Thursday

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Melting Ice! President Obama ready to visit Cuba soon

Senior administration official confirms the plans to CBS News; trip "definitely a shocker," one analyst says
President Obama will travel to Cuba in coming weeks, a senior administration official confirmed to CBS News Wednesday night.
The administration will announce the president's upcoming trip to Latin America, including Cuba, on Thursday, the official said.
No sitting U.S. president has visited Cuba since Calvin Coolidge in 1928.
More than a year after moving to normalize relations with Cuba, the White House has concluded conditions are now right for Mr. Obama to visit the island.
CBS News' Pamela Falk calls the planned visit "a shocker."
"By going to Cuba while he is still in office, Mr. Obama is showing Havana that he will continue to make enough progress that it will be difficult for the next president to change course from restoring ties with Cuba -- and he is proving to Congress that the president still has a lot of executive authority to change foreign policy," Falk said.
The announcement will come only two days after the U.S. and Cuba signed an agreement restoring commercial air traffic between their two countries for the first time in 50 years.

Source: (CBS NEWS, 2016)
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Monday

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Flight MH370 shot down by US Air Force, Mark Dugain


Mark Dugain believes the American military blasted the missing jetliner out of the sky amid fears it had been hijacked remotely and could be used in a 9/11-style terror attack

Missing Flight MH370 was 'hacked and then shot down over the Indian Ocean by the US Air Force,' it has been claimed.
The Malaysia Airlines plane was remotely hijacked by unknown persons before being blasted out of the sky by the American military, fearing a terrorist attack similar to 9/11, according to. 
The Frenchman, an author and the ex-head of the now-defunct Proteus Airlines, believes the Boeing 777 was downed by US Air Force assets from the British-controlled Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia.
Mr Dugain said he had travelled to the Maldives and spoken to locals who claimed to have seen a "huge plane" flying overhead at low altitude in the direction of Diego Garcia.
According to an article penned by Dugan in French weekly magazine Paris Match, one fisherman told him: “I saw a huge plane fly over us at low altitude.
“I saw red and blue stripes (the livery of Malaysia Airlines) on a white background."
Dugain said the man's account was supported by several other locals. He also wrote how he had met the mayor of Baarah Island, who showed him photos of a device seized by the Maldives military after it was found on a beach two weeks after the tragedy.
Dugain claimed the device was a fire extinguisher, citing two aviation experts and a local military officer, and pointed out that the extinguisher must have been empty to have floated.
This, Dugain claimed, was due to it being automatically triggered by a fire, even as all passengers and crew might have died from asphyxiation.
In a separate radio interview, Dugain claimed that a British intelligence officer had warned him of the “risks” in investigating MH370’s disappearance, suggesting instead that he “let time do its work”.
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 disappeared on March 8 while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew on board.
The search for the vanished jet is focused on the Indian Ocean off the coast of Australia. Officials had hoped to conclude the mission by May 2015, however a technical problem affecting equipment on board one of the search ships may mean that is no longer achievable.
 Source: Mirror.co.uk

U.S. military shot down MH370
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OPEC not responsible for falling oil price, Gulf Oil Ministers

Oil-rich Gulf states have vowed not to cut crude production, blaming speculators and producers outside the OPEC group for tumbling prices.
Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said "the spread of misleading information and speculation" had contributed to the 40% price fall.

Speaking in Abu Dhabi, he also dismissed claims of a Saudi plot to push prices down for political goals.

Ministers from Kuwait and the UAE also said there were no plans to cut output.
Mr Naimi said that if producer countries outside OPEC wanted to restrict output, "they are welcome".

"We are not going to cut; certainly Saudi Arabia is not going to cut."
Kuwait's Oil Minister, Ali al-Omair, said OPEC did not need to cut production and would not consider an emergency meeting.

"I don't think we need to cut. We gave a chance to others [and] they were not willing to do so," he said during the conference in Abu Dhabi on Sunday.

In November, OPEC decided to keep its target output of 30 million barrels per day unchanged, leaving the market to balance itself without the group taking action.

Oil Price Rise?
In the past, Saudi Arabia, the world's largest producer, has acted to rein in output to support prices.
The decision not to intervene this time prompted conspiracy theories, including that OPEC wanted to undermine the US shale boom and that there was a political plot to reduce oil revenues earned by Russia and Iran.

Mr Naimi denied that politics played a role in the kingdom's oil policy. He said he was not happy about the falling oil price, but added: "Current prices do not encourage investment in any form of energy, but they stimulate global economic growth, leading ultimately to an increase in global demand and a slowdown in the growth of supplies."

Meanwhile, OPEC's Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri told Reuters news agency on Sunday he hoped to see a recovery in the price of oil by the end of next year.

"We hope the price would rebound by the end of the second half of 2015," he said. "We can't see the market now; we have to wait until the end of the second half of 2015 to see how the market [will] react to these low prices."


The world is expected to need less OPEC oil next year as the US shale gas boom accelerates.

Source: BBC.CO.UK 
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Sony Hack,North Korea warned of strikes against the White House

North Korea has threatened unspecified attacks on the US in an escalation of a war of words following the Sony Pictures cyber-attacks.
In a fiery statement, the North warned of strikes against the White House, Pentagon and "the whole US mainland".
North Korea denies US claims it is behind cyber-attacks linked to a film that features the fictional killing of its leader Kim Jong-un.
North Korea has a long history of issuing threats against the US.
The latest statement comes days after the US formally accused the North of orchestrating a massive cyber attack on Sony Pictures.
"The army and people of the DPRK [North Korea] are fully ready to stand in confrontation with the US in all war spaces including cyber warfare space," a long statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency said.
"Our toughest counteraction will be boldly taken against the White House, the Pentagon and the whole US mainland, the cesspool of terrorism, by far surpassing the 'symmetric counteraction' declared by Obama."
It accused President Obama of "recklessly making the rumour" that North Korea was behind the Sony attack.
It also said it "estimates highly the righteous action" taken by the hackers of Sony, although it is "not aware of where they are".
Sony details leaked
The hack resulted in unreleased films and the script for the next James Bond film being leaked online.
Details of corporate finances and private emails between producers and Hollywood figures were also released.
The eventual fallout from the attack saw Sony cancel the Christmas release of a comedy called The Interview, a film depicting the assassination of the North Korean leader.
That decision followed threats made by a group that hacked into Sony's servers and leaked sensitive information and emails.
The North has denied being behind the attacks, and offered to hold a joint inquiry with the US.
But the US turned down the offer, and President Barack Obama said it was considering putting North Korea back on its list of terrorism sponsors, a move that further angered Pyongyang.
North Korea had been on the US list of state sponsors of terrorism for two decades until the White House removed it in 2008, as part of now-stalled negotiations relating to Pyongyang's nuclear programme.
In an interview with CNN on Sunday, Mr Obama promised to respond "proportionately" to the cyber-attack.
"I'll wait to review what the findings are," he said, adding that he did not think the attack "was an act of war".
The US has reportedly also asked China to curb cyber-attacks by North Korea.
The Interview saga
The Interview features James Franco and Seth Rogen as two journalists granted an audience with Mr Kim. The CIA then enlists the pair to assassinate him.
Sony says it made the decision to cancel its release after most US cinemas chose not to screen the film, following terrorism threats.
·         22 November: Sony computer systems hacked, exposing embarrassing emails and personal details about stars
·         7 December: North Korea denies accusations that it is behind the cyber-attack, but praises it as a "righteous deed"
·         16 December: "Guardians of Peace" hacker group threatens 9/11-type attack on cinemas showing film; New York premiere cancelled

·         17 December: Leading US cinema groups say they will not screen film; Sony cancels Christmas-day release
·         19 December: FBI concludes North Korea orchestrated hack; President Obama calls Sony cancellation "a mistake"
·         20 December: North Korea proposes joint inquiry with US into hacks, rejected by the US.

Source: BBC.CO.UK
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