Thursday, August 1, 2013

Pentagon Afghanistan Report Says Afghan Forces Will Need Help Beyond 2014

WASHINGTON ? The Pentagon said Tuesday it is offering no "zero option" for the number of troops that would remain in Afghanistan after the U.S. combat mission ends in December 2014. It said in a report to Congress that "substantial" long-term military support will be needed to ensure that Afghans can hold off the Taliban insurgency.

The White House has not ruled out leaving no troops behind after 2014, although officials say the most likely option is a residual training force of roughly 9,000.

In its twice-a-year report to Congress on war progress, the Pentagon said Afghanistan's military is growing stronger but will require a lot more training, advising and foreign financial aid after the American and NATO combat mission ends.

The Pentagon's assessment was an implicit rejection of the "zero option." Zero is considered an unlikely choice by President Barack Obama, not least because his administration has pledged to stand with the Afghans for the long term. But Obama has grown frustrated in his dealings with Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

Peter Lavoy, the Pentagon's top Afghan policy official, told a news conference that a number of post-2014 options have been developed, taking into account the Afghans' need for additional training and advising, as well as what the Pentagon views as a longer-term requirement for U.S. counterterrorism forces in Afghanistan.

"In none of these cases have we developed an option that is zero," Lavoy said.

It remains possible that the administration will be left with no option other than zero if it cannot successfully negotiate a security deal with Kabul that gives the U.S. a legal basis for having forces in Afghanistan after 2014.

Talks on a security deal began last year but have made little recent headway. Karzai suspended negotiations following a disagreement this month over a Taliban political office in the Gulf state of Qatar that was to host peace talks. The office, which has the support of the United States and other countries, infuriated Karzai after the Taliban opened it with a display of the name and flag it used when it ruled Afghanistan.

Relations between Afghanistan and the United States plunged after that incident.

In its report to Congress, which is required by law every six months, the Pentagon made no recommendation on the number of U.S. troops to keep in Afghanistan after 2014. There are currently about 60,000 U.S. troops there ? down from a 2010 peak of 100,000 ? and the total is to shrink to 34,000 by February.

The report said it will be difficult to judge whether Afghanistan can keep the upper hand against the Taliban until the exact size of a post-2014 U.S. military presence is determined.

The report painted a largely positive picture of progress in strengthening the Afghan army and police, but it offered cautionary assessments of the economic and political elements of its strategy for stabilizing the country.

"Effective government, the rule of law and sustainable economic development are all necessary for long-term stability in Afghanistan, but multiple factors continue to hinder them, including widespread corruption," it said.

The report said that the amount of Afghan territory held by the insurgents has continued to shrink. It called the Taliban "less capable, less popular and less of an existential threat" to the Kabul government. And it said the number of "insider attacks" by Afghan forces against their U.S. and other coalition partners has declined.

On the other hand, it said the insurgents still wield influence in several key rural areas that serve as avenues to attack urban areas, including certain districts adjacent to Kabul and in areas west of the southern city of Kandahar.

"Insurgents also used violence and assassination to undermine perceptions of the Afghan government's ability to provide security," the report said, "including intimidation of tribal elders, local power brokers and Afghan government officials."

For the first time, the report to Congress said some Afghan security forces are making potentially troublesome accommodations ? in some cases in the form of local ceasefire deals ? with insurgent groups.

Lavoy said these are generally desirable moves toward reconciliation with the Taliban, but the report said they "can have negative effects" if Afghan military leaders compromise on security standards in the process. It said these deals have the potential to "throw off the balance of power in a given area, causing more destabilization if agreements are achieved under coercion or co-option." More deal-making is likely as U.S. and other foreign forces leave the battlefield, the report said.

The report also provided the first detailed public explanation of a mix-up earlier this year in which the U.S. military was forced to retreat from a claim that Taliban attacks had declined by 7 percent last year, compared to 2011. After inquiries by The Associated Press, the military determined that there had been no decline at all.

Tuesday's report said the incorrect report of a 7 percent decline did not take account of a number of attacks that Afghan government forces had accurately reported but that the U.S.-led military command in Kabul had failed to record. It said the error, discovered in January, did "slightly affect" the data that was provided in the Pentagon's previous report to Congress, published last December, but did not change broad trends.

The report said statistics on attacks, which had previously been a central feature of the Pentagon's reports to Congress and in other U.S. government assessments of war progress, will no longer be used in that way. One reason is that the data now come mainly from Afghan rather than coalition forces, since the Afghans are now doing most of the fighting; as a result, the figures are less detailed and take longer to process.

"It is now clear that (coalition) public reporting and media coverage of the war have relied too heavily on (attack) reporting as a `scoreboard' for progress," the report said.

___

Follow Robert Burns on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/robertburnsAP

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/30/pentagon-afghanistan-report_n_3677966.html

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Denver energy firm drilling next to Jared Polis's property could be fined

A truck drives past the fracking operation across Weld County Road 5 from property owned by U.S. Rep. Jared Polis, D-Boulder, near Berthoud on Thursday, July 18, 2013. (Kai Casey / For the Camera)

U.S. Rep. Jared Polis, D-Boulder (Courtesy photo)

The state agency that regulates oil and gas extraction in Colorado has ruled that the company that started drilling earlier this month near the Weld County property of U.S. Rep. Jared Polis may have placed its rig too close to a road and a power line.

The possible violation by Denver-based Sundance Energy Inc. of the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission's setback rules remains under investigation.

"It's too soon to know the outcome of the alleged violation of our setback rule, but violations always have the potential to result in an enforcement action, and those actions can include a fine," Todd Hartman, a spokesman for the Colorado Department of Natural Resources, said in an email.

Sundance Energy did not respond to requests for comment.

The drilling activity at the rural Weld County weekend getaway of Polis, a Democrat who represents Boulder and the rest of Colorado's 2nd Congressional District, came to light last week when Polis said he had joined the list of those whose quality of life was under attack due to hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.

Polis reported -- initially by way of a guest opinion piece written for Sunday's Daily Camera -- that heavy equipment appeared July 18 directly across the street from his 50-acre retreat on Weld County Road 5, just east of Berthoud. A drilling operation quickly followed, soon manifest by a tall rig on his neighbor's property, which Polis estimated loomed less than 100 feet from his own guesthouse and garage.

Polis filed a complaint in Denver District Court on July 22 seeking a temporary restraining order to halt the drilling. But he withdrew that complaint Friday, leaving open the option of re-filing it after he gathers more information on Sundance Energy's operation.

On-site inspection

However, separately from his aborted court action, Polis also had filed a complaint about the drilling with the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, which sent an inspector to the Weld County operation last Wednesday and Thursday.

In his email, Department of Natural Resources spokesman Hartman said the inspector did not identify any odors, and that a noise survey couldn't be completed due to windy conditions.

However, Hartman said, "While investigating the complaint, the inspector discovered what appeared to be a violation of our setback rule. The well was believed to be less than 1.5 times the total rig height away from a power line and road, as COGCC setback rules require."

Hartman added, "The operator was informed of this, and instructed it must move the planned location of two other wells to conform to the setback requirement and get COGCC approval for the new locations."

The Sundance Energy permit applications to the state for the land across from Polis's property showed plans for three wells drilled to setting depths of 7,565 feet to 7,820 feet.

Hartman said that because the existing well was at the planned depth and drilling already is completed, the commission is not requiring Sundance Energy to plug and abandon it. Sundance Energy is voluntarily taking steps for noise reduction, including installation of a noise wall and sound curtains, he added.

Also, Hartman said, "We continue to communicate with Rep. Polis' attorneys on this matter."

'Violations of law'

Polis, in an email discussing the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission inspection, said the company "grossly mischaracterized the facts" when it claimed last week that he had dropped his lawsuit because his claims were completely without merit.

And, Polis wrote, "We have reasons to believe Sundance was aware or should have been aware of its material violations of law," and said his own independent surveyor found "the same violations as the state inspectors," citing both the location and the height of the derrick.

"We hope that the penalties imposed by the Oil and Gas Conservation Commission are significant enough to deter other companies from violating the law and are not just a symbolic cost of doing business," Polis stated.

"I am concerned that I had to hire lawyers and file a complaint with the COGCC to uncover these violations," he added. "Homeowners should not have to hire surveyors and lawyers at their own expense to defend their neighborhood from illegal fracking."

Contact Camera Staff Writer Charlie Brennan at 303-473-1327 or brennanc@dailycamera.com.

Source: http://www.dailycamera.com/old/state-west-news/ci_23763247/denver-energy-firm-drilling-next-jared-poliss-property?source=rss_emailed

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The Age of Hyperbole: How Normal Weather Became ?Extreme?: ?A media without shame drives us towards energy poverty?

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Source: http://www.climatedepot.com/2013/07/31/the-age-of-hyperbole-how-normal-weather-became-extreme-a-media-without-shame-drives-us-towards-energy-poverty/

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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Syria troops 'retake' key Homs area

Syrian government forces have fully captured a district that was a key rebel stronghold in the central city of Homs, state media report.

The Sana news agency said the military had "restored security and stability to the neighbourhood of Khalidiya".

Activists reported clashes in Khalidiya on Monday morning, but said that most of the area was under army control.

The announcement comes a month after troops launched an offensive to oust rebels from Syria's third largest city.

Homs has been one of the focuses of a two-year nationwide uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, in which the UN says more than 100,000 people have died.

Correspondents say the capture of Khalidiya would add further impetus to the counter-offensive by government troops and their allies, which saw the nearby town of Qusair fall in June.

'Almost over'

On Monday, an unnamed army officer told Syrian state television: "Today, we can report having complete control of the area of Khalidiya."

"That was a victory of all our fighters and the whole Syrian Army and especially our dear leader, Bashar al-Assad. And God willing, we will get rid of the terrorists in the entire country and the future will be free of killings and under the control of the army."

However, UK-based activist group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights cast doubt on the claim.

While the group acknowledged that government forces were in control of most of Khalidiya, it said fighting was continuing on Monday.

"Clashes took place between rebels and regime forces, supported by Hezbollah and National Defence Forces, in the southern parts of the Khalidiya neighbourhood," it said.

"Regime forces are bombarding parts, and military reinforcements are arriving as advancing regime forces try to establish full control."

Opposition activists told the AFP news agency that about 90% of Khalidiya was now controlled by the army. One told the Associated Press that the battle for the district was "almost over".

On Sunday, the Arabic TV station al-Mayadeen, which is seen as close to the Syrian government, broadcast what it said was footage of Khalidiya, showing heavily damaged buildings and piles of rubble.

It also showed pictures of the interior of the historic Khaled bin Walid mosque, a focal point for anti-government protesters. Troops reportedly seized it on Saturday, days after activists accused them of firing shells at the tomb of Khaled bin Walid, a revered figure in Islam.

Only the Old City of Homs and a few other districts are still held by the opposition. On Monday, government jets bombed the Bab Hud district of the Old City, just south of Khalidiya, according to the Syrian Observatory.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-23488855

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

Beth Ditto confirms Hawaii nuptials, shares wedding picture

Beth Ditto has revealed she tied the knot with girlfriend Kristin Ogata in April.

The Gossip singer has kept us in suspense for a while but has finally posted her first wedding picture on Facebook.

She captioned the happy snap: "At long last, now that we have returned home and recovered from all the amazingness and had some time to bask in the afterglow, we are exited to share with you a pic or two from Beth and Kristin's wedding!"

They added: "So much love and appreciation to all of our family and friends who celebrated with us! And a huge thank you to Jean Paul Gaultier for the dream-come-true dress!"

Shortly after Beth made the announcement, the designer took to Twitter to share his well-wishes.

He posted: "Congratulations to the newlyweds! All the best for Beth and Kristin! Love, JPG."


ABOVE: The Gossip singer and her beau Kristin Ogata tied the know back in April

Sounds like it was the wedding she had always hoped for.

ABOVE: Beth Ditto seemed over the moon as she got to wear her 'dream' wedding dress

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ok-magazine-celebrity-gossip/~3/Tg2Bn2Xo6ow/

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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Fruitvale Station Duo Reuniting for Rocky Spinoff

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Michael B. Jordan will play Apollo Creed's grandson, with Sylvester Stallone returning to play Rocky, and "Fruitvale Station" director Ryan Coogler set to direct.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1927951/news/1927951/

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Therese Poletti's Tech Tales: Will activist investor help or hurt Microsoft?

By Therese Poletti, MarketWatch

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) ? Activist investors are popping up among many established technology companies, many of which are in tumult with big, core businesses slowing or under threat from faster growing mobile devices.

Whether or not these activists ? some of which are hedge funds ? will have a positive or negative impact on their targets will be the big question for investors, who have to decide early on whether their presence in a stock is a good or ominous sign for their investment.

Google buys stake in Glass partner, and more

Google invests more in its ?Glass? device, buying a 6.3% stake in display unit of Himax Technologies. Daniel Loeb steps down from Yahoo?s board. Existing home sales fall 1.2% in June. Death toll rises from earthquake in northwestern China.

The most recent case is Microsoft Corp. /quotes/zigman/20493/quotes/nls/msft MSFT -0.59% . Last week, the software giant disappointed Wall Street with an earnings and revenue shortfall just on the heels of news about a big corporate restructuring. Its shares had jumped to a new 52-week high, as investors over-optimistically assumed that its current problems were limited to the PC business. But some analysts found that the quarter was a letdown on many other fronts, including a slight miss in its server business.

So, on Friday, with its shares tumbling 11.4% in its worst single day performance since 2009 investors could hardly be surprised when Reuters reported that hedge fund/activist investor ValueAct was talking to Microsoft?s board of directors about its wish to gain a seat on the board.

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Rick Sherlund, an analyst with Nomura Research, had predicted such an event. In a note Friday morning, Sherlund said that after the software giant's disappointing results, the company would be ripe for shareholder activism. Sherlund noted that he believes Microsoft?s shares could benefit from the potential for ValueAct to get a seat on the board. One area where an activist/outsider may have an interesting voice is in the company?s online business, which includes search.

Daniel Loeb, founder and chief executive officer of Third Point, was credited with helping to oust former Yahoo CEO Scott Thompson.

?Microsoft has lost over $17 billion by our estimation in the search and online business,? Sherlund wrote. ?Why is the company in this business and what are the returns and how is this strategic??

One tech giant has benefited from an outside activist investor. Just Monday, Daniel Loeb, the hedge fund investor who led the charge to oust Yahoo Inc. (TICKER:YHOO) short-lived CEO, Scott Thompson, stepped down from the board. Loeb, who bought a 6% stake in Yahoo in 2011, and eventually got three seats on the board, is credited with pushing hard for Yahoo to hire Marissa Mayer from Google Inc. as its CEO. Yahoo?s shares have jumped over 70% since her arrival, even though its second-quarter earnings showed that her work has only begun. in a statement, Loeb said, ?Since our board?s rigorous search led us to hire Marissa Mayer as CEO, Yahoo?s stock price has nearly doubled.?

So if Yahoo could be an example, at least so far, of the positive influence of the activist investor, Dell Inc. /quotes/zigman/27952/quotes/nls/dell DELL -0.23% might represent the not-so-great side. Billionaire investor Carl Icahn has mostly made a lot of noise and created a lot of distractions since he purchased an over 6% stake in the company, which is trying to go private. Icahn?s fight against Dell founder Michael Dell?s proposal to take the company private at $13.65 a share has held sway with some big shareholders, though, and the company deferred its vote on Dell?s offer until this week. But Icahn separate proposal to buy the bulk of Dell and keep part of the computer maker public is fraught with risk, according to the two big shareholder advisory firms, ISS and Glass Lewis.

Carl Icahn, billionaire investor and chairman of Icahn Enterprises Holdings LP., opposes Michael Dell?s bid to take the company private.

Still, it is not clear yet what kind of board member ValueAct (which did not respond to requests for comment) could be, if it negotiated a seat on Microsoft?s board. The hedge fund, based in San Francisco, teamed up with private equity firm Silver Lake in 2007 to take the data management firm Acxiom Corp. /quotes/zigman/67626/quotes/nls/acxm ACXM +0.39% ?private, but that deal fell apart. It had pressed Axciom to develop shareholder-friendly moves such as increasing cash flow and improving margins and ultimately waged a proxy war for two seats on its board.

Sherlund noted that ValueAct was probably willing to launch a proxy battle for a seat on Microsoft?s board. ?We think the chances of winning a board seat are high given the dissatisfaction with how Microsoft has failed to optimize shareholder value,? Sherlund wrote in a note on Monday. ?And we suspect Microsoft figures it is better to work through the ValueAct agenda in private rather than in a public proxy solicitation process.? Sherlund believes the ?investor activism is a positive for the stock.? Microsoft did not respond to a request for comment.

Still, investors are bound to get nervous once an activist investor buys stock in a company they own. In some cases, their presence can be beneficial, but ultimately, it is usually a sign that the target company has probably seen better days.

/quotes/zigman/20493/quotes/nls/msft

US : U.S.: Nasdaq

Volume: 12.89M

July 23, 2013 10:15a

Market Cap

$266.58 billion

Rev. per Employee

$828,181

/quotes/zigman/27952/quotes/nls/dell

US : U.S.: Nasdaq

Volume: 2.43M

July 23, 2013 10:15a

Rev. per Employee

$508,553

/quotes/zigman/67626/quotes/nls/acxm

US : U.S.: Nasdaq

Volume: 26,828

July 23, 2013 10:14a

Therese Poletti is a senior columnist for MarketWatch in San Francisco. Follow her on Twitter @tpoletti.

Source: http://feeds.marketwatch.com/~r/marketwatch/software/~3/iP7W9urOCGg/story.asp

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