Category: Security

  • Army vet is VA clinic shooting suspect, report says

    The male suspect who was shot and wounded by police officers Sunday after allegedly firing shots into an empty Veterans Affairs clinic has been identified as Troy Allen McMaster, a United States Army veteran from East Wenatchee, Washington.

    According to a press release obtained by The Wenatchee World, investigators into Sunday’s shooting incident McMaster allegedly drove a pickup truck into the Department of Veterans Affairs Elwood “Bud” Link Community-Based Outpatient Clinic, located in Olds Station, prior to firing multiple shots into the empty building.

    The North Central Washington Special Investigation Unit explained that officers with the Wenatchee Police Department and the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office pursued McMaster to the 2500 block of Eastmont Avenue, which is located outside of East Wenatchee. During an armed confrontation with the authorities, McMaster was shot multiple times.

    The press release obtained by The Wenatchee World noted that McMaster, age 54, was arrested for the unlawful discharge of a firearm and first-degree malicious mischief, as well as suspicion of first-degree assault.

    READ MORE: Navy veteran gets nearly 5 years in prison over Jan. 6

    The Wenatchee World shared that the unidentified officers and deputies involved in Sunday’s incident were placed on administration leave, which is a standard procedure. The outlet added that the number of law enforcement officers involved in the incident has not yet been disclosed.

    According to Lt. Colonel Ruth Castro, an Army spokesperson, McMaster served as a military police officer in the U.S. Army from November 1987 to November 1991. McMaster was deployed to Southwest Asia from August 1990 to April 1991 and reached the rank of specialist by the end of his enlistment period.

    According to The Wenatchee World, Douglas County deputies were notified at 8:42 p.m. on Sunday that McMaster was sending text messages threatening self-harm; however, attempts by law enforcement to contact McMaster were not successful.

    Following Sunday’s pursuit by law enforcement officials, McMaster was reportedly shot by officers at roughly 11:16 p.m. as a result of the armed confrontation.

    After he was shot by responding law enforcement officers, McMaster was transported to Confluence Health Hospital before being airlifted to the Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. Douglas County Undersheriff Tyler Caille told The Wenatchee World that McMaster underwent a successful surgical operation on Monday and was moved out of intensive care by Tuesday.

    According to The Wenatchee World, the North Central Washington Special Investigation Unit is not expected to release additional information regarding Sunday’s shooting until sometime next week.



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  • Biden exchanged 54 emails with Hunter’s business associate

    New records released by Republicans in the House of Representatives reveal that President Joe Biden exchanged emails 54 times with his son Hunter Biden’s business associate during his time as vice president under former President Barack Obama’s administration. Some of the emails were exchanged around the same time Joe Biden traveled to Ukraine and Hunter Biden was on the board of a Ukrainian gas company.

    House Republicans recently launched a formal impeachment inquiry into Joe Biden. A press release by the House Ways and Means Committee explained, “Key to Congress’s impeachment inquiry is this fact: There is no doubt that Joe Biden was complicit in his son’s global influence peddling scheme, and this gross abuse of office gives the appearance that the best way to influence the White House is to pay the President’s son.”

    According to NBC News, the records released by House Republicans provide a list of the dates and the individuals involved in the emails; however, the content of the email messages has not yet been released.

    NBC News reported that email records show Joe Biden emailed Eric Schwerin, Hunter Biden’s business associate, 35 times around the then-vice president’s trips to Ukraine. The outlet noted that the majority of the email exchanges between Joe Biden and Schwerin occurred around the same time Hunter Biden was hired to serve on Burisma’s board in Ukraine.

    While a White House spokesperson refused to comment when approached by NBC News, the spokesperson directed the outlet to previous statements made by House Democrats, who have explained that Schwerin served as a financial adviser for Joe Biden between 2009 and 2017.

    READ MORE: Biden’s daughter owes $5,000 in taxes: Report

    The revelation of the email records between Joe Biden and Hunter Biden’s business associate was made public recently by House Republicans in the aftermath of IRS whistleblower Joseph Ziegler’s testimony to Congress.

    The email records were presented to the House Ways and Means Committee earlier this month with a sworn affidavit. Ziegler told Congress, “There were multiple emails found with Hunter Biden and his business associates.”

    In Tuesday’s press release, the House Ways and Means Committee stated, “From the campaign to the White House, President Biden and his allies have repeatedly denied any connection to his son’s business dealings – claiming that he had never spoken to his son about his business, then later, that he wasn’t involved. But mountains of evidence released by the Ways and Means Committee have thoroughly debunked these claims, leaving little doubt that President Biden was complicit in Hunter Biden’s use of the ‘Biden Brand’ to sell access to the White House around the world.”



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  • 120 illegal immigrants flown from Texas to Chicago

    Texas sent its first flight of migrants to Chicago on Tuesday as the border state continues to place pressure on President Joe Biden’s administration to secure the southern border.

    Sources inside the governor’s office told Fox News the first migrant flight departed from El Paso on Tuesday afternoon and arrived with 120 migrants on board at the O’Hare Airport in Chicago. All of the migrants reportedly signed voluntary waivers for the transportation.

    According to Fox News, the move comes as Chicago has launched multiple lawsuits against bus companies that have been transporting migrants from Texas to the sanctuary city over the past year. Fox News also reported that the new transportation method being used by Texas represents an escalation of Abbott’s strategy since April 2022 to transport migrants to sanctuary cities across the United States.

    The governor’s office told Fox News this week that Texas has transported 82,900 migrants to cities across the United States, which are overwhelmingly led by Democrats with “sanctuary” policies. According to Fox News, the cities include New York City, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C.

    Sharing a video of the first migrant airplane being sent from Texas to Chicago on X, formerly Twitter, Abbott wrote, “Sanctuary city Chicago started obstructing and targeting our busing mission. Texas will now expand our operation to include flights to Chicago. Until Biden steps up to secure the border, we will continue to provide overwhelmed Texas border towns with much-needed relief.”

    While Abbott’s handling of the southern border crisis has been applauded by conservatives across the country, Fox News reported that the governor’s critics have repeatedly claimed that transporting migrants to blue states and sanctuary cities is merely an “illegal” political move.

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson have both strongly opposed Abbott’s actions. Earlier this week, Johnson blamed Abbott for adding to the current migrant crisis in Chicago.

    READ MORE: Video: NY Gov tells migrants ‘go somewhere else’ after inviting them ‘with open arms’

    “The issue is not just how we respond in the city of Chicago,” Johnson said. “It’s the fact we have a governor, a governor, an elected official in the state of Texas, that is placing families on buses without shoes, cold, wet, tired, hungry, afraid, traumatized, and then they come to the city of Chicago, where we have homelessness, mental health clinics that have been shut down and closed. We have people who are seeking employment. The governor of Texas needs to take a look in the mirror, with the chaos he’s causing for the people of this country.”

    Responding to the criticism, Andrew Mahaleris, Abbott’s press secretary, told Fox News Digital that Chicago’s mayor was “flat out lying.”

    “If he truly cared about these migrants, he would stop spreading falsehoods and complaining about a few thousand migrants being bussed into his sanctuary city,” Mahaleris said. “Instead, Mayor Johnson should call on President Biden to take immediate action to secure the border — something the president continues failing to do.”



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  • Navy officer caught in NY sex sting brings teddy bear to meet FBI agent posing as girl, 13

    A U.S. Navy petty officer was carrying a large teddy bear when he showed up at a Long Island train station for what he thought was a sexual encounter with a 13-year-old girl, the feds said Tuesday.

    But Douglas Engstrom’s meet-up Friday turned out to be with an undercover FBI agent, and now he faces the possibility of 10 years to life in prison.

    Engstrom, 36, a divorced father of two children from Hanover, Md., works as a data analyst at Fort Meade, law enforcement sources said.

    He also went by “bleepbloorp” on the social media app Whisper, where users post anonymous public messages and confessionals.

    The FBI agent put out bait on the app on Dec. 6, with a post claiming she “no longer needed dental braces,” according to a criminal complaint. Engstrom replied, and during their correspondence the agent said several times she was a 13-year-old girl in school, the complaint alleges.

    He said he was 36 years old, lived in Maryland, worked for the Navy, and expressed interest in having sex with her, the complaint alleges. He also gave a cell phone number and made similar comments over text, according to the complaint.

    The agent set up a Saturday meeting at the Long Island Rail Road station in Valley Stream, and Engstrom flew into New York, arriving at Kennedy Airport, the feds allege.

    The FBI agent asked he bring a teddy bear along with him, and he had it with him when law enforcement officials arrested him at the train station Saturday, the feds allege.

    Engstrom was arraigned Monday in Long Island Federal Court and ordered held without bond, as he and his lawyer continues to put together an acceptable bail application.

    The Federal Defenders of New York, which represented Engstrom at arraignment, declined comment Tuesday.

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    © 2023 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Second sex tape recorded in U.S. Capitol: Report

    A new report claims that the recent incident involving a Democratic senator’s staff member who allegedly recorded a gay sex tape in a Senate hearing room was actually the second sex tape scandal since 2022.

    According to Semafor, sexually explicit videos allegedly filmed inside a U.S. Capitol building were discovered in June of 2022, prompting an investigation into a senior aide working for Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.).

    A Newhouse spokesperson confirmed to Semafor that reports of “purported, unbecoming behavior” from a senior staff member in the Washington representative’s office resulted in an investigation; however, the spokesperson claimed that the investigation found “no conclusive evidence.”

    “As soon as the office was alerted, we immediately contacted the appropriate House entities to conduct an independent investigation,” the spokesperson said. “The office will not be providing further comment on personnel matters.”

    READ MORE: Democrat Senate staffer fired after graphic sex tape in Senate exposed

    The congressional staffer, whose identity was withheld by Semafor, denied his involvement in the sexually explicit videos and disagreed with part of the characterization of the incident provided by Newhouse’s office. The staff member claimed that while he was notified of the investigation in June of 2022, the investigation concluded with “no evidence to the allegation.” He added that he left the senior aide position in the fall of 2022 on positive terms for a different job.

    Despite the congressional aide’s testimony to Semafor, the outlet noted that it is “clear” that there was a second group of sex tape videos allegedly filmed in the U.S. Capitol that were distributed on Snapchat last year.

    Videos obtained by Semafor allegedly show a male individual “masturbating” in a House office building. The outlet noted that the building was identified based on standard House carpeting and furniture. Additionally, a desk included in the video footage allegedly featured a congressional-branded mouse pad.

    Semafor claimed that a screenshot of one of the videos shows two male individuals engaging in a sex act in an office room. However, neither of the individuals’ faces was visible in the videos provided to the outlet.



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  • Family of political prisoner describes his ordeal behind bars

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    A Vietnamese prisoner-of-conscience serving a six-year sentence has been a frequent target of inmates in the notorious Prison No. 5 in the northern province of Thanh Hoa, his family told RFA.

    “Since his arrival at Prison No. 5, he has been held in cell block K1. It’s not a solitary confinement area, but he has had to share the cell with two or sometimes three inmates, some of whom showed signs of mental illness,” his wife, Le Bich Vuong, told RFA Vietnamese shortly after visiting him. 

    “They keep swearing, and they often scold him and insult him,” she said. Their behavior is seriously hurting his mental health, she said.

    In April, the Hanoi People’s Court sentenced Nguyen Lan Thang, a long-time contributor of blog posts on politics and society to Radio Free Asia’s Vietnamese service, to six years in prison and two years of probation.

    Authorities arrested him in July 2022 based on allegations that he posted videos on Facebook and YouTube that were said to “oppose” the Vietnamese Communist Party.

    He did not appeal the verdict and was transferred to serve his jail term on June 15.

    Vuong said that even when her husband is resting, inmates swear at him and incite him to fight with them or to file petitions to denounce prison guards,” she said. When he did not follow their request, these people insulted him with foul language.

    Terrorizing other inmates

    Vietnamese prison guards are known to use loyal inmates to terrorize others, especially political prisoners. The practice allows them to plausibly deny responsibility for a prisoner’s mistreatment.

    After the visit, Thang’s family complained to the prison and requested that management take measures to improve the situation, including moving him to another cell. However, the management responded that he should deal with the situation because the prison has limited facilities.

    According to two former prisoners who were held at Prison No. 5, cell block K1 is a temporary place for newly arrived male prisoners. These inmates are usually transferred to other divisions after a few days or a few weeks. Political prisoners are usually held in cell block K3 if they are men and cell block K4 if they are women.

    Former political prisoner Nguyen Van Dien, who had been held in K1 for more than four years until his release at the end of February, told RFA that it had the best facilities among all the cell blocks. It even had sports facilities for inmates, he said.

    However, not every inmate has access to K1 facilities.

    Vuong said she did not understand why her husband had been held in K1 for the past six months.

    He was allowed to leave his cell once a month to see his family and always had to stay in the cell at all other times, she said, adding that he hasn’t had access to the sports area.

    Thang requested to be allowed to do prison labor to avoid staying in the stuffy cell all the time, but his request was rejected.

    Denials

    RFA contacted the prison by telephone and a staff member who refused to identify himself denied all of Thang’s claims, saying that his prison stay has been conducted according to regulations and the law. 

    The staff member recommended contacting the Ministry of Public Security’s Department of Prison Management for detailed responses to questions.

    The staff member also said that cell block K1 held prisoners with sentences ranging from eight months to life, and was not a transitory cell block as the previous prisoners claimed.

    According to human rights lawyer Dang Dinh Manh, who fled Vietnam this year and currently resides in the United States, it is clear that Thang has been mistreated and retaliated against for his resilience. 

    “There are no legal provisions that allow holding normal inmates with mentally ill inmates,” he said. “Banning prisoners who don’t violate rules and regulations from coming out of their cells to do physical exercises and plant trees is also illegal. … These [practices] obviously violate not only regulations on prisoner management but also human rights. They should be condemned.”

    Thang’s treatment in prison was “no surprise” because he is being targeted as a political prisoner, Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at New York-based Human Rights Watch, told RFA.

    “Guards’ use of so-called trustee prisoners to terrorize political prisoners is particularly common since the prison officials will then claim they are not responsible,” he said. 

    “In fact, everything that goes on inside the prison is strictly controlled by the warden and their guards, which means that what is happening to Nguyen Lan Thang is no doubt international harassment and abuse.”

    In addition, Thang has also been unable to access any outside information.

    According to his family, Thang said that he had sent them some letters in July and August, but they had not received them yet. His family also sent him letters and books many times, but due to the prison’s time-consuming censorship protocols, he was not updated on his family’s information and he has no books to read.

    Vuong said that her family was preparing to send a petition to the Prison Management Police Department, the Thanh Hoa Provincial People’s Procuracy, and Prison No. 5, requesting an investigation into Thang’s allegations.

    His family also requested the prison to move him to cell block K3, where prisoners are allowed to carry out some activities, including physical exercise and planting trees.



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  • Taiwan reports sightings of Chinese balloons

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    The Taiwanese defense ministry said another Chinese balloon has been detected crossing the median line in the Taiwan Strait, the fifth balloon sighting this month.

    The line serves as the de-facto boundary between Taiwan and mainland China.

    As Taiwan is preparing for presidential and parliamentary elections on January 13, 2024, any intrusion from China would be treated as highly sensitive. Beijing considers the democratic island as one of its provinces and has been accused by Taipei of meddling in Taiwan’s politics.

    In the latest incident, a balloon was spotted at around 11 p.m. on Tuesday night near the port city of Keelung but “disappeared” at around 2 a.m. Wednesday morning, the Ministry of National Defense (MND) said in a statement.

    Another balloon was detected also near Keelung on Monday morning, and two were spotted on Sunday in the morning and the afternoon. The ministry told Taipei-based media that preliminary assessments are that they were weather balloons.

    On Dec. 7, a balloon was detected, also near Keelung. The MND declined to confirm whether it was a surveillance balloon.

    Security risks?

    “It is highly likely that these balloons have been moving around Taiwan for some time, so I don’t think it has anything to do with the election specifically,” said Ben Lewis, an independent defense analyst based in Washington D.C.

    “I’m not concerned about any security risks associated with the balloons so long as they don’t violate Taiwan’s sovereign territory,” Lewis told Radio Free Asia.

    Another analyst, Wendell Minnick, said that “they are most likely small weather balloons, similar to the one discovered on Matsu island in May.” 

    On May 13, Taiwanese troops stationed on Matsu discovered the wreckage of a balloon imprinted with “Shanghai Chang Wang Meteorological Technology Company” indicating it was a meteorological device. A similar balloon was found in February, also in Matsu.

    “I suspect these balloons are a normal occurrence,” said Minnick, editor of “China In Arms” on Substack.

    However, the MND never revealed Chinese balloon intrusions before 2023, the Taipei-based analyst told RFA. 

    “These should not be confused with the Chinese balloon that flew over the U.S. in February,” he added.

    In the so-called “2023 Chinese balloon incident,” the Pentagon said that a Chinese high-altitude balloon was flying for days over the continental U.S. before being shot down by a stealth F-22 Raptor fighter jet in the Atlantic Ocean on Feb. 4.

    U.S. authorities said it was a high-altitude surveillance platform the size of a school bus but China said it was a weather balloon that was blown off course.

    The incident prompted U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to postpone a planned visit to China and marked a further dip in the already problematic relations between Washington and Beijing.



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  • Zelenskyy says Ukraine not at risk of losing war with Russia

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his military isn’t at risk of losing the war with Russia and expressed confidence the U.S. will deliver on its $61 billion in aid held up by a political standoff.

    “I’m certain the U.S. won’t betray us — and what has been agreed upon will be fulfilled,” Zelenskyy told reporters in Kyiv at a wide-ranging press conference organized to close out the year.

    Ukraine’s campaign against the Russian invasion has ground to a standstill as the war-battered nation approaches its third year of conflict, with more than $110 billion in financial aid from Kyiv’s main allies entangled in political infighting in Washington and Brussels.

    Asked whether the risk that military may lose the conflict with the Kremlin after the standoff in 2023 was increasing, Zelenskyy said: “No.”

    The Ukrainian leader spoke after making a tour of the Americas and Europe. Kyiv secured a European Union agreement to start accession negotiations, though the win amounted to a symbolic advance as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban held up a €50 billion ($54.7 billion) aid package.

    Zelenskyy gave an account of a brief exchange he had with Orban in Buenos Aires during the inauguration of Argentine President Javier Milei on Dec. 10. He said he prodded the Hungarian premier on his lack of support for Ukraine — and why the two leaders couldn’t hold an official meeting.

    “He couldn’t tell me,” Zelenskyy said, though said the Hungarian ceded ground on a bilateral meeting. “Our sides will work on it,” he said.

    As Ukraine is gripped by the second winter of the war, it’s again fending off missile and drone barrages from Russia on critical infrastructure as troops are dug in across a front line that stretches from the Donbas region in the east to the Dnipro River delta in the south.

    ‘Very Sensitive’

    Authorities in Kyiv are struggling to bolster the ranks of troops and lure volunteers. General Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s military chief, this week criticized the pace of conscription as too slow — remarks that highlighted Zelenskyy’s delay in signing a bill to lower the draft age.

    The Ukrainian president said the military seeks to mobilize as many as 500,000 troops, but said he’s still awaiting a comprehensive mobilization plan that includes a blueprint for troop rotations and leaves. He called the call-up issue “very sensitive.”

    Zelenskyy cited the cost, calculating that one soldier requires six civilians to make up the expense — meaning the government would need to come up with 3 million more taxpayers by next month.

    At the same time, Russian President Vladimir Putin has seized the moment, making clear that has no plans to back down or compromise — particularly ahead of a presidential election in March. He said Thursday his nation remained determined to achieve its military aims, including holding ballots in four Ukrainian regions that it occupies and illegally annexed after it staged plebiscites that aren’t recognized by the international community.

    Ukraine’s allies are beginning to contemplate scenarios should the deadlock work in Russia’s favor — and the impact a Kremlin victory would have for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO members are beginning to reassess the risks of an emboldened Russia.

    The developments are contributing to a darker mood in Kyiv. The number of citizens who see the country and its war effort going in the right direction has fallen to 54% this month from 68% in May 2022, according to a survey conducted by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology.

    Ukrainians living in eastern regions showed a higher level of discontent, according to the Dec. 4-10 poll, which surveyed 1,200 respondents in regions controlled by Kyiv.

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    © 2023 Bloomberg L.P

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Long-awaited federal wildfire aircraft expected to come to California. When can they fly?

    California is a step closer to getting long-promised firefighting aircraft in the air.

    The state and its fire protection agency will have to get them into shape, but the first of the seven C-130 aircraft could be in service by the end of 2024 when President Joe Biden signs the bill into law.

    Ken Pimlott, now-retired Cal Fire chief who worked with late Sen. Dianne Feinstein and others to get the planes, summed up his feelings in one word: “Elated.”

    “We should celebrate the efforts of so many people and folks, taking a moment to reflect on how important and what an opportunity was accomplished today,” Pimlott said, “and obviously not taking our eyes off the ball.”

    Five years ago, Congress told the U.S. Air Force to convert seven surplus Coast Guard aircraft into firefighting tankers for California’s fire protection agency. A series of delays caused by the pandemic, contracting issues and construction hurdles prevented the job from being completed.

    Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., Rep. Ken Calvert, R-Corona, and Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., inserted a provision in a 2024 defense spending bill to send the C-130 aircraft to California immediately — done or not. Congress passed the National Defense Authorization Act Thursday, and Biden is expected to sign it.

    “These are aircraft that can mobilize quickly and attack wildfires to better protect our communities,” said Gov. Gavin Newsom, who also helped get the planes. “This was a collaborative effort with our partners Sen. Padilla, the late Sen. Feinstein, and others to deliver for Californians.”

    What will the firefighting planes do?

    Cal Fire, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Prevention, currently has 65 aircraft in use, making it the world’s largest civil firefighting fleet. That includes 23 S-2T air tankers, which can hold 1,200 gallons of fire retardant. C-130s — giant four-engine turboprops traditionally used for transport and aerial refueling — can carry up to 4,000.

    Fire retardant is used around the fire perimeter to slow its spread. Its effectiveness depends on winds, weather and terrain, but firefighters rely on it to quickly contain blazes.

    Cal Fire is expected to retrofit and add the C-130 aircraft to its fleet up and down the state, the first of which should be in the air in the fourth quarter of 2024, a spokesman said. Pimlott said the additional aircraft would be a great aid in the initial containment of a fire, and in the event of continued spread.

    “When those fires do escape initial attack because conditions, et cetera, that are causing that,” Pimlott said, “now you’ve got an aircraft that can be put in the mix as you need additional aircraft and provide more retardant to strategically put-in containment lines — you can do that more efficiently, more quickly.”

    Delays in converting the aircraft

    The Air Force was originally charged with updating these aircraft nearly a decade ago: Under a 2014 spending mandate, the surplus Coast Guard planes were supposed to go to the U.S. Forest Service.

    Years of delays and rising cost estimates led the Trump administration in late 2017 to scrap the idea. Congress in 2018 directed that the planes go to California, which had a robust firefighting fleet and worsening wildfire seasons.

    The soonest planes were expected to get to California was 2021, Roll Call reported at the time. But a fresh round of delays — caused by the pandemic and often glacial federal contracting procedures — prolonged the wait.

    No longer, Padilla said: “While it has been a frustrating few years, ecstatic that these C-130s will be in the right hands soon and helping respond to wildfires very, very soon.”

    Wildfire seasons in California

    California has seen some of the largest, deadliest and most expensive wildfires in the state’s history in recent years. The 2021 Dixie Fire was the largest; the 2018 Camp Fire was its deadliest.

    This season, following a winter with atmospheric rivers and historic rain, was mild, as was 2022. But that trend won’t last, according to experts. Warmer global temperatures indicate wildfires could become more common and severe.

    “It is absolutely recognized that 2023 was a modest fire season,” said Matt Dias, CEO of the California Forestry Association, a trade coalition for the state’s forestry sector, “but to be clear, we are still in the midst of a wildfire crisis.”

    “When we have lives at risk, when we have communities at risk, we have to have the strongest all-hands-on-deck approach to suppression,” he added, “so that the private lands, the communities, our resources, our public trust resources are all being treated as such.”

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    © 2023 The Sacramento Bee

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Paramilitary forces defy US warning with attack on Sudan aid hub

    Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces defied a U.S. warning and expanded its offensive on a crucial aid hub, escalating the eight-month-old conflict and forcing hundreds of thousands of people to flee.

    The four-day attack on the southeastern city of Wad Madani also jeopardized the North African nation’s main humanitarian operations, already running at low capacity in a war that’s pitted the RSF against the military and left 12,000 people dead and displaced millions more.

    As many as 300,000 people fled the area in Sudan’s Al-Jazirah state — located on the Nile River and commonly referred to as Sudan’s breadbasket — since Dec. 15, the United Nations said Tuesday in a statement. “Given the scarcity of available transport options, many people have reportedly fled by foot,” it said.

    The escalation has thwarted efforts by East African mediators and regional heads of state as well as the U.S. and Saudi Arabia to have the leaders of Sudan’s two warring factions meet face to face for the first time in the conflict by the end of the year. The U.N. is warning of a humanitarian catastrophe, with 25 million — more than half of the resource-rich country’s population — in need of aid.

    Violence also spread in the southwestern city of El-Fasher in the Darfur region, where hundreds of people fled and private and commercial properties were looted in recent days. The upheaval has spilled over into Sudan’s eastern state of Sennar, with people trying to reach the relative safety of Gedaref, Kassala and Blue Nile states.

    The attack on Wad Madani has shuttered shops and markets. It’s also put at risk warehouses contains large stocks of supplies for displaced people and residents of the capital, Khartoum.

    All humanitarian field missions have been canceled since Dec 15, according to the U.N..

    The RSF, which has its roots in a Darfur militia known as the janjaweed, or “devils on horseback,” said in a statement it moved on Wad Madani after receiving information the army under Abdel Fattah al-Burhan mobilized 40,000 soldiers in an effort to eliminate its forces. Wad Madani is located 150 kilometers (93 miles) southeast of Khartoum.

    A spokesman for the army didn’t respond to questions on the latest military operations.

    The spike in violence occurred around the fifth anniversary of a popular revolt that eventually toppled the former dictator Omar al-Bashir, whose whereabouts remain unknown after he left a prison in Khartoum earlier in the conflict.

    “The incredible bravery and sacrifice displayed by protesters from all walks of life – especially women and youth – led to the beginnings of a democratic future,” the U.S. Embassy to Sudan said in a statement. “However, the promise of that future has been denied to Sudan’s people time and again.”

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    © 2023 Bloomberg L.P

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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