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Hacker-activist group Anonymous seizes KKK Twitter accounts; reveals identities

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Posted 11:59 AM, November 17, 2014

anon

FERGUSON, MO (KTVI) – Two Twitter accounts belonging to the KKK have been seized by the hacker-activist group Anonymous.  ZDNet has confirmed that the group has also compromisedKKK e-mail accounts and are conducting a phone harassment campaign against members.  According to a statement from Anonymous, “We are attacking you because of what you did to our brothers and sisters at the Ferguson protest on the 12th of November.”

Anonymous also announced that they will be releasing a statement Monday evening about the take-over.  The group started publicly revealing identities and personal information of KKK members Friday.

This is a statement from Anonymous released with YouTube video.  The video has been taken down:

Published on Nov 14, 2014 Greetings world, we are Anonymous

KKK it has came to our unfortunate attention that you have been interfering with Anonymous.

We are not attacking you because of what you believe in as we fight for freedom of speech…

We are attacking you because of what you did to our brothers and sisters at the Ferguson protest on the 12th of November.

Due to your actions we have started Operation KKK. The aim of our operation is nothing more than Cyber Warfare. Anything you upload will be taken down, anything you use to promote the KKK will be shut down.

DDos attacks have already been sent and have infiltrated your servers over the past 2 days… d0x’s have also been launched on leaders of the KKK. All information retrieved will be given to the public.

You messed with our family and now we will mess with yours…

Let the cyber war begin.

We are legion.

We do not forgive

We do not forget

Ku Klux Klan you should have expect us.

Follow Us On Twitter @GroupAnonAU

Originally published at http://fox2now.com/2014/11/17/hacker-activist-group-anonymous-seizes-kkk-twitter-accounts-reveals-identities/


Filed under: cyberwar, Hackers, Information operations Tagged: Anonymous, KKK, Operation KKK

Russian Humanitarian Aid brings Artillery

Putin’s three choices on Ukraine

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Zbigniew Brzezinski, US National Security Advisor, 1977 – 1981

Zbigniew Brzezinski, US national security adviser from 1977 to 1981, in a recent Washington Post story, says Russia has three choices.

1. He could pursue an accommodation with Ukraine by terminating the assault on its sovereignty and economic well-being. This would require wisdom and persistence from Russia as well as Ukraine and the West. Such an accommodation should involve the termination of Russian efforts to destabilize Ukraine from within, ending any threat of a larger invasion, and some sort of East-West understanding that entails Russia’s tacit acceptance of Ukraine’s prolonged journey toward eventual European Union membership. At the same time, it should be made clear that Ukraine does not seek, and the West does not contemplate, Ukrainian membership in NATO. It is reasonable for Russia to feel uncomfortable about that prospect.

Additionally, it would likewise be made clear that Russia no longer expects Ukraine to become part of the “Eurasian Union,” which is a transparent cover for the recreation of something approximating the former Soviet Union or tsarist empire. This should not preclude, however, a Russian-Ukrainian trade deal, since both countries can benefit from increasingly cooperative trade as well as financial relations.

2. Putin could continue to sponsor a thinly veiled military intervention designed to disrupt life in portions of Ukraine. Should Russia continue on this course, obviously the West would have to undertake a prolonged and truly punishing application of sanctions designed to convey to Russia the painful consequences of its violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty. This unfortunate outcome would likely yield two basket cases in Eastern Europe: Ukraine, because of destructive Russian actions, and Russia itself.

3. Putin could invade Ukraine, exploiting Russia’s much larger military potential. Such an action, however, would not only prompt retaliation by the West but also could provoke Ukrainian resistance. If such resistance were sustained and intense, there would be growing pressure on themembers of NATO to support the Ukrainians in a variety of forms, making the conflict much costlier to the aggressor.

For the Kremlin, the consequence of this third option would be not only a permanently hostile Ukrainian population of more than 40 million but also an economically and politically isolated Russia facing the growing possibility of internal unrest.

Choice one, cease and desist.  Two, continue the status quo. Three, invade Ukraine. The last two options are losing propositions for Russia but appear to be what Russia prefers. The first option is a clear loser for Putin, personally, and may cost him his presidency, but it enables Russia to reduce crippling sanctions and perhaps assume a semblance of normalcy.

I believe there is a fourth choice. Russia withdraws from Ukraine and establishes an unhealthy unconventional war inside Ukraine, capitalizing on current successes inside Ukraine.  The difference between this and option #2 is the presence of Russian conventional military machines, tanks, APCs and artillery.  I actually think this is a really bad choice for Russia, since they have zero experience.

Who knows what idiocy lurks in the minds of Russian planners?


Filed under: Information operations, Russia, Ukraine Tagged: #RussiaFail, #RussiaLies

Russia drives Ukraine to NATO

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Pro-Russian rebels on a tank drive on a road in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine.

Now that everybody knows that Russia specifically does not want Ukraine to join NATO, Ukraine is taking steps to join NATO as its #1 priority.  If I were Russia I would consider that a huge slap in the face.  Much deserved, I might add.

ITAR-TASS is reporting that Ukraine is solidifying a five-party coalition in Ukraine’s parliament,the Verkhovna Rada, and they have begun outlining their priorities for the near future.

Ukraine joining NATO is the first priority for Ukraine.  This is a direct confrontational attitude for Ukraine, as Putin stated preventing Ukraine from joining NATO was his priority for Ukraine.

Russia has called for “a 100% guarantee that no-one would think about Ukraine joining Nato”, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman has told the BBC.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-30107520

This rather arrogant statement by Putin is somewhat of a slap in the face to the West.  Putin has consistently told a fib, saying NATO ‘promised’ not to expand Westward following the fall of the Iron Curtain. This tale has been debunked numerous ways, Putin’s nose continues to grow with this lie.

Ukraine’s position was contained in a document signed by leaders of the five parties comprising the parliament.

The document was signed by leaders of the Petro Poroshenko Bloc, Samopomich (Self Reliance), People’s Front, Radical Party, and Batkivshchyna. The Opposition Bloc, which unites representatives of the Party of Regions, which was at power earlier, is not a member of the coalition.

- http://en.itar-tass.com/world/760989

Russia has nobody to blame but itself. It drove Ukraine to this conclusion.


Filed under: Information operations, Russia, Ukraine Tagged: #RussiaFail, #RussiaLies

Ukraine to Russia: we will decide on NATO

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Russia is, once again, attempting to strong arm Ukraine.

Russia is demanding guarantees from Ukraine that it not join NATO.

I think the Ukrainian response is rather witty.

According toUkraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Yevhen Perebyinis, Ukraine would also like to receive 100% guarantees from Russia that it will cease to interfere in the internal affairs of Ukraine and will stop sending its armies and annexing Ukrainian territories.

- http://euromaidanpress.com/2014/11/19/ukraine-to-russia-we-will-decide-on-nato/


Filed under: Information operations, Rusia, Ukraine

U.S. Delivers Radar Systems to Ukraine

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I only wonder if Ukraine artillery can or will return fire back to Russia?

By Terri Moon Cronk

DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Nov. 21, 2014 – The U.S. military delivered three lightweight, counter-mortar radar systems yesterday to Ukrainian armed forces, Pentagon spokesman Army Col. Steve Warren told reporters today.

The radar systems are the first few of 20 that will be delivered during the next several weeks and U.S. military members will begin training Ukrainian armed forces in mid-December, Warren said.

Systems ‘See’ Incoming Mortar Fire

“The radar systems see incoming mortar fire and quickly calculate the point of origin of a mortar round fired by the enemy, and allows friendly forces to react appropriately,” the Pentagon spokesman said.

The Ukrainian armed forces will determine how, where and when they will employ the systems, he added.

“It’s also up to the Ukrainians if they attach these radar [systems] to a fire-direction system, which will allow for counter battery fires, or if they use them independently and react with ground forces,” Warren said.

The radar systems are part of the $118 million in equipment and training the United States has committed to assisting Ukraine’s armed forces.

“We’re working closely with the Ukrainians through the interagency process,” the colonel said.

A U.S. team of about 12 people also recently completed some medical training in Ukraine.

“[The team] assessed Ukraine’s need for immediate care, looked at potential long-term capacity building and conducted some battlefield medical training,” Warren noted

Published at http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=123700


Filed under: Information operations, Russia, Ukraine Tagged: #RussiaLies

Northrop Grumman Launches Cyber Center

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Northrop Grumman, in an effort to address its clients’ most dangerous cyber threats, announced on Nov. 19 the launch of its new Advanced Cyber Technology Center.

The center is designed primarily to increase speed and resiliency when it comes to attacks on its clients’ networks, said company executives speaking at a press conference at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.

“The ACTC is a new way of combining expertise from a force of more than 2,400 cyber professionals with an array of intellectual property from key partners across the government, industry, and academia to address our … toughest cyber challenges,” said Vern Boyle, director of technology at Northrop Grumman’s cyber division.

“We are an increasingly cyber-dependent society,” said Shawn Purvis, vice president and general manager of Northrop Grumman’s cyber division. “The center’s charter is to create a more mature differentiated offering that will respond to our customers most critical challenges.”

“Vulnerabilities in our information infrastructure pose significant threats to our national and economic society,” she added.

Threats will continue to grow. Cyber attacks are becoming more frequent, costly and harder to detect, said Dennis McCallam, director and distinguished technical fellow of Northrop Grumman’s cyber division.

“The dynamic nature of the cyber threat requires a new approach to the problem — one that leverages expertise and technological innovation from every mission area of our company,” Purvis added.

Not only is this happening in the commercial sector, but also globally on the state level. She cited the recent breach of the State Department as one of many examples of unacceptable cyber attacks. Moreover, “cyber threats can and have changed the battlefield dynamics,” she added.

The eventual goal is to preserve mission critical functions while under attack, Boyle said. McCallam said there are dangers such as aircraft in combat losing navigation abilities.

Northrop Grumman executives said the center will allow its analysts to be better trained and equipped. There are not enough cyber security analysts to address thethreats seen today, McCallam said. A mixture of well-trained analysts and automated systems is the key to addressing threats in a timely manner.

The ACTC has four regional cyber technology hubs: two in the United States, one in Australia and one that opened recently in the United Kingdom.

Executives said the ACTC is the next step towards ensuring that the company maintains cyber programs to address the global threats that are constantly evolving.

“Through the ACTC, we can collaborate across our global presence to develop strategic capabilities that address a variety of customer and mission needs,” Purvis said. “We’re pursuing the best, most innovative ideas and investing affordably to bolster our nation’s cyber resiliency.”

http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/blog/Lists/Posts/Post.aspx?ID=1679


Filed under: Cybersecurity, Information operations

Increase in Russian Trolls using Social Media

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A good friend just floated a question past me and I thought it best to ask you, gentle readers. Okay, also you not so gentle readers.

Have you seen a recent increase in the use of social media by Russians, particularly demonstrating they are ‘crazy’?

Facebook, LiveLeak, YouTube, Vimeo, Twitter, you name it.

Examples of crazy behavior could be climbing television towers, parkour acts, excessively violent fights, and so on…

Personally, I haven’t seen a huge increase in anything ‘crazy’ by Russians, as I’ve been seeing them for months.

I did recently see a Russian boxer knock out two thugs, trying to defend his wife.

Besides that, I’ve seen a lot of truck accidents, crazy drivers getting into accidents, crazy motorcyclists, rude bouncers at clubs popping idiots, and the like…

His contention is that the Russians are trying to make the case that they are crazy. An extrapolation of that might be that they are crazy enough to use nuclear weapons…

What have you seen?


Filed under: Information operations, Russia

Information Experts – Who Are They?

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For the past few days I have been categorizing people who ‘do’ IO and cyber into categories in my mind.

There are three types of IO and cyber folks, I believe.  Within each of these three broad divisions are other multiple divisions.

  1. Leaders.  Mostly ex-military, they have a history of application of the tools, are proficient at running organizations, and are proficient with the doctrine.  Within this broad category are future leaders, those who are currently doing nug work and preparing for a leadership position. Project and program managers may, I say again, may, fall within this category, as they are making sure workers and specialists within the field are employed properly, are doing their job within the specification of the contract or the guidelines and the administrative specialists take care of them.
  2. Academics.  Mostly PhD types, are proficient in research, inventing and doing hands on work. A few are leaders but are mostly relegated to labs.  They write papers, occasionally, for journals.
  3. Authors.  Mostly not in the corporate or governmental world. They write the books the academics occasionally use in classes if they ever teach a course.  They are often academics or ex-military  but often just found a niche to write about.  The author can be a strange creature, probably has experience as a worker bee or a nug in the field and at one time had the opportunity to see the big picture.

At one point I attempted to pile on all the job descriptions for every position within the IO and cyber community.  Not a good idea.  This blog quickly exploded to over 5,000 words, so I cut it all out and kept a few basic descriptions.

Of course I am not including technical experts, such as attorneys, administrative specialists, acquisition folks, doctrine specialists and writers.

This list is sure to grow…


Filed under: Information operations

Islamic State Fail: Uses Hungarian Porn for Propaganda

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The Islamic State used pornography made in Hungary, supposedly to show them raping Sunni Muslim women.

The US State Department exposed the fake today via Twitter.

The original tweet blamed Western soldiers for the sexual abuse.

All kinds of backlash can be made at the expense of the “State of Islam” now.

Do I honestly need to cite examples?  I can get R rated in this blog, I’d really hate to get censored…

Okay, here are a few.

  • Erectile dysfunction
  • Micropenis
  • Too ugly
  • Unattractive to women
  • Body odor
  • Bad hygiene
  • Goats not women
  • Men not women
  • AIDS
  • Too hairy
  • Abused as children
  • Persians are smarter

Then we have:

There are many problems with Arabic insults, however.  Ask the Psyop people…

Bottom line: IS #PropagandaFail


Filed under: Information operations, Islamic State Tagged: #PropagandaFail, Fail, Propaganda fail

Putin’s Catch 22

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by Pascale Siegel

In an interview to TASS Sunday, Vladimir Putin dismissed the idea that he failed to anticipate Western retaliatory sanctions and boasted that he “never takes arbitrary decisions, decisions that may entail consequences I don’t foresee.” He even went further, saying “he had never made any reckless decisions in his nearly 15 years running Russia.”  Such thoughtfulness and integrity should make Putin the envy of the world. Who does not dream of a political leader who never gets things wrong? A political leader who anticipates all the consequences his actions might entail? A political leader who does not act if he cannot foresee all the consequences of his actions?

I can certainly appreciate Putin’s predicament. Ordinary Russians are feeling the pain of Western-imposed sanctions and may well start thinking this is an unnecessary self-inflicted wound. Putin cannot afford to look like he overplayed his hand and miscalculated the repercussions of his actions. Acknowledging as much would damage his image and standing among his voter base. It would also wet the appetites of potential competitors. No politician in his right mind wants to be in this position.

Yet, portraying himself as the guy so in control that he never miscalculates, Putin paints himself as a cold hearted leader.  If we take him at his word, then he anticipated the harsh Western retaliation, the political ostracism, the economic sanctions, and the resulting economic slowdown that is squishing the livelihood out of his people. He anticipated those consequences and he still went ahead throwing the Russians under the bus for what? his own delusion of grandeur? This is the short tag-line: Putin pursues his policy of grandeur while ordinary Russians racks up the bills and the dead. In the long run, this is not an enviable position.

Are we starting to see Vladimir caught between the anvil and the hammer?

Pascale Combelles Siegel
Insight Through Analysis, LLC
(ph) 571-594-6453
pcsiegel@ita-online.net
LinkedIN:  www.linkedin.com/in/pascalecsiegel/


Filed under: Information operations, Russia

Fortune 500 Cyber Attacks Timeline

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Originally posted on Hackmageddon.com:

For the Infosec professionals, this troubled 2014 will be remembered for the trail of gigantic breaches unleashed nearly exactly one year ago, when the real outcome of the infamous Target breach became to emerge. The real extent of the breach was yet to be known, like also the fact that it would not have been an isolated case, but just the beginning of a nightmare.

However this is not the only example of a Fortune 500 company deeply hit, and thanks to a very smart hint by @bufferzone, I took the opportunity to collect in this timeline all the main cyber incidents involving Fortune 500 and Fortune 500 Global companies since 2011 to nowadays.

The adopted selection criteria take into considerations only incidents involving a direct impact on end users, so defacements have not been taken into consideration.

Fortune 500 Global companies are characterized by a blank value in…

View original 104 more words


Filed under: Information operations

Russia signs deal with Abkhazia, becomes commander of military in that region

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Russia President Vladimir Putin and the leader of Abkhazia have signed an agreement under which Putin will become the commander of a joint military force in the breakaway region.

“I’m sure that cooperation, unity and strategic partnership between Russia and Abkhazia will continue to strengthen,” stated Putin after signing the agreement Monday.

Russia already has a military presence in the territory. Russian troops have served in Abkhazia since it broke away from Georgia in a separatists war in the early 1990s.

The United States issued a statement in response to the deal. “The United States will not recognize the legitimacy of any so-called ‘treaty’ between Georgia’s Abkhazia region and the Russian Federation,” read a press release issued by the US State Department.

The US and other nations strongly suspect Russia is stepping up its attempt to expand in the region, which recently had a change in leadership after the former leader was forced to step down and a former Soviet KGB officer was elected president.

The deal was signed by this president, Raul Khadzhimba.

“The United States’ position on Abkhazia and South Ossetia remains clear,” wrote Jeff Rathke, Director of the Bureau of Public Affairs at the Office of Press Relations for the State Department, “these regions are integral parts of Georgia, and we continue to support Georgia’s independence, its sovereignty, and its territorial integrity.

“We once again urge Russia to fulfill all of its obligations under the 2008 ceasefire agreement, to withdraw its forces to pre-conflict positions, to reverse its recognition of the Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states, and to provide free access for humanitarian assistance to these regions.

Continued at http://thespeaker.co/russia-signs-deal-abkhazia-becomes-commander-military-region/


Filed under: Information operations, Russia Tagged: #RussiaLies, abkhazia

Putin’s Approval Rating Plummets

How NATO Could End

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On an otherwise uneventful Sunday morning in late February, a small group of Russian protesters, residents of Narva, Estonia’s third largest city, took over the city hall demanding that the Estonian government either relax its naturalization requirements or grant the city autonomy. Reporters from RT, a Kremlin-funded international news network with one of the most popular news channels on YouTube, were already on the scene, as if forewarned, providing uninterrupted English language coverage of the event.

To the casual observer, the protesters demands seemed reasonable. Estonian law requires passing a language exam to become a naturalized citizen, which is ostensibly a difficult task for Narva’s Russian speakers who represent more than 80% of the city’s population. The protesters were making an emotional plea through RT’s cameras that their civil rights were being trampled.

The government of Estonia tried to calm the protests by offering to meet with its leaders and proposing an economic package to help the economically depressed city. As the days passed, protesters grew more intransigent. They now wanted Russian to be recognized as the second official language of the country. For most Estonians, who view the Soviet Union as an occupier, this would be unacceptable. Things were about to get worse, and they appeared to be following an eerily familiar script.

As the police threatened to remove protesters by force, armed men brandishing Kalashnikovs began to appear in the crowds. The leader of the protest movement, a local underworld figure with murky connections to Russia, warned Estonian authorities that people were ready to die for their cause. By now, the flags of the Narva People’s Republic were flying above the city hall, and western journalists were flocking to the city. News coverage, even by the more objective media outlets, gave the fledgling republic de facto recognition in the public discourse, and centered on the plight of Russians in Estonia. The sovereignty of this small democratic republic was now simply “one side of the story.”

Up until this point, the government tried to avoid a repeat of the fatal 2007 riots when more than 1000 ethnic Russians in the capital city, Tallinn, took to the streets over the relocation of a WWII memorial. Now, after an emergency meeting, Estonian security officials drew up a plan to storm Narva’s city hall and restore order. It was too late.

“Little green men” armed with machine guns and portable anti-tank missiles had arrived in Narva. The leader of the protest movement said these were local gun owners who would protect unarmed Russians from Estonian Nazis who were coming after them. As the number of Russian special forces masquerading as local rebels rapidly grew, there was little the tiny Estonian military could do. After all, Narva is, geographically speaking, practically in Russia — it lies on the Narva River on the Russian border and is closer to St. Petersburg than to Tallinn.

As the crisis escalated, and the media coverage grew more hysterical, the EU urged restraint from all sides. RT showed millions of viewers worldwide footage of elderly Russian women crying and begging Russia to help them. Western journalists who dutifully passed on the statements of both sides — but who also noted that some of the rebels seemed new to Narva — were attacked by well-coordinated mobs forcing most of them to leave.

That a silent majority of the residents of Narva were against separatism was now irrelevant. RT interviewed only the most vocal pro-Russia activists and when that was not enough, actors were brought in from Moscow to artfully portray a disenfranchised minority standing up for its rights. Dissenting voices were silenced, sometimes violently.

Finally, the US, against the wishes of many European leaders, came out and declared that Russia had launched an “incursion” into, although not an invasion of, Estonia. The Russian government denied this and vetoed the UN Security Council resolution that named it a party to the conflict. Estonia invoked Article 5 of the NATO founding treaty, hoping that member states would be compelled to come to its defense. And then the international order completely collapsed.

As western political leaders debated what steps to take, experts offered their opinions. Stephen F. Cohen, a prominent Russian studies scholar, opined on the pages of The Nation that the situation was much more nuanced than the foreign policy hawks would have you believe. Did the average American who had never heard of Estonia realize that the Baltics had once been part of Russia, or that Estonia once had a Nazi connection? Were Americans — or for that matter Europeans — ready to die for a tiny country far away on the eastern edge of Europe so that it could prevent a single city with an ethnic Russian majority from exercising its political will?

The military experts painted a similarly complicated picture. Retaking Narva would be close to impossible without causing severe collateral damage and killing a large number of civilians. Moreover, Russia’s quiet and bloodless invasion would make any western military operation look terrible by comparison. Public opinion polls indicated that boots on the ground would be political suicide for any western leader.

Continued at http://ukrainereporter.com/how-nato-could-end/


Filed under: Information operations, Russia Tagged: Russia, Russian protesters

Vladimir Putin seeks Opec oil deal with direct appeal to Saudi in Vienna

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#PutinFail

Putin is desperately trying to save the failing Russian economy by falsely propping up oil prices.  #RussiaFail

Russian president hopes oil-producing nations will act collectively to cut production quota to halt a 28pc slide in prices since June

Vladimir Putin’s top oil lieutenants were locked in tense meetings in Vienna with Opec delegates on Tuesday in a last ditch effort to reach a deal with the cartel as Russia faces a deep recession from falling oil prices.

Igor Sechin, chief executive of Russia’s state-controlled oil giant Rosneft, and the country’s oil minister Alexander Novak held a second meeting with officials from Saudi Arabia and Venezuela this afternoon amid intense speculation over whether the group will act collectively to cut its production quota to halt a 28pc slide in prices since June.

However, the meeting held at the Hyatt Hotel appeared to have ended inconclusively with Mr Sechin and Opec officials leaving by a side entrance. A planned press conference was cancelled following the discussions.

Analysts say that the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec), which pumps a third of the world’s oil, would have to make deep cuts of up to 1.5m barrels per day (bpd) of crude to their existing 30m bpd quota levels in order to revive prices. However, that will require non-Opec producers such as Russia to also limit output.

Moscow currently pumps over 10m bpd of oil and provides Europe with the majority of its natural gas supplies but the country has been haemorrhaging revenue since the US and European Union imposed sanctions.

Venezuela’s main Opec delegate Rafael Ramirez told reporters in Vienna on Tuesday that the meetings with Russia would be key to the group of 12 producers reaching a consensus when they officially meet on Thursday.

“It’s likely the market is currently pricing in the nervous expectation that Opec won’t agree to cut production,” said Graham Martin, Managing Director at Optima Investment Management. “If Opec announced a co-ordinated cut of 500,000 barrels per day or more we would expect a rally in oil and oil related equities.”

“While core-Opec [Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait] will undoubtedly demand some output reductions from members such as Angola, Nigeria, Venezuela, Qatar, and Algeria, the main cuts will have to come from, and are more likely to be forthcoming from, the Persian Gulf States,” he added.

Today’s high-level meetings in Vienna come after Russia’s Finance Minister Anton Siluanov, warned yesterday that the country faced an economic crisis from the loss of revenue incurred from falling oil prices.

“We are losing around $40bn [£26bn] per year due to geopolitical sanctions and we are losing some $90bn [£58bn] to $100bn [£64bn] per year due to oil prices falling 30 pc,” Mr Siluanov said in a speech in Moscow, reported by RIA Novosti news agency.

“Saudi Arabia, the most powerful member of the cartel, has continuously insisted that they will not take action unless there is a consensus,” wrote Helima Croft, head of commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets in a note to investors.

Bloomberg has reported that one proposal under consideration would be to exclude Iran, Iraq and Libya from any cuts that Opec may agree to. However, this proposal would potentially meet resistance from Gulf states who may be concerned of eventually losing market to both Tehran and Baghdad.

Although Iran sits on vast oil and gas reserves its production and exports are limited due to tough nuclear sanctions, which won’t be lifted until at least next year after the recent failure to reach an agreement with the US.


Filed under: Information operations, Rusia Tagged: #RussiaFail

Russia, China, Iran Waging Political Warfare, Report Says

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Cadet members of China’s People’s Liberation Army / AP

Bill Gertz nails it.  The US lacks a counter-propaganda strategy.  To add to this point, the US lacks a coherent strategy – period.

U.S. currently lacks strategy to counter unconventional, information warfare threats from states and terrorists

November 25, 2014 5:00 am

Russia, China, Iran, and Islamists are waging unconventional warfare around the world, and the United States currently lacks a clear strategy to counter the threat, according to a recent report by the Army Special Operations Command.

“This challenge is hybrid warfare combining conventional, irregular, and asymmetric means, to include the persistent manipulation of political and ideological conflict,” states the Army white paper, “Countering Unconventional Warfare.”

“Foreshadowed by Iranian actions throughout the Middle East, and by Chinese ‘unrestricted warfare’ strategists in the 1990s, hybrid warfare has now reached its most brazen form in Russia’s support for separatist insurgents in Ukraine.”

The 48-page white paper, published Sept. 26 by the Fort Bragg, North Carolina command, urges building new, non-kinetic warfare tools into a comprehensive U.S. and allied strategy.

The tools should include covert and clandestine special operations commando activities combined with political, intelligence, diplomatic, and financial warfare methods to counter the activities of states like Russia, China and Iran, and insurgent activities by terrorist groups such as the Islamic State.

Countering unconventional warfare also should be made “central to U.S./NATO security policy and practice over the next several decades,” the report states.

The Army study said the U.S. government “lacks a cohesive [information warfare] strategy to counter adversary [unconventional warfare] campaigns conducted by state and non-state actors, and this has hindered the U.S./NATO response to Russian aggression in Ukraine.”

“The U.S. government must develop a comprehensive framework to plan and execute regional and global IW strategies and operations that counter adversary UW campaigns as part of a whole-of-government approach,” the report said.

Russian unconventional threat

The report says that while Islamists in Iraq and Syria are “cascadingly disruptive,” the threat posed by Russia is more significant.

“Russian unconventional warfare is thus the central, most game-changing component of a hybrid warfare effort involving conventional forces, economic intimidation of regional countries, influence operations, force-posturing all along NATO borders, and diplomatic intervention,” the report said.

“The brazen audacity of unconventional warfare within Russian hybrid warfare has produced urgent concern among America’s NATO and non-NATO partners that Russia may apply similar approaches to other regional countries in the region with dissenting Russophile populations, such as the Baltic States, Moldova, and Georgia,” the report adds.

According to the report, Russia is using special operations forces, intelligence agents, political provocateurs, and news media reporters, as well as transnational criminal elements in eastern and southern Ukraine.

“Funded by the Kremlin and operating with differing degrees of deniability or even acknowledgement, the Russian government uses ‘little green men’ for classic [unconventional warfare] objectives,” the report says.

The objectives of Russian covert warfare include “causing chaos and disrupting civil order” and provoking an excessive reaction from Ukrainian security organs that Moscow hopes will delegitimize the Kiev government.

The Russians have engaged in a successful unconventional warfare campaign against Ukraine by organizing pro-Russian separatists and dispatching advisers and fighters from Russian special forces and intelligence units to assist them. Activities include funding and arming, tactical coordination, and fire support for separatist military operations.

The report identified retired Col. David S. Maxwell, a former Army special operations officer, as a “chief advocate” for a new counter unconventional warfare strategy and methods.

“Our enemies are conducting unconventional warfare and political warfare: Russia and its new Generation Warfare, Iran and its Iranian Action Network, and the Chinese Three Warfares,” Maxwell said in an email to the Washington Free Beacon.

“Non-state actors such as al Qaeda are conducting unconventional and political warfare,” he added. “We need to understand their strategies and we need to be able to counter their strategies. Counter unconventional warfare provides a foundation for strategic thinking about the threat strategies we face.”

Maxwell told a U.S. Special Operations Command briefing in July that counter unconventional warfare, or U-CW in Army parlance, can prevent states and groups from achieving their strategic aims.

Counter programs against unconventional war are likely to be “protracted and psychological-centric in nature,” Maxwell told SOCOM and added that the United States should “comprehensively employ political, economic, military, and psychological pressure” to degrade both the will and capability of enemies to use the new form of warfare.

U.S. should resume political warfare

The report quotes the late George Kennan, architect of Cold War containment policies against the Soviet Union, as urging the use of “political warfare,” which he defined as peacetime efforts using all means short of conflict to achieve national objectives.

The future geopolitical environment will feature ideological battles among states, the report said, noting that “Russia, China, and Iran currently conduct political warfare activities to further their individual goals.”

The United States, by contrast, ceased using political warfare at the end of the Cold War and instead is focused on “public diplomacy” that seeks to “tell America’s story” rather than influencing events in support of U.S. and allied interests.

The United States should renew political warfare efforts as part of a new strategy to influence local struggles, the report said. Additionally, “policies should be developed assigning political warfare as a core mission of government agencies responsible for C-UW doctrines and capabilities,” the report said.

Among the tools are increased intelligence to understand foreign unconventional threats and applying diplomatic, informational, economic, financial, and legal power along with military forces to wage hybrid and irregular counter-war.

Key elements of a new strategy will be using special operations “special strike” capabilities, like the use of Seal Team Six, and “surgical strike capabilities” a reference to precision attacks, such as covert drone strikes that have been highly effective against terrorist leaders.

Ken McGraw, a spokesman for the U.S. Special Operations Command in Tampa, Fla., said the Army report is a doctrinal think piece. Countering unconventional warfare currently is “neither a recognized special operations mission or activity in either Army or joint special operations doctrine” but could be in the future, McGraw said.

Several aspects of the new strategy appear to be part of the Obama administration’s current campaign against the Islamic State. The administration has sought to apply financial and diplomatic pressure on IS and announced plans to attack the Islamist ideology motivating the group. So far, however, the non-military results have had a limited impact on the group currently holding territory in Syria and Iraq.

China’s ‘Unrestricted Warfare’

China’s use of unconventional warfare was described in the Army report as based on the 1999 book by two Chinese colonels called Unrestricted Warfare that calls for using all means to defeat enemies, including cyber attacks, ecological warfare, financial warfare, and terrorism.

“China will use a host of methods, many of which lie out of the realm of conventional warfare,” the report said. “These methods include trade warfare, financial warfare, ecological warfare, psychological warfare, smuggling warfare, media warfare, drug warfare, network warfare, technological warfare, fabrication warfare, resources warfare, economic aid warfare, cultural warfare, and international law warfare.”

Examples include China’s threat several years ago to sell off large U.S. debt holdings to protest U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, and cutting off sales of rare earth minerals to Japan in a dispute over the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea.

Chinese news outlets also are used in media warfare, including at the White House. “The Chinese state-controlled television station network CCTV has a White House pool reporter that could influence U.S. media reporting on China issues,” the report said.

Cyber attacks also are a key Chinese unconventional warfare tool and the report said Chinese hackers are suspected of causing power outages in the northeastern United States and Florida, the report said.

“China’s cyber-attacks clearly show the vulnerabilities to the U.S. public and private sectors information and infrastructure security,” the report said. “States like Russia and China will continue to exploit weaknesses in cyberspace to gather information and influence others.”

Iran’s Qods Force

Iran’s main use of unconventional warfare is its support for terrorism and subversion through surrogates, like the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Qods Force.

“Through the Qods force, Iran provides ‘material support to terrorist or militant groups such as HAMAS, Lebanese Hezbollah, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Taliban, and Iraqi Shia groups,’ the report said. “Hezbollah is the primary terrorists’ proxy for Iran working together with a campaign of terror against Israel, the United States, and other western nations.”

Qods operatives are working in Iraq with Shia militias to “counter U.S. objectives and diminish the presence and influence of Sunni groups,” the report said.

Iranian special operations commandos in Iraq are trained to attack critical infrastructure such as dams, power plant, and pipelines.

Iran also is developing cyber warfare capabilities as one of its key unconventional warfare tools.

“Iran seeks a sophisticated offensive cyber capability to weaken adversaries to gain military superiority and to counter external actions and activities,” the report said

“An effective cyber capability allows Iran the ability to have effects on an adversary with plausible deniability, and those cyber actions may not reach the level of retaliatory reactions.”

Iranian hackers were blamed in 2012 by U.S. intelligence for cyber attacks on U.S. banks that produced “debilitating” effects, the report said, adding that Iranian hackers also infiltrated Navy and Marine Corps computer networks.

Iran also is backing the Syrian Electronic Army cyber group.

“Adversaries are using and growing capabilities, which avoid current western overmatching combat strengths,” the report concludes. “Adversaries will continue using asymmetrical approaches such as applications derived from technological proliferation, cyber operations, terrorist activities, information, and media operations to diminish western advantages.”

Like conventional military strategy, the report says a counter unconventional warfare approach should rely on intelligence about enemy activities that can be used in counter attacks against enemies.

Additionally, U.S. special operations forces can apply similar methods used in unconventional warfare as part of their operations, the report says.

Irregular warfare main form of conflict

Sebastian Gorka, the Horner professor of military theory at the Marine Corps University and an adviser to Army Special Operations Command, notes that 80 percent of all war since Napoleon has been irregular or unconventional. “So only a fool would believe that ‘Big War’—​​​tanks versus tanks, fighter jets versus fighter jets—will define the threat to America,” he said.

“U.S. Army Special Forces—or Green Berets—were created to understand and function in this irregular threat environment,” Gorka said. “The truth is that the current global situation is defined by non-state actors using irregular warfare​, such as al Qaeda and the Islamic State (IS), or nations such as China, Iran, and Russia using unconventional means, be it cyber warfare, proxies, or balaclava-wearing special forces without rank tabs or units insignia in Crimea.”

The biggest challenge for the U.S. policymakers in Washington is to treat U.S. Special Forces and irregular warfare as tactical assets and a tactical domain. They also fail to understand that the Green Berets are a strategic asset, and that China, Iran, Russia, and the jihadis are all at war with us right now,” Gorka said.

Bill Cowan, a former Army Special operations officer, said the need for a strategy to counter unconventional warfare is obvious but the recommended “whole of government approach” is a problem.

“No matter how well thought out and put forward, any implementation of a strategy that requires ‘a whole government’ approach to implement becomes problematic from the outset,” Cowan said.

“The notion of ‘coordinated synergy’ undermines the very basis of implementation unless driven decisively from the highest levels of the U.S. government,” he said. “We don’t have the leadership to make this concept/doctrine the core doctrine of our fight against our enemies.”

The Army report was first reported by The Epoch Times newspaper last week in an article on Chinese intelligence activities.

Published at http://freebeacon.com/national-security/russia-china-iran-waging-unconventional-warfare-report-says/


Filed under: Information operations Tagged: counter-propaganda, information warfare

Isis Wear Nappies In Battle

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Islamic State fighters are wearing nappies on the battlefield because their backsides are so weak from constant bouts of “man love”. The crazed jihadis’ sordid secret was discovered by shocked members of the British-trained Iraqi army. It’s thought the extremists — hell bent on creating a Muslim caliphate across swathes of Iraq and Syria — are resorting to vigorous buggery to release tensions.

But their lust for man-on-man rutting has led to an unforseen problem: a growing number of fighters with slack sphincters. One Iraq Army source said,

“Every time we overrun an Islamic State position we’re always pretty horrified to find discarded shitty nappies (diapers). One or two of them could possibly be dismissed, but we are seeing them everywhere.”

“A few have been examined and, not to beat around the bush, they are caked in excrement and semen. We doubt that they’re all gay men — gay men would take better care of themselves”.

“The only theory we can think of is they’re sex-starved and so desperate to rid their tensions they’re turning to each other for emotional release. But it’s obviously had a very visible physical effect on them too, as it looks as though their backsides are dripping out their contents all day long.

“It’s pretty disgusting — but then this is Islamic State we’re talking about.”

Ironically, the militants released a video mocking US President Barack Obama saying his troops were too scared to take on Isis fighters. In the 15 minute film, one fighter asks: “Obama, did you prepare enough diapers for your soldiers?”

Published at http://casualinfamy.com/isis-wear-nappies-in-battle/


Filed under: Information operations, Islamic State

Information Abuse at the New York Times

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Information is power.  An old saying goes “Absolute power corrupts absolutely”. I’d like to simplify that a bit and just say “Power can corrupt”.

Wielding power in the form of information can be a heady thing. Knowing and not disclosing secrets can be too much for some people, they just have to talk.  Even knowing information that is not classified can be a big deal, and in the case of two reporters from the New York Times, it was.

I don’t normally comment on domestic issues inside the United States unless they are somehow related to informing, influencing, or reaching out to the leaders or people of another country, region or globally.

The events in Ferguson, Missouri, however, are in the news, in a very, very big way. Not only do these events dominate the domestic news front, but all the propaganda outlets in the world are cackling with delight and broadcasting these events as if the United States is breaking apart at the seams.

Since the grand jury decided not to indict Officer Darren Wilson, a split that is, quite literally, almost black and white, has torn at the very fabric of this nation.

Some disagreed with the decision.  Two New York Times reporters, Julie Bosman and Campbell Robertson, decided to publish an image containing the address of Officer Wilson here. The article has been edited, the image with the address has since been removed but from the information still contained in the article, it is very simple to figure out his address (and his new wife).

So, thinking turnabout as fair play, some newsites published Julie Bosman and Campbell Robertson’s addresses, here, here and here. I suspect the last link, to “Why Can’t We Publish Addresses Of New York Times Reporters?” is the original article. All three publish the home addresses of both Bosman and Robertson.

In all these cases it is a matter of privacy, to not publish their addresses. In the case of Officer Wilson’s address, seeing the destruction of private property in and near Ferguson, MO, the looting, and the rioting. This practically screams ‘This is where he lives, go shoot him!’  That is almost tantamount to a death threat.  It is irresponsible, negligent, unprofessional and potentially dangerous.  It was also irresponsible and unprofessional to publish the home addresses of the two reporters.

This information is often publicly available, too much so, in too many cases.

Information is power. Power can easily be abused. Think, people.  Think.


Filed under: Information operations

Putin’s Hilter-esque excuses

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by: Mykhaylo Krylatov

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 2014/11/26
 Simferopol – We do not think much about the fact that we are constantly participating in the living process of history. From the societal and intellectual perspective, we are a component and the characters of the historical process. We live in history. The famous song lyrics that “there is only a moment between the past and the future…” are genius, as they fixate the historical process of time going by and events unfolding around us. This is why history is seen as a constantly renewable matter, always new and unique. On the other hand, there is nothing new in this world, history repeats itself, maybe in a spiral, but almost exactly the same way. And we managed to make sure of this again… 

“At 4 a.m., without declaring war…” these words said by Levitan on June 22, backed the entire Soviet nation into a dead end, as they wondered why Hitler had attacked the USSR, as they had been friends before: through armies, intelligence services, internal affairs, and not only parades and training, but in action, by dividing Poland, for example. However, this was the essence of the cynical lie told to the nations of the Soviet Union by Stalin’s regime. Everything was different in reality, it wasn’t unexpected, and war was declared, and even explained – but all this was hidden from the people.

In the spring and summer of 1941 Hitler’s hypocrisy was only a discovery for Stalin and Molotov. After the end of World War II the USSR did not issue Winston Churchill’sbook on World War II for a long time, even though the author was given the Nobel Prize for Literature for it. Even now we cannot consider it a published book – In 1997, Fenix publishing house in Rostov-on-the-Don published only fragments of the six volumes of the English original, in a single tome, only notes, we can say.

This captivating read, Churchill’s factual diary, can restore the events of the days when Hitler had prepared and had attacked the USSR with documentary validity. Now, what is interesting is not that most wold politicians were aware of the exact day of the attack, and Churchill wrote back on June 15 to Roosevelt that Hitler would attack the USSR in about a week. On the night of June 22 he slept especially soundly, because he knew that in the morning he would be woken up and told that Hitler’s divisions had attacked the USSR, and the German aviation was bombing Soviet towns. This was exactly what he was told by his secretary in the morning, who was on duty that night, and he did not dare wake him up at 4 a.m. because he knew that Churchill had predicted it all.

Churchill had spent the entire Sunday preparing a speech and he spoke on British radio at 9 p.m. the very same day. Meanwhile Stalin said: “Comrades! Citizens! Brothers and Sisters! The fighters of our arm and fleet! I address you, my friends!…” – but on July 1 (“Pravda,” July 3, 1941).

The entire official history of the ‘Great Patriotic War’ leads us to believe that Hitler’s attack had been ‘cunning and without explanation.’ However, could this be? Did Hitler did not even try to explain to the entire world the reasons for his decisions which, as everyone knew, influenced the fate of humanity in its entirety? Even in the 1940’s Hitler tried to present himself as a respectable politician to the entire world.

No, of course, Hitler explained his decision, only we were never told. And, as it turns out, Adolf Hitler did it the way Vladimir Putin does it now when he explains the annexation of Crimea and the intervention in Donbas, with the fact that the victim of the aggression is to blame, that they did not behave the way they were supposed to, which is why shelling, intervention and war serve as a lesson.

We know the events of 2014: Vladimir Putin has spoken about them many times – Ukraine is to blame for its wrongful policies in regard to Crimea, which is why the citizens decided to ‘reunite’ with Russia, and civil war is ongoing in Donbas because, again, Ukraine conducted wrongful internal policies in regard to Russian speakers.

The events of 1941, which clearly remind one of Putin’s justifications, we discover only now from Churchill’s book. The latter offers a letter German Minister of Foreign Affairs Ribbentrop sent to his ambassador in Moscow Schulenberg on June 21, which contained instructions on how to explain Hitler’s decision to start the war to Molotov after the attack.

Churchill writes:

 Putins Hilter esque excusesScreenshot 2014 11 26 23.19.44 1024x826 Putins Hilter esque excuses

This is how Hitler explained the start of the war: the USSR “has adopted a more and more anti-German foreign policy.” This is just like Putin accused of adopting anti-Russia policy. Crimean pro-Putin ‘expert’ Alexandr Formanchuk spoke about the existence of a special ‘anti-Russian project’ in Ukraine. This clears up another excuse: Russia’s policy is anti-fascist, meanwhile Ukrainian policies are allegedly “fascist.”

As we know, the USSR government in June 1941 ordered the Soviet army not to “provoke” Hitler in any way not to evoke aggression. This did not help. What is more, the entire appeasement policy fell through because the aggressor never wants peace, as they are the aggressor. About the same way in march of 2014, the temporary government in Ukraine tried not to provoke Putin in Crimea. This did not help either.

Deputy head of the President’s Administration Valery Chaly recently said something similar: “Our goal is to avoid full-scale war in central Europe. Landing a blow (to the Russian military equipment in Donbas – ed.) is starting a war with the involvement of aviation, you know that if escalation continues, it will be a totally different story.”

Crimean journalist Ruslan Uhosh writes: “It turns out that rebuking an aggressor who invaded your territory is ‘starting a war’! The fact that armed invasion happened is not considered war? Only the counteraction? Which is why we should allow the enemy to take all the territory, not to ‘start a war,’ right? It seems the President’s Administration lives in a distorted dimension. And they have no idea that war has already started and is going on full-force. So far they pretend nothing is happening…”

However, in March Ukraine and Europe tried to placate Putin. Now, eight months after he started war, they are trying to appease the aggressor, not seeing that what they failed to do in March, will fail again. In any case, Putin will blame Ukraine and Europe for his invasion if it happens. We cannot learn these two truths: the aggressor never wants peace, ‘appeasement’ only helps them in advancing successfully, the aggressor always blames the victim for starting the war. This will happen regardless of the victim’s behavior, therefore the victims needs completely different policies, a different quality of measures should be taken to successfully counter aggression.

Published at http://euromaidanpress.com/2014/11/26/33913/#!prettyPhoto


Filed under: Information operations, Russia, Ukraine Tagged: #RussiaLies
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