Saturday, 4 January 2020

Rocket Attacks Aimed at US Air Base, US Embassy in Iraq

Rocket Attacks Aimed at US Air Base, US Embassy in Iraq 

By Hana Levi Julian -


American B-52 Stratofortress aircraft arriving in Qatar to join air campaign to defeat ISIS/Da'esh

A US Air Base has been attacked in Iraq, in an area north of Baghdad, according to the Al Arabiya website.

At least two Katyusha rockets landed inside the Balad Air Base housing US troops Saturday night, located about 50 miles north of the city, two security sources told Reuters.

A mortar shell exploded in the Al-Jadiriya neighborhood in Baghdad, wounding five people according to a statement from a spokesperson for the Iraqi Army.

Several rockets landed in the “Green Zone’ near the US Embassy, according to an Iraqi security official who spoke with Reuters. The rockets landed inside “Celebrations Square,” near the US Embassy.” A great deal of damage was caused, but no one was physically wounded, according to the sources.

The Green Zone is the district in which the foreign embassies – including that of the United States – as well as Iraqi parliament and government ministries are located. Some areas of the district, but not all, are protected by barriers.

It’s not yet clear who launched the rocket attacks.

Iran vowed Friday to avenge the death of IRGC Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani, assassinated last Thursday in a US air strike.

Inside the plot by Iran’s Soleimani to attack U.S. forces in Iraq

 WORLD NEWS JANUARY 3, 2020 / 5:56 PM / UPDATED 6 HOURS AGO
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-iraq-security-soleimani-insight/inside-the-plot-by-irans-soleimani-to-attack-u-s-forces-in-iraq-idUSKBN1Z301Z

 Inside the plot by Iran’s Soleimani to attack U.S. forces in Iraq


(Reuters) - In mid-October, Iranian Major-General Qassem Soleimani met with his Iraqi Shi’ite militia allies at a villa on the banks of the Tigris River, looking across at the U.S. embassy complex in Baghdad.
The Revolutionary Guards commander instructed his top ally in Iraq, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, and other powerful militia leaders to step up attacks on U.S. targets in the country using sophisticated new weapons provided by Iran, two militia commanders and two security sources briefed on the gathering told Reuters.
The strategy session, which has not been previously reported, came as mass protests against Iran’s growing influence in Iraq were gaining momentum, putting the Islamic Republic in an unwelcome spotlight. Soleimani’s plans to attack U.S. forces aimed to provoke a military response that would redirect that rising anger toward the United States, according to the sources briefed on the gathering, Iraqi Shi’ite politicians and government officials close to Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi.
Soleimani’s efforts ended up provoking the U.S. attack on Friday that killed him and Muhandis, marking a major escalation of tensions between the United States and Iran. The two men died in air strikes on their convoy at a Baghdad airport as they headed to the capital, dealing a major blow to the Islamic Republic and the Iraqi paramilitary groups it supports.
Interviews with the Iraqi security sources and Shi’ite militia commanders offer a rare glimpse of how Soleimani operated in Iraq, which he once told a Reuters reporter he knew like the back of his hand.
Two weeks before the October meeting, Soleimani ordered Iranian Revolutionary Guards to move more sophisticated weapons - such as Katyusha rockets and shoulder-fired missiles that could bring down helicopters - to Iraq through two border crossings, the militia commanders and Iraqi security sources told Reuters.
At the Baghdad villa, Soleimani told the assembled commanders to form a new militia group of low-profile paramilitaries - unknown to the United States - who could carry out rocket attacks on Americans housed at Iraqi military bases. He ordered Kataib Hezbollah - a force founded by Muhandis and trained in Iran - to direct the new plan, said the militia sources briefed on the meetings.
Soleimani told them such a group “would be difficult to detect by the Americans,” one of the militia sources told Reuters.

FILE PHOTO: Iranian demonstrators chant slogans during a protest against the killing of the Iranian Major-General Qassem Soleimani, head of the elite Quds Force, and Iraqi militia commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, who were killed in an air strike at Baghdad airport, in front of United Nations office in Tehran, Iran January 3, 2020. WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Nazanin Tabatabaee via REUTERS




White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien told reporters on Friday that Soleimani had just come from Damascus, “where he was planning attacks on American soldiers, airmen, Marines, sailors and against our diplomats.”
An official at the headquarters of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards declined to comment. A spokesperson for the Iranian foreign ministry was not available for comment.

PICKING U.S. TARGETS WITH DRONES

The United States has grown increasingly concerned about Iran’s influence over the ruling elite in Iraq, which has been beset for months by protesters who accuse the government of enriching itself and serving the interests of foreign powers, especially Iran, as Iraqis languish in poverty without jobs or basic services.
Soleimani, leader of the Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force, was instrumental in expanding Iran’s military influence in the Middle East as the operative who handles clandestine operations outside Iran. The 62-year-old general was regarded as the second-most powerful figure in Iran after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Muhandis, a former Iraqi lawmaker, oversaw Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), an umbrella grouping of paramilitary forces mostly consisting of Iran-backed Shi’ite militias that was formally integrated into Iraq’s armed forces.
Muhandis, like Soleimani, had long been on the radar of the United States, which had declared Muhandis a terrorist. In 2007, a Kuwaiti court sentenced him to death in absentia for his involvement in the 1983 U.S. and French embassy bombings in Kuwait.
Soleimani picked Kataib Hezbollah to lead the attacks on U.S. forces in the region because it had the capability to use drones to scout targets for Katyusha rocket attacks, one of the militia commanders told Reuters. Among the weapons that Soleimani’s forces supplied to its Iraqi militia allies last fall was a drone Iran had developed that could elude radar systems, the militia commanders said.
Kataib Hezbollah used the drones to gather aerial footage of locations where U.S. troops were deployed, according to two Iraqi security officials who monitor the movements of militias.

Slideshow (2 Images)
On December 11, a senior U.S. military official said attacks by Iranian-backed groups on bases hosting U.S. forces in Iraq were increasing and becoming more sophisticated, pushing all sides closer to an uncontrollable escalation.
His warning came two days after four Katyusha rockets struck a base near Baghdad international airport, wounding five members of Iraq’s elite Counter-Terrorism Service. No group claimed responsibility for the attack but a U.S. military official said intelligence and forensic analyses of the rockets and launchers pointed to Iranian-backed Shi’ite Muslim militia groups, notably Kataib Hezbollah and Asaib Ahl al-Haq.
On Dec. 27 more than 30 rockets were fired at an Iraqi military base near the northern Iraq city of Kirkuk. The attack killed a U.S. civilian contractor and wounded four American and two Iraq servicemen.
Washington accused Kataib Hezbollah of carrying out the attack, an allegation it denied. The United States then launched air strikes two days later against the militia, killing at least 25 militia fighters and wounding 55.
The attacks sparked two days of violent protests by supporters of Iranian-backed Iraqi paramilitary groups who stormed the U.S. Embassy’s perimeter and hurled rocks, prompting Washington to dispatch extra troops to the region and threaten reprisals against Tehran.
On Thursday – the day before the attack that killed Soleimani - U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper warned that the United States might have to take preemptive action to protect American lives from expected attacks by Iran-backed militias.
“The game has changed,” he said.
Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Brian Thevenot

Crazed Rapper realizes he is a God, cuts off his junk, jumps from building, gets married :)

Rapper Who Cut Off His Own Penis Gets Married

christbearer1
Screenshot/YouTube
1:33
Christ Bearer, the rapper who cut off his own penis in 2014, celebrated with fans news that he’s now married.
The rapper, whose real name is Andre Johnson, told fans that he married Cheryl after a six-month courtship. He also noted that he knew her several years previous to hooking up.
The former Wu-Tang-affiliated rapper said he and Cheryl tied the knot on December 30, ENews reported.
Johnson made news six years ago when he went on a drug-fueled rampage where he severed his penis and then jumped off the second floor of an apartment building.
The rapper, who also performs under the name “Andre Roxx,” mutilated himself and jumped from the building on April 16, 2014.
Friends who were with Johnson at the time said he acted without warning. They also insisted no drugs were present. The witnesses told TMZ at the time that there weren’t “any hard drugs that would cause him to do such a thing.”
However, since then, Johnson has admitted that drugs were a factor in the incident.
“Yes, I was using drugs that night, but I was in complete control,” Johnson said. “I cut it off because that was the root of all my problems. My solution to the problem was the realization that sex is for mortals, and I am a god…Those kinds of activities got me into trouble, and I came here to be a god.”

Maxine Waters' phone call with 'Greta Thunberg' was apparently the work of Russian pranksters

https://www.foxnews.com/media/maxine-waters-russian-pranksters-greta-thunberg-trump



Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., appeared to have been tricked by Russian pranksters into thinking she was speaking on the phone with Greta Thunberg and that the teenage climate activist had dirt on President Trump.
Vladimir Kuznetsov and Alexey Stolyarov, who go by the names Vovan and Lexus on YouTube, released audio of a phone conversation allegedly between Waters and people she believed to be Thunberg and her father. The audio was accompanied by illustrations poking fun at the conversation.
The conversation began with "Thunberg" telling Waters that she was calling from a climate strike meeting in North Carolina where they were advocating for the protection of the fictitious "Chon-Go-Chango" islands. She asked Waters to make remarks to the meeting attendees, where she showered "Thunberg" with praise.
"Thunberg" then told Waters about a fictitious meeting she said she had with President Trump at the United Nations back in September.
"It was a really terrible meeting in the U.N. building in September with him. And I had nightmares afterwards. It's terrible," the Thunberg impersonator told Waters. "I saw him in the hallway. He was with security and I shouted at him, 'Sign the Paris Climate Agreement again!' He came over, he leaned in towards me, and said softly, 'Listen carefully to me, little girl. You will never achieve your goal, like the congressional goal, trying to accuse me.'"
"He said you will never achieve your goal? Oh my goodness." Waters said with shock. "Did you ask him if he would rethink signing the Paris Climate Agreement? Is that your question to him?"
"Yes, yes," the impersonator said. "He added that ... 'You know what? I'll tell you the truth. I really wanted to push the Ukraine president to put my competitor on trial.'"
Her supposed "father" chimed in.
"He said to her, 'You know, little girl, nobody believe you anyway, I will tell you the truth. I really pushed on Ukrainian president and you know that you will never achieve your goals like those congressional fools who accuse me,” the fictional parent told Waters. "So nobody will believe you. You will be on trial like my competitor."
"Oh, my God! He mentioned Ukrainian president?" Waters asked.
"Yes, he said that," the prankster responded. "And he added, 'Nobody will believe you anyway.'"
The prankster also alleged that his "daughter" always records her speeches and had a recording of her exchange with Trump.
"Are you going to be in Washington anytime soon? I want you to come meet with me in Washington," Waters said.
The "father" suggested that Congress continue with the president's impeachment and offered that the activist can make a speech on Capitol Hill, something Waters expressed interest in.
"We are working very hard. We are putting together the facts and we're going after him," Waters told the "Thunbergs." "We're going to try everything that we have to impeach him. Yes. And if the public knew that he talked to Greta like that, he made her cry, and told her she would never achieve, this would go against him too."
"And he added that he pushed on the Ukrainian president," the prankster father reiterated. "I think he didn't expect that we have a record of that."
"Well, you bring it to me," Waters responded. "You tell me what day you can get there and we'll arrange to meet with you as quickly as we can. ... I will make myself available whenever you get there."

Waters' congressional office did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment.
Waters isn't the only lawmaker to be fooled by the Russian pranksters. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., was also apparently pranked into believing that they had "naked Trump" photos back in 2018.

Friday, 3 January 2020

Impeachment impasse deepens as McConnell rejects Pelosi's bid to shape trial: ‘Their turn is over’

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/impeachment-impasse-deepens-as-mcconnell-rejects-pelosi-bid-to-shape-trial-their-turn-is-over


Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, speaking from the chamber’s floor Friday, rejected House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s efforts to shape a pending impeachment trial as “fantasy”—leaving the process at a standstill as lawmakers return from the holiday recess.
“Their turn is over. They’ve done enough damage. It’s the Senate’s turn now to render sober judgment,” McConnell, R-Ky., said on the Senate floor.

But he stressed that the chamber cannot hold a trial unless and until the House of Representatives transmits the two articles of impeachment adopted last month, accusing President Trump of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress pertaining to his dealings with Ukraine. Pelosi, D-Calif., has held onto them in a bid to seek favorable terms for a trial, including the involvement of certain Democrat-sought witnesses.
McConnell called Pelosi’s effort to “hand-design” the proceedings in the Senate a “non-starter” and a “fantasy.”
Moments later, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., defended his party's efforts to seek certain high-level witnesses and documents, noting how recently published emails have started to fill out the details of the administration's decision to freeze aid to Ukraine while the president sought politically advantageous investigations from Kiev. Schumer said it is imperative to learn the "whole truth," while voicing concern McConnell could end up holding a "mock trial."

“Will we fulfill our duty to conduct a fair impeachment trial of the president of the United States or will we not? That is most pressing question facing this Senate,” Schumer said. “The country just saw McConnell’s answer to that question. The answer is no.”
Schumer argued that McConnell is ignoring “the only one precedent that matters here.”
“Never, never in the history of our country has there been an impeachment trial in which the Senate was denied the ability to hear from witnesses, yet the Republican leader seems intent on violating that precedent and denying critical evidence to this body and to the American people,” Schumer said, adding that McConnell has “no intention to be impartial.”
The remarks leave the proceedings as they were before the recess—stalled, with lawmakers at an impasse and unsure when and if a trial might start. Even Schumer acknowledged they appear "no closer" to setting the rules for a trial than before the recess.

Schumer has demanded testimony from top Trump administration officials amid new reports of what occurred inside the administration at the time of the decision to freeze millions of dollars of military aid to Ukraine.
The New York Democrat recently sent a letter to fellow senators that cited records including an email sent by the Office of Management and Budget Associate Director Michael Duffey to Defense Department officials roughly an hour-and-a-half after Trump's controversial July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
"This shows all four witnesses we requested – [acting White House chief of staff] Mulvaney, Bolton, Duffey, [White House aide Robert] Blair – were intimately involved & had direct knowledge of Pres. Trump’s decision to cut off aid to benefit himself," Schumer tweeted.
Meanwhile, McConnell has argued that the eventual Trump impeachment trial should mirror that of former President Bill Clinton's in 1999.
At the center of the inquiry is Trump’s efforts to press Zelensky to launch politically related investigations — regarding former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter’s dealings in Ukraine, as well as issues related to the 2016 presidential election.
The president’s request came after millions of dollars in U.S. military aid to Ukraine had been frozen, which Democrats argue shows a “quid pro quo” arrangement. Trump has denied any wrongdoing.
But McConnell charged that Democrats' "Trump derangement syndrome" has escalated into a partisan "fever," while accusing his counterparts of taking positions that contradict their actions during the Clinton impeachment.
"It appears that one symptom of Trump derangement syndrome is also a bad case of amnesia," he quipped.
Republican Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri said overnight that he plans to introduce a measure Monday to dismiss the "bogus impeachment" entirely.
"If Dems won’t proceed with trial, bogus articles should be dismissed and @realDonaldTrump fully cleared," he tweeted.
McConnell, though, indicated the Senate process is at a standstill for now, as he accused the House of getting "cold feet."
"The same people who spent weeks screaming that impeachment was so urgent … now decided it could wait indefinitely while they check the political winds and look for some new talking points," he said.

House Dems, Trump DOJ clash in court over McGahn subpoena push

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/house-dems-trump-doj-clash-in-court-over-mcgahn-subpoena-push


The Trump Justice Department faced tough questioning Friday from a federal appeals court over a political and legal standoff with the House Judiciary Committee, dealing with a pair of interrelated disputes that could impact the current and future impeachment proceedings against the president.
A three-judge panel in Washington presided over about three hours of public arguments, hearing from lawyers representing the executive and legislative branches, including over efforts to compel testimony from former White House counsel Donald McGahn.

At issue is whether judges should be settling a dispute between the two branches over information requested by Congress, dealing with a subpoena of a former White House official, and unredacted grand jury material from the Mueller investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.
The president has told his aides not to cooperate with a congressional impeachment inquiry, said Judge Thomas Griffith, an appointee of President George W. Bush. "Has that ever happened before? No it hasn't," he said.
Griffith said the White House was engaging in a "broad-scale defiance of a congressional investigation."
The Democrat-led House committee wants testimony from McGahn, which lawmakers suggested could be relevant to the impeachment trial pending in the Senate.
But Justice Department lawyers argued McGahn left his post before the July Trump phone call with the Ukrainian president that is at the heart of the impeachment articles.
Griffith and Judge Neomi Rao, a Trump bench appointee, questioned the House's need for McGahn's testimony at this stage. And they suggested this matter may be best left for the other branches to work out among themselves, with a measure of compromise and accommodation, as is usually done with such disputes.
And Judge Karen Henderson, named to the court by President George H.W. Bush, suggested even if McGahn were compelled to appear before the House committee, he might not say much, citing attorney-client privilege to protect sensitive conversations with the president.

Trump is charged with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress over his alleged efforts to tie Ukrainian military aid to that country's promise to investigate his potential political rival Joe Biden, the former vice president.
House lawyers told the judges that "absolutely" the McGahn subpoena and the Mueller grand jury information could be relevant to current and future impeachment proceedings. House General Counsel Douglas Letter told the court the White House's efforts to defy Congress were "so clearly wrong."
But Justice Department lawyers said not only should judges not get involved in these cases, but the issue is currently moot, since Trump is about to face a Senate trial without McGahn's testimony being used by the House.
Rulings are expected in several weeks, and the Supreme Court could then be asked to get involved. It is unclear how any high court final decision would impact the current impeachment drama unfolding on Capitol Hill.

Iraqis seen dancing in the street after Soleimani’s killing, Pompeo says

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/iraqis-seen-dancing-in-the-street-after-soleimanis-killing-pompeo-says


Mike Pompeo, the U.S. secretary of state, tweeted a video that he claimed showed Iraqis taking to the streets to celebrate the death of Iranian Gen. Qassim Soleimani.

Soleimani was the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ elite Quds Force. He was killed in a targeted U.S. military attack ordered by President Trump. His killing was seen as a major escalation between the U.S. and Iran.
It was not immediately clear where or when the footage in the tweet was recorded.
Reporter Steven Nabil of Al Hurra News tweeted that Iraqis are dubbing pro-Saddam Hussein songs and baking cakes to show appreciation to President Trump for the airstrike.
The reporter also tweeted a video that he said showed Iraqis in Basra celebrating Soleimani's death
The Pentagon said in a statement that the attack was intended the thwart future Iranian attacks on U.S. personnel abroad. Iran slammed the attack as an unnecessary escalation and Democrats were swift to criticize Trump.

Rep. Adam Schiff, D- Calif., tweeted that the world is better off without Soleimani, but  Trump attacked without getting authorization from Congress.