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  • 8
    Apr
    2013
    3:50pm, EDT

    Navy unveils powerful ship-mounted laser weapon

    U.S. Navy

    The Laser Weapon System (LaWS) temporarily installed aboard the guided-missile destroyer USS Dewey.

    By Courtney Kube, NBC News

    The U.S. Navy announced Monday that it is preparing to deploy a new weapon that can disable a hostile boat and even destroy a surveillance drone overhead — all without dispensing any expensive ammunition.

    The Navy released this video showing its new laser weapons system during an exercise at sea. The laser is capable of destroying planes, drones and boats.

    It is the Navy's Laser Weapons System (LaWS), a laser mounted on a ship that is so strong it can ignite a drone, sending it crashing and burning to earth in mere moments.


    The USS Ponce, an amphibious transport docking ship, will be the first Navy vessel to deploy with the LaWS, officials announced Monday.

    The new laser will be installed on the Ponce over the next year and operational in summer 2014. The Ponce is now based in the Fifth Fleet area, which covers the Persian Gulf and the Horn of Africa.

    The LaWS will initially be used to combat small boats that pose a threat to larger U.S. Navy vessels — much like the small Iranian fast boats that pester U.S. ships in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz.

    The Navy plans to use the laser to combat missiles and other threats from the air, to ward off threatening ships and to stop other foreign threats. Eventually the system will be able to stop an incoming missile.

    While making the announcement in Maryland today, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Jonathan Greenert praised the LaWS ability to take out targets at a tiny fraction of the cost of other conventional weapons.

    He claimed that the LaWS can shoot down a small drone for about $1 worth of electricity and, once the laser is operational, it should be able to replace a Gatling gun, whose rounds can cost several thousand dollars each.

    A defense official also stressed that the laser will not have full capability to take down a larger target for a decade or so.

    Despite speculation the laser is deploying to the Fifth Fleet to warn Iran, a U.S. military official says that the real reason it's going to that region is that it is "the hardest environment" the Navy has available to test the new system.

    Related:

    • Star Wars' of the sea: Navy wants a ship-based laser weapon 
    • Ground-based laser zaps rockets in tests

     

    611 comments

    Well let's hope the terrorists are not smart enough to bring a mirror on board......

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  • 19
    Feb
    2013
    6:41am, EST

    Winter storm to hit US from Calif. to Midwest

    The Weather Channel

    Snow forecast through Wednesday.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A winter storm moving in from the Pacific Ocean was expected to bring a foot or more of snow and 75 mph wind gusts to mountainous areas of California on Tuesday, before aiming for the Midwest and laying down a wintry blanket as it goes, the National Weather Service said.

    Even coastal Californians would feel the storm's wrath in the form of high winds and heavy rains, forecasters said.

    Weather.com meteorologists said the storm originated in the Gulf of Alaska and was taking a southerly course that would hammer California before the system turns inland and strikes as far northeast as Chicago and the Midwest.

    More coverage from The Weather Channel

    Mountainous parts of Los Angeles, San Diego and Ventura counties in California were under winter storm warnings, and snow could present a danger on mountain highways, including Interstate 15, the weather service said.

    Slideshow: Winter's frozen splendor

    /

    Ice and snow changes our environment, as winter engulfs our world.

    Launch slideshow

    Those on the Southern California coast were expected to see see wind-whipped waves. High-surf advisories, predicting waves up to 10 feet, have been issued from Ventura County south through Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties.

    Up to two inches of rain could fall in some areas as the storm moves through, and high winds and snow are likely to also cause problems inland, in heavily populated Riverside and San Bernardino counties, both of which are under winter storm and high-wind warnings.

    After the storm moves through California, it will take a sharp turn and hit the Four Corners states Wednesday and Thursday, bringing widespread snowfall across the mountains of Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and parts of Arizona, Weather.com reported.

    Weather Channel meteorologist Nick Wiltgen said that as the storm moved eastward, cold air from Canada and moist air from the western Gulf of Mexico would mix to bring snowfalls of up to an inch an hour for several hours, setting the stage for a "major winter storm" over the Plains that could produce double-digit snowfalls along the Interstate 80 corridor. Just to the south, an icy mix could make travel treacherous.

    A huge section of the middle of the country is under a winter storm watch, and the Deep South may see severe thunderstorms.

    By the time the weather system reaches the Great Lakes, the snowfall was likely to be minor, Wiltgen said.

    However some computer models suggested Chicago would get heavy snow late in the week.

    The weather service has issued special weather statements and various winter storm advisories for large parts of the western Great Lakes region.

    The Northern Plains were expected to remain in the icy grip of arctic winds, with wind chills in many approaching 40 degrees below zero. Up to nine inches of snow was thought possible in places.

    Nearly the entire state of Minnesota and large parts of the Dakotas were under a wind-chill advisory.

    Related:

    26 injured as snow sparks crashes on I-95

    High winds and snow hit New England -- again

     

     

    73 comments

    And now for our update from the Great Plains......Very windy today with blowing snow and hazardous wind conditions. A chance of snowfall late tonight-early morning hours could be a couple inches to a foot depending on which way the storm moves according to our computer models. Stay tuned for further …

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  • 2
    Feb
    2013
    4:43am, EST

    How the US military can become a 'band of brothers and sisters'

    IDF

    Arielle Werner, 21, originally of Minnetonka, Minn., is a combat soldier with Israel's co-ed Caracal Battalion. "Women in combat can only bring good things," she said. "Two halves of a whole together can only be good."

    By F. Brinley Bruton, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Even before she moved to Israel, Minnesota-born Cpl. Arrielle Werner was certain she possessed what it took to fight on the front lines. 

    "I realized that I couldn't be the passive Minnesotan," said the 21-year-old member of Israel's majority female Caracal Battalion, a combat unit which patrols the volatile border with Egypt's Sinai Peninsula. "I knew this was the place for me. My friends back in the States are shocked … now I’m the wild combat soldier."

    The self-described "peace keeper of the family" said she is prepared to "give everything" on the battlefield. 

    That's the sort of gung-ho attitude that military brass appreciate in any soldier -- but it isn't an attitude many expect from a woman.

    There have long been barriers to women at war, never mind those assigned to fight at the tip of the spear. But the U.S. government's announcement on Jan. 24 that it was dropping its ban on women in combat units changed everything. (While not officially in combat units, American women have long served side-by-side with male service-members -- in fact, 152 women died while being deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan.)

    Despite living in a country "where some still think women should stay in the kitchen," Werner feels accepted by male colleagues.

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta's decision to lift the 20-year ban on women serving in combat will open some 237,000 combat-related positions to women. Initially, women will be assigned to combat communications, logistics and drivers. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    "There is a little bit of a glass ceiling (but) ... you see women every day getting higher and higher," said Werner, who is originally from Minnetonka, Minn. "As long as you want to succeed and want to get stronger … you’re able to handle everything."

    While many worry whether society has the stomach to accept women being killed, and being killers, Werner is in no doubt about her place on the battlefield.  And she doesn't mince words about her fellow females in the co-ed Caracal Battalion.

    "These girls are tough," she said.

    Werner, who has been on stationed on the border since October, admitted that she has noticed differences between the sexes.

    "Guys are able to really to put a tough face on things (while) girls really take time to put emotion into something," she added. "Women in combat can only bring good things. Two halves of a whole together can only be good."

    Not practical or not relevant?
    As the U.S. military implements its new and controversial policy ahead of a January 2016 deadline, it will be seeking lessons from Israel and the handful of other countries that currently do not bar women from front-line combat. They include all of Scandinavia, Australia, Eritrea, France, Germany, Lithuania, Netherlands, New Zealand, North Korea, Poland and Romania.

    Despite examples set by these countries, one of the biggest worries remains that integration will undermine the essential cohesion of the so-called band of brothers that has long defined the camaraderie among fighting men.

    "(In the British military) the argument always comes down to the pure practicalities of the effectiveness of the unit rather than if a woman can't do it," said Amyas Godfrey, a former infantry officer and associate fellow at British security think tank the Royal United Services Institution (RUSI).

    Atef Safadi / EPA, file

    Israeli female soldiers take positions during clashes with Palestinian protesters from the West Bank village of Nabi Salah on Dec. 28.

    The United Kingdom is almost alone among Western European countries in not allowing women into front-line combat roles.

    "It comes down to 18-to-22-year-old boys not being able to ignore the fact that there is a woman in their midst," he said. Integrating combat units and concentrating on making space for women also "doesn't fit with the practicality of closing with and killing the enemy," he said.

    Norwegian Brigadier Odin Johannessen, who served in Bosnia and Afghanistan and commanded military units for 12 years, disagreed with the idea that men and women could not be trained to serve together.

    "In mixed units, what is most important is to become a soldier," said the 51-year-old who formerly ran the Norwegian Army Academy in Oslo. "That you are a good soldier tends to be the most prized factor of all, if you are a male or female doesn’t matter."

    "It's called a band of brothers. I would rather rephrase it to a band of brothers and sisters," he added. 

    Johannessen's exposure to military women colored the rest of his career.

    "My first day in the military I met Sgt. Bente Karlsen and she has been present in my mind for my entire service for the professional way she led us," he said.  

    Karlsen had the essential ability to convey instructions and orders, but also clearly cared about the young men under her command, Johannessen said. 

    "She was a brilliant sergeant and showed me that it matters not if you are male of female," he said. 

    Norway has no official restrictions on women joining any of its operational units, although no women are members of its special forces. Nine percent of combat roles in Norway are made up of women, and the armed forces' aim to increase that the proportion of females in military positions to 15 percent.

    'Masculine warrior culture'
    With its "no-exclusion policy," Canada is also recognized internationally as one of the few militaries to have officially removed all barriers to women. Canadian women have served and died on the front line in Afghanistan, and make up four percent of the roles in Canada's so-called combat arms divisions, and 14.8 percent of military roles overall. 

    Getty Images, file

    Canadian Master Corporal Tera Avey of Edmonton, Alberta, a mother of two and one of three female combat soldiers, wakes up on March, 2002 in the rocky Shahi Kot mountains in Afghanistan. Hundreds of American and Canadian troops were lifted into the mountainous region at high altitude to search and destroy Taliban and al-Qaida fighters.

    Karen Davis, a gender integration expert for Canada's armed forces, acknowledges that women have to adapt to the "masculine warrior culture" of combat units.

    But when Canadian men and women were sent to fight on the front lines in Afghanistan, fears that women's presence would hurt all-important unity did not bear out, she said.

    "What we learned when we went into Afghanistan is that Canadian soldiers are trained to do a job, no matter if they were men or women," Davis said, adding that proper and rigorous training before deployment helped make this happen.

    Whether women can or should be treated and tested differently from their male counterparts is at the heart of any discussion on how to integrate military operations, especially front-line combat troops.

    In Israel, where women have formed part of the military since before the founding of the state and face conscription, the training process "accepts differences between men and women and just deals with them," according to Capt. Eytan Buchman, a spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces.

    "Everybody comes in with their own baggage and physiological differences," he added.

    Johannessen, for his part, advises trainers and commanders to not give women under their command special treatment. 

    "Say there are two females in the unit. If you want to do it wrong, pay special attention to them," he said.  

    To this end, gender-neutral physical standards are also essential, he said.

    According to Davis, Canada's success at integrating women also came about as a result of a rigorously enforced non-fraternization policy. And the onus for making sure relationships don't happen lies not just on the women, but also the men throughout the chain of command, she says.

    But beyond policies and rules, Norway's Johannessen says that more women make militaries better and smarter.

    Slideshow: All-female U.S. Marine team in Afghanistan

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    View images of the women deployed as the second Female Engagement team in Afghanistan

    Launch slideshow

    "Men and women are looking at a problem from different positions," he said. "Having the possibility for a different view is many times better."

    While integrating women into combat can be down to well-thought-out polices, effective leadership and rigorous training -- natural attributes for any well-run military organization -- an important lesson is that change will most likely not come quickly or implemented uniformly.

    Gender integration expert Davis admits that even her own thinking changed radically from the time she joined an all-female land-bound unit in the Canadian Navy in 1978. At the time, she agreed that women did not belong in many roles in the military. But in 1985 that changed: Davis was asked to be one of two women to go to sea for 12 days on a formerly all-male ship.

    "I came back questioning everything," Davis said. "I had joined and completely accepted everything I had been told, but in fact none of it was rational, it could all be dismantled." 

    Related:

    Female veterans cheer new era: 'It's about time!'

    Women in the infantry? Forget about it, says female Marine officer

     

     

    1039 comments

    This whole women in combat thing is really starting to get stupid. What is wrong with our country? They are making combat into a joke.

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  • 28
    Jan
    2013
    2:20pm, EST

    Light snow, ice slides into Northeast, storm threatens Plains

    As cool air moves in from Canada, the unusually high temperatures in the South will plummet, which could result in severe weather systems. The Weather Channel's Chris Warren reports.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A winter storm that socked the Midwest last week moved across the Northeast on Monday, bringing light snow, ice and rain to the region, forecasters said. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The wintry mix hit from eastern Pennsylvania through southern New England, The Weather Channel reported. Major accumulations of snow were not anticipated.


    Snowfall of up to 3 inches is possible from central and northern New York through central and northern New England.

    The weather will change to sleet and freezing rain in southern New York, northeastern Pennsylvania and northern New Jersey, and roads could be slick.

    Morning sleet and freezing rain forecast to become afternoon rain in western Virginia, central and southeastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, Maryland and Delaware.

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Snow falls lightly in Manhattan, N.Y., on Monday, January 28, 2013. Temperatures near freezing are making it tricky for commuters and pedestrians.

    The mixture of freezing rain and sleet in the Northeast follows a weekend of disruption in the Midwest, with many flights in and out of Chicago, Minneapolis and St. Louis being grounded by icy runways on Sunday, according to Reuters.

    Hundreds of churches across Iowa cancelled Sunday services as sidewalks were turned to sheets of ice by the storm that covered the region, Reuters said.

    Meanwhile, a storm bringing rain to the southwest Monday was expected to move into the southern Plains and southern half of the Mississippi Valley on Tuesday.

    Damaging wind gusts, hail and tornadoes are possible from eastern Oklahoma and northeast Texas to central and southern Illinois, western Kentucky, western Tennessee, northwest Mississippi and northern Louisiana Tuesday.

    In the northern Plains, as many as 4 to 6 inches of precipitation was expected from eastern North Dakota to northern Minnesota Monday afternoon through Tuesday.

    Elsewhere, heavy mountain snows and strong winds were forecast in mountain areas across the West that will result in significant drifting snow, which has prompted an avalanche watch for a portion of the Colorado Rockies.   

    Comment

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  • 28
    Jan
    2013
    6:06am, EST

    Iran jails US pastor for 8 years, State Department says

    An American pastor who has been jailed in Iran since September has been sentenced to eight years in prison, the U.S. State Department said Sunday.

    Spokesman Darby Holladay said the department is calling on Iran to respect Saeed Abedini's human rights and release him.

    Earlier this month, Iran's semi-official news agency, ISNA, quoted Abedini's attorney, Nasser Sarbazi, as saying his client stood trial in the Revolutionary Court on charges of attempting to undermine state security by creating a network of Christian churches in private homes.

    The pastor, who is of Iranian origin but lives in Boise, Idaho, has rejected the charges.

    "Mr. Abedini's attorney had only one day (Jan. 21) to present his defense, so we remain deeply concerned about the fairness and transparency of Mr. Abedini's trial," Holladay said.

    'Devastated'
    Following the court presentation, ISNA quoted Sarbazi as saying the court would issue its verdict later, and that Abedini would be allowed to leave Iran and meet his family in the U.S. after posting bail.

    "The promise of his release was a lie," said the pastor's wife, Naghmeh. "With today's development, I am devastated for my husband and my family. We must now pursue every effort, turn every rock, and not stop until Saeed is safely on American soil."

    Her comments were provided by the Washington-based American Center for Law and Justice, which focuses on constitutional and human rights law around the world. The center is representing the pastor's family in the United States.

    Holladay said the State Department is in close contact with Abedini's family and actively engaged in the case. Abedini and his wife have two children.

    "We condemn Iran's continued violation of the universal right of freedom of religion," Holladay said.

    The Associated Press

    204 comments

    As the march toward the war with Iran continues. I am willing to bet that the next right wing Hawk that gets into office (and it will happen) will start a war. It's the same thing as Iraq. The Democrats will sanction to weaken the country and say "look, we are trying to make peace".

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  • 5
    Jan
    2013
    8:24am, EST

    US soldier's remains come home 62 years after Korean War death

    By Reuters

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- A U.S. soldier who left his family farm in Tennessee to volunteer for the Korean War is finally coming home more than six decades later to be buried next to his mother and father, authorities said on Friday.

    With the help of DNA samples provided by his siblings in 2004, the U.S. military identified remains recovered in North Korea as Private First Class Glenn Schoenmann, who was 20 when he died in December 1950.

    Schoenmann was among the nearly 8,000 U.S. troops unaccounted for from the Korean War, which lasted from 1950 until 1953. His remains are due to be brought back to Tennessee's Grundy County on Jan. 10 and he will be buried after a memorial service two days later.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Schoenmann died just weeks after he was taken prisoner during the Battle of the Chosin Reservoir, according to the Tennessee Department of Veterans Affairs.

    His four surviving siblings never had the opportunity for closure until they were notified by military officials in December that his remains had been identified. It was an occasion for tears, said his brother Raymond Schoenmann, 80, who still lives in rural Grundy County, about 100 miles southeast of Nashville.

    "It was just like it actually just happened," said Schoenmann. His brother Ernest, an Illinois resident who was one of the siblings who provided the DNA samples, told him the news.

    "My brother said he turned away and had to cry when he found out," Raymond Schoenmann said. "I broke into tears when he told me."

    Schoenmann said the family never gave up hope that Glenn's remains would be found, especially after the U.S. government took the DNA samples eight years ago as part of an effort to identify remains buried at POW camps in North Korea during the war.

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un offers olive branch to South in rare address

    U.S. officials believe major concentrations of remains are located at POW camp burial sites and the Chosin Reservoir area in North Korea.

    Joint recovery efforts to recover soldiers' remains halted in 2005 after the United States cited the uncertain environment created by North Korea's nuclear program.

    'He died for his country'
    Raymond was two years younger than his brother, "but we grew up like twins. We even went to school together. He started a year before me, but he didn't like it. He told my mom and dad 'I ain't going back until Ray starts.' We went all the way through the ninth grade of high school together, then he volunteered and went into the military."

    Raymond Schoenmann recalled when the ominous wartime telegram was delivered to the family's farmhouse.

    "I was still at home and I was over at the barn and I seen the car and knew something was up. I went up to the house and Mom told me she got the telegram that he was missing in action," Schoenmann said. "And she was tore up so bad that I just turned and went back to the barn by myself to cry."

    He volunteered for the Navy the next year.

    "It was pretty hard to leave Mom and Dad after losing a son, but I wanted to get my time over," Raymond Schoenmann said. "I didn't want no part of the Army because it was so quick (between the time) he was in boot camp and he died in Korea."

    North Korea hands over remains of British pilot shot down in Korean War

    Raymond Schoenmann said he used his Navy liberty time to wander around Korea looking for his big brother. "I thought he might run up on me if he was still alive."

    The family had talked in recent years about holding a memorial service and installing a marker over an empty grave near the graves of his parents and grandparents at Brown's Chapel Cemetery near the city of Palmer where he was born.

    Instead, Glenn Schoenmann will be buried there on Jan. 12, his remains placed in a uniform inside the casket.

    "We always were a close family," Raymond Schoenmann said, adding that he feels much better that his brother's remains will be returning to Tennessee.

    Schoenmann said he always thought of his brother as "a war hero, big time. And more so lately."

    "He died for his country," Schoenmann said.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    144 comments

    "He died for his country," Schoenmann said." Yes he did Mr.Schoenmann. Godspeed to you and yours.

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  • 4
    Jan
    2013
    3:58am, EST

    Alleged al-Qaida operative extradited to US over subway bomb plot

    Metropolitan Police

    Abid Naseer, 26, was extradited from Britain to the United States on Thursday.

    By Reuters

    LONDON -- A Pakistani man accused by U.K. authorities of being an al-Qaida operative who took part in a plot to bomb U.S. and British targets was extradited to the United States on Thursday to face terrorism charges.

    Abid Naseer, 26, was one of a dozen men arrested in April 2009 on suspicion of preparing to cause mass casualties by bombing Manchester city center in northern England.

    He and the other suspects were never charged, but Britain said in addition to the alleged Manchester plot, Naseer was part of a wider al-Qaida cell bent on staging attacks in the United States and Norway.

    On Thursday, he was taken by counter-terrorism police from a high security prison in east London to Luton airport, north of the British capital, and handed over to U.S. officials.

    He is wanted for trial in the United States for his alleged role in planned suicide bomb attacks on New York City subways in 2009, for which a number of men have already been convicted.

    He faces three charges: providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization; conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization; and conspiracy to use a destructive device.

    Full international coverage from NBC News

    Naseer and 11 others, mostly students from Pakistan, were arrested in daylight raids in 2009 after Britain's most senior counter-terrorism officer was photographed openly carrying details about the operation.

    'Very big terrorist plot'
    Britain's then-prime minister, Gordon Brown, said officers were dealing with a "very big terrorist plot," but no explosives were found and all the men were later released as there was not enough evidence to charge them.

    Britain's case against them had been based around emails exchanged between Naseer and a Pakistan account believed to be registered to an al-Qaida operative.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    British authorities said the emails, which appeared to be discussions about girlfriends and wedding plans, in fact related to ingredients for explosives and they said Naseer posed a serious threat to national security.

    The men were ordered to be deported to Pakistan but Naseer won an appeal against the decision because of fears he would be mistreated if he was returned.

    He was arrested again in July 2010 when the U.S. warrant was issued, and last month European Court of Human Rights rejected his appeal against the extradition.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • ANALYSIS: Is peace really in the air in Afghanistan?
    • Drug-resistant malaria threatens deadly global 'nightmare'
    • From alcohol to kites: An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'
    • UK police: Attackers dressed as Oompa Loompas beat man
    • Vatican launches swipe-card security system
    • US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO for post-quake radiation exposure

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    36 comments

    The men were ordered to be deported to Pakistan but Naseer won an appeal against the decision because of fears he would be mistreated if he was returned.

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  • 1
    Dec
    2012
    6:09pm, EST

    Cuba pushes swap: its spies jailed in US for American contractor held in Havana

    In what could be the setting for a gripping thriller, Cuba and the U.S. are reportedly locked in a standoff this weekend, with the fate of an American contractor hanging in the balance. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    By Michael Isikoff, NBC News

    HAVANA, Cuba — It seems straight out of a Cold War spy movie. A group of Cuban undercover agents sneak into the U.S. and set up a secret pro-Castro network in south Florida — receiving instructions in code through late night radio transmissions from handlers in Havana. But the FBI gets wind, tails the agents, intercepts their messages and busts them, sending the agents off to federal prison, their ringleader for life.

    Today, the story of those spies — called La Red Avispa, or the Wasp Network — rolled up by the feds 14 years ago is barely known in the United States. But its members, now  known as the Cuban Five, are national heroes in Cuba — the subjects of mass demonstrations, their pictures on billboards and  posters – and their petitions for freedom are championed around the world by Nobel Prize winners, celebrities like Danny Glover, even former President Jimmy Carter.

    And they may now prove key to the tense impasse between Havana and Washington over the fate of jailed American contractor Alan Gross, arrested three years ago Monday for distributing sophisticated satellite equipment to Cuba’s tiny Jewish community and later sentenced to 15 years in prison for "acts against the independence and/or territorial integrity of the state." (Gross says he was only bringing Internet access to Cuba.)


    While the U.S. is demanding that Cuba release Gross, who visitors say is angry and frail, having lost 110 pounds in prison, Cuban officials say they are willing to do so only if President Barack Obama will  release the Cuban agents.

    "I understand what Mr. Gross is going through," Gerardo Hernandez, 47, the Cuban Five ringleader, said in an exclusive interview with NBC News in October at his current home --a federal prison outside Victorville, Calif. "I understand his sufferings and that of his family. … If an agreement can be reached, to stop the sufferings of six families, then I welcome it."

    The idea of a swap — the release of Gross for Hernandez and his confederates among the Cuban Five — faces legal and political hurdles.

    NBC News

    A billboard in Cuba shows the Cuban Five -- Gerardo Hernández, Antonio Guerrero, Ramón Labañino, Fernando González, and René González.

    An Obama administration official told NBC News that the "imprisonment of Alan Gross, an international development worker, is not comparable in any way to that of the five Cuban agents," noting that the Cubans were afforded their "due process rights" and convicted of serious crimes.

    Cuban Five ringleader Gerardo Hernandez

    Members of Congress have denounced Cuba for holding Gross "hostage" to the release of the Cuban Five. "The Castro regime has no regard for human rights or international law," said Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey, a senior member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and frequent critic of the Castro regime. "The Cuba Five should serve their sentences for spying."

    And Hernandez, who sports a trim goatee and displays a hearty laugh despite 14 years in prison,  might not make the ideal candidate for a pardon or commutation from Obama — a precondition for a swap to take place. Asked if he regretted any of his actions, he smiled and said,  "I regret that I got caught." In a follow up phone interview, Hernandez readily acknowledged that "we violated some U.S. laws" — mainly failing to register as foreign agents with the U.S. Justice Department. "We came here with fake passports. Fake identities."  But, he added, "We act out of necessity."

    As Hernandez and Cuban officials tell it, the Cuban Five was not sent to spy on the U.S. government. In fact, the members weren’t accused of stealing any U.S. secrets (although they were convicted of conducting surveillance of U.S. military bases.) Instead, the mission of the Wasp Network, they say, was to infiltrate  anti-Castro exile groups in South Florida who Havana suspected of plotting terrorist attacks inside Cuba. Among those attacks: the notorious bombing of Cubana Flight 455 over the Caribbean in 1976, killing 73 passengers (including teenage members of a Cuban  national fencing team)  as  well as a string of hotel bombings in Havana in  1997 that killed an Italian businessman and were believed to have been aimed at disrupting Cuba’s nascent tourist industry.   

    "Cuba doesn’t have drones to neutralize the terrorists abroad," said Hernandez. "They need to send people to gather information and protect the Cuban people from these terrorist actions. … I think it’s the same feeling that Americans have that defend their country and love their country when they go to infiltrate al-Qaida and send information here to avoid the terrorist acts. And the U.S. has to understand that Cuba has been involved in the war against terrorism for 50 years.”

    Alan Gross in an undated family photo, left, and in 2012, after losing 110 pounds while imprisoned in Cuba.

    While admitting his role in spying on anti-Castro exiles — "I would do it again," he said — Hernandez adamantly denies the most serious charge against him: conspiracy to commit murder. His conviction on that count, which has earned him a life sentence, was based on his alleged complicity in the February 1996 shoot-down by a Cuban fighter jet of two Cessna planes flown by members of the Cuban exile group Brothers to the Rescue, killing four men.

    The anti-Castro group had provoked Cuba by dropping anti-government leaflets over Havana. At the trial of the Cuban Five, prosecutors introduced messages between Hernandez and his controllers in Havana suggesting he had prior knowledge of the shoot-down. But Hernandez insists that prosecutors misinterpreted the messages and he knew nothing that wasn’t already public.

    "No, sir, absolutely not," Hernandez replied when asked if he knew in advance about the incident. "All I knew was what everybody knew: that Brothers to the Rescue through the years has violated many times Cuban air space, that there have been 16 diplomatic notes from Cuba complaining over that situation."

    /

    Ricardo Alarcon, president of the Cuban National Assembly

    Ricardo Alarcon, president of Cuba’s National Assembly (the Parliament) and a longtime Castro confidante, said this week in Havana that "the Cuban government publicly, front page in our papers, months before that incident had warned that we are not going to allow any more intrusions into our air space. … The order, the decision (to shoot down the planes) came from the highest level. Fidel Castro himself had said that publicly, that he was responsible for that decision."

    U.S. Appeals Court Judge Phyllis Kravitch of Atlanta concluded in 2008 that prosecutors never proved their case tying Hernandez to a plot to shoot down the planes, but she was outvoted two to one and his conviction on the murder conspiracy charge was upheld. Now Hernandez and his lawyers are appealing on another ground: that hundreds of thousands of dollars in secret  U.S. government payments to anti-Castro journalists in Miami — newly discovered through Freedom of Information Act requests — inflamed the Miami community against the Cuban Five and made it impossible for them for them to get a fair trial. The payments were mostly made for appearances on Radio Marti, a TV and radio operation funded by the Broadcasting Board of Governors, an independent agency that oversees international broadcasting sponsored by the U.S. government.

    Slideshow: Castro through the years

    In court papers, lawyers for the Cuban Five have cited articles by some of the journalists, including one that denounced the "genocidal character" of Castro’s regime and another that speculated that the real purpose of the Wasp Network was to introduce "chemical or bacteriological weapons" into south Florida. “"his information was spread throughout the Miami area and helped inflame the community against these guys," said Martin Garbus, Hernandez’ lawyer. "It was total madness. … When the case was brought, the anti-Castro feeling in the Miami area was at a fevered pitch."

    Slideshow: US and Cuba: A long tense relationship

    Keystone / Getty Images

    Ever since U.S.-backed Cuban President Fulgencio Batista was forced from power by rebels led by Fidel Castro in 1958, the relationship between the two nations has been fraught with difficulties.

    Launch slideshow

    U.S. prosecutors dismiss as “implausible” and "unfounded" the idea that the Radio Marti payments were part of a U.S. government effort to influence the jury in the Cuban Five case.

     "The jury (in the case) was carefully selected, following a searching voir dire (jury selection process) that the appellate court deemed a high model for a high-profile case, and that the trial comported with the highest standards for fairness and professionalism,” wrote Caroline Heck Miller, an assistant U.S. attorney in Miami, in a court filing in July asking a judge to reject Hernandez’ motion for a hearing into the payments to the journalists. She also noted, as federal prosecutors have repeatedly done when the issue has come up, that “no Cuban-Americans – the audience (Hernandez) hypothesizes as the target of the government campaign he imagines — served on the jury."

    Unless Hernandez can somehow persuade a court to reopen his case  – or barring a prisoner swap with Gross — he would seem to have few options.

    American imprisoned in Cuba may have cancer, doctor says

    Rene Gonzalez, another member of the Cuban Five who was not convicted of the conspiracy-to-commit-murder charge, was released from federal prison on probation late last year, but has not yet been allowed to return home to Cuba to live.

    /

    Adriana Perez, wife of imprisoned Cuban agent, Gerardo Hernandez

    The Cubans are doing their best to ratchet up the pressure. Just as Judy Gross has launched a public relations campaign in the United States to free her husband, appearing at a National Press Club press conference on Friday, this week the Cubans made Hernandez wife, Adriana, available for an interview with NBC News. A chemist in the food industry in Havana, she wept as she described the pain of separation from her husband — and how it has left her unable to bear children. "Every detail, every single moment reminds me of him," she said. "I believe there are many people in the U.S. and the American people as a whole, who could convey to President Obama that there is a woman here suffering."

    Hernandez, too, says missing his wife is the hardest part of his life in prison. And he has few illusions about his prospects of being freed. "The only thing I know for sure with me is that I have two life sentences and live with that every day," he said. "And to keep your sanity and your mind, you have to be realistic. But I would be dishonest to say that I don’t have hope."

    Michael Isikoff is NBC News' national investigative correspondent; NBC News Producer Mary Murray also contributed to this report.

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    380 comments

    I lived in South Florida for 25 years and am familiar with the terrorist activities of the "bad" Cubans. I believe the rationals offered by the imprisoned investigators from Cuba. It's high time US citizens stop letting the bad Cubans bully our country. Let's release these men.

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  • 20
    Nov
    2012
    4:44am, EST

    Four Calif. men arrested for plotting attacks against US in Afghanistan

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Four men, including a former member of the U.S. Air Force, have been arrested in southern California and charged with plotting to kill Americans overseas by joining up with al-Qaida to engage in "violent jihad" or Islamic holy war, the FBI said late Monday.

    Other charges the men face include plotting to bomb government facilities and conspiracy to kill Americans.

    The authorities said Sohiel Omar Kabir, 34, traveled to Afghanistan where he planned to introduce the other suspects to his al-Qaida contacts. Kabir is a naturalized U.S. citizen who was born in Afghanistan and served in the U.S. Air Force from 2000 to 2001, according to the Associated Press.

    Also arrested were Ralph Deleon, 23, of Ontario, Calif.; Miguel Alejandro Santana Vidriales, 21, of Upland; and Arifeen David Gojali, 21, of Riverside.

    If convicted, the men face up to 15 years in prison.

    The FBI said in its complaint that Kabir introduced Deleon and Santana to radical Islamic teachings in 2010, including those of al-Qaida leader Anwar al-Awlaki, who was killed by a U.S. drone in Yemen in September 2011. The U.S. has said that that al-Awlaki was the inspiration behind a series of attacks and plots against Americans.

    NBC's Richard Engel reports on a U.S. drone strike which killed American-born radical cleric Anwar Al-Awlaki in Yemen.

    In one conversation with an FBI confidential source, Santana and Deleon discussed their preferred roles when it came to carrying out attacks. Santana stated that he had experience with firearms and that he wanted to become a sniper, while Deleon said he wanted to be on the front line but that his second choice was handling explosives.

    Both men also indicated they were willing to kill people they perceived to be enemies.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Training at paintball courses
    Deleon is a lawful permanent resident alien who was born in the Philippines, and Santana is a lawful permanent resident who was born in Mexico and has applied to become a U.S. citizen, according to the FBI.

    In July 2012, Kabir traveled to Afghanistan, where he continued to communicate with Santana and DeLeon and arrange for their travel to join him there, according to the complaint.  Kabir said that he would wait for their arrival before heading to a training location and that they would meet members of the Taliban and al-Qaida when they arrived.

    In September 2012, Deleon and Santana recruited Gojali, a U.S. citizen. The three men discussed how to raise funds for a trip to Afghanistan, and how to train and carry out attacks. To prepare for terrorist training overseas, the men started training in southern California at firearms and paintball facilities.

    With a power vacuum caused by the current uprising in Yemen -- and the severe wounds suffered by the Yemeni president that have forced him to hospital in neighboring Saudi Arabia -- the U.S. is accelerating its covert operations to eliminate al-Qaida linked operatives in the troubled nation. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    Santana, Deleon and Gojali were arrested on Friday and then handed over to federal authorities  following their hearing in a U.S. district court in Riverside, Calif., on Monday afternoon. Gojali's hearing will be continued on Nov. 26. Kabir is in custody in Afghanistan, the FBI said.

    Since the Sept. 11 2001 attacks, the U.S. government has stepped up surveillance efforts to catch both domestic and foreign militants, but has repeatedly warned that such groups continue to pose a threat.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Too much democracy? Apathy triumphs in UK's latest election
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    103 comments

    15 years? With fellow citizens like them who needs enemies? Hang them.

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  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    8:59am, EDT

    Two US border agents shot, one fatally, in Ariz.

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection / AP file

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent Nicolas Ivie, 30, who was shot to death early Tuesday near the U.S.-Mexico line in Arizona.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection has identified an agent who was shot to death near Naco, Arizona early Tuesday as 30-year-old Nicolas Ivie, a native of Provo, Utah who has been with the federal agency since 2008, KVOA.com in Tuscon reported.

    A news release from Customs and Border Protection said that Ivie and two other agents were responding to a motion sensor that was activated along the border. Another agent, whose name was not released, sustained non-life-threatening injuries and was in stable condition after being airlifted to a local hospital.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The agents who were shot were on patrol with a third agent who was not harmed, George McCubbin, president of the National Border Patrol Council, a union representing about 17,000 border patrol agents, told The Associated Press.


    In a statement issued Tuesday CBP Deputy Commissioner David Aquilar said the agency suffered the loss of Ivie "at the hands of criminals operating on the border near Naco, Arizona."

    "Agent Ivie died in the line of duty, protecting our nation against those who threaten our way of life," he said. "His death only strengthens our resolve to enforce the rule of law and bring those responsible to justice. Our thoughts and prayers are with Agent Ivie’s family and friends in this difficult time.”

    The FBI, which is investigating the shooting with the Cochise County Sheriff's Office, said in a press briefing Tuesday afternoon that they had deployed a special group of agents from Phoenix to process the crime scene.

    See coverage at KVAO.com

    Authorities did not say whether investigators had recovered guns or bullet casings at the site.

    No arrests have been made, but authorities suspect that more than one person fired at the agents.

    "It's been a long day for us but it's been longer for no one more than a wife whose husband is not coming home. It's been longer for two children whose father is not coming home, and that is what is going to strengthen our resolve" to find those responsible and enforce the law, said Jeffrey Self, commander of Customs and Border Protection's Arizona joint field command.

    The shooting occurred at a patrol base about 100 miles southeast of Tucson named after Brian Terry — a border agent who was killed in December 2010 in an incident at the center of a controversy over a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives (ATF) gun tracking operation known as "Fast and Furious."

    Brian A. Terry Border Patrol Station dedicated for slain agent

     

    A US border patrol agent was killed and another was hurt after they were shot while patrolling at a major drug corridor near the Arizona border with Mexico.

    The operation allowed people suspected of illegally buying guns for others to walk away from gun shops with weapons, rather than be arrested.

    Authorities intended to track the guns into Mexico. Two rifles found at the scene of Terry's shooting were bought by a member of the gun-smuggling ring being investigated.

    Critics of the operation say any shooting along the border now will raise the specter those illegal weapons are still being used in border violence.

    Twenty-six U.S. Border Patrol agents have died in the line of duty since 2002, the AP reported.

    Feds reveal more charges in murder tied to 'Fast and Furious'

    NBC News' Kari Huus and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    1684 comments

    Wow where's the info??? Did they get shot cleaning their firearms, or was it a shootout with Mexican drug smugglers, or just illegal immigrants.

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    Explore related topics: us, arizona, immigration, drugs, border, homeland-security, guns, patrol, featured, crime-courts
  • 20
    Sep
    2012
    7:13am, EDT

    $10M burglary: Thieves steal paintings, wine and a Porsche from Santa Monica home

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By NbcLosAngeles.com

    A $100,000 reward is being offered after a haul of art, vehicles and jewelry worth an estimated $10 million was stolen in a burglary in Santa Monica, Calif.

    Several "high-end paintings," a red 2010 Porsche Carrera 4S, several expensive watches, wine and a "small amount" of cash were taken in the heist, police said.

    The victim returned home from a trip on Sept. 14 to find that their home had been raided, according to Santa Monica police.


    Read the full story at NBCLosAngeles.com

    "We're looking for the public's help," said Sgt. Richard Lewis of the Santa Monica Police Department. "If they know anything about the crime, anybody trying to fence art, investigators are working any leads they can get while they work the leads they currently have."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Investigators say the alleged crime occurred in the 500 block of 12th Street sometime between 3 p.m. on Sept. 12 and 8 p.m. on Sept. 14.

    Photographs of the stolen artwork along with the victim’s vehicle and descriptions of the watches are available on the Santa Monica Police Department's website.

    The victim is offering the $100,000 reward. 

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    290 comments

    WOW. People keep that kind of stuff in their homes? Just boggles my mind. People have that much laying around inside of their home? And the burglers stopped to take the time to steal wine? How about if information leads to an arrest that person gets their home paid off, a free cruise, meal at their  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us, art, police, heist, theft, burglary, crime, weird, santa-monica, featured
  • 19
    Sep
    2012
    6:36am, EDT

    State Department: No secret plan to invade Canada

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    The U.S. and Mexico are not secretly planning to invade Canada, a State Department spokeswoman confirmed to laughter during a daily press briefing.

    Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland was taking questions from journalists about its activities Tuesday, which included a meeting between Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Mexico Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa.


    Follow Ian Johnston on Twitter

    She was asked about “a signing ceremony” with Espinosa – what was being signed and why was the ceremony not open to the press.

    “I think it’s an update on Merida, but I will get that for you,” Nuland reported, referring to the Merida Initiative to fight organized crime.

    The journalist asked, “This isn’t some secret thing … to invade Canada or something like that?”

    Amid laughter, Nuland replied: “No, no, no. It’s not anything classified.”

    The U.S. did draw up a secret plan to invade Canada in 1935, codenamed “War Plan Red,” some of which was accidentally published by mistake and reported by The New York Times.  

    A U.S. invasion of Canada also featured in the film, "Canadian Bacon," starring John Candy, Alan Alda and Rhea Perlman, and the movie South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, which included the song "Blame Canada."

    There is also a website called www.invadecanada.us, which lists reasons such as connecting the mainland U.S. with Alaska, “they’re just a little too proud,” and “they stole our basketball teams.” 

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    376 comments

    The State Department is not aware of the CIA's plans for Canada.

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    Explore related topics: us, canada, mexico, world, border, invasion, featured, invade
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