position:senior aide

  • Archive 2003: Conspiracy of Silence - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/12/books/conspiracy-of-silence.html

    The theory of ’’Why America Slept,’’ saved for the provocative final chapter of this smart and evocatively written book: the Saudis were in on it.

    The basis for this charge, Posner writes, is the C.I.A.’s interrogation of one of America’s biggest catches in the campaign against Al Qaeda — a senior aide to Osama bin Laden named Abu Zubaydah, who was captured in March 2002 in western Pakistan by American and Pakistani forces. Relying on two unnamed government sources to provide new information about the intelligence gleaned from the interrogation, Posner writes that C.I.A. interrogators manipulated the injured Zubaydah’s pain medication to wear down his defenses. They tricked him into believing he was in Saudi custody — and were then shocked to hear what a relieved Zubaydah finally had to tell them. He instructed them to call a senior member of the ruling Saudi family, Posner writes, and gave them a phone number from memory. ’’He will tell you what to do,’’ Zubaydah said. He went on to tell his interrogators that bin Laden had struck a deal in the late 1990’s to gain the blessing and support of top Saudi leaders in exchange for assurances that his holy war would spare the Saudi kingdom. This testimony, an American investigator says, was ’’the Rosetta stone of 9/11.’’ Still more intriguing, three of the Saudi leaders whom the prisoner named as allies (including Prince Ahmed bin Salman, probably best known to Americans as the owner of the Kentucky Derby winner War Emblem) wound up dead within a week of one another in three separate incidents; a Pakistani military official also named by Zubaydah was killed seven months later in a plane crash.

    The allegations will no doubt provide grist for those eager to link the Saudis to the Sept. 11 attacks. But as with all conspiracy theories — as Posner himself has shown in his past work — there is reason for skepticism. Qaeda prisoners like Zubaydah have become notorious for providing misinformation to their captors, American officials have not rushed to broadcast the information prisoners have given them and the Saudis have vigorously denied any links to bin Laden, despite the fact that 15 of the 19 hijackers hailed from the kingdom. (Last month, in fact, Saudi officials asserted that bin Laden intentionally recruited Saudis for the Sept. 11 mission in order to strain relations between the United States and the kingdom.) Still, Posner’s reputation for sober, exhaustive journalism and his access to classified intelligence signal that his theory should not be dismissed out of hand.

  • Ukraine accuses Facebook of pro-Russia bias - Yahoo7
    https://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/27951859/ukraine-accuses-facebook-of-pro-russia-bias

    A senior aide to Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Thursday accused Facebook of political bias, ahead of a question-and-answer session with co-founder Mark Zuckerberg.

    There is pro-Russian influence and pressure on the Facebook office in Russia,” said deputy head of the presidential administration Dmytro Shymkiv, who is negotiating with the global social network to solve the problem.

    He claimed Russian moderators are overseeing Ukrainian users and are swayed by the Kremlin’s political agenda in the conflict in eastern Ukraine.
    […]
    Facebook did not respond to requests for comment.

    Previously the company has argued that its Russian-language segment is managed from Ireland and does not have a physical office in Russia, although its director is Russian.
    […]
    Many Russian “trolls” work out of an office in Russia’s northwestern city of Saint Petersburg and are charged with writing content with a pro-Kremlin slant on blogs and in website comment sections, one former cyber warrior told AFP last month.

    I am sure Facebook is not at fault, they are victims of abuse themselves,” Parkhomenko said. “Unfortunately, Facebook is defenceless against this.

  • Saudi king sacks aide for photographer ’slap’ - BBC News
    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-32590988

    Saudi Arabia’s King Salman has sacked a senior aide, days after he was filmed appearing to slap a photojournalist.
    No reason was given for the removal of Mohammed al-Tobayshi as head of royal protocol in a decree published by the official SPA news agency on Tuesday.
    But TV footage seemingly showed Mr Tobayshi hitting the photographer while King Salman greeted Morocco’s King Mohammed at Riyadh airport on Sunday.
    The king’s decision was welcomed by Saudis on social media networks.
    After the video was posted online, many had accused Mr Tobayshi of abusing his authority.
    “This is a great day for journalists and media figures,” journalist Abdullah al-Bergawi told Gulf News. "Removing the head of the royal protocol in support of a journalist is a clear consolidation of the status of the media and a victory for journalism.
    “King Salman is again showing that no-one is above the law and that all people, officials or not, are to be held responsible for their words and deeds and for not respecting people’s right to dignity.”
    Last month, King Salman banned a senior member of the royal family, Prince Mamdouh bin Abdul Rahman, from taking part in all sports activities and speaking to the media after he made remarks considered racist during a TV talk show.
    The king also replaced Ahmed Al-Khatib as health minister earlier in April after he was filmed having a heated argument with a member of the public who had come to speak to him about the condition of a hospital in Riyadh.

  • Four NATO Allies Deny Ukraine Statement on Providing Arms - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2014/09/07/world/europe/07reuters-ukraine-crisis-nato-arms.html?ref=world&_r=0

    A senior aide to Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko said on Sunday that Kiev had agreed at the NATO summit in Wales on the provision of weapons and military advisers from five NATO member states, but four of the five swiftly denied any such deal had been reached.
    (…)
    At the NATO summit agreements were reached on the provision of military advisers and supplies of modern armaments from the United States, France, Italy, Poland and Norway,” Poroshenko aide Yuri Lytsenko said on his Facebook page.
    (…)
    A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, denied that the United States had made such a pledge. The official told Reuters, “No U.S. offer of lethal assistance has been made to Ukraine.”

    Asked about Lytsenko’s comments, defense ministry officials in Italy, Poland and Norway also denied plans to provide arms.

    In France, an aide at the Elysee palace declined to comment.

    L’article a fusionné l’annonce et le démenti.

    J’ai vu l’annonce sur Le Monde, mais elle a disparu.

  • Afghan peace team seeks Dubai meeting with #Taliban figures
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/18675

    A delegation from #Afghanistan's High Peace Council has traveled to Dubai to meet former and current Taliban figures, in the hope of laying the groundwork for peace talks to end Afghanistan’s long conflict, sources familiar with the move told Reuters. Officials led by Mohammad Masoom Stanekzai, a senior aide to President Hamid Karzai, traveled on Sunday to the United Arab Emirates, officials from the High Peace Council and the Afghan government confirmed. read more

    #Top_News #UAE