Bill Clinton breaks with Hillary on impact of Comey letter
November 19, 2017 by admin
Filed under Lingerie Events
Comments Off
Former President Bill ClintonBill ClintonTop Oversight Dem pushes back on Uranium One probe Bill Clinton hits Trump, tax reform plan in Georgetown speech The Hill’s 12:30 Report MORE on Saturday said he disagrees with his wife on the impact of former FBI Director Jame’s Comey’s decision to reopen his investigation into Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonGOP rushes to cut ties to Moore Papadopoulos was in regular contact with Stephen Miller, helped edit Trump speech: report Bannon jokes Clinton got her ‘ass kicked’ in 2016 election MORE‘s private email server just days before the 2016 election.
Clinton said the decision to reopen the investigation wouldn’t have been as damaging had the controversy surrounding her emails not been overblown in the first place.
“We have a slight disagreement about this,” the former president said, speaking alongside the former secretary of State at an event celebrating the 25th anniversary of his 1992 presidential victory.
“If the voters hadn’t really been told that the email…was the most important issue since the end of World War II, I doubt if the FBI director could have flung the election at the end.”
Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server during her tenure as secretary of State has long been the subject of controversy and an FBI investigation.
That FBI probe ended last year, when Comey announced that the bureau did not believe Clinton’s actions warranted charges. But months later, less than two weeks before the November presidential election, Comey revealed that the bureau had reopened the probe after it uncovered additional emails on the computer of former Rep. Anthony Weiner.
Eventually, Comey said that the agency had closed the probe again. But Clinton has cited the controversy surrounding Comey’s Oct. 28 letter announcing that he was reopening the investigation as politically damaging and detrimental to her presidential bid. She eventually lost to then-candidate Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpDems win from coast to coast Falwell after Gillespie loss: ‘DC should annex’ Northern Virginia Dems see gains in Virginia’s House of Delegates MORE.
Hillary Clinton has said on multiple occasions that she believes the letter was among a number of factors that cost her the election.
Share and Enjoy
Argentina detects 7 ‘communication attempts’ from missing submarine
November 19, 2017 by admin
Filed under Lingerie Events
Comments Off
Argentine authorities say the crew of a missing submarine attempted to transmit messages several times Saturday, the first such communications from the vessel since it went missing Wednesday morning in the south Atlantic.
Defense Minister Oscar Aguad said over Twitter on Saturday night that the submarine, with a crew of 44 members, sent seven “communication attempts” earlier in the day. He did not provide further details.
The whereabouts of the vessel, the subject of an intensive search involving eight nations, remained a mystery, including whether it was at the surface or underwater.
The submarine ARA San Juan had participated in naval exercises off southern Argentina before departing Monday from the city of Ushuaia for a naval base in Mar de Plata. The last contact was made after the northbound vessel passed the Valdes Peninsula about 270 miles off Argentina’s coast.
Orion propeller-driven patrol airplane, equipped with magnetometers, infrared cameras and other sensors that can detect a submerged submarine. The aircraft, which can also measure ice thickness, is temporarily based in Ushuaia to take part in a NASA survey of Antarctica.
Argentine naval officials said they received no distress signals from the vessel, a German-built TR-1700 model, before losing contact. Vessels from Chile, Brazil, Peru, Uruguay, South Africa and the United Kingdom are also assisting in the search.
Pope Francis, a native of Argentina, said in a statement issued by the Vatican earlier Saturday that he was praying for the safe return of the submarine and its crew, and for “spiritual serenity and Christian hope” for Argentina. He said he felt especially close to family members “in these difficult moments.”
Anguished family members of the crew have gathered at the Mar de Plata base awaiting news.
“It’s agonizing the passing of the hours, a mixture of horrible feelings and silence,” said Marcela Moyano, wife of submarine machinist Hernan Rodriguez, in an interview at the base with TodoNoticias TV channel before Aguad’s announcement. “It’s a situation of desperation and fear. But we’re still hopeful they are returning.”
Of the 44 crew members, one is a woman: Lt. Eliana Maria Krawczyk, 34, the sub’s operations chief. Her father, Eduardo, said in a TV interview Thursday that he last talked to his daughter two weeks ago.
“She told me that after arriving at Tierra del Fuego, that the [female] governor of the state came aboard the submarine and congratulated her because a woman was on the crew,” Eduardo Krawczyk said. He added that he is praying for his daughter’s safe return and that their union will like “being born again.”
Psychologists and a Roman Catholic bishop have arrived at the naval base to counsel family members. Navy spokesman Enrique Balbi said the fleet was “not discarding any hypothesis” on what might have happened to the sub.
“We are going to suppose the submarine had problems of communications, that there might have been a blackout, or power failure, and that it is now adrift,” Balbi said. “From [projected] movement after going adrift, we can estimate the search area.”
One of three submarines in the Argentine fleet, the diesel-powered sub measures 220 feet long and has a range of 13,000 miles. It underwent a major overhaul and reconditioning in 2008 that officials here say qualified it for 30 years more of use.
But weather in the search area has turned rough, with strong winds and waves as high as 20 feet, complicating the rescue operation, Balbi said.
“Remember that the part of the submarine that is above surface is very small, just a third of its length. The color of the vessel doesn’t help either because it mimics that of the ocean,” Balbi told reporters.
Argentine President Mauricio Macri said in a message Friday over Twitter that the government is using all resources at its disposal to search for the submarine. Officials are in contact with the crew’s family members to keep them informed, he said.
“We share your worries and those of all Argentines,” Macri wrote.
Four Argentine ships, various helicopters and 500 marines are participating in the search. Aguad, the defense minister, said the country is accepting all offers of international assistance. The United Kingdom has lent assets including a Hercules C-130 military aircraft based in the Falkland Islands, over which the U.K. and Argentina fought a war in 1982.
Special correspondents D’Alessandro and Kraul reported from Buenos Aires and Bogota, Colombia, respectively.
UPDATES:
5:30 p.m.: This article was updated to report the crew of the missing submarine has attempted to communicate.
This article was originally posted at 2:55 p.m.