SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (KABC) — A wind-whipped fire erupted in San Bernardino, forcing mandatory evacuations and ravaging several homes in the area, as the blaze quickly grew to 200 acres early Thursday morning.

San Bernardino County Fire responded to the area of Highway 18 at Lower Waterman Canyon at about 1:38 a.m. as strong winds carried the flames amid extreme red flag conditions.

Evacuation orders were issued as the fire threatened the North Park neighborhood. Mandatory evacuations were declared in areas for all homes north of 50th Street, west of Highway 18, and east of Mayfield Avenue. Highway 18 was also shut down.

An evacuation center was set up at Pacific High School at 1020 Pacific Street.

The blaze, called the Hillside Fire, was burning at a rapid rate of spread and quickly expanded to 200 acres by about 2:30 a.m., officials said.

It was not immediately known how many structures were threatened or destroyed, but multiple homes were seen damaged. Homes in the North Park community were seen surrounded by intense flames.

Structure defense was being put in place as strike teams were requested.

It was not immediately known what caused the fire.

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Source Article from https://abc7.com/san-bernardino-blaze-prompts-evacuations-damages-homes—live/5661248/

Firefighters in Northern California believe they have “turned the corner” in battling the Kincade fire and are expecting more good news on Thursday and in coming days.

At a Wednesday night news conference, the authorities listed several positive signs: The fire was 45 percent contained, up from 30 percent on Wednesday morning. Air quality was improving. Strong, gusty winds had subsided. And most of the roughly 190,000 residents who were evacuated had been cleared to return to their homes.

“We believe that most of the threat is now in our rearview mirror, and we are moving forward here,” said Mark Essick, the Sonoma County sheriff.

The fire burned 76,825 acres, destroyed 266 structures and damaged 47 others as of Wednesday night. More than 4,200 firefighting personnel were still on the scene, some of whom worked through the night. The authorities cautioned that despite the good news, the fire could still behave unpredictably, as humidity remained low and there was no rain in the forecast.

But Jonathan Cox, a division chief with Cal Fire, the state’s firefighting agency, said firefighters were also shifting their focus away from the front lines and toward “secondary hazards,” including pockets of embers and trees in danger of falling.

In Southern California, a different picture emerged. A fast-moving brush fire that began early Wednesday — and burned its way 100 yards from the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum — was still raging.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/31/us/california-fire.html

The two Ukrainian visitors — Andriy Yermak, a top Zelensky adviser, and Oleksandr Danyliuk, the head of Ukraine’s national security and defense council — were first escorted to Bolton’s office, where they met with Vindman, Sondland, White House Russia adviser Fiona Hill and Kurt Volker, the State Department’s special envoy to Ukraine.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/white-house-lawyer-moved-transcript-of-trump-call-to-classified-server-after-ukraine-adviser-raised-alarms/2019/10/30/ba0fbdb6-fb4e-11e9-8190-6be4deb56e01_story.html

Twitter will stop running political ads, CEO Jack Dorsey announced Wednesday. Online political ads pose “significant risks to politics,” he tweeted.

Denis Charlet/AFP/Getty Images


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Twitter will stop running political ads, CEO Jack Dorsey announced Wednesday. Online political ads pose “significant risks to politics,” he tweeted.

Denis Charlet/AFP/Getty Images

Updated at 6:04 p.m. ET

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey announced that his social media platform will stop running political ads, citing online ads’ “significant risks to politics.” Facebook has been criticized for allowing deceptive political ads.

“We’ve made the decision to stop all political advertising on Twitter globally. We believe political message reach should be earned, not bought,” Dorsey tweeted late Wednesday afternoon.

He explained his reasons in a long thread of tweets.

“A political message earns reach when people decide to follow an account or retweet,” Dorsey wrote. “Paying for reach removes that decision, forcing highly optimized and targeted political messages on people. We believe this decision should not be compromised by money.

“While internet advertising is incredibly powerful and very effective for commercial advertisers, that power brings significant risks to politics, where it can be used to influence votes to affect the lives of millions.”

He said that online political ads “present entirely new challenges to civic discourse: machine learning-based optimization of messaging and micro-targeting, unchecked misleading information, and deep fakes. All at increasing velocity, sophistication, and overwhelming scale.”

In an apparent jab at Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Dorsey tweeted, with a wink emoji: “it’s not credible for us to say: ‘We’re working hard to stop people from gaming our systems to spread misleading info, buuut if someone pays us to target and force people to see their political ad…well…they can say whatever they want!’ “

Dorsey was referring to Zuckerberg’s decision not to block political speech on Facebook, even if it contains misleading statements.

“Our policy is that we do not fact-check politicians’ speech, and the reason for that is that we believe that in a democracy, it is important that people can see for themselves what politicians are saying,” Zuckerberg told a U.S. House committee last week.

This afternoon, Zuckerberg again defended Facebook’s policy on not checking politicians’ ads during a conference call about the company’s financial performance.

“We need to be careful about adopting more and more rules that restrict the way people can speak and what they can say,” Zuckerberg said.

But critics, including several Facebook employees, say the policy gives politicians free rein to lie and makes it easy to spread those lies.

Facebook workers posted an open letter with 250 signatures to the company’s internal message board, urging Facebook to hold political ads to the same standards as other ads, including being fact-checked.

President Trump’s political campaign criticized Twitter’s move, saying the company is turning its back on a lot of money.

“This is yet another attempt to silence conservatives, since Twitter knows President Trump has the most sophisticated online program ever known,” said Brad Parscale, Trump’s political campaign manager.

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While all the major Democratic candidates have spent money on Twitter advertising, two have cleared the $1 million mark, according to figures provided by the company

Former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke and California Sen. Kamala Harris have each spent $1.1 million with Twitter. Their campaigns did not immediately return requests for comment on how Twitter’s decision could affect their strategy.

NPR’s Alina Selyukh and NPR’s Sean McMinn contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/10/30/774865522/twitter-to-halt-political-ads-in-contrast-to-facebook

The Pentagon has released footage showing the raid that resulted in the death of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

Marine Corps General Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr, commander of U.S. Central Command, released the footage at a press conference on Wednesday at the Pentagon. 

McKenzie was the operational commander of the Delta Force raid, which took place on Saturday in northwest Syria, and resulted in the death of Baghdadi after the terror leader detonated a suicide vest to avoid capture.

The general clarified that Baghdadi killed two of his own young children in the blast, not three as the breach force initially believed. McKenzie said both children were thought to be under the age of 12.

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s compound is seen prior to the assault in footage released Wednesday

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi died on Saturday in the Delta Force raid, after retreating to a tunnel and detonating a suicide vest. New footage shows the US raid on his compound

‘Baghdadi was the subject of an intense inter-agency effort to bring him to justice, and that effort significantly advanced recently as we closed in on his whereabouts,’ McKenzie said in a statement. 

‘As it became clear that we had gained fleeting and actionable intelligence on his hideout, we developed an execution level plan designed to capture or kill him and started preparing a special operations team for the mission,’ he continued. 

Assault force helicopters come under fire from ground

The first video released on Wednesday depicts the assault force helicopters coming under fire from combatants on the ground during the approach to the compound.

McKenzie said that the ground combatants were not believed to be ISIS fighters, but nevertheless presented a threat to the raid team, which responded with overwhelming firepower from the assault helicopters.

The video shows the ground combatants scattering as the return fire lights up the ground around them. 

Marine Corps General Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr, the operational commander of the Delta Force raid, explains footage showing enemy combatants on the ground during the raid

The first video shows enemy combatants firing on the helicopter assault force from the ground, before they are obliterated by return fire from the aircraft

U.S. forces respond with overwhelming force, returning fire at the ground combatants

Delta Force storms Baghdadi compound 

The next video shows U.S. Delta Forces on the ground, approaching Baghdadi’s compound from two directions.

The special operators used tactical munitions to blow holes in the walls of the compound and enter it along with K-9 military dog units. 

McKenzie said that as non-combatants fled the compound, they were checked for explosives and weapons, detained, and then released following the raid.

‘The group was treated humanely at all times and included 11 children,’ McKenzie said. 

‘Despite the violent nature of the raid and the high profile nature of this assault, every effort was made to prevent civilian casualties, and to protect the children we suspected would be at the compound,’ he continued.

Delta Force operators are seen storming the Syrian compound during the raid

The US forces close in on the compound from two directions before blowing the walls

McKenzie praised the military dog that was injured by exposed live electrical wires while pursuing Baghdadi into the tunnel. He said the dog as been returned to duty

Five ISIS members inside the compound attempted to fight back as the U.S. forces breached the building. All five were killed. Four were women and one was a man. 

As the Delta Force operators closed in, Baghdadi retreated into a dead-end tunnel in the compound using his own children as human shields.  

‘When capture at the hands of U.S. forces was imminent, Baghdadi detonated a bomb killing himself and two young children,’ the general said. 

The general explained that initial reports that three children were killed were incorrect, due to a mistaken report up the chain of command.

No U.S. forces were killed, though a military dog sent into the tunnel after Baghdadi suffered injuries from an exposed electrical wire. The dog has been returned to duty.

The total death toll of the attack was eight: Baghdadi, five other ISIS members, and the two children killed by Baghdadi’s suicide bomb.

Other individuals were killed when militant groups in the area, unconnected to ISIS, became aware of the assault and began moving toward the compound with ‘hostile intent,’ McKenzie said. 

McKenzie said that two men at the compound were detained and extracted by the assault force. 

Though the general did not confirm it, at least one of the men removed from the compound is thought to be the ISIS mole whose inside information led U.S. forces to Baghdadi. 

Total destruction of the compound 

The third video depicts the drone strike that obliterated Baghdadi’s compound.

The assault force spent about two hours at the compound following the raid.

The team gathered evidence and secured Baghdadi’s remains for further DNA testing, after a field DNA test came back positive identifying him. 

After the assault force cleared the compound and left with the two detainees, standoff missiles were fired at the compound, destroying the building and its contents. 

‘It looks pretty much like a large parking lot with potholes right now,’ McKenzie said. 

McKenzie shows footage of drone missiles striking the compound following the raid

The compound is seen being obliterated by drone munitions after the raid 

An overview of the compound is shown before (left) and after (right) the raid

Nothing but rubble remains at the site of the compound, seen the day after the raid

Baghdadi’s remains were buried at sea within 24 hours of the raid in accordance with the international laws of warfare, McKenzie said. 

DNA from the remains was further analyzed at a Defense Intelligence Agency laboratory, and compared against a known sample taken when Baghdadi was detained at Camp Bucca in Iraq in 2004.

The analysis indicated a confirmed match, with a probability of 1 in 104 septillion that anyone else could match the known DNA profile. 

‘Which is certainly, beyond a shadow of a doubt,’ McKenzie said.

At the press conference, a reporter pressed McKenzie to confirm President Donald Trump’s statement that Baghdadi was ‘whimpering and crying’ in his final moments.

‘I can tell you this,’ said McKenzie. ‘He crawled into a hole with two small children and blew himself up while his people stayed on the grounds. You can deduce what kind of person it is based on that activity.’ 

‘I’m not able to confirm anything about his last seconds, I just can’t confirm that one way or another,’ McKenzie said. 

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7632435/Pentagon-releases-video-raid-ISIS-leader-al-Baghdadis-Syrian-compound.html


Despite being located in mandatory evacuation zones, certain Santa Rosa businesses continued operating this week in defiance of public safety calls to clear the area because of Kincade fire risks.

They appear to be mostly small companies around the west side of the city that retained power during PG&E’s preemptive shut-off that continues. It also included a Safeway supermarket.

The concern was palpable enough that city officials sent 10 teams of two staffers each around the city on Tuesday to visit businesses and residences to remind them that they were in a mandatory evacuation zone and should leave.

Law enforcement officials said they were worried that defying the Sonoma County Sheriff’s evacuation order posed a public safety threat given that the winds around the Kincade fire easily could have changed direction and took aim at the city and posed problems for emergency crews responding to calls.

Sheriff Mark Essick said he was aware of businesses operating in evacuated areas, a misdemeanor that can result in an arrest, but he is not strictly enforcing the law.

“I’d say it is a matter of discretion,” the sheriff said. “We are not going in and arresting them and dragging them out by the heels.”

Santa Rosa Police Chief Ray Navarro said the evacuation orders were put in place because of lessons learned during the 2017 Tubbs fire.

Just as troubling were concerns of employees who worked at the open businesses as well as their family members who contacted The Press Democrat about the matter and asked for anonymity because of possible retaliation from their employers.

“I’m very worried as I’m losing out on money and it’s just another level of stress added and I want to do the right thing,” wrote one worker whose employer on the west side of the city encouraged employees to come into work if possible.

Elected officials said they were troubled by the actions of these companies that kept operating when they were supposed to close. “That’s the wrong message,” county Supervisor Shirlee Zane said.

City councilman Chris Rogers acknowledged the evacuations were a hardship on small businesses. “If you are a small business and shut down for a few days, I understand the desire to get open,” he said.

Yet, he also was adamant businesses did the wrong thing by defying evacuations.

“The reality is, businesses should not have been open in the evacuation zone. Period. The City shouldn’t have had to go door to door telling them to be closed, they should have been closed,” Rogers wrote in a Facebook post.

The issue started to emerge Monday night, Rogers said, and became a bigger problem by Tuesday, forcing the city to address it. The tipping point came when Omelette Express in Railroad Square announced on Facebook Tuesday at 4:16 a.m. that it would be open that day in an evacuation zone.

Don Taylor, owner of Omelette Express, said he opened Tuesday morning after seeing others nearby working, specifically the construction crew building the new AC Hotel by Marriott at Fifth and Davis streets.

“I thought they must have lifted the ban or something. But that’s when the city came down and said I had to close” Taylor said. “I was confused because the only angle I had on that was they didn’t seem to stop the hotel people.”


Source Article from https://www.pressdemocrat.com/business/10241976-181/array-of-santa-rosa-businesses

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Volunteers and others came to the resuve of horses as the flames of the Easy Fire closed in on them in Simi Valley.
Ventura County Star

CAMARILLO, Calif. – The CB Ranch was surrounded by fire, the air so blackened with smoke flames couldn’t even be seen.

“That was scary, so scary – just the darkness and the wind and smoke,” said Dan Dollar of Newbury Park, west of Thousand Oaks. He raced Wednesday to the ranch to rescue his horse in a scene repeated time and again during the Easy Fire, which has pushed across Simi Valley’s horse country.

Dollar and dozens of others threaded their pickup trucks and horse trailers around closed roads to evacuate their horses to the Ventura County Fairgrounds on Wednesday morning.

As soon as they unloaded their horses, some raced back to try to rescue more animals.

“Just get the ones we can get and get out,” said Peggy Lane of Reseda, who helped with rescue efforts at the Elvenstar Show Stables between Moorpark and Simi.

“It’s super bad in there,” she said of the fire. “I’ve never seen it like this.”

The trailers came to the fairgrounds one after another. More than 110 horses filled the livestock area by 2 p.m. Ventura County Animal Services officials had declared the site full but were scrambling to create more outdoor stalls.

Dozens more horses were evacuated to the Humane Society of Ventura County in Ojai. People were also able to take their horses to the Earl Warren Showgrounds in Santa Barbara.

Some people drove to Camarillo seeking shelter for smaller pets. By midday, fire refugees had brought five dogs, five cats and three goats to the county animal shelter near the Camarillo Airport.

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Emma Stavropoulos, 24, said the shelter was the best choice for four family dogs after she learned of the evacuation warning for her address in Moorpark.

“I was going to sit at a dog park all day or go to Riverside where my brother lives,” she said.

After driving through traffic crawling at 10 to 20 mph on Highway 118, she checked in two cocker spaniels, a Jack Russell terrier and a bichon frise.

The shelter accepts basically every animal except large livestock, said animal services spokesman Randy Friedman.

He said both the Camarillo shelter and a small county shelter in Simi Valley were closed for adoptions but remained open for people reclaiming lost pets.

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With a week of wild Santa Ana winds, California is under siege by several fires such as the Kincade, Getty, Easy and Tick Fires.
Harrison Hill and Robert Hanashiro, USA TODAY

At the Ventura County Fairgrounds, people tried to calm and care for their horses, using hay donated by Camarillo Feed Store. They tried to find hotel rooms, checked their phones for updates and shared what news they could.

“Ours is on fire right now,” said one man, referring to a Moorpark area ranch he had left 90 minutes earlier, adding he knew no details.

At some ranches, horses that couldn’t be evacuated were left in arenas. Some were let loose with plans to rescue them later.

“The whole ranch was surrounded,” said Carrie Burke, who helped rescue horses from a ranch alongside Tierra Rejada Road. “We just had to let horses out.”

A year ago, the Woolsey Fire destroyed White Cloud Ranch near Malibu, where Brian and Amy Stevenson boarded a mare named Dulcinea and mini-donkeys Sierra and Lacey. They moved their animals to Castle Rock Farms on Tierra Rejada. And that site was threatened by the Easy Fire.

“We saw fire probably 120 yards away,” said Brian Stevenson. He expressed relief to be at the fairgrounds with his wife and their animals.

“It’s not burning,” he said. “Any place that’s not burning is good with us.”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/10/30/simi-valley-fire-horse-owners-scramble-rescue-their-animals/4104458002/

Federal law enforcement and homeland security officials warned about the growing threat of domestic terrorism at a House Homeland Security Committee hearing Wednesday.

“The prevalent trend of Americans driven by violent extremist ideologies or personal grievances” to commit racially and ethnically-motivated attacks has become “one of the most significant emergent threats” to national security, said Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan.

“We see domestic terrorism as [a] persistent, evolving threat,” said FBI Director Christopher Wray. He said domestic terrorists have committed more fatal attacks than international terrorists in the U.S. in recent years.

These concerns were echoed by Russell Travers, acting director of the National Counterterrorism Center at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and David Glawe, under secretary in charge of DHS’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis.

Wray clarified that “international terrorism is very much alive and well and something we need to stay focused on too.” But he and the other witnesses emphasized how rapidly advancing technology and the increasingly disorganized nature of terrorism in general make home-grown terrorism uniquely dangerous at this time.

“Terrorism today moves at the speed of social media,” Wray said. While there have been cases of American white supremacists traveling overseas to train with groups in Eastern Europe as well as some known ties “between U.S.-based neo Nazis and their overseas analogues,” Wray said that for the most part, interactions between individual U.S. based extremists and like-minded individuals overseas is limited to social media, internet forums and, increasingly, encrypted messaging technology.

“They’re not working together but they’re inspired by each other,” he said.

RELATED: Wray testifies in Congress 




Wray suggested that the counterterrorism tools developed in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, which have been crucial for tracking the nexus of more structured foreign terror groups such as al Qaeda, aren’t as useful against the “increasingly diffuse” nature of today’s terror landscape.

“The whole concept of going after organizations is still valid, but the threat we face right now isn’t so much about organizations,” Wray said when asked whether it would be helpful to formally designate European white nationalist and neo-Nazi groups as Foreign Terror Organizations.

Doing so may be useful, he said, “but isn’t going to hit the biggest threat we face here” which is “self-radicalized terrorists” who pick up their ideology online and act alone.

But the witnesses acknowledged other obstacles, such as the need for more funding for DHS efforts to identify potential radicals and the absence of a federal criminal charge for domestic terrorism.

Wray said the FBI has been “laser focused on threats from within the country,” relying on “creative workarounds,” including bringing other types of federal charges and handing off cases to state and local authorities who can bring cases more readily. In fiscal year 2019, he said, the FBI made 107 domestic terrorism arrests, slightly fewer than the number of arrests (around 121) for international terrorism made during the same period.

Beyond domestic terrorism, the witnesses addressed a variety of other threats including those posed by ISIS and other foreign terror organizations, the potential for biological attacks and election interference efforts.

Travers warned against complacency.

“Terrorism may no longer be viewed as number one threat to country,” he said, but the “threat itself continues to metastasize and will require very close attention in years ahead.”

Many of the members of the committee, especially Democrats, including Chairman Bennie Thompson, expressed concerns about the lack of a permanent, confirmed secretary at the Department of Homeland Security.

McAleenan, a career Homeland Security official who previously served as Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, recently announced his intention to resign after sixth months as acting director. He was the fourth person to run the department since President Trump took office and was never officially nominated. Thursday was slated to be McAleenan’s last day in office, but by the conclusion of Wednesday’s hearing, Trump had yet to name his replacement. Overnight, the New York Times reported that the White House had found a legal loophole that could allow Trump to install one of his political allies who’d previously been considered ineligible.

“At no time in my tenure on this committee have I been more concerned about DHS’s ability to ability to carry out its mission,” Thompson said in his opening remarks. “Beyond the secretary and deputy secretary,” he continued, “eleven components and offices within DHS are operating with acting leaders, and in all but two cases the President has yet to nominate anyone to fill these vacancies.”

However, McAleenan repeatedly dismissed questions about whether such instability in leadership could harm the department’s ability to effectively address domestic security threats.

He acknowledged that “it’s always good to have confirmed leaders,” but insisted “I’m not worried.”

“I’m very confident with quality and caliber of leadership [among] the frontline people across this entire department,” said McAleenan.

Asked whether he was prepared to stay on at DHS if a new acting secretary had not been named by Thursday, McAleenan said “I hope a plan for successor is imminent, but if necessary I will absolutely ensure a smooth transition.”

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Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/10/30/fbi-chief-warns-congress-of-danger-from-self-radicalized-domestic-terrorists/23850298/

On a hill in Simi Valley overlooking Southern California, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library is the final resting place of the 40th president and his wife, and the site of his Air Force One aircraft.

That same aircraft was the unlikely anchor for a photo of the hills set alight by the Easy fire, which broke out early Wednesday morning and sent thousands of Simi Valley residents running from their homes before dawn.

Staff photographer Wally Skalij has covered many a fire for the Times. As flames from the Easy fire raced toward the Reagan library, he was ready and waiting to capture this unique view of the 2019 fire season in Southern California.

The library is designed to withstand earthquakes and wildfires. As the grounds nearby burned, people inside sheltered in place. To hold back the flames, firefighters launched aggressive attacks on the burning ridges near Simi Valley’s residential areas.

In a question-and-answer session, Skalij explained how he got the shot.

How long have you been shooting fires?

I have been shooting fires for over 20 years and think I’ve seen everything, but it seems something new arises at every fire.

It’s not always about the huge flame photos. It’s about giving the viewer a different perspective and telling the story.

How did you know where to go?

I was stationed at the Getty fire last night waiting to see if it would flare up again. I was getting notices that the winds in Simi Valley were gusting around 60 mph so I headed in that direction.

As I arrived, the Easy Fire started. I immediately headed to the front of the fire.

What led you to shoot this photo from inside the Reagan library?

My colleague, staff photographer Al Seib, told me the Reagan library was nearby. I didn’t know what to expect but noticed Air Force One inside overlooking the hills.

I waited for 45 minutes for the fire to arrive.

Overall I was looking for [a moment of] historical value and to create something that would grab the reader.

What were your challenges?

My only challenge in shooting this photo was not getting kicked out. I wasn’t 100% sure I was allowed to be in there.

The Times is offering fire coverage for free today. Please consider a subscription to support our journalism.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-10-30/easy-fire-photo-air-force-one-reagan-library

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/30/politics/pentagon-baghdadi-raid-video/index.html

Right as Facebook was set to report its third-quarter earnings on Wednesday, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey announced his company would be banning political advertisements.

But Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg didn’t take the bait. On the company’s earnings call, he defended Facebook’s decision to allow ads that contain false information.

“Some people accuse us of allowing speech because they think all we care about is making money, and that’s wrong,” Zuckerberg said on the earnings call. “I can assure you that from a business perspective, the controversy this creates far outweighs the very small percentage of our business that these political ads make up.”

Facebook’s approach came under intense scrutiny this month after the company said it would allow Trump’s re-election campaign to run an ad with false claims about former Vice President Joe Biden and his son. The ads policy was a major point of discussion at a congressional hearing last week where Zuckerberg testified.

On the call, Zuckerberg said the company estimates ads from politicians will be less than 0.5% of its revenue next year.

“To put this in perspective, the FTC fine that these same critics said wouldn’t be enough to change our incentives was more than 10x bigger than this,” he said.

Zuckerberg also argued that Google, YouTube, some cable networks and national broadcasters run “these same ads.” Google didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

“I think there are good reasons for this,” he said. “I don’t think it’s right for private companies to censor politicians and the news.”

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey had already anticipated and poked fun at this argument, tweeting, “For instance, it’s not credible for us to say: ‘We’re working hard to stop people from gaming our systems to spread misleading info, buuut if someone pays us to target and force people to see their political ad…well…they can say whatever they want!'”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/30/zuckerberg-defends-facebooks-political-ads-approach-after-twitter-ban.html

Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan appears before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday for his confirmation hearing to be the new U.S. ambassador to Russia.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP


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J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan appears before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday for his confirmation hearing to be the new U.S. ambassador to Russia.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP

John Sullivan, a senior State Department official and President Trump’s nominee to be the next ambassador to Russia, faced questions from lawmakers Wednesday about his connection to events at the center of the impeachment inquiry.

Sullivan, currently the deputy secretary of state, has bipartisan support for his appointment. But the open confirmation hearing provided a window into the discussions at the State Department over dealings with Ukraine — at a time when the impeachment testimony hearings are happening behind closed doors.

Sullivan was the official who told then-Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch that she was being recalled from her post. The circumstances behind the recall of that long-serving diplomat are being scrutinized in the impeachment probe.

“In your view, was there any basis to recall Ambassador Yovanovitch?” Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., asked Sullivan at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing.

“Yes, there was. The president lost confidence in her,” Sullivan replied. He said he asked Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for more information on why the ambassador was being recalled, and he was again told, “the president has lost confidence in her. Period.”

When Sullivan was asked if he thought she had served the State Department capably and admirably, he replied that he “told her so” when they met in Kyiv last year. Menendez admonished Sullivan for not pushing back harder on the decision to recall her.

Sullivan stated that discussions about Yovanovitch had taken place over several months. “The secretary finally told me that there had come a point when the president lost confidence in the ambassador, and that we needed to make a change in our mission to Ukraine.”

When asked by Menendez if he was aware of “individuals and forces outside the State Department, seeking to smear Ambassador Yovanovitch … and seeking to remove her,” he said he was, and he believed that included Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani.

Sullivan also added that after Pompeo asked for information on what Yovanovitch had done, a packet of information was sent from “someone at the White House.” Sullivan says he didn’t know who created the package and that it “didn’t provide, to me, a basis for taking action against our ambassador.”

Sullivan served as a lawyer prior to his appointment at the State Department. And as NPR’s Michele Kelemen reported, Sullivan is “well-respected in the building and has a personal connection to the State Department.” His uncle was the last U.S. ambassador to Iran and was recalled by the Carter administration.

“He was undermined by the White House,” Sullivan said. “There were leaks about his character, his loyalty to the United States and to the administration, and as a result after 32 years of service in the Foreign Service, three-time ambassador, he resigned from the Foreign Service.”

It’s a story that appears to have some common elements with the Yovanovitch situation — and this is how Sullivan summed up the story about his uncle: “When the president loses confidence in the ambassador, right or wrong, the ambassador needs to come home.”

Sullivan vowed that he would be “relentless” in combating Russian interference in U.S. elections. In reference to the impeachment probe, Menendez asked him whether it was appropriate for the president to use his office to solicit investigations into a domestic political opponent.

“I don’t think that would be in accord with our values,” Sullivan responded.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/10/30/774783563/democrats-grill-trumps-nominee-for-russia-ambassador-over-ukraine

Updated 9:07 PM ET, Wed October 30, 2019

Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what’s happening in the world as it unfolds.

(CNN)In May 2017, Samantha went to a book burning in upstate New York. She had entered the inner circle of the modern white power movement called the alt-right, and it was the moment its activists see in retrospect as the peak of its power.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/30/us/white-supremacist-woman-reeve/index.html

The move is likely to pressure Facebook, which has lately faced heat for allowing politicians to run any claims — even false ones — in political ads on the social network. Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook chief executive, has taken a stand on political advertising in recent weeks, saying that he would not police politicians’ ads even if they lied in them. He said that was because Facebook had been founded to give people a voice and because the social network stood for free expression. Politicians’ ads, he said, were newsworthy and added to public discourse.

That position has been highly unpopular among lawmakers, presidential candidates and even some of Facebook’s own employees. The campaign of the former vice president Joseph R. Biden Jr. recently blasted Facebook for its refusal to remove a false ad about Mr. Biden that was being run by President Trump’s campaign. Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat who is also running for president, has called out Mr. Zuckerberg for running a “disinformation-for-profit machine.” And over the last two weeks, hundreds of employees at Facebook signed a letter to Mr. Zuckerberg asking him to reconsider how Facebook treats political ads.

In a veiled dig at Mr. Zuckerberg, Mr. Dorsey said that the fight against online disinformation is hampered if technology companies accept payment for misleading political content. Without naming Mr. Zuckerberg, Mr. Dorsey said it was not credible for tech companies to say they were working hard against misinformation “buuut if someone pays us to target and force people to see their political ad…well…they can say whatever they want!”

Political ads make up only a small portion of the company’s advertising business, Twitter said.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/30/technology/twitter-political-ads-ban.html

CLOSE

George Gonzales is a goat herder that is using his goats to help prevent brush fires, an issue that continues to plague California each year.
Harrison Hill, USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES – As a fast-growing wildfire scorched a corner of Simi Valley, California, flames came within a few feet of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, and an unlikely hero may have saved the day.

The structure was threatened but undamaged Wednesday morning by the so-called Easy Fire. Goats that grazed on vegetation near the property are partially to thank for why the building remains standing.

In other words, goats are the G.O.A.T.

Library spokeswoman Melissa Giller said the Ventura County Fire Department brings hundreds of goats every May to eat the brush around the perimeter of the library to create a fire break.

“The firefighters on the property said that the fire break really helped them because as the fire was coming up that one hill, all the brush has been cleared, basically,” she said.

“It was darn smart for us to do that,” John Heubusch, executive director of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation & Institute, said of bringing the goats to the 400-acre complex. 

Driven by the Santa Ana winds, the Easy Fire grew quickly and raged over 1,300 acres while threatening 6,500 homes, Ventura County officials said Wednesday. 

As the blaze expanded, the flames came within a few feet of the library pavilion holding Reagan’s Air Force One, Heubusch said.

California fires updates: Easy Fire rages within 30 yards of Reagan Library as Getty, Kincade blazes continue assault on California

“It was bad news for a few hours,” he said. He arrived early and watched as firefighters worked to save the complex, battling from the ground and the air.

Wildfires have bored down on the 400-acre presidential library and museum complex before, but this was the closest call yet, he said.

“What saved this library was those brave helicopter pilots,” Heubusch said. “They braved 80-per-mile gusts to put water in that canyon. Gusts like that drove enormous flames up to the library.”

While the 260,000-square-foot museum’s exhibits were in danger, the most important asset, the presidential papers, are stored in an underground vault-like complex designed to protect them from fire and other catastrophes. 

“The closest call this morning was Air Force One,” Heubusch said. The building in which it is housed “butts right up against the canyon.”

When he arrived at 6 a.m., the landscaping sprinklers were already engaged. At one point, about 50 or 60 fire trucks were on the hilltop fighting the fire and protecting the buildings. Shifting winds helped, too. And, of course, the goats.

“So right now, we are safe,” Giller said.

‘When I smelled that smoke … here we go again’: Weary Californians seek shelter amid latest wildfire outbreak

The building was built with fire protection in mind. The hilltop complex was fitted with a landscape irrigation system that extends out beyond the normal boundaries of the property.

Also, the building is fully equipped with sprinklers, with some on the roof, said Ben Anderson of the Jacobs Engineering Group in Boston, which acquired the architectural firm that designed the library and museum.

The museum and galleries also have fire doors, Giller said. 

“So God forbid, if a fire was to breach inside the building, the doors close and traps the fire in that specific gallery,” she said. “A fire can’t get through those doors.”

The Reagan library is home to more than 60 million pages of documents and 1.6 million photographs from the Reagan administration, the library’s website says. A half-million feet of motion picture film, tens of thousands of audio and video tapes and over 40,000 artifacts are housed there, too.

The Air Force One, tail number 27000, which flew seven U.S. presidents, sits in a pavilion with other presidential limousines and Secret Service SUVs. A full-size replica of the White House Oval Office is also located on the complex’s grounds.

Reagan and his wife, Nancy, are buried next to each other on a hillside at the library.

Haunting wedding photo: Masked newlyweds picture in burning California looks apocalyptic

Residents in the area said the fire spread with speed. Vickie Garza was on her way to work when her husband called to say the hill behind their Simi Valley home was on fire early Wednesday.

She had left about 5:45 a.m. and saw no smoke or flames. By 6 a.m., a neighbor had started honking a car horn to wake people up and let them know something was wrong.

“That’s how quickly it came,” said Garza, who has lived on Algonquin Drive for around 30 years.

As she headed back, she could see the smoke and fire from Highway 118. The Garzas met up at a Target parking lot where authorities had set up a temporary command post near their neighborhood.

They waited there for their neighbor Jean Erickson, who was trying to get her two cats before leaving.

“All I saw was orange,” Erickson said of her view out her front window.

Nearby in Los Angeles County, more than 7,000 homes near the Getty Museum have been evacuated with the Getty Fire raging. In Northern California’s Sonoma County, the Kincade Fire also threatened 80,000 homes in wine country, with about 200,000 people evacuated from the area since the fire ignited last week.

Contributing: Cheri Carlson, Ventura County Star; John Bacon, USA TODAY; The Associated Press.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/10/30/easy-fire-ronald-reagan-presidential-library-simi-valley-california-goats/4098268002/

Here’s what you need to know to understand the impeachment inquiry into President Trump.

How we got here: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the beginning of an official impeachment inquiry against President Trump on Sept. 24, 2019. Here’s what has happened since then.

What’s happening now: Lawmakers are conducting an inquiry, which could lead to impeachment. An impeachment would mean the U.S. House thinks the president is no longer fit to serve and should be removed from office. Here’s a guide to how impeachment works.

What’s happening next: House committees conducting the investigation have scheduled hearings and subpoenaed documents from dozens of witnesses relating to the president’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Here are key dates and what’s next.

Stay informed: Read the latest reporting and analysis on the impeachment inquiry here.

Get email updates: Get a guide to the latest on the inquiry in your inbox every weekday. Sign up for the 5-Minute Fix.

Listen: Follow The Post’s coverage with daily updates from across our podcasts.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/senate-democrats-grill-trumps-ambassador-pick-on-ukraine-impeachment/2019/10/30/351a00fa-fb1f-11e9-8190-6be4deb56e01_story.html

A foreign service officer assigned to the White House says former GOP Rep. Robert Livingston (La.), now a powerful lobbyist, repeatedly urged that then-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch be fired, according to a copy of the officer’s opening statement obtained by The Hill.

The officer, Catherine Croft, is testifying Wednesday behind closed doors to lawmakers on three panels running the House impeachment inquiry. 

In her testimony, Croft says that Livingston, who nearly became the Speaker in 1998 after then-Speaker Newt GingrichNewton (Newt) Leroy GingrichMORE (R-Ga.) stepped down, repeatedly pressed her to fire Yovanovitch when she worked for the National Security Council.

“During my time at the NSC, I received multiple calls from lobbyist Robert Livingston, who told me that Ambassador Yovanovitch should be fired,” her opening statement says. 

“He characterized Ambassador Yovanovitch as an ‘Obama holdover’ and associated with George Soros,” Croft’s statement says. “It was not clear to me at the time — or now — at whose direction or at whose expense Mr. Livingston was seeking the removal of Ambassador Yovanovitch.”

Croft’s statement says she informed two officials of the calls: Fiona Hill, the senior director for Europe and Russia on the National Security Council at the time, and State Department Ukraine expert George Kent. 

The New York Times first reported the content of Croft’s opening statement.

Stepping out of the deposition room Wednesday morning, Rep. Debbie Wasserman SchultzDeborah (Debbie) Wasserman SchultzSondland emerges as key target after Vindman testimony New testimony raises concerns over Sondland’s credibility, says Wasserman Schultz Overnight Defense: Trump lifts sanctions on Turkey | ‘Small number’ of troops to remain by Syrian oil fields | Defense official’s impeachment testimony delayed five hours after Republicans storm secure room MORE (D-Fla.), a member of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, said it was the first time she has heard a reference to Livingston in the impeachment investigation, despite the fact that both Hill and Kent had previously testified.

“The introduction of Bob Livingston definitely generates more questions. And I would like to hear more about that,” she said.

Wassermann Schultz stopped short of saying she would like Livingston to testify as part of the probe, deferring the decision to committee leaders. 

Yovanovitch has already testified in the impeachment inquiry about an effort to remove her from the ambassadorship. She eventually was recalled to Washington, D.C. by President TrumpDonald John TrumpNumber of uninsured children rises for second year, tops 4 million Trump moment from White House Halloween trick-or-treat event goes viral White House official says transcript of Ukraine call omitted key phrases: report MORE

Yovanovitch testified earlier this month that Trump pressured the State Department to remove her from her post, calling it a “concerted campaign” against her.

In her testimony, Yovanovitch denied that she had been disloyal to the administration. 

The congressional panels are examining whether Trump withheld aid to Ukraine as part of an effort to convince its government to conduct political investigations that would benefit his political campaign. 

On Tuesday, another White House aide, Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, testified of his concern that Trump was pressing Ukraine to conduct an investigation into former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenWhite House official says transcript of Ukraine call omitted key phrases: report Biden uses National Cat Day to fundraise for putting a ‘pet back in White House’ Sondland emerges as key target after Vindman testimony MORE during a July 25 phone call to Ukraine’s president. Vindman was among those on that call. 

Croft said she did not hear the July 25 call, but had heard before it took place that White House chief of staff Mick MulvaneyJohn (Mick) Michael MulvaneyEx-Trump officials back Russia ambassador pick ahead of hearing The Hill’s 12:30 Report: White House official testifies he warned about Trump pressure on Ukraine House committees ask key Mulvaney aide for testimony in impeachment inquiry MORE had placed an informal hold on security assistance to Ukraine at the direction of the president. She also said that she understood Trump believed Ukraine was a corrupt country.

She said she understood that the purpose of the call had been to set up a one-on-one meeting between Trump and Ukraine President Zelensky that might “help undo President Trump’s long-held view of Ukraine as a corrupt country.”

Since July, Croft said her sole focus has been on helping to resolve the conflict in eastern Ukraine between that country and Russia. She described Zelensky as a leader who had taken political risk to bring Russia back to the table, and that his best hope for success lay in support from the United States and European countries.

Croft also said in her statement that she did not have any contact with Rudy GiulianiRudy GiulianiTrump attacks on Vindman trigger backlash AP: Saudi tycoon donated to Obama inauguration through a middleman House committees ask key Mulvaney aide for testimony in impeachment inquiry MORE, the personal attorney for Trump who some witnesses have said was conducting a shadow campaign in Ukraine that had worried other members of the administration. 

The House Intelligence Committee issued a subpoena to compel Croft to testify Wednesday in light of an attempt by the White House and State Department to direct the officer not to appear for her deposition, according to an official working on the impeachment inquiry. 

The official said Croft is now complying with the subpoena and answering questions from both Democratic and Republican members and staff.

Christopher Anderson, a former assistant to former special envoy to Ukraine Kurt VolkerKurt VolkerAdministration official to testify Bolton painted Giuliani as possible obstacle on Ukraine policy The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Better Medicare Alliance – Dems unveil impeachment measure; Vindman splits GOP The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Better Medicare Alliance – ISIS leader dead; Congresswoman resigns MORE, will also testify. He plans to tell investigators that former national security adviser John BoltonJohn BoltonThe Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Better Medicare Alliance – Dems shift strategy on impeachment vote Judge schedules hearing for ex-Trump aide who refused to appear in inquiry Ex-Trump official’s refusal to testify escalates impeachment tensions MORE painted Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani as a possible obstacle on Ukraine policy, according to a copy of his opening statement reported by CNN. 

Livingston resigned from Congress when he was near the Speakership after details of an extramarital affair spilled into the public, just as Republicans were set to impeach President Clinton for actions related to his affair with then-White House intern Monica Lewinsky. 

He later formed the Livingston Group, which according to the Times has represented Ukrainian clients in the past.

Mike Lillis contributed to this report, which was updated at 12:05 p.m. 

Source Article from https://thehill.com/policy/national-security/468083-ex-rep-livingston-pressed-for-ukraine-ambassadors-firing-says