Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Monday, June 17, 2013

US to start arming Syrian rebels, but will it make much difference?

Now that the White House says it has determined with ?high certainty? that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons against its people, the United States is planning to send small arms and ammunition to rebel groups there.

Analysts and high-ranking military officials within the Pentagon, however, are warning that this plan may have dangerous and unintended consequences, including drawing the United States into another war in the Middle East.

Arming rebels may also be of questionable strategic value, some senior US military officials argue, although they add that other military options ? notably a no-fly zone ? would come with serious concerns as well.

RECOMMENDED: Briefing Chemical weapons 101: Six facts about sarin and Syria?s stockpile

Syria ?is awash in weapons,? says one senior Pentagon official who spoke on condition of anonymity. ?The main thing is, will it make a difference??

Rebels have been supplied with arms from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and other neighboring countries vying for influence in the region.

Sen. John McCain (R) of Arizona ? one of the most outspoken advocates of establishing a no-fly zone and arming rebel groups with heavy anti-tank and anti-air weapons ? acknowledged Friday on Fox News: ?Just sending arms, very frankly, although they need them very badly ... is not going to change the situation on the ground.?

Want your top political issues explained? Get customized DC Decoder updates.

However, a no-fly zone would be ?quite frankly, an act of war,? Gen. Philip Breedlove, NATO?s supreme allied commander, warned earlier this month.

Senior military officials, for their part, have argued that a no-fly zone would be of questionable strategic value since 10 percent of the casualties inflicted by the Syrian opposition have occurred through the use of air power. ?The other 90 percent are by direct fire or by artillery,? said Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at a Monitor breakfast in April.

Senior military officials are also concerned that a no-fly zone could inadvertently catapult the US into a more complex military operation than it had intended. ?The question becomes, if you eliminate one capability of a potential adversary, will you be inclined to find yourself in a position to be asked to do more against the rest?? Dempsey said.

The Obama administration has ruled out a no-fly zone for now.

What might prove more helpful, according to the senior Pentagon official, are supplies like night vision goggles, body armor, and communications gear to help rebel factions coordinate with one another. The US has been considering such a move, but there are no firm plans.

Still, some warn against aiding rebel groups that include large numbers of Islamic fundamentalists and even some members with ties to Al Qaeda.

The Syrian rebel group Jabhat al-Nusra ?has declared its affiliation to Al Qaeda and is the strongest military force on the rebel side,? notes James Paul, author of ?Syria Unmasked? and the former executive director of the Global Policy Forum, a think tank that monitors the United Nations. ?This does not bode well for democracy.?

The best hope for a resolution is a diplomatic push that would bring nonviolent democratic activists within Syria into the peace process, Mr. Paul says.

While such a diplomatic resolution seems like a ?long shot,? Syria?s neighbors, including Iran, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, ?all have a lot to lose by this continuing to spiral out of control, and none of them have a lot to win,? says Doug Bandow, a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute.

The decision that the Obama administration has made to arm rebels ?is a halfway step,? he says. ?I don?t think it?s very likely that providing light armaments will significantly change the balance.?

And in the event that the rebels continue to falter even with US arms, ?the pressure comes to do more,? he says. ?So it?s no longer a discussion of, ?Does this make sense?? It becomes, ?Well, we?re committed.? ?

The war in Syria ?is awful,? Mr. Bandow adds. ?Civil wars are the most awful and horrible kinds of conflict. But if we become involved, we?re looking at a very bad outcome. It?s a horrible situation.

?I don?t think the US can make it much less horrible by providing arms.?

RECOMMENDED: Briefing Chemical weapons 101: Six facts about sarin and Syria?s stockpile

Related stories

Read this story at csmonitor.com

Become a part of the Monitor community

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-start-arming-syrian-rebels-much-difference-123418004.html

Ink Master Jenni Rivera Funeral aspergers Richard Engel Daniel Inouye steelers scarlett johansson

Angels send Yankees to 5th straight loss, 6-2

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) ? After a lengthy stretch away from baseball to recover from a personal tragedy, Tommy Hanson is pitching his way back into top form.

The rest of the Los Angeles Angels are also looking sharp against the struggling New York Yankees.

Erick Aybar homered and drove in two runs, and Albert Pujols added two more RBIs in the Angels' 6-2 victory Saturday night, sending New York to its fifth straight defeat.

Hanson (4-2) recorded a season-high eight strikeouts while pitching five-hit ball into the seventh inning for the Angels, who have won three straight after a four-game skid.

"This was the most confident I've felt all year," said Hanson, just the third pitcher in 20 years to win in each of his first three career appearances against the Yankees. "Obviously, I needed a little time to deal with what I was dealing with, but I feel like I'm getting back to a rhythm. I'm back to a normal routine."

The big right-hander delivered his strongest start since returning from a 27-day gap between starts in May while he was on the Angels' restricted list, mentally dealing with his stepbrother's death. Against the Yankees, Hanson walked just one and allowed the second-fewest hits in any start of his debut season with Los Angeles.

He also got plenty of help from his teammates.

Josh Hamilton had an RBI double, and Aybar hit an early homer before delivering a tiebreaking RBI single in the sixth. Howie Kendrick had three hits and drew a bases-loaded walk in the seventh inning of his fourth straight multi-hit game. Mike Trout drew three walks and scored two runs.

Combined with Pujols' third straight multi-hit game, the Angels got another standout day from their inconsistent offense, which has 25 hits in the first two games of this weekend series.

"A lot of guys are really swinging the bats real well," said Kendrick, who leads the AL with 24 hits while batting .500 in June. "One through nine, different guys are doing it every time. We just want to play good baseball. We're not worried about the standings or whatever. We just want to win."

Brett Gardner had an RBI triple for the Yankees, who matched their worst skid of the season. Jayson Nix drove in Gardner in the third inning, but New York managed just two more hits in the final six innings ? both by Ichiro Suzuki, who also made two outstanding catches in right field.

"He's a little funky out there with his mechanics," Yankees catcher Chris Stewart said of Hanson. "It throws you off when the ball comes out at a weird angle, and we had shadows today, too, so it was a little tough to pick him up. He's got extreme speeds ? a real slow curveball, which he mixes with his slider, and his fastball kind of gets on you because of his motion."

And it gets worse: Mark Teixeira left in the fourth inning with an aggravated right wrist, heading home to New York for further evaluation.

David Phelps (4-4) yielded nine hits and four runs while pitching into the seventh for the Yankees, taking a small step back from outstanding work in his two previous starts.

The Yankees have lost 27 of their last 39 games at the Big A, and their overall skid got even more foreboding with the latest injury setback for Teixeira, their $180 million slugger.

Teixeira flied out to right and popped out to third before leaving in the fourth inning when David Adams replaced him at first base. Teixeira is hitless in 12 at-bats and is just 8 for 53 since coming off the disabled list on May 31 with a torn sheath on his right wrist.

"It's the first time he's come to us, really, and said something," New York manager Joe Girardi said. "I think he just doesn't feel that he has the whip that he normally does, hitting left-handed, so we'll see what it is. He came to us after the second at-bat and just said he feels like there's not a lot of strength there, so we told him we're going to take him out of there. I've always said that wrist is tricky, so I'm concerned."

Aybar put the Angels ahead in the second inning with a low drive that barely cleared the short fence in the right-field corner for the shortstop's second homer of the season.

After Aybar drove in Mark Trumbo with the go-ahead run in the sixth, Hamilton bounced an RBI double down the first-base line in the seventh against reliever Shawn Kelley.

NOTES: The Yankees stole four bases against Hanson, who has yielded 14 stolen bases this season. "I can't hold runners on first base," Hanson said with a chuckle. "I'm terrible at that." ... Suzuki doubled in the fourth inning, but was caught trying to steal third base. Television replays showed Suzuki might have been safe even though Hank Conger's throw beat him to the bag, and Girardi had an animated argument with umpire Manny Gonzalez. ... Yankees LHP Andy Pettitte turned 41 on Saturday, and Eduardo Perez turned 26.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/angels-send-yankees-5th-straight-loss-6-2-023415805.html

Jennifer Lawrence Fall Ang Lee les miserables jennifer lawrence Oscar Winners 2013 quentin tarantino jessica chastain

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Kill Bill! 'True Blood's' ex-hero is now tiresome

TV

11 hours ago

Image: Bill was reborn after drinking Lilith's blood on "True Blood."

HBO

The "True Blood" vamp was reborn after drinking Lilith's blood, but maybe it's time to kill Bill.

He started out as the gentleman vampire who managed to woo the residents of Bon Temps with his too-good-to-be-believed ways. But now, Bill Compton is a changed man -- and it's not a change for the better.

Last season, Bill chugged the last drops of Lilith's blood -- otherwise known as the holy juice that made all of those Authority-seizing Sanguinistas loopy -- and it transformed the 175-year-old vamp. First he turned into a puddle of goo, then he turned into Billith.

If previews for the new season are anything to go by, he's about to turn into a something else too: a massive jerk with even more superpowers than he had before.

That's why it's time to kill Bill -- or Billith. Whatever.

The truth is Bill's been a jerk for a while. The evolution of "True Blood's" leading man started long before he ever imbibed the ancient proto-vampire. Sure, back in the first season he was charmer, and it was easy to see why Sookie Stackhouse fell for him. And in the second season, he was still a protector and a more-or-less loyal BF.

It was in season three when Bill's glamour first started to wear off. After his proposal to Bon Temps best bad waitress went awry (granted, through no fault of his own), Bill lost his dark-knight-in-shining-armor vibe. Maybe it was that brutal bit of cheating he did with his maker, Lorena. Or maybe it was the way he -- oops! -- nearly drained Sookie to death. Or just maybe it had something to do with the fact that he had a big bad ulterior motive behind why he ever got together with her in the first place. (Mmm, fairy blood.)

Whatever it was, no one could blame Sookie for breaking it off and turning to the Viking-vamp arms of Eric Northman in season four. Besides, by then Bill had offed the Queen of Louisiana and turned into a politician who worried about public image more than personal relationships.

So by the time he started his slip into the dark side of vampire fundamentalism in season five, the idea of killing Bill just didn't seem so bad.

Now? As season six approaches, it seems necessary.

But the question is: Would the "True Blood" powers-that-be actually consider killing Bill? After all, this isn't HBO's other dark and deadly hit, "Game of Thrones," where no major character is safe.

And, yet, the answer is "maybe."

"One of our principal characters will not make it all the way through the season," new showrunner Brian Buckner recently told Rolling Stone without divulging more about the doomed character's identity.

So take heart, Truebies. And watch out, Billith!

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/kill-bill-true-blood-needs-break-good-guy-turned-bad-6C10315940

oregon ducks oregon ducks rob gronkowski Coughing eddie murphy Stephanie Bongiovi stanford football

Small Businesses Can Still Have Big SEO Success | Search Engine ...

Small Businesses Can Still Have Big SEO Success

image credit: ShutterStock

Many small business owners feel like they can?t compete with the ?big? brands simply because they don?t have the money or the manpower to achieve real SEO success. But comparing your SEO success against those bigger brands might actually be selling your own campaign short! Small businesses can have just as much SEO success as any other company, the key is knowing where to focus your limited resources to get the most bang for your buck.

Here are 3 ways small businesses can still achieve big SEO success:

1. Build one quality link at a time.

Links are still the bread and butter of SEO. And although the Google Penguin update has many small business owners running scared from link building you can?t afford to ignore this crucial component of SEO for too long. They key to link building is to build one quality link at a time and to vary up the link sources as much as you can. This helps keep your link profile looking natural and can protect your website from future algorithm updates. Don?t set arbitrary link count goals for yourself as this can often lead to last minute scrambling at the end of the month, which usually means you?re building links you would have otherwise passed over. If it wasn?t a good link then why is it now that a deadline in hanging over your head?

Remember that no quality link needs to be justified! The minute you have to look at it through rose colored glasses to make a link look like a good idea is the moment you know it?s time to walk away. Relevancy and authority determine a quality link, not how easy it is to build!

2. Create content that serves your audience?s needs, not your ego?s.

In a recent interview Elisabeth Osmeloski of Search Engine Land said;

Small businesses who connect with their most loyal customers on a regular basis, through simple interactions can be more agile and responsive to customer needs. Content marketing doesn?t have to be a massive investment of time or even intense amounts of writing. Just quick announcements on G+ or pictures/comments on Facebook might be enough for their audience.

Your content marketing campaign has to be about your audience and what they need; it should not be about how awesome your company is. What kind of information is your target audience looking for? What problems are they trying to solve? Your content should become a resource for your audience and over time you authority and online brand presence will grow. Great content can also earn you high quality links, which is like killing two birds with one stone! The key is to figure out what your audience needs and to give it to them. A company blog, a strong social media presence, and an ear to the ground can help your small business build its online presence over time.

Just remember that building authority through content marketing takes time. It could be months or even longer before your company blog starts getting much traffic. But you have to be committed to the long haul for your SEO program to work.

3. Focus on the niches your competition has overlooked.

If you run a small floral shop in Boston chances are you will never have the same online brand presence that 1-800-Flowers does. But that doesn?t mean you can?t dominate your own local market with a strong SEO program! Your shop can cater to wedding parties, high-end hotels that throw events, gardening enthusiasts, local restaurants and more. The key is to figure out what niches your competition isn?t in or has overlooked and claim that space for yourself. SEO is about positioning your website so that when visitors come looking your site is ready to go! The goal is to not interrupt their online experience with ads and banners, but create enough touch points so that when they need you they can easily find you and do business with your brand.

Nick Stamoulis is the President of Brick Marketing, a full service Boston SEO firm. With nearly 13 years of experience in the Internet Marketing industry, Nick Stamoulis shares his B2B SEO knowledge by contributing to the Brick Marketing Blog and publishing the Brick Marketing SEO Newsletter, read by over 160,000 opt-in subscribers.

Source: http://www.searchenginejournal.com/small-businesses-can-still-have-big-seo-success/64085/

PlayStation Network chip kelly NRA Golden Globes 2013 Anna Kendrick Sandy Hook conspiracy Stuart Scott

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Moderate cleric wins Iran's presidential vote

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? Moderate cleric Hasan Rowhani was declared the winner of Iran's presidential vote on Saturday after gaining support among many reform-minded Iranians looking to claw back a bit of ground after years of crackdowns.

The powerful showing by the former nuclear negotiator allowed him to avoid a two-person runoff and demonstrated the strength of opposition sentiment even in a system that is gamed against it. The ruling clerics barred from the race reform candidates seen as too prominent, allowing a list of hopefuls who were mainly staunch loyalists of the supreme leader.

But the opposition settled on Rowhani as the least objectionable of the bunch, making him the de facto reform candidate.

While Iran's presidential elections offer a window into the political pecking orders and security grip inside the country ? particularly since the chaos from a disputed outcome in 2009 ? they lack the drama of truly high stakes as the country's ruling clerics and their military guardians remain the ultimate powers.

Security forces also are in firm control after waves of arrests and relentless pressures since the last presidential election in 2009, which unleashed massive protests over claims the outcome was rigged to keep the combative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in power for a second and final term. He is barred from seeking a third consecutive run. However the last-moment surge around Rowhani injected some excitement in the race.

Rowhani won with 50.7 percent of the more than 36 million votes cast, the Interior Ministry reported, well ahead of Tehran Mayor Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf with about 16.5 percent. Hard-line nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili came in third with 11.3 percent followed by conservative Mohsen Rezaei with 10.6 percent.

Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar said the turnout was 72.7 percent, suggesting that liberals and others abandoned a planned boycott as the election was transformed into a showdown across the Islamic Republic's political divide. Iran has more than 50 million eligible voters.

Voters waited on line for hours in wilting heat Friday at some polling stations in downtown Tehran and other cities, while others cast ballots across the vast country from desert outposts to Gulf seaports and nomad pastures. Voting was extended by five hours to meet demand, but also as possible political stagecraft to showcase the participation.

On one side were hard-liners looking to cement their control behind candidates such as Jalili, who says he is "100 percent" against detente with Iran's foes, or Qalibaf, who was boosted by a reputation as a steady hand for Iran's sanctions-wracked economy.

Opposing them were reformists and others rallying behind the "purple wave" campaign of Rowhani, the lone relative moderate left in the race.

Candidates needed more than 50 percent of the vote to seal victory and avoid a runoff. Journalists face limits on reporting such as requiring permission to travel around the country. Iran does not allow outside election observers.

The Interior Ministry said Rowhani had 18,613,329 votes, followed by Qalibaf with 6,077,292, Jalili with 4,168,946 votes and Rezaei with3,884,412. The other two candidates were far behind.

Despite reformists' support, Rowhani's win is likely to be more of a limited victory than a deep shake-up. Iran's establishment, a tight alliance of the ruling clerics and the ultra-powerful Revolutionary Guard, still holds all the effective power and sets the agenda on all major decisions such as Iran's nuclear program and its dealings with the West. The greater comfort level by the theocracy and Revolutionary Guard also sets a different tone from 2009. Opposition groups appear too intimidated and fragmented to revive street demonstrations.

Rowhani, the only cleric in the race, led the influential Supreme National Security Council and was given the highly sensitive nuclear envoy role in 2003, a year after Iran's 20-year-old atomic program was revealed.

"Rowhani is not an outsider and any gains by him do not mean the system is weak or that there are serious cracks," said Rasool Nafisi, an Iranian affairs analyst at Strayer University in Virginia. "The ruling system has made sure that no one on the ballot is going to shake things up."

Yet a Rowhani victory is not entirely without significance either as it could make room for more moderate voices in Iranian political dialogue and display their resilience. It also brings onto the world stage an Iranian president who has publicly endorsed more outreach rather than bombast toward the West.

The last campaign events for Rowhani carried chants that had been bottled up for years.

Some supporters called for the release of political prisoners including opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mahdi Karroubi, both candidates in 2009 and now under house arrest. "Long live reforms," some cried at Rowhani's last rally. The rally was awash in purple banners and scarves ? the campaign's signature hue in a nod to the single-color identity of Mousavi's now-crushed Green Movement.

"My mother and I both voted for Rowhani," said Saeed Joorabchi, a university student in geography, after casting ballots at a mosque in west Tehran.

In the Persian Gulf city of Bandar Abbas, local journalist Ali Reza Khorshidzadeh said many polling stations had significant lines and many voters appeared to back Rowhani.

Just a week ago, Rowhani was seen as overshadowed by candidates with far deeper ties to the current power structure: Jalili and Qalibaf.

Then a moderate rival of Rowhani bowed out of the presidential race to consolidate the pro-reform camp. That opened the way for high-profile endorsements including his political mentor, former President Akbar Heshmi Rafsanjani, who won admiration from opposition forces for denouncing the postelection crackdowns in 2009. This, too, may have led to Rafsanjani's being blackballed from the ballot this year by Iran's election overseers, which allowed just eight candidates among more than 680 hopefuls.

Fervor remained strong for Rowhani's rivals as well.

Qalibaf was riding on his image as a capable fiscal manager who can deal with the deepening problems of Iran's economy and sinking currency.

Jalili drew support from hard-line factions such as the Revolutionary Guard's paramilitary corps, the Basij. His reputation is further enhanced by a battlefield injury that cost him the lower part of his right leg during Iran's 1980-88 war with Saddam Hussein's Iraq, which at the time was backed by the United States.

"We should resist the West," said Tehran taxi driver Hasan Ghasemi, who supported Jalili.

Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has not publicly endorsed a successor for Ahmadinejad following their falling out over the president's attempts to challenge Khamenei's near-absolute powers.

Ahmadinejad leaves office weakened and outcast by his political battles with Khamenei ? yet another sign of where real power rests in Iran. The election overseers also rejected Ahmadinejad's protege Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei in apparent payback. The usually talkative Ahmadinejad gave only a brief statement to reporters as he voted and refused to discuss the election.

Khamenei remained mum on his own choice even as he cast his ballot. He added that his children don't know whom he backs.

Instead, he blasted the U.S. for its repeated criticism of Iran's clampdowns on the opposition and the rejection of Rafsanjani and other moderates from the ballot.

"Recently I have heard that a U.S. security official has said they do not accept this election," Khamenei was quoted by state TV after casting his vote. "OK, the hell with you."

Iran's state media hailed the apparently high turnout as a boost for the Islamic Republic's political system.

"A great political epic has shocked the world," read a front-page headline inestimated at 75 percent by the hard-line newspaper Kayhan ? Kayhan Saturday. Khamenei had called for a "political epic," saying a high turnout would protect Iran against its enemies.

The economy, too, is under far more pressures than in 2009.

Western sanctions over Iran's nuclear program have shrunk vital oil sales and are leaving the country isolated from international banking systems. New U.S. measures taking effect July 1 further target Iran's currency, the rial, which has lost half its foreign exchange value in the past year, driving prices of food and consumer goods sharply higher.

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/moderate-cleric-wins-irans-presidential-vote-164644333.html

mit nfl schedule brittney griner ied breaking news new york post Texas Bombing