
Ukraine's Kyivstar CEO Says Russian Hackers Target Network Often
'We see regular attempts, different types of attacks, aimed at destroying infrastructure,' Kyivstar PJSC 's Oleksandr Komarov said Friday in an interview at the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Rome. The attempted hacks are targeting operations and don't pose much threat to clients' personal data, he said.
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Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
Fox News Politics Newsletter: A Big, Beautiful Clawback
Welcome to the Fox News Politics newsletter, with the latest updates on the Trump administration, Capitol Hill and more Fox News politics content. Here's what's happening… - Trump admin readies for fight after judges block Abrego Garcia removal for now - Thailand, Cambodia troops open fire on each other, killing at least 12 - Senate Republicans call on DOJ to appoint special counsel to probe Obama-Russia intel President Donald Trump signed into law his roughly $9 billion rescissions package to scale back already approved federal funds for foreign aid and public broadcasting Thursday, after both chambers of Congress approved the legislation earlier in the month, sources familiar to the matter have confirmed. The signing marks another legislative victory for the Trump administration just two weeks after the president signed into law his massive tax and domestic policy measure, dubbed the "big, beautiful bill." The rescissions package pulls back nearly $8 billion in funding Congress already approved for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), a previously independent agency that provided impoverished countries aid and offered development assistance… READ MORE 'LAWLESS AND INSANE': Trump admin readies for fight after judges block Abrego Garcia removal for now CLASH OVER AUTHORITY: Trump foe Boasberg to grill DOJ over migrant flights in heated hearing REVERSING COURSE: Trump says he wants Elon Musk to 'thrive' after suggesting DOGE could investigate him POWER STRUGGLE: Trump stands by Alina Habba as DOJ clashes with judges over her replacement LEGAL SCRUTINY: DOJ forms Russiagate 'strike force' to investigate declassified Obama-era evidence LEGAL SETBACK: Federal appeals court rules against Trump's birthright citizenship executive order 'I AM RECOVERING': Pam Bondi cancels appearance at anti-trafficking summit over medical issue ACCOUNTABILITY TEST: Zelenskyy forced to rethink anti-corruption law after public backlash MAN MACHINE MERGER: China experimenting with brain-computer interfaces in global race for AI dominance: report BORDER BATTLE ERUPTS: Thailand, Cambodia troops open fire on each other, killing at least 12 BEACH BLAST: Battle over the Black Sea: Russia, Ukraine strike top resort cities EYES IN THE SKIES: Rules keeping drones on leash could loosen with deregulation proposal from Congress COLLUSION CHAOS: Trump-foe Adam Schiff dismisses Tulsi Gabbard's declassified Russia collusion intelligence as 'dishonest' BEG YOUR PARDON: WATCH: House Republicans zero in on Biden autopen pardons after bombshell report EPSTEIN SECRETS: Jeffrey Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell to see how feds meeting plays out amid subpoena: brother CREATING OPPORTUNITY: EXCLUSIVE: GOP proposal seeks to end 'backdoor hiring practices' at American universities INTEL DECEPTION: Senate Republicans call on DOJ to appoint special counsel to probe Obama-Russia intel BRIDGING THE DIVIDE: 'Shirts and Skins': How one Republican bridged the gap to pass Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' NOT WELCOME: House Republican introduces companion bill to end China's buying of American farmland 'GOOD LUCK': House to vote on censuring Dem rep charged in ICE facility incident KLAIN TO FAME: Ex-Biden chief of staff Ron Klain faces grilling in House GOP's cover-up probe ANTI-ANTISEMITISM: Pro-Israel Dem says those who won't decry Hamas over Oct. 7 attack 'have no business' posing as humanitarians FINDING THE FORCE: 'Star Wars bar of leftists': Weingarten, Hunter, Mamdani prove Democrat Party lead by extreme figures 'SEVER' CONNECTIONS: West Point Bible crest controversy spurs lawsuit from conservative watchdog THE CHOSEN ONE: RNC Chair Michael Whatley to seek open Republican-held Senate seat in battleground North Carolina: sources HATE SPEECH SILENCE: Dem governor criticizes Mamdani for not condemning 'blatantly antisemitic' rhetoric WAKE UP CALL: Mamdani's former Dem colleague rails against his signature campaign promise: 'Nail in the coffin' Get the latest updates on the Trump administration and Congress, exclusive interviews and more on


American Military News
2 hours ago
- American Military News
Videos: Trump accuses Obama of ‘treason,' Obama responds
President Donald Trump accused former President Barack Obama on Tuesday of committing 'treason' after Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard released documents providing 'new evidence' that the Obama administration engaged in a 'treasonous conspiracy' to undermine Trump's first term in office by falsely claiming Trump colluded with Russia to win the 2016 election. Asked by a reporter in the Oval Office on Tuesday who should be investigated regarding the allegations against the Obama administration, Trump said, 'Well, based on what I read, and I read pretty much what you read, it would be President Obama. He started it, and Biden was there with him, and Comey was there, and Clapper, the whole group was there.' 'If you look at those papers, they have him, stone cold, and it was President Obama. It wasn't lots of people all over the place,' Trump added. 'It was them too, but the leader of the gang was President Obama, Barack Hussein Obama. Have you heard of him?' Trump told the reporter that Obama is 'guilty' and that the alleged actions of the officials under his administration amounted to 'treason.' 'This was treason. This was every word you can think of,' Trump continued. 'They tried to steal the election. They tried to obfuscate the election. They did things that nobody's ever even imagined, even in other countries.' Trump: 'The leader of the gang was President Obama … This was treason.' — The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 22, 2025 Trump was also asked by a reporter regarding the Justice Department's plan to interview Jeffrey Epstein's former associate, Ghislaine Maxwell. After Trump described the interest in Epstein as a 'continuation' of a 'witch hunt,' the president said, 'The witch hunt that you should be talking about is they caught President Obama, absolutely cold.' READ MORE: Fmr. CIA, FBI directors under criminal investigation over Trump-Russia probe: Report 'It's time to go after people. Obama's been caught directly,' Trump added. 'So people say, oh, you know, a group. It's not a group. It's Obama. His orders are on the paper. The papers are signed. The papers came right out of their office. They sent everything to be highly classified. Well, the highly classified's been released, and what they did in 2016 and in 2020 is very criminal. It's criminal at the highest level.' Trump: "It's time to start—after what they did to me—and whether it's right or wrong, it's time to go after people. Obama's been caught directly." — The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 22, 2025 In response to Trump's claims, Patrick Rodenbush, an Obama spokesperson, released a statement obtained by NBC News, saying, 'Out of respect for the office of the presidency, our office does not normally dignify the constant nonsense and misinformation flowing out of this White House with a response. But these claims are outrageous enough to merit one. These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction.' 'Nothing in the document issued last week undercuts the widely accepted conclusion that Russia worked to influence the 2016 presidential election but did not successfully manipulate any votes,' the Obama spokesperson added. 'These findings were affirmed in a 2020 report by the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee, led by then-Chairman Marco Rubio.'


New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Barack Obama's dirty trick destroyed a presidency — and our trust
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard contends that new declassified documents show former President Barack Obama engaged in the plot to create the lie that President Donald Trump had conspired with Russia to steal the 2016 presidential election. Of course he did. We have known for years that in July 2016, then-CIA Director John Brennan briefed Obama on how Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign had sought to 'vilify' Trump by accusing him of collaborating with Russian President Vladimir Putin. We already know that despite having this information in hand, Obama withheld intelligence about Russia from the Trump transition team and ordered agencies to compile an assessment of the situation. Now, typically such an assessment — which brings together intelligence at the highest levels — takes months to gather and analyze. This report, however, was cobbled together in just a few weeks so that the Obama administration could control not only the content but the messaging before the new Trump administration began. To understand how shoddy the assessment was, consider that it included the Steele dossier, an opposition-research document paid for by Democrats, as an annex — but not the views of two senior CIA officers from the Russia mission center who argued there was no evidence that Putin's ham-fisted meddling was intended to boost Trump's fortunes. Indeed, it turns out that numerous career officials expressed skepticism about the claim. It is utterly implausible that Obama did not know that potentially exculpatory evidence regarding Clinton's role in spreading the Russia-collusion hoax was omitted. It is certainly worth asking him. In any event, a responsible report even intimating that a president-elect's campaign may have been involved in a seditious plot should have been undertaken with extra-special care. Instead, it was weaponized. In her very last hour in office Susan Rice, Obama's national security adviser, wrote a transparently self-preserving email to protect the president, claiming she'd attended a meeting in which he stressed to then-FBI Director James Comey that everything in the Trump-Russia investigation should proceed 'by the book.' Why? Why mention this on her last day? Did high-ranking Obama administration officials such as Comey not always conduct their investigations 'by the book?' Of course, they didn't. It was the dirtiest political trick played on the public in US history. As intended, the Russia hysteria paralyzed the incoming presidency. It probably worked even better than those who hatched it could have imagined, as the legacy media took the bait on virtually every anonymously sourced story, no matter how far-fetched. 'Mr. President,' Adam Schiff, then a member of the House Intelligence Committee, said in 2017, 'the Russians hacked our election and interfered. No one disputes this now but you.' Anyone who disputed this characterization was smeared as a shill for a foreign power. Polls found that over 60% of Democrats claimed to believe that the Russians had altered vote tallies. Not one investigation, of course, not even special counsel Robert Mueller's inquiry run by Trump-hating partisans, found any evidence that collusion had taken place. Few events have done more to undermine our trust in our elections and in our officials. Attorney General Pam Bondi has launched a 'strike force' to investigate the declassified findings regarding Obama's role. But Gabbard has already accused the former president of 'treason,' as has Trump. One suspects that Gabbard's piecemeal release of declassified documents was intended to distract from the Jeffrey Epstein mess that was partly created by Trump's administration. This, too, is over-promising. Those imagining Obama being cuffed and marched to the jailhouse in orange overalls are fooling themselves. It would be a miracle if anyone involved was indicted, much less convicted. For one thing, the statute of limitations has expired on most of these events. And Obama, thanks to Trump v. United States, would enjoy presidential immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts — even if Bondi could prove criminality, which is doubtful. After all, this brand of corruption can't be explicitly found in any documents. Plotters don't have to have conversations. Everyone understood what was happening. And the system gives intelligence heads tremendous latitude and power. It has long been clear that everyone involved in the Russia hoax abused their position, but indicting a CIA director for, say, excluding certain information from an assessment report would be difficult — if such an action were illegal at all, which seems questionable. None of that is to contend that Obama and his underlings weren't in on the plot. Or that we shouldn't find out the truth. But it will have to be written in the historical record. That's important, too. David Harsanyi is a senior writer at the Washington Examiner. Twitter @davidharsanyi