for a new deal and is yet to receive an offer.”





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Categories
US

Ron Johnson suggests Medicare, Social Security be approved on an annual basis

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said Wednesday that Social Security and Medicare should be up for congressional approval each year, instead of staying under their current status as federal entitlement programs.

“Social Security and Medicare, if you qualify for the entitlement, you just get it no matter what the cost,” Johnson said in an interview that aired Tuesday on “The Regular Joe Show” podcast.

The Wisconsin senator, who is up for reelection in a highly contested race this fall that will help determine which party holds the majority next year, argued that the mandatory spending status of funding for the federal programs should be switched to discretionary spending “so it’s all evaluated.”

“Our problem in this country is that more than 70 percent of our federal budget, of our federal spending, is all mandatory spending. It’s on automatic pilot. It never — you just don’t do proper oversight. You don’t get in there and fix the programs going bankrupt. It’s just on automatic pilot,” Johnson said.

“As long as things are on automatic pilot, we just continue to pile up debt,” he added.

I have argued that funding for the programs should instead come before Congress for annual approval.

A spokesperson for Johnson’s office told The Hill in a statement Wednesday that the senator “never suggested putting Medicare and Social Security on the chopping block.”

“The Senator’s point was that without fiscal discipline and oversight typically found with discretionary spending, Congress has allowed the guaranteed benefits for programs like Social Security and Medicare to be threatened. This must be addressed by Congress taking its responsibilities seriously to ensure that seniors don’t need to question whether the programs they depend on remain solvent,” the spokesperson said.

Social Security benefits are available to US retirees, and Medicare health insurance is available to citizens who are over the age of 65 or disabled. American workers’ taxes fund the programs, with workers paying into the federal programs. In the case of Social Security, benefits are linked in part to one’s earnings, which help determine a monthly payment.

Democrats quickly pounced on Johnson’s remarks, suggesting the majority party thinks they could hurt Johnson in his reelection bid.

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) said that Johnson’s comments showed that the programs could be cut by Republicans.

“They’re saying the quiet part out loud. MAGA Republicans want to put Social Security and Medicare on the chopping block,” Schumer wrote, referring to the Trump campaign slogan “Make America Great Again.”

Johnson’s spokesperson pushed back against the majority leader, saying in a statement that “Senator Schumer is lying about what Sen. Johnson said.”

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Categories
Technology

Researchers discover major roadblock in alleviating network congestion | MITNews

When users want to send data over the internet faster than the network can handle, congestion can occur — the same way traffic congestion snarls the morning commute into a big city.

Computers and devices that transmit data over the internet break the data down into smaller packets and use a special algorithm to decide how fast to send those packets. These congestion control algorithms seek to fully discover and utilize available network capacity while sharing it fairly with other users who may be sharing the same network. These algorithms try to minimize delay caused by data waiting in queues in the network.

Over the past decade, researchers in industry and academia have developed several algorithms that attempt to achieve high rates while controlling delays. Some of these, such as the BBR algorithm developed by Google, are now widely used by many websites and applications.

But a team of MIT researchers has discovered that these algorithms can be deeply unfair. In a new study, they show there will always be a network scenario where at least one sender receives almost no bandwidth compared to other senders; that is, a problem known as starvation cannot be avoided.

“What is really surprising about this paper and the results is that when you take into account the real-world complexity of network paths and all the things they can do to data packets, it is basically impossible for delay-controlling congestion control algorithms to avoid starvation using current methods,” says Mohammad Alizadeh, associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science (EECS).

While Alizadeh and his co-authors weren’t able to find a traditional congestion control algorithm that could avoid starvation, there may be algorithms in a different class that could prevent this problem. Their analysis also suggests that changing how these algorithms work, so that they allow for larger variations in delay, could help prevent starvation in some network situations.

Alizadeh wrote the paper with first author and EECS graduate student Venkat Arun and senior author Hari Balakrishnan, the Fujitsu Professor of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence. The research will be presented at the ACM Special Interest Group on Data Communications (SIGCOMM) conference.

congestion control

Congestion control is a fundamental problem in networking that researchers have been trying to tackle since the 1980s.

A user’s computer does not know how fast to send data packets over the network because it lacks information, such as the quality of the network connection or how many other senders are using the network. Sending packets too slowly makes poor use of the available bandwidth. But sending them too quickly can overwhelm the network, and in doing so, packets will start to get dropped. These packets must be resent, which leads to longer delays. Delays can also be caused by packets waiting in queues for a long time.

Congestion control algorithms use packet losses and delays as signals to infer congestion and decide how fast to send data. But the internet is complicated, and packets can be delayed and lost for reasons unrelated to network congestion. For instance, data could be held up in a queue along the way and then released with a burst of other packets, or the receiver’s acknowledgment might be delayed. The authors call delays that are not caused by congestion “jitter.”

Even if a congestion control algorithm measures delay perfectly, it can’t tell the difference between delay caused by congestion and delay caused by jitter. Delay caused by jitter is unpredictable and confuses the sender. Because of this ambiguity, users start estimating delay differently, which causes them to send packets at unequal rates. Eventually, this leads to a situation where starvation occurs and someone gets shut out completely, Arun explains.

“We started the project because we lacked a theoretical understanding of congestion control behavior in the presence of jitter. To place it on a firm theoretical footing, we built a mathematical model that was simple enough to think about, yet able to capture some of the complexities of the internet. It has been very rewarding to have math tell us things we didn’t know and that have practical relevance,” he says.

Studying starvation

The researchers fed their mathematical model to a computer, gave it a series of commonly used congestion control algorithms, and asked the computer to find an algorithm that could avoid starvation, using their model.

“We couldn’t do it. We tried every algorithm that we are aware of, and some new ones we made up. Nothing worked. The computer always found a situation where some people get all the bandwidth and at least one person gets basically nothing,” Arun says.

The researchers were surprised by this result, especially since these algorithms are widely believed to be reasonably fair. They started suspecting that it may not be possible to avoid starvation, an extreme form of unfairness. This motivated them to define a class of algorithms they call “delay-convergent algorithms” that they proved will always suffer from starvation under their network model. All existing congestion control algorithms that control delay (that the researchers are aware of) are delay-convergent.

The fact that such simple failure modes of these widely used algorithms remained unknown for so long illustrates how difficult it is to understand algorithms through empirical testing alone, Arun adds. It underscores the importance of a solid theoretical foundation.

But all hope is not lost. While all the algorithms they tested failed, there may be other algorithms which are not delay-convergent that might be able to avoid starvation This suggests that one way to fix the problem might be to design congestion control algorithms that vary the delay range more widely, so the range is larger than any delay that might occur due to jitter in the network.

“To control delays, algorithms have tried to also bound the variations in delay about a desired equilibrium, but there is nothing wrong in potentially creating greater delay variation to get better measurements of congestive delays. It is just a new design philosophy you would have to adopt,” Balakrishnan adds.

Now, the researchers want to keep pushing to see if they can find or build an algorithm that will eliminate starvation. They also want to apply this approach of mathematical modeling and computational proofs to other thorny, unsolved problems in networked systems.

“We are increasingly reliant on computer systems for very critical things, and we need to put their reliability on a firmer conceptual footing. We’ve shown the surprising things you can discover when you put in the time to come up with these formal specifications of what the problem actually is,” says Alizadeh.

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Categories
Sports

Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag labels Cristiano Ronaldo’s actions ‘unacceptable’

Newly appointed Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag was left fuming after a handful of first team players left a preseason match early, including wantaway star forward Cristiano Ronaldo.

The Portuguese superstar was filmed by fans leaving the ground along with a group of fellow teammates prior to the final whistle of the Red Devils’ pre-season game against Rayo Vallecano, leaving Ten Hag unimpressed.

Ten Hag described the act as “unacceptable,” in an interview with Viaplay. “We are a team and that means you stay until the end,” he said.

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The incident came as rumors emerged suggesting Ronaldo and agent Jorge Mendes made it clear the six-time Ballon D’or winner wanted a summer move away from Old Trafford, in search of Champions League football ahead of the new season.

Despite the talk over a potential move elsewhere, Ten Hag remains certain the 37-year-old will stick around for the upcoming campaign, saying the former Real Madrid and Juventus striker was “in our plans” for the new season and “not for sale.” .”

Amongst all the current drama surrounding the highly decorated English club, Ten Hag has remained upbeat and positive with his new squad, ahead of Sunday’s season-opener against Brighton.

“Overall I am happy.” Ten Hag said, looking back on his first pre-season at the club. “We make good progress and we’re ready for the season.”

However, the former Ajax manager has made it clear “there is a lot of room for improvement” for his side, especially considering the Reds had dropped to their lowest ever finishing points in the Premier League era just last season.

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Australia

Defense review warranted but suitability of Stephen Smith questioned as former minister

That report’s author, Paul Dibb, said on Wednesday the task before Houston and Smith was a big challenge, particularly given the short timeframe.

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There was an urgency both to finalize the review and to set the ADF up for the new strategic environment, he said.

“Time is not on our side, there’s some urgency about this. And in my experience … it is very difficult to get Defense to recognize that some things are urgent,” Dibb said.

“What we need is a long-range strike… capability – and it’s got to be something that’s quicker than ordering large amounts of new fighter aircraft, warships and submarines.”

Australian Strategic Policy Institute defense and strategy director Michael Shoebridge said the review had to consider the “disturbing” new direct security challenge through China pushing into our region, as well as the lessons from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine about the importance of self-reliance.

“Like the Ukrainians, we need to be able to look after ourselves to bring the support of partners, allies and friends,” he said.

“And the fracturing world means relying on global systems to supply what you need in times of crisis is a bad plan.”

Neil James, executive director of the Australian Defense Association, agreed the review was sensitive.

“If the situation is as bad as they fear, they need to increase the defense budget substantially. And they’ve got to actually sell that to the Australian people,” he said.

However, he said it was not ideal to have a former defense minister leading the review, saying there was a “legacy protection risk” since some delays plaguing defense projects now were a result of decisions made during Smith’s time in the portfolio.

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The opposition echoed these concerns.

“When Mr Smith was last in government, he cut and canceled defense projects, delayed decisions, and dismissed warnings about the strategic environment Australia was heading into a decade ago,” opposition defense spokesman Andrew Hastie said.

Albanese said the government had found the best people to conduct the review, and he and Marles recommitted to at least maintaining defense spending.

Shoebridge said Smith and Houston brought a detailed understanding of how defense operated as an organization but warned they would have to revisit assumptions they may have held while in office about how the world works.

“This review isn’t about either of them defending their legacies. It’s about looking with clear eyes at the world we have today, Australia’s security challenges in it, and the kind of military that we need to deal with that,” he said.

“And I think they’re both smart enough.”

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

Categories
US

After a deadly 2009 attack, the CIA’s hunt for Zawahiri became personal

Comment

It was one of the darkest days in CIA history: Seven operatives killed after being lured by a rogue informant into a deadly trap. In the years since, memories of the 2009 disaster in eastern Afghanistan helped to animate the intelligence agency’s global search for an elusive terrorist believed to have played a key role in the officers’ deaths.

That terrorist was Ayman al-Zawahiri, the al-Qaeda leader killed on Saturday, in a strike carried out by the CIA. Nothing in official US statements describes Zawahiri’s death as payback for the American losses in Khost, Afghanistan, some 12 years earlier. But many former and current intelligence officers say that’s exactly how it felt.

The CIA, per usual practice, has not publicly acknowledged any part in firing the missile that struck Zawahiri as he stood on his balcony in an apartment building in Kabul, the Afghan capital. But since Monday, confirmation of the 71-year-old Egyptian’s death has triggered an emotional response within the agency’s Langley, Va., headquarters, and also with former colleagues, friends and family members of those who were killed or wounded in 2009.

“This is an incredibly personal moment,” said Marc Polymeropoulos, a former officer with the CIA’s operations division who served with several of the five men and two women from the agency killed at Camp Chapman, a CIA base on the outskirts of Khost from which the agency ran clandestine missions against al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters. In addition to the seven CIA operatives, a senior Jordanian intelligence officer and an Afghan driver were also killed.

Polymeropoulos described the deaths at Camp Chapman as “the most stark example of the tragic costs of the fight against terrorism.”

Numerous current and former CIA officials marked the news of Zawahiri’s death with social media posts paying tribute to the CIA officers and security team officials who died in the Khost attack, the deadliest against the CIA since eight employees were killed in a bombing at the US Embassy in Beirut in 1983.

“Just remember. They are heroes,” former CIA director and retired Gen. Michael N. Hayden wrote in a Twitter post. In an interview, Hayden recalled working with two of the slain officers, Khost base chief Jennifer Matthews and Elizabeth Hanson, and learning about their deaths while at CIA headquarters on the day of the attack.

“I went outside to my car and cried,” Hayden said.

CIA Director William J. Burns, in response to a query from The Washington Post, did not comment on details of the operation against Zawahiri but said the events were “deeply personal for CIA.”

Zawahiri appeared on his balcony. The CIA was ready to kill him.

“In the hunt for Ayman al-Zawahiri, a brutal attack took the lives of seven CIA officers in Khost in 2009,” Burns said. “While terrorism remains a very real challenge, Zawahiri’s removal diminishes that threat and offers a measure of justice.”

Zawahiri’s role in al-Qaeda’s astonishingly complex operation against the CIA base was chronicled in a 2011 book and also described in articles and essays about the attack. The key figure was a Jordanian national, Humam al-Balawi, a physician who got into trouble in his home country for posting pro-al-Qaeda messages on social media. After being interrogated by Jordan’s intelligence service, he was persuaded to become a counterterrorism informant. Ultimately, Balawi agreed to travel to Pakistan to gather information that might aid the CIA’s search for Osama bin Laden and other top al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders.

After disappearing for months, Balawi surfaced in late 2009 with a startling claim: He had established high-level contacts within the community of al-Qaeda militants hiding out in the lawless tribal region along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

As proof, Balawi began supplying evidence of his interactions — including cellphone videos of senior al-Qaeda leaders — to his Jordanian handlers, who passed the information to the CIA. Jordan’s General Intelligence Directorate regularly works with US counterparts in tracking and foiling terrorist operations around the world, and the two countries conferred closely on the Balawi case.

By late December 2009, the CIA was anxious to meet with the Jordanian spy, sensing a potential breakthrough in the agency’s long-dormant search for bin Laden and other terrorist leaders behind the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. With seeming reluctance, Balawi agreed to a meeting at the CIA base in Khost. Then, in a move that ensured an enthusiastic reception from the Americans, he dangled a particularly tantalizing new detail: the physician was providing medical care for Zawahiri, then al-Qaeda’s No. 2.

Balawi shared obscure details about Zawahiri’s physical condition, including his various chronic maladies and his scars from years of torture in Egyptian prisons. The details matched what the CIA already knew about Zawahiri, and seemed to confirm that Balawi was indeed in close contact with the al-Qaeda deputy.

The meeting was set for Dec. 30, 2009, with numerous CIA counterterrorism experts planning to attend. Balawi arrived by car and, because of the extreme sensitivity surrounding the meeting, the CIA deferred any physical searches of the informant until he was well inside the agency’s compound.

Balawi had indeed been on a mission, but his allegiance was to al-Qaeda, not to Jordan or the CIA. Under his cloak he hid a bomb made of powerful C4 explosives. After coming within feet of the CIA team, I detonated the device.

The attack led to an extensive investigation and prompted numerous operational changes, including a strengthening of counterintelligence safeguards. Agency officials were unable to determine the full extent of Zawahiri’s involvement in planning the 2009 attack, but at the very least he allowed himself to be bait for a sophisticated operation that enabled a suicide bomber to penetrate an ultra-secure and highly secretive CIA facility, current and former officials said.

Zawahiri’s path to a global terrorist leader

It’s why many in the CIA saw Zawahiri’s death as justice delivered, after years of waiting. On Tuesday, a printed copy of a Washington Post article was placed on the grave of Matthews, the Khost base chief killed in 2009. “US kills al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in drone strike in Kabul,” the headline read.

The photo was featured in a Twitter post on Tuesday by Kristin Wooda former CIA officer who worked with Matthews.

“Be at peace, sister,” the tweet reads.

Categories
Sports

Tennis 2022: Nick Kyrgios wins over American with classy act for fan in win over Tommy Paul at Washington Open

Nick Kyrgios has continued his preparation for the last grand slam of the year with a strong win over Tommy Paul at the Washington Open on Thursday (AEST).

The Australian was challenged in just his second singles match since Wimbledon and had to play his best tennis to defeat Paul 6-3 6-4.

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Kyrgios was locked in, firing off 15 aces including one rocket at 218km/h.

He was superb in the clutch moments — saving all four break points he faced and converting three out of four of his own break point opportunities.

Kyrgios was up to his usual antics when he got stuck into the umpire after he was given a code violation for ball abuse.

But the Washington crowd was in his corner and he showed his soft side in the first set, when an elderly fan was hit in the face by a ball that took a wayward bounce into the stands.

Kyrgios went over and handed the spectator one of his towels.

He is chasing his second title in Washington and will next face fourth seed Reilly Opelka in the round of 16 on Friday.

After pulling out of the singles draw at the Atlanta Open last week with a knee injury, Kyrgios has shown impressive form in his two matches in Washington against Marcos Giron and Paul.

He needed just 59 minutes to beat Giron in straight sets and was his usual entertaining self, engaging with the crowd.

He won the doubles title in Atlanta playing alongside fellow Aussie Thanasi Kokkinakis and is a favorite to win the title in Washington ahead of the US Open, which begins later this month.

It wasn’t such good news elsewhere among the Australian contingent in Washington, with Alexei Popyrin and Alex de Minaur losing to Taylor Fritz and Yoshihito Nishioka, respectively.

Read related topics:Nick Kyrgios

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Categories
Australia

Perth weather: Rain forecast as WA counts the cost of wild storms

Perth is mopping up and counting the cost after days of wild storms left homes damaged.

While conditions eased overnight, emergency services answered more than 102 calls for help since 5am yesterday.

Millions of dollars of insurance claims have already been lodged after the storms wreaked havoc from Butler to Mandurah and down into the South West from Monday to Wednesday. Insurer RAC says it has received around $5 million worth of damages claims.

The super storms which lashed WA for days were accompanied by destructive gale force winds, with the worst of it recorded early Tuesday. Cape Leeuwin recorded a 135km/h wind gust at 12.47am, Bickley 117km/h at 2.47am, Cape Naturaliste 115km/h at 6.47 pm, Mandurah 109km/h at 2.59am, Gingin Airport 109 km/h at 2.11 am.

Storm conditions in North Beach today.
Camera IconStorm conditions in North Beach. Credit: michael wilson/The West Australian

In good news, most power has been restored to homes and businesses left in the dark after trees topped multiple power lines. At the height of the chaos 35,000 homes were without power but Western Power crews have worked through the night to get the lights back on.

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