After more than three decades in prison, Thomas James was exonerated by prosecutors for a 1990 murder.
Thirty years in prison for a murder he did not commit. You know that there is more to this story, he is a black man and the police and DA in racist Florida simply did not care, they pinned it on him and sent him away to rot. What can the state now do to make it up to him? Wrongly accused, all those years, the years of the prime of his life gone. How does he earn any income? But wait, his Social Security is going to be the minimum which is not enough to live on as he was behind bars all those years. So he will continue to be screwed by the same state that imprisoned him for a crime he never committed. But I guess at least now he can vote? Maybe? In Florida, a black man from prison? Good luck.
A group of bears in search of food decided to check inside a van—effortlessly unlatching the door, sliding it open and jumping inside. No CC because the bears don’t talk.
This has not gotten the attention I felt it should have so I am posting it again. The Us is in this conflict up to its eyeballs so why not step in all the way and save the people. Stop the torture and stop the rapes. I still am struggling with the idea of a preteen with their teeth pulled out that was repeatedly reported when the Russians withdrew. I have not heard one reason not to go in that is not based on fear that Russia will lash out at the countries that do. Guess what they already are. I have heard people say they don’t want to extend the area of conflict but guess what Russia already did. Don’t let Russia set the rules, these are people that torture, rape, and terrorize civilians. Don’t let the worst people make the rules the rest of the world lives by. You have already seen what Russia is willing to do by violating their gas and oil contracts to hurt other countries. How much of Europe is the world willing to let Putin have? Where you see pictures in the below quoted story there are videos on the linked page. Please go to the link to see the videos.
Ukrainian forces have used specific coordinates shared by the U.S. to direct fire on Russian positions and aircraft, current and former officials tell NBC News.
As Russia launched its invasion, the U.S. gave Ukrainian forces detailed intelligence about exactly when and where Russian missiles and bombs were intended to strike, prompting Ukraine to move air defenses and aircraft out of harm’s way, current and former U.S. officials told NBC News.
That near real-time intelligence-sharing also paved the way for Ukraine to shoot down a Russian transport plane carrying hundreds of troops in the early days of the war, the officials say, helping repel a Russian assault on a key airport near Kyiv.
It was part of what American officials call a massive and unprecedented intelligence-sharing operation with a non-NATO partner that they say has played a crucial role in Ukraine’s success to date against the larger and better-equipped Russian military.
The details about the air defenses and the transport plane, which have not previously been reported, underscore why, two months into the war, officials assess that intelligence from U.S. spy agencies and the Pentagon has been an important factor in helping Ukraine thwart Russia’s effort to seize most of the country.
“From the get-go, we leaned pretty heavily forward in sharing both strategic and actionable intelligence with Ukraine,” a U.S. official briefed on the matter told NBC News. “It’s been impactful both at a tactical and strategic level. There are examples where you could tell a pretty clear story that this made a major difference.”
In a statement, a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council said, “We are regularly providing detailed, timely intelligence to the Ukrainians on the battlefield to help them defend their country against Russian aggression and will continue to do so.”
NBC News is withholding some specific details that the network confirmed about the intelligence sharing at the request of U.S. military and intelligence officials, who say reporting on it could help the Russians shut down important sources of information.
“There has been a lot of real-time intelligence shared in terms of things that could be used for specific targeting of Russian forces,” said a former senior intelligence official familiar with the situation. The information includes commercial satellite images “but also a lot of other intelligence about, for example, where certain types of Russian units are active.”
Ukraine continues to move air defenses and aircraft nearly every day with the help of American intelligence, which is one reason Russia has not been able to establish air dominance. In some cases, Ukraine moved the targeted air defense systems or planes just in time, the officials said.
“The Russian military has literally been cratering empty fields where air defenses were once set up,” one U.S. official said. “It has had an enormous impact on the Russian military’s ability on the ground.”
While U.S.-Ukrainian cooperation had been building since Russia seized Crimea in 2014, the Biden administration shifted into high gear in the weeks before the Russian invasion, when a U.S. military team visited to assess the state of Ukraine’s air defenses. The Americans provided Ukraine with detailed advice about how to disperse their air defense systems, a move that U.S. officials say helped Ukraine prevent Russia from seizing control of the skies.
Once the invasion got underway, lawyers in the U.S. defense and intelligence bureaucracy imposed guidance that in some cases limited the sharing of targeting information that could enable lethal Ukrainian strikes against Russians. But as Russia’s aggression has deepened, and under pressure from Congress, all of those impediments have been removed, officials say.
Earlier this month, for example, the director of National Intelligence withdrew and replaced a memo that prohibited intelligence sharing for the purposes of regaining captured territory or aiding Ukrainian strikes in Crimea or the Donbas, officials said. NBC News was first to report on the expanded sharing.
Intel has helped Ukraine defend, and also attack
Even before the change, the U.S. had provided Ukraine with timely information enabling it to better target Russian forces.
Ukrainian forces have used specific coordinates shared by the U.S. to direct fire on Russian positions and aircraft, current and former officials tell NBC News.
Those early shoot-downs helped thwart the Russian air assault operation designed to take Hostomel Airport near Kyiv, which would have allowed the Russians to flood troops and equipment to the region around the capital. The Russians eventually took the airport for a time, but never had enough control to fly in massive amounts of equipment. That failure had a significant impact on the battle for Kyiv, U.S. officials say.
The CIA is also devoting significant resources, current and former officials say, to gathering intelligence with the aim of protecting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, whom the Russians want to kill. The agency is consulting with the Ukrainians on “how best to move him around, making sure that he’s not co-located with his entire chain of command, things like that,” a U.S. official said.
“I would say where we are at is revolutionary in terms of what we have been able to do,” Army Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told Congress last month in describing the sharing of information and intelligence between the U.S. and Ukraine.
CIA Director William Burns told Congress last month that when he met with Zelenskyy in Kiev in January, “We shared with him intelligence we had at the time about some of the most graphic and concerning details of Russian planning about Kyiv as well and we’ve continued to do that every day since then.”
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said last month that the U.S. has shared “a significant amount of detailed timely intelligence on Russia’s plans and activities with the Ukrainian government to help Ukrainians defend themselves,” adding that the material “includes information that should help them inform and develop their military response to Russia’s invasion, that’s what’s happening — or has been happening.”
The U.S. military and the CIA began seeking to deepen their relationships with Ukrainian counterparts after Russia seized Crimea in 2014. The CIA first helped Ukrainian services root out Russian spies, the former senior official said, and then provided training and guidance. The U.S. military also trained Ukrainian soldiers.
Ukrainian soldiers walk on a destroyed bridge in Irpin, on the outskirts of Kyiv, last week.Emilio Morenatti / AP
“There has been a very robust relationship between U.S. intel agencies and the Ukrainians for the last eight years,” the official said, adding that by the time Russia invaded two months ago, the U.S. trusted Ukraine enough to provide details of Russian troops’ deployment, attack routes and real-time targeting information.
“The foreknowledge we had of Russian plans and intentions shows that our intelligence was very solid on the overall situation,” said John McLaughlin, a former acting CIA director who now teaches at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. “So just logically, if we so earnestly want them to win as we have publicly said, it only follows that we’d be giving them the results of intelligence. It would be along the lines of, ‘Here’s what we know — it doesn’t matter how we know it.’”
One Western intelligence official noted that it’s not only the intelligence that has proven decisive — it’s the performance of the Ukrainians in using it. The source said Ukrainians have fought the Russians with agility and courage, and when they have received actionable intelligence, they have moved with astonishing speed.
McLaughlin said the Ukrainians have made clever use of so-called open-source intelligence — commercial satellite imagery and intercepts of Russians talking openly on unencrypted radios.
“The fact that there is so much open source [intelligence] available means that those collecting classified intelligence can focus on the things that are really hard and not publicly available.”
As the Ukrainian government sees it, intelligence sharing has improved, a source familiar with the government’s view told NBC News. That’s as far as he would go.
This is a hard story to listen to. In fact both of them are. Child rape hits me hard, but I guess it does most decent people. The second story is about a civilian man who was tortured for no reason except it seems that is the standard why the Russians soldiers are dealing with men. I have posted it before. They take the men’s fingers and cut them to the bone in slashes so that they will not only be painful but fester and decay. This man lost most of his. I have posted videos of others with their fingers stitched up trying to save them. The US could stop this. NATO could stop this. But we are allowing it. For how much longer?
CNN’s Nick Paton Walsh speaks with 16-year-old Dasha, who says she was raped by a Russian soldier in her village in Ukraine’s Kherson region. CNN cannot independently verify Dasha’s story, but Ukrainian prosecutors in the Kherson region said in a statement they had investigated her account.
He was tortured by Russians for eight days and left in the forest to die
On thing about this. The Russians seem to like causing pain and being cruel. These acts are deliberate. No professional army acts this way. We must act to stop this. How many generations will ask why we did not stop it when we could have? Were they not worthy enough for us to save?
Oleg Moskalenko is a Ukrainian man who was captured and tortured by Russian troops for several days and left for dead in the forest. He shares his harrowing story of survival on CNN’s New Day.
Again no CC. But the story is important. This is what happens in a country of uncontrolled capitalism where the wealthy get to suck every drop of money from the lower incomes. How is it acceptable that hedge funds bought up most of the housing in the US paying over market prices so they could then jack up rents. Builders see the profit and are buying up land at over market value. Cities are cracking down on homeless as more and more people have no where to live but in their cars or on the streets. Here where I live any wooded areas are being cleared out because the homeless set up camps in them, often at the risk of their lives. I have talked about James moving back home to afford housing even though he works every hour he can get at a county job. He talks about in three or five years moving from Florida. Ron and I want too also. But the where to go that is decent on a fixed income with what we can get for our home. More and more the governments at every level, local, state, federal are working for the wealthy to increase their wealth but do nothing for the people as we slide into desperation. This is why tRump won the first time, he spoke of helping the people. Democrats speak of that every four years but never do it. The Democrats have shown that most of them are corporate owned as much as the Republicans. Build Back Better would have helped the people out immensely and it would have cost less a year than the aid to Ukraine so far, but the wealthy / large corporations in the US cannot have the government helping the people. Businesses in the US need a desperate work force to make the most profit. The people must be kept desperate so they will accept any job at any low wage under any harsh conditions and be grateful they got it. Notice right after months of debate about giving the people of the country scraps, the congress then approved a 800 billion dollar plus military budget without any debate. None. Just passed it. A military we are now afraid to use in Ukraine to save those people. Why do we have it then and deny ourselves other services? Because the profit generated for the defense contractors. It comes down to what kind of country do we want, other advanced countries don’t live this way. Canada doesn’t? Mexico doesn’t either and we use to call them the poor people? Ever wonder why the immigrants at the southern border are not majority Mexicans? We are the ones with a lower standard of living now. They are growing better standards for their people; the US is regressing to the days of robber barons.
I am sorry there is no CC with this. The point of these stories are these are people living on the front lines that Russia is shelling. They cannot leave and have nowhere to go. They are old and disabled. They survive by the aid that gets brought to them. The area has no military targets yet Russia has kept up bombardments of the area. This is terrorism. The driving out of the population and making the death toll and pain as high as possible so the Ukrainians will give in. Russia doesn’t see a difference between military targets and civilians, it is all just targets. We have the ability to stop this. We have a duty to help stop it. Aid wont last, and military aid can not get there fast enough. The Ukrainians barely have half the bullets they need because their weapons don’t use the same ammo as Nato guns. Lets not only give them NATO guns, lets send in NATO troops to use them, to show the Ukrainians how to use our equipment. The Ukrainians are a democracy fighting to survive against someone who has threatened to take large parts of other countries. Do we just let Putin do it? And what about the next country that wants some of their neighbors’ lands? The strong protect the weak in a just world, those that can, have a responsibility to do. We can, and we have a responsibility to do so.
CNN’s Sam Kiley goes to Severodonetsk, Ukraine, a frontline city in the war with Russia, to talk to Ukrainians desperate for resources as they live amid Russian shelling.
Former President Donald Trump reportedly told state governors to “ask [him] nicely” for federal assistance and relief for natural disasters. Connecticut’s Democratic Governor Ned Lamont recounted his experience when asking Trump for help in restoring electricity to residents after a massive storm in 2020 while Trump provided FEMA aid to Florida and Texas without question. Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian discuss on The Young Turks.
“Former President Donald Trump made governors flatter him personally for federal aid after natural disasters, a new book says. The revelations are made in an upcoming book, “This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America’s Future,” by New York Times reporters Jonathan Martin and Alex Burns, according to The Independent. In the book, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan, a Republican, said Trump told governors who wanted aid: “You have to call and ask me nicely.” Hogan claimed that Trump had a policy in which only Texas and Florida, two states with governors Trump considered close allies, would be given federal aid when needed without question. Governor Ned Lamont of Connecticut, a Democrat, recounted a similar experience, The Independent reported. Lamont said he asked the White House for assistance in obtaining federal disaster aid after a storm in August 2020 left parts of Connecticut without electrical power.”