Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts

Saturday, November 14, 2009

What Do YOU Think About Cybercrime?

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The Kama Sutra of VatsyayanaImage via Wikipedia

How protected are you from cybercrime? I know I was not protected at all. I have been a Norton Security user for the last 10 years. I thought I was protected. You can imagine how surprised I was to find Trojan viruses and several others on my personal computer. Some of the viruses I found on my computer were: Trojans, Sobig, Sasser and Kama Sutra.

Trojan spy program is designed to steal sensitive user data and to manage the victim’s computer system remotely. It is an executable file. It has only 470 bytes – not a significant amount of space to occupy on your computer. The damage it can create is devastating. After your computer is hijacked, it becomes a tool in the criminal’s hands and acts like a zombie.

I recently found out that cybercrime profits are higher then profits of illegal drug trafficking. According to president Obama, there were 8 billion dollars stolen from Americans only in the last 2 years. Last year the price of repairing hijacked consumer systems has risen to 11 billion dollars. Why does cybercrime continues to thrive today? Evgeny Kaspersky, a known cybercrime authority, says that we need better Internet Regulations. In his opinion, individuals need Internet Passports, businesses have to have accreditation.

Would it help if internet anonymity ceased? If every computer, every person and every company was identifiable a lot of problems could be solved. Online dating experience could be more rewarding if men and women were identifiable. There could be much more trust between people, if everybody could be identified.

On the other hand, being totally identified could trigger various dangers for single people, for example, for older people and for children.

If it was up to me, I would not mind to have an Internet Passport. I think that companies should be identifiable. Besides, I think if all companies were identifiable, the revenues of these companies would go up. If a consumer orders a product on internet, he/she should have all the information necessary to receive the product and to get the refund if it comes to that point.

If it was your choice, would you rather have an Internet Passport? Please, visit the website to answer the question.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Iran vows reprisals after bombing kills dozens

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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Iran vowed retaliation Monday after accusing Pakistan, the U.S. and Britain of aiding Sunni militants who stunned the Islamic regime with a suicide bombing that killed top Revolutionary Guard commanders and dozens of others.

A commentary by the official news agency called on Iranian security forces "to seriously deal with Pakistan once and for all." And President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told his Pakistani counterpart that his nation must hunt down suspected members of Jundallah, or Soldiers of God.

"The presence of terrorist elements in Pakistan is not justifiable and the Pakistani government needs to help arrest and punish the criminals as soon as possible," state TV quoted Ahmadinejad as telling President Asif Ali Zardari on Monday.

Iran made no specific threats against the U.S. or Britain, but the accusations came as talks began in Vienna over Iran's nuclear program. The U.S. is part of those talks, which observers said made little headway Monday beyond spelling out each side's position.

Iran has often claimed that Western powers use groups such as Jundallah to try to destabilize the country. But the direct finger-pointing at Pakistan - and the warnings of a stepped-up offensive - present a different and risky scenario for Iran's leaders.

Sunday's attack occurred in a region that is home to several minority Sunni tribes in rugged southeastern Iran. It is one of the country's most restive areas. Until now, authorities have avoided widespread security offensives that could draw in outside extremists such as al-Qaida.

Sharper tensions with Pakistan could severely hurt Iran's efforts to battle drug trafficking and jeopardize i! mportant trade deals at a time when Tehran could face more sanctions over its nuclear program. In May, the two countries signed a landmark pact for a natural gas pipeline into Pakistan.

Pakistan's president quickly condemned the attack that killed at least 42 people - including five senior Revolutionary Guard officers - in a district near Iran's border with Pakistan. The dry canyons and hills are crisscrossed by smuggling routes and home to Sunni Muslim ethnic groups known as Baluchi.

Jundallah gained notice more than five years ago with sporadic attacks and kidnappings, claiming the minority Sunni tribes in southeastern Iran suffer at the hands of Iran's Shiite leadership. Its leader, Abdulmalik Rigi, has been quoted as saying the group does not seek to break from Iran but that violence is necessary to draw attention to discrimination.

Most experts estimate Jundallah has no more than 1,000 main fighters from Baluchi clans, whose territory extends into Pakistan and Afghanistan. Iran has claimed the group has ties to al-Qaida and the Taliban, but most analysts say no evidence has been produced.

Jundallah has targeted the powerful Revolutionary Guard before, including a February 2007 car bombing that killed 11 members. The group also claimed responsibility for a May suicide bomb that killed 25 worshippers in a Shiite mosque.

Sunday's blast was the most deadly. Reports said a suicide bomber ambushed a high-level delegation of Guard commanders arriving for talks on promoting Sunni-Shiite reconciliation with tribal leaders in Pishin near the Pakstani border.

Revolutionary Guard chief Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari vowed to deliver a "crushing" response and said an Iranian delegation would travel to Pakistan soon to present evidence of links to its agents.

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei issued a statement on his official Web site v! owing to punish those behind the attack.

Several analysts who have studied Jundallah say the group likely receives inspiration and material support from Baluchi nationalists in Pakistan, but no direct backing from militant factions.

"Evidence shows that U.S., British and Pakistani intelligence supported the group," state TV quoted Jafari as saying.

The State Department and Britain's Foreign Office strongly rejected claims of any involvement.

Zardari called the incident "gruesome and barbaric" and pledged full Pakistani support to fight the militants, according to a statement from his office.

Peiman Forouzesh, an Iranian lawmaker representing the region where the attack took place, called on the Guard to carry out military operations inside the Pakistani soil against Jundallah.

A statement in the name of Jundallah said the attack was carried out in "retaliation for the Iranian regime's crimes against the unarmed people of Baluchistan."

The victims of the attack included the deputy commander of the Guard's ground forces, Gen. Noor Ali Shooshtari, as well as a chief provincial Guard commander, Rajab Ali Mohammadzadeh. The others killed were Guard members or tribal leaders.

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Associated Press Writers Asif Shahzad in Islamabad and Sebastian Abbot and Maamoun Youssef in Cairo contributed to this report. Murphy reported from Dubai.


Saturday, October 24, 2009

Iran to respond to UN nuclear proposal next week

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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Iran put off until next week a formal response to a U.N.-backed plan to ship much of its uranium to Russia for enrichment, the country's nuclear envoy said Friday. The West sees the proposal as a way to curb Tehran's alleged efforts to make nuclear weapons.

Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran's representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency, said Tehran is still studying the proposal and would inform the U.N. nuclear watchdog "next week about our evaluation."

"We are working and elaborating on all the details of this proposal," Soltanieh told state Press TV.

The plan was put forth Wednesday after three days of talks between Iran and world powers in Vienna. The United States, Russia and France endorsed the deal Friday, when an official response from Tehran had been expected.

Iran's acquiescence would be a boost to Obama administration efforts to curtail Tehran's nuclear program and ease Western fears about its potential to make nuclear weapons.

The State Department expressed mild disappointment that Iran withheld a decision and said it was unhappy Iran was not ready to embrace the proposal.

The plan is attractive to the U.S. because it would consume a large amount of Iran's stockpile of low-enriched uranium, thereby limiting the potential for Tehran to secretly convert it into uranium suitable for a nuclear weapon. Iran denies it has any intention of making a weapon, saying its nuclear program is for generating power.

State Department spokesman Ian C. Kelly said the U.S. still hopes Iran will go along with the IAEA option. "This is a real opportunity for Iran to help address some of the real conc! erns of the international community about its nuclear program and at the same time still provide for the humanitarian needs of the Iranian people," Kelly said. "We hope that they will next week provide a positive response."

Alireza Nader of the RAND Corp. said if Iran rejects the deal, it would "lead to increased tensions" and a possible new set of U.N. sanctions. Nader said the U.N. proposal is "problematic for Iran's hard-line factions."

"Accepting it would indicate a compromise with world powers, and Tehran has repeatedly said it would not compromise," Nader said.

Soltanieh's statement came on the eve of a visit by U.N. nuclear experts to Iran to inspect a recently disclosed uranium enrichment facility near the holy city of Qom. The visit, which kicks off late Saturday, is an indication that Tehran is making good on some of its promises to the West.

The IAEA said Friday that Iran told agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei it is "considering the (U.N.) proposal in depth and in a favorable light, but needs time until the middle of next week to provide a response."

Just hours earlier, Iranian state TV quoted an unidentified official close to the Iranian nuclear negotiating team as saying that Tehran wants to buy nuclear fuel it needs for a research reactor, rather than accept the U.N. plan.

The TV quoted the official as saying Tehran was waiting for a response from world powers to its own proposal to buy the 20 percent-enriched uranium it needs for its Tehran reactor that produces medical isotopes. The U.S.-built reactor has been producing medical isotopes for more than three decades.

While the TV report was not an outright rejection of the U.N. proposal, it raised concerns since Iran has often used counterproposals as a way to draw out nuclear talks with the West. On Thursday, deputy speaker of the parliament Mohammad Reza Bahonar dismisse! d the U. N. plan.

David Albright, a former U.N. nuclear inspector, now with the Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, said the Iranian proposal to buy nuclear fuel is a nonstarter because U.N. sanctions stand in the way of anyone willing to sell Tehran enriched uranium.

"The IAEA plan was pretty clear, it was goodwill test by the Obama administration to see if Iran is serious about being prepared to negotiate," Albright told The Associated Press. "Iran would put itself in a bad position if it rejects a very reasonable offer made in good faith."

At the U.N., Israeli Vice Prime Minister Silvan Shalom said he told U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Friday that Iran is trying to buy all the items it needs to become a nuclear power. Shalom did not disclose any details.

The Vienna talks followed a similar meeting Oct. 1 in Geneva that included the highest-level bilateral contact between the U.S. and Iran in years. At the time, the revelation that Iran has been building a nuclear plant for uranium enrichment near Qom had heightened international concerns.

Iran is enriching uranium to a 3.5 percent level for a nuclear power plant it is planning to build in southwestern Iran. Iranian officials have said it is more economical to purchase the more highly enriched uranium needed for the Tehran reactor than produce it domestically.

The Vienna-brokered plan would have required Iran to send 2,420 pounds (1,100 kilograms) of low-enriched uranium - around 70 percent of its stockpile - to Russia in one batch by the end of the year, French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said Thursday.

After further enrichment in Russia, France would have converted the uranium into fuel rods for return to Iran for use in the Tehran reactor, he said.

This would significantly restrain any covert arms pursuit! , since 2,205 pounds (1,000 kilograms) is the commonly accepted amount of low-enriched uranium needed to produce weapons-grade uranium for a single nuclear warhead.

Based on Iran's present stockpile, the U.S. has estimated that Tehran could produce a nuclear weapon between 2010 and 2015, an assessment that broadly matches those from Israel and other nations.

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Friday, October 23, 2009

Mass man accused of plot to kill U.S politicians

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MINGORA, PAKISTAN - FEBRUARY 25:  Pakistani Ar...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

BOSTON (AP) -- A Massachusetts man and two friends tried and bootless to get into agitator training camps and again plotted to annihilate two prominent U.S. politicians and randomly shoot bodies at American arcade malls, authorities said Wednesday.

Tarek Mehanna, who recently accomplished at a Muslim academy in Worcester, was arrested early Wednesday at his parents' suburban Boston home. Mehanna was charged with conspiring with two other men - an American now in Syria and another man who is allied with authorities - to provide abutment to terrorists.

Ultimately, the leash never came abutting to pulling off an attack. Authorities say they never got the agitator training they sought - that the men told friends they were angry down because of their nationality, ethnicity or inexperience, or that the bodies they'd hoped would get them into such camps were either in jail or on a religious pilgrimage.

The men abandoned the capital attack plans afterwards their weapons acquaintance said he could find alone handguns, not automatic weapons.

The men acclimated code words such as "peanut butter and jelly" for fighting in Somalia and "culinary school" for agitator camps, and talked extensively of their admiration to "die on the battlefield," according to cloister documents.

Mehanna, who has accomplished math and adoration at Alhuda Academy, fabricated a defiant cloister actualization hours afterwards his arrest. He banned to stand to hear the charge adjoin him and assuredly did - tossing his chair audibly to the attic - alone afterwards his father urged him to do so.

"This really, really is a show," his father, Ahmed Mehanna, said as his son was ! actualit y led away in handcuffs. When asked if he believed the charges adjoin his son, he said, "No, absolutely not."

Prosecutors said Mehanna worked with two men from 2001 to May 2008 on the conspiracy that, over time, intended to "kill, kidnap, batter or injure" soldiers and two politicians who were associates of the controlling annex but are no longer in office. Authorities banned to analyze the politicians and said they were never in danger.

Acting U.S. Attorney Michael Loucks said the men justified the planned attacks on malls because U.S. civilians pay taxes to abutment the U.S. government and because they are "nonbelievers," Loucks said. He banned to analyze the targeted malls.

Mehanna - who received a doctorate in 2008 from the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy in Boston, where his father is a professor - allegedly conspired with Ahmad Abousamra, who authorities say is now in Syria.

Mehanna, 27, is actuality captivated without bail until his next cloister actualization on Oct. 30.

"I'm assured that the American bodies will put abreast their fears and instead rely on the fairness guaranteed by our Constitution," said his attorney, J.W. Carney Jr. "Mr. Mehanna is entitled to that."

Rola Yaghmour, 20, of Shrewsbury and her ancestors are friends with the Mehannas and she said she couldn't believe the new charges adjoin Mehanna, calling him a "good man."

"He's not going to go crazy in a mall. There's no way he would do article like that," she said. "I read it and I was laughing, and I was like, 'They have to be kidding.' Because there's no way he would do article like that. It makes no sense. I was in shock. That's not like him at all nor his family, annihilation of them at all."

Mehanna aboriginal was arrested in November and charged with lying to the FBI in December 2006 when asked the whereabouts of Da! niel Mal donado, who is now confined a 10-year prison sentence for training with al-Qaida to overthrow the Somali government.

Authorities said Wednesday that Mehanna and his conspirators had contacted Maldonado about getting automatic weapons for their planned capital attacks, but he told them he could alone get handguns.

Court abstracts filed by the government say that in 2002, Abousamra became frustrated afterwards again actuality alone to accompany terror groups in Pakistan - aboriginal Lashkar e Tayyiba, again the Taliban.

"Because Abousamra was an Arab (not Pakistani) the LeT camp would not accept him, and because of Abousamra's lack of experience, the Taliban camp would not accept him," Williams wrote in the affidavit.

Mehanna and Abousamra traveled to Yemen in 2004 in an attempt to accompany a agitator training camp, according to cloister documents.

Mehanna allegedly told a friend, the third abettor who is now allied with authorities, that their trip was a abortion because they were unable to ability bodies affiliated with the camps.

Abousamra said he was alone by a terror group when he sought training in Iraq because he was American, authorities said.


Negotiators consider public option in Senate bill

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WASHINGTON - SEPTEMBER 30:  Committee Chairman...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senior Senate Democrats at work with White House officials on health care legislation are strongly considering a requirement for the federal government to sell insurance in direct competition with private industry, officials said Thursday, with individual states permitted to drop out of the system.

Liberals in Congress long have viewed such an approach, called a public option, as an essential ingredient of the effort to overhaul the nation's health care system, and President Barack Obama has said frequently he favors it. But he has also made clear it is not essential to the legislation he seeks, a gesture to Democratic moderates who have opposed it.

Sens. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., and Kent Conrad, D-N.D., said in separate interviews they had been told the plan was drawing interest in the private negotiations unfolding in an ornate room in the Capitol down the hall from the Senate chamber.

The final decision is up to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who led a delegation of Democrats to the White House late in the day to discuss health care with Obama.

"I'm not part of those discussions. What I'm hearing is that this is the direction of the conversation," said Conrad, who supports an alternative approach under which nonprofit co-ops would compete with private industry.

"I keep hearing there is a lot of leaning toward some sort of national public option, unfortunately, from my standpoint," Nelson said.

The White House declined to comment.

Reid's office did likewise, and the Nevada Democrat left the White House without talking with reporters.

Several officials said no fina! l decisi ons had been made about including the so-called public option into the legislation. In the extraordinarily complicated atmosphere surrounding health care, one possibility seemed to be that the idea of a public option was being given wide circulation to see whether it could attract enough support to survive on the Senate floor.

WASHINGTON - SEPTEMBER 22:  Senate Finance Com...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

If not, it surely would be jettisoned beforehand, with liberals urged to accept something less or risk defeat of health care legislation. There is little margin for error among Obama's allies in the Senate as they confront nearly unanimous Republican opposition.

Democratic moderates are skeptical of allowing the government to sell insurance, concerned that it would mark an unwarranted federal intrusion into the private marketplace. And even if they agreed, it would raise questions of payment rates for doctors, hospitals and other providers.

Conrad, for example, has said repeatedly he could not accept a plan with payments tied to Medicare, the federal health care program for the elderly, because rates in North Dakota are too low to give doctors an incentive to treat additional patients.

The public option issue has been one of the most vexing of the yearlong effort by Obama and his Democratic allies in Congress to remake the nation's health care system.

Legislation taking shape in the House is also expected to include a public option, although it is unlikely states will be allowed to opt out.

After months of struggle, both houses are expected to vote in the next few weeks on sweeping legislation that expands coverage to millions of people who lack it, ban industry practices such as denial of coverage for pre-existing medical conditions and slow the growth of medical care spending in general.

The House and Senate measures aim to expand coverage to about 95 percent of the population, and include federal sub! sidies t o help lower-income families afford coverage and permit small businesses to provide it for their employees.

The two bills differ at many points, although both are paid for through a combination of cuts in future Medicare spending and higher taxes - a levy on high-cost insurance policies in the case of the Senate and an income surcharge on very high income individuals and families in the House measure.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said at a news conference she and her leadership were entering the "final stages" of assembling a health care bill to be voted on this fall. Officials have said the measure would cost $871 billion over a decade, but that total excluded a handful of items not directly related to expanded coverage that would push the total to well over $1 trillion.

Pelosi told reporters a provision eliminating the health insurance industry's exemption from federal antitrust law would be incorporated into the House measure.

Officials said a similar move was under discussion in the Senate, part of a strong response to recent industry criticism of the legislation.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs declined to take a position on the antitrust proposal, saying it was under review.

Similarly, Christine A. Varney, the head of the Justice Department's antitrust division, testified before Congress recently that the administration "generally supports the idea of repealing antitrust exemptions. However, we take no position as to how and when Congress should address this issue."

Varney also said that repeal of current exemptions covering the industry would "allow competition to have a greater role in reforming health and medical malpractice insurance markets than would otherwise be the case."

The Senate negotiations have proceeded in unusual secrecy, attended by Reid, two Senate committee chairmen, S! en., Max Baucus, D-Mont., and Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., and a small group of administration officials led by White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.

Nominally, their task is to merge bills cleared earlier in the year by two Senate committees. But in fact, they have a virtual free hand to draft legislation that Reid will then usher onto the Senate floor for one of the most widely anticipated debates in recent years.

Democrats hold a 60-40 majority in the Senate, counting two independents, precisely the number needed to overcome a threatened Republican filibuster. Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, voted for the health care bill that cleared the Senate Finance Committee recently, giving Democrats one potential additional vote.

But she has long voiced opposition to a public option along the lines under consideration, as has Nelson, and other moderate Democrats have voiced skepticism. Without 60 votes, the legislation could stall even before debate began in earnest.

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Associated Press writers Charles Babington, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Erica Werner contributed to this report.

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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Feds: Mass. man planned terror attacks on US malls

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BOSTON (AP) -- A pharmacy college graduate made a defiant actualization in federal court Wednesday, hours afterwards actuality charged with conspiring with two added men in a alarm plot to annihilate two prominent U.S. politicians and carry out a holy war by attacking shoppers in U.S. malls and American troops in Iraq.

Authorities say the men's affairs - in which they used code words like "peanut butter and jelly" for fighting in Somalia and "culinary school" for agitator camps - were thwarted in part back they could not find training and were clumsy to buy automated weapons, authorities said.

Tarek Mehanna, 27, was arrested Wednesday morning at his parents' home in Sudbury, an upscale suburb 20 miles west of Boston, and appeared for a brief hearing afterwards in the day. When ordered by the judge to stand to hear the charge adjoin him, he refused. He finally did stand - tossing his chair loudly to the floor - alone afterwards his ancestor urged him to do so.

"This really, absolutely is a show," his father, Ahmed Mehanna, said afterward. When asked if he believed the charges adjoin his son, he said, "No, definitely not."

Prosecutors say Tarek Mehanna worked with two men from 2001 to May 2008 on the cabal to "kill, kidnap, maim or injure" soldiers and two politicians who were associates of the executive branch but are no best in office. Authorities refused to identify the politicians.

Mehanna - a graduate of the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy in Boston, where his ancestor is a professor - conspired with Ahmad Abousamra, who authorities say is now in Syria, and an bearding man, who is allied in the investigation, according to authorities.

Th! e three men often discussed their admiration to participate in "violent jihad adjoin American interests" and talked about "their admiration to die on the battlefield," prosecutors said. But back they were clumsy to accompany alarm groups in Iraq, Yemen and Pakistan, they begin inspiration in the Washington-area sniper shootings and turned their interests to calm alarm pursuits while they plotted the attack on shopping malls, authorities said.

Mehanna had "multiple conversations about obtaining automated weapons and randomly cutting bodies in shopping malls," Acting U.S. Attorney Michael Loucks said. Prosecutors would not say which malls had been targeted.

Loucks said the men justified attacks because U.S. civilians pay taxes to support the U.S. government and because they are "nonbelievers."

The mall plan was abandoned afterwards the men bootless to track down automated weapons, Loucks said.

Mehanna's attorney, J.W. Carney Jr., would not comment on the allegations. Mehanna is actuality captivated until his next court actualization on Oct. 30.

Court abstracts filed by the government say that in 2002 or 2003, Abousamra became frustrated afterwards repeatedly actuality rejected to accompany alarm groups in Pakistan - aboriginal Lashkar e Tayyiba, then the Taliban.

"Because Abousamra was an Arab (not Pakistani) the LeT affected would not acquire him, and because of Abousamra's abridgement of experience, the Taliban affected would not acquire him," FBI Special Agent Heidi Williams wrote in the affidavit.

Mehanna and Abousamra catholic to Yemen in 2004 in an attempt to accompany a agitator training camp.

Mehanna allegedly told a friend, the third abettor who is now allied with authorities, that their trip was a failure because they were clumsy to ability bodies affiliated with the camps. The men, who had allegedly! receive d tips on whom to accommodated from a being identified in court abstracts as "Individual A," said half the bodies they wanted to see were on "hajj," apropos to the crusade to Mecca in Islam, and half were in jail.

"They catholic all over the country looking for the bodies Individual A told them to meet," authorities allege in the criminal complaint.

Abousamra was rejected by a alarm accumulation back he approved training in Iraq because he was American, authorities said.

The men afterwards decided they were not activity to be able to get alarm training in Pakistan and "began exploring added options, including agitator acts in the United States," the affidavit said.

Mehanna, a U.S. citizen, was arrested in November and charged with lying to the FBI in December 2006 back asked the abode of Daniel Maldonado, who is now confined a 10-year bastille sentence for training with al-Qaida to abolish the Somali government.

Mehanna told the FBI that Maldonado was living in Egypt and alive for a Web site. But authorities said Maldonado had alleged Mehanna from Somalia urging him to accompany him in "training for jihad."

Authorities said Wednesday that Mehanna and his conspirators had contacted Maldonado about accepting automated weapons for their planned mall attacks.

Carney, who represented Mehanna in the antecedent case, said at the time: "If this is the FBI's idea of a terrorist, they are application a net that is designed to bolt minnows instead of sharks."

After his arrest, Mehanna developed a cult following among Muslim civilian rights groups and Web sites that believed Mehanna was wrongly arrested. Web sites like the London-based cageprisoners.com, a animal rights accumulation that advocates for prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and added detainees as part of the U.S. war on terror, asked supporters to write Meh! anna in bastille to keep up his spirits.

The site MuslimMatters.org asked supporters to pray for his release and published a letter they said Mehanna wrote from prison.

In the letter, Mehanna thanked supporters and said he was actuality treated well.

"I can alone think of the endless confined Muslims in the jails of tyrants about the globe and hope that if it is not Allah's Decree to free them in the near future, that they taste the sweetness that Allah has placed them in bastille to taste," Mehanna wrote.

He active the letter, "Your brother in the green jumpsuit."


Afghan coalition government is an option, US says

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States would be receptive to a power-sharing arrangement between Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his election challenger if they agreed to it, Obama administration officials said Wednesday.

Karzai and former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah have settled on a Nov. 7 runoff following weeks of acrimony over Afghanistan's fraud-ridden national election. But both sides also are considering a coalition government that could either replace the runoff or follow it.

A State Department official said the U.S. would not be opposed to a power-sharing deal, depending on its legitimacy and how it was implemented. And President Barack Obama appeared to allude to the still-fluid discussions Wednesday.

"I think we're still in - finding out how this whole process in Afghanistan is going to unfold," Obama said in an interview on MSNBC.

One senior defense official said that a power-sharing deal at this point had equal odds of coming together or falling apart.

The administration is stressing that any such agreement is up to the Afghan government and the U.S. is not involved in any effort to forge or encourage it.

The U.S. wants a government that is legitimate in the eyes of Afghans and the international community, officials say, and at present that legitimacy appears clearest through the Afghan Constitution's requirement for a run-off vote.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to describe confidential discussions between the two governments.

"We don't have any view really on a power-sharing arrangement," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters on Wednesday. "! It would depend on the manner in which it was presented and carried out."

Officials also said Wednesday that Obama's pending decision on sending more troops to Afghanistan figured in the U.S. discussions with Karzai about how to resolve the political impasse.

Several officials stressed that the looming troop plan decision was not used overtly to force Karzai to concede on the election's contested first round, but one highly placed U.S. official in Afghanistan said the United States used Obama's deliberation over troop numbers as leverage.

That official spoke on condition of anonymity because Obama has not announced whether he will agree to a U.S. military request for thousands of additional forces.

Karzai and Abdullah have largely dismissed the idea of sharing power, but there have been reports of private horsetrading discussions before and since Tuesday's announcement that the country would hold a runoff election on Nov. 7.

The most important near-term goal for the U.S. was Karzai's acceptance of election commission results and his recognition that the impasse must be resolved, the defense official said.

The outcome has been in doubt since an August election badly marred by fraud. The United Nations says much of the vote-rigging and phantom balloting was done on Karzai's behalf.

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., met repeatedly with Karzai leading up to Tuesday's announcement that a runoff would be held. Kerry gave Obama his accounting at the White House on Wednesday, and afterward told reporters that in Afghanistan he "did not discuss nor did I even attempt to put on the table the concept of a coalition."

It would be inappropriate to raise that possibility and would make it seem to Afghans that the United States was calling the shots, Kerry said. "We want to avoid that, always."

However, h! e acknow ledged the issue was being discussed in Kabul, and said there may have been talks between the Karzai and Abdullah camps on it "even today."

Obama is mulling how to shift strategy in the 8-year-old Afghanistan war, and the election mess in Afghanistan has played a big role in his intensive, weeks-long discussions with his war council.

"What we've said is that it is important to make sure that we understand the landscape and the partner that we're going to be dealing with," Obama told MSNBC. "Because our strategy in Afghanistan is not just dependent on military - forces. It's also dependent on how well we're doing with our civilian development efforts, how well we're doing in stemming corruption. So, this is part of a comprehensive strategy, it always has been. And our basic attitude is that we are going to take the time to get this right."

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said the decision about troops could come before the Nov. 7 runoff date.

"I don't know when the decision is going to be, so it's certainly possible," Gibbs said.

In his own interview, Obama added that even if the new strategy is formulated before the runoff "we may not announce it."

The White House has been saying that Obama's decision on troops is still weeks away. Obama leaves Nov. 11 for a long trip to Asia, and it has been expected he would make a decision before then.

A State Department official said Abdullah's camp had expressed some interest in a coalition or power-sharing deal, and that some Karzai aides, concerned about the results of a runoff, are willing to consider the idea despite the president's public repudiation of the idea.

That official said the U.S. would support any course that leads to the formation of a credible government in the eyes of the Afghan people.

That could include a c! oalition or other power-sharing arrangement that is either formed to eliminate the need for a second round or one that is created using the results of the runoff.

But there are no provisions for a coalition in the Afghan Constitution, and it is not clear how such a deal would work or remain enforceable.

Abdullah was not enthusiastic in public comments Wednesday in Kabul about a possible power-sharing arrangement, although as the second-place finisher in August he probably has the most to gain from such a deal.

"I think a coalition government is not a solution for Afghanistan's problems," Abdullah said, speaking in Dari. "The solution is to bring peace and good governance."

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Associated Press writers Jennifer Loven, Ron Fournier and Julie Pace in Washington and Robert H. Reid in Kabul contributed to this report.


Wednesday, October 21, 2009

THE INFLUENCE GAME: Firms resist new health rules

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WASHINGTON - JANUARY 20:  A line stretches aro...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Despite promises by President Barack Obama, more than 70 million Americans who have health insurance through their jobs could be open to higher costs or denials of some coverage under a leading overhaul plan making its way through Congress.

That's because large employers that directly assume the cost and risk of health coverage for their workers - including Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., Caterpillar Inc. and Xerox - wouldn't be subject to the same rules and restrictions that would be imposed on health insurers in the measure approved this month by the Senate Finance Committee.

Large companies that offer their workers such coverage are lobbying hard to keep the status quo and be shielded from costly new regulations and requirements in the final health measure currently being negotiated behind closed doors by Obama's top aides and leading Democrats.

Not all Democrats want to go along.

"I want to make very clear that we cannot promise the American people that the insurance reforms they have been hearing so much about will benefit everyone, when the reality is that this bill leaves out" up to 55 percent, or 73 million people covered by such arrangements, said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W. Va., when the Finance panel met recently to debate the measure. He failed to change the legislation to require those plans to obey the rules applying to insurers.

What the firms want is to be able to keep extending health insurance to their workers free of many insurance regulations, such as those governing what services must be covered by a policy and when a person can be denied coverage.

That means that despite Obama's pledges that people will no longe! r be sub ject to the most egregious aspects of today's health care system - being denied insurance because of a health condition, shouldering crippling out-of-pocket costs, or facing limits or high costs for basic services and treatments - a wide swath of workers wouldn't enjoy the same guarantees.

Several big business groups have banded together as the National Coalition on Benefits to preserve their special status, originally granted in the early 1970s for employers that take on the risks and costs associated with insuring their own workers. They've been bringing executives from companies large and small to Capitol Hill for meetings with lawmakers to drive home their slogan: "Don't erode what works to fix what's broken."

The companies say they need flexibility to continue covering workers, and provisions included in other drafts of the health overhaul that would eventually subject them to some of the same rules as insurance companies - like requiring them to offer specific benefits - would crush their ability to do so.

"The more the administrative burdens are, the more costly it becomes. These things tend to snowball and grow with time," said Martin Reiser, a lobbyist with Xerox who heads the coalition. "Our message is that the employment-based system is working, so don't try and fix us."

Wal-Mart is part of the group. So is Caterpillar, which is a member of the steering committee along with such other Fortune 100 firms as AT&T, Dow Chemical and Verizon Communications.

At issue are businesses that "self-insure" rather than purchasing coverage from an insurance company. Workers in such arrangements often believe they're covered by a health insurer since they have cards bearing the company's name, but in fact their employer shoulders the risks and pays claims, with the insurance company merely administering the plan.

The Associated Press is one of many lar! ge emplo yers that self-insures.

Firms that offer the coverage generally provide generous benefits, and they're already subject to some federal requirements. They must cover maternity care, mental health and breast cancer screening, for example, and can block someone from coverage because of a pre-existing health condition only under certain circumstances and for limited periods of time. While they're not legally required to cover everyone regardless of medical history or health status, most if not all of these employer-provided plans already do so, since their goal is to spread risk across a broad group.

Still, some lawmakers contend they should have to abide by the same strict requirements that health insurance companies would under the new system.

Rockefeller says he is worried that some "bad actors" looking to manage their costs would end up saddling their workers with more health expenses. For example, if a worker had cancer and reached his employer's coverage limit, the company could stop paying for treatment. Insurance companies, by contrast, would be barred from establishing such limits in the new system.

Employers already have been shifting more health care costs onto workers in recent years as those expenses have skyrocketed. In the current sluggish economic environment with unemployment high, some analysts expect the trend to intensify.

"An employer's ability to increase deductibles and copays and basically mess around with a source of compensation depends on the strength of the labor market," said Paul Fronstin of the Employee Benefits Research Institute. "Right now, employers have it made, because unemployment is at 10 percent - they can do whatever they want."

If companies in this category get their way in the debate over the health overhaul, employees will remain subject to such changes and reductions.

"They're already ! vulnerab le in the sense that employers decide what to cover in the benefits plan, and should somebody want something covered that's not covered, there's basically no recourse. That won't change," Fronstin said.

Organizations representing the large employers - including the Business Roundtable, the National Association of Manufacturers and the American Benefits Council - say their members aren't asking for special treatment.

"We're the group that's been doing the right thing year after year. If the end goal is to make sure that everyone has good insurance, we're the group that's doing that already," said Jeri Kubicki of the NAM.

The Self-Insurance Institute of America Inc., which represents smaller firms that provide coverage to their workers, dispatched some 300 executives to Capitol Hill for three days in the spring to try and persuade lawmakers to leave their plans alone in the push to expand coverage.

"We cut costs, the employees are happy, and this is the part of the health care system that's clearly working - you're wasting your time picking at this issue," said Cliff Roberti, the Institute's government relations director.

Roberti's group has poured more than $600,000 into lobbying Congress over the past two years, doubling its spending this year as it has intensified its push to resist new requirements. Large members of the National Coalition on Benefits have shelled out much more to influence Capitol Hill, including more than $20 million by the Business Roundtable, more than $9.5 million by the National Association of Manufacturers and $1.6 million by the American Benefits Council.


Afghan president's rival accepts Nov. 7 runoff

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Afghan President Hamid Karzai meets with Secre...Image via Wikipedia

KABUL (AP) -- President Hamid Karzai's arch political rival agreed Wednesday to booty allotment in the Nov. 7 runoff election, cementing the stage for a high-stakes showdown in the face of Taliban threats and approaching winter snows.

Ex-Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah made his animadversion to reporters one day after Karzai bowed to intense U.S. and all-embracing pressure and accustomed findings of a U.N.-backed panel that there had been massive artifice on his behalf in the Aug. 20 vote. Those findings showed Karzai bootless to win the 50 percent appropriate to avoid a runoff.

As allotment of efforts to avert cheating in the upcoming ballot, acclamation admiral acquire accursed 200 commune acclamation chiefs following complaints by candidates or observers about misconduct in their regions, the U.N. said aftermost week. It was not immediately known how many posts in absolute there were.

The country's electoral crisis has comes as the Washington debates its way forward in a war that entered its ninth year this month.

Holding the second annular of polling as Afghanistan enters its winter season poses serious challenges, both for cartoon voters and distributing ballots nationwide, which the U.N. said would begin Thursday. Abdullah said U.S. and Afghan forces also charge provide security to prevent a repeat of a beachcomber of Taliban attacks in August that dead dozens. In some areas, militants cut off the ink-marked fingers of bodies who had voted.

Voters "are demography a risk in some parts of the country and they should be assured that that risk is worthwhile," said Abdullah, who said he called Karzai to acknowledge him for agreeing to hold the second-round! . "I wou ld like to see that our bodies are accommodating after an environment and atmosphere of fear and intimidation."

But he conceded security was far from perfect. "There are some circumstances that we cannot change in the coming 15 days, like areas which Taliban can abuse the people," Abdullah said.

Abdullah's acknowledgment sets the stage for an acclamation that U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said would be a "huge challenge" to pull off after repeating the boundless artifice that marred the first-round balloting. The world anatomy has set aside added than $20 million to support the poll, according to the U.N. spokesman in Kabul, Aleem Siddique.

Finding replacements for acclamation workers implicated in artifice will be difficult. The government had to clutter this summer to recruit enough acclamation admiral and poll workers, abnormally at voting stations for women. It's unclear if they would be able to fill accessible posts with better-qualified people.

"It is hard to see how a second annular can be aboveboard unless women's security and access to the polls is dramatically improved," said Rachel Reid, a researcher with Human Rights Watch in Kabul.

The Independent Election Commission, the Afghan anatomy that runs elections, charge also agree the account of polling stations. Much of the artifice in the August balloting came through ballots that arrived from alleged "ghost polling stations" that never opened because they were in alarming areas.

But closing the ambiguous stations would prevent voters in those areas from casting ballots. Kai Eide, the U.N. arch in Afghanistan, has said he worked to accessible the stations to avoid disenfranchising voters.

Abdullah said Wednesday that he is preparing a account of conditions that his aggregation wants acclamation organizers to commit to in order to acquire a fair vote. He said he ! would be accessible to negotiating the conditions, but would not acquire an acclamation organized on the aforementioned terms as the August vote.

"I will be flexible, but I will be serious about this because, after all, it is the accuracy and candor of the elections which will decide the outcome," he said.

Karzai's capitulation Tuesday was a relief to the Obama administration, which hopes the troubled nation has taken one footfall afterpiece toward a credible, accepted government necessary to win public support in the U.S. for the war and reverse Taliban gains. The U.S. military appear one of its troops was dead in a bomb attack in the south Tuesday, bringing the absolute number of Americans dead in October to 30.

Karzai announced the accommodation Tuesday after a day of intensive talks with U.S. Sen. John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Later, in a blast interview from Dubai with The Associated Press, Kerry declared the evolution in Karzai's thinking.

"President Karzai really deeply believes he had won the acclamation and ... that the all-embracing community was affectionate of conspiring to push for a different outcome," Kerry said. "He had bodies aural his government, bodies aural the acclamation agency who felt they were being insulted about putting together a faulty acclamation process."

"There were a lot of very abysmal feelings about Afghanistan's appropriate to run its election, its competency in active it," Kerry said.

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Associated Press Writer Todd Pitman contributed to this report.


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