Political Current Events March 7-12

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“… On Thursday, two South Korean KF-16 fighter jets mistakenly released four MK-82 bombs each on a civilian area in Pocheon, a city near the tense border with North Korea. The bombing, which injured nearly 30 people, two of them seriously, occurred when South Korean and U.S. forces were engaging in a live-fire drill in connection with their broader Freedom Shield command post exercise set to begin Monday.

This year’s Freedom Shield exercise is the allies’ first major joint training since President Donald Trump returned to office in January and comes amid concerns about North Korea’s booming military cooperation with Russia.

… Lee Illwoo, an expert with the Korea Defense Network in South Korea, said the suspension of flight training would particularly cause “really a big problem in examining the two countries’ operational plans.” He said flying warplanes would be essential to determining their actual capabilities, discussing the size of reinforcements of U.S. aircraft from abroad and modifying the allies’ operational plans.

… Initial investigations found the pilot of one of the KF-16s entered wrong coordinates for a bombing site. Officials said the pilots of two KF-16s had more than 200-400 hours of flying time. Lee said they likely piloted KF-16s only two to three years. …”
 
Pentagon Deputy Press secretary is a virile anti-semite.





 

Inside Trump and DOGE’s chaotic effort to release billions of gallons of California’s water​


“Representatives from the Department of Government Efficiency repeatedly pressured the head of a United States water management agency to open a major California pump system in late January, intending to release a huge amount of water south toward Los Angeles — even though the water would have never made it to the fire-scarred metropolis.

When the acting head of the Bureau of Reclamation did not relent, the DOGE agents flew to California with the goal of turning the pumps on themselves, in what people familiar with the incident characterized as a stunt for a “photo op.”

… A power outage — and the fact that at least one of the DOGE representatives was not yet an employee of the federal government and therefore was not allowed near the pump controls — ultimately threw a wrench in the plan to engage the pumps in late January.

But a few days later, in a show of authority that superseded California’s own water policy, Trump ordered the US Army Corps to open two dams in central California, which ultimately flooded farmland in the San Joaquin Valley with 2.2 billion gallons of fresh water.

State water experts previously told CNN it was a regrettable waste as farmers look anxiously toward the state’s dry season.

… DOGE agents, including Tyler Hassen, a former oil company CEO, told senior Reclamation officials they had an order from the president to turn on water pumps at the Jones Pumping Plant, three people with knowledge of the requests told CNN. The plant transfers water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta into a canal system, delivering water to farmers and other water users in the Central Valley.

… After the fruitless back-and-forth, Reclamation officials were informed representatives of DOGE wanted to “turn on the pumps” themselves, a person familiar with the matter said.

But the men’s request to have a photo taken of them turning on the Jones pumps didn’t happen; Shang wasn’t an official government employee, he wasn’t allowed inside the pump facility’s control room, which is under strict cybersecurity protocols. Hassen had to travel back before the electricity was scheduled to be restored.

Instead, Hassen and Shang posed in front of a 3-dimensional map of the Central Valley in a public space inside the plant and posted their photos to DOGE’s X account, congratulating Reclamation for getting its pumps back up and running — part of the facility’s standard operating procedure.

… “They didn’t get their photo op,” a person with knowledge of the matter told CNN.

The entire episode felt like “what DOGE has been this entire time — this slapstick operation of 20-somethings they’re seeing as whiz kids but have zero knowledge.” …”
 
The entire episode felt like “what DOGE has been this entire time — this slapstick operation of 20-somethings they’re seeing as whiz kids but have zero knowledge.” …”



“Two of Elon Musk’s DOGE minions caught on video in a tense standoff with a small U.S. government aid agency have been identified as a lawyer set to clerk for conservative Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch and a 22-year-old software engineer with links to Musk nemesis Sam Altman, according to a report.

Jacob Altik and Ethan Shaotran were among the members of Musk’s cost-cutting task force DOGEwho tried to enter the U.S. African Development Foundation on Wednesday to dismantle the agency after President Donald Trump deemed it “unnecessary,” The New York Times reported.

But only Congress has the power to shutter the USADF and lay off its staff, its leaders concluded, so employees blocked the doors and refused to let DOGE in.

After they were denied entry on Wednesday, Altik and Shaotran returned to the USADF on Thursday with U.S. Marshals, who escorted them inside and ordered security officials to change the locks, the Times reported. Engineer Nate Cavanaugh, 28, also joined them. …”


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“… Thursday’s takeover of the small foundation, which has about 55 employees and an annual budget of about $45 million, came after a weekslong standoff between administration officials and the foundation’s leaders. The leaders refused to succumb to the efforts of Mr. Marocco and the Department of Government of Efficiency team, overseen by Elon Musk, to assume control of their functions, dismiss staff members and install Mr. Marocco as the acting leader.
 

Inside U.S. spy agencies, workers fear a cataclysmic Trump cull​

Firings and mass disruptions could harm intelligence collection on foreign threats and future recruiting, current and former officials say.


“… The Pentagon this week is expected to begin firing up to 5,400 probationary employees, as it culls its ranks. The CIA also has started to dismiss some probationary workers, a spokeswoman said. About 80 people have been let go, said one former officer, who like other current and former officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they feared reprisals for speaking out or because they work in sensitive jobs.

“Work is next to impossible right now,” said the analyst, who is still waiting to learn his fate. “Morale is through the floor.”

…Across the vast network of U.S. spy agencies, from the CIA’s human operatives to the National Security Agency’s codebreakers, job cuts and the frequently conflicting instructions to the workforce have deeply unsettled tens of thousands of intelligence personnel who are usually known for their stoicism, disdain for partisan politics and focus on the critical missions at hand. Some former officials say they haven’t seen such turmoil in decades, if ever.

Because their work is shrouded in secrecy, the impact of the Trump administration’s efforts to reshape the U.S. intelligence community has been less obvious than they have elsewhere across the federal government.

And, at least so far, the effects have been less drastic than at other agencies and departments, which have seen large-scale firings or, in the case of the U.S. Agency for International Development, virtual dismantlement.

But the potential cuts, particularly of young officers, and their impact on recruiting could make it harder for the United States to collect intelligence on threats like China, Russia, Iran and terrorist groups in the future, current and former officials said.

“We’re shooting ourselves in the head, not the foot,” said a former senior intelligence official who mentors young and aspiring intelligence officers. “We’re mortgaging our future.”

… The elimination of DEI programs is particularly painful to some intelligence officials, who see pragmatic virtue in a more diverse workforce. For years, spy chiefs have spoken of a lack of analysts with the necessary language skills and cultural backgrounds to understand foreign societies — and undercover operatives with the physical features to work clandestinely in Africa, Asia or the Middle East.

… The former official said he’s heard from at least a dozen young people who have had their offers of employment rescinded amid the drive to downsize. He knows others who were still in their probationary terms and were let go — among them nuclear engineers and analysts fluent in Chinese.

One young analyst moved to Washington for the job, “got an apartment, bought a car, got insurance, and in one moment, they no longer have an income,” he said. …”
 


Including images of the Enola Gay … because “gay” I guess?

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I mean, it’s a literal whitewashing, with the only reasonable explanation of misogynistic white supremacy.
 


Including images of the Enola Gay … because “gay” I guess?

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“…One official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to provide details that have not been made public, said the purge could delete as many as 100,000 images or posts in total, when considering social media pages and other websites that are also being culled for DEI content. The official said it’s not clear if the database has been finalized.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had given the military until Wednesday to remove content that highlights diversity efforts in its ranks following President Donald Trump’s executive order ending those programs across the federal government.

… In some cases, photos seemed to be flagged for removal simply because their file included the word ”gay,” including service members with that last name and an image of the B-29 aircraft Enola Gay, which dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, during World War II.

Several photos of an Army Corps of Engineers dredging project in California were marked for deletion, apparently because a local engineer in the photo had the last name Gay. And a photo of Army Corps biologists was on the list, seemingly because it mentioned they were recording data about fish — including their weight, size, hatchery and gender.

In addition, some photos of the Tuskegee Airmen, the nation’s first Black military pilots who served in a segregated WWII unit, were listed on the database, but those may likely be protected due to historical content.

… Many of the images listed in the database already have been removed. Others were still visible Thursday, and it’s not clear if they will be taken down at some point or be allowed to stay, including images with historical significance such as those of the Tuskegee Airmen. …”

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