Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Aoun says able to talk to everyone, restore stability


BEIRUT: Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun Thursday said he has the ability to persuade the various political leaders to accept him as a consensus presidential candidate.


“I believe that I can talk to everyone and bring stability back to Lebanon,” Aoun told pan-Arab newspaper Al-Hayat in response to a question regarding the presidential election crisis and his nomination.


He reject a president to be appointed and one who has no representation [of the people],” he said in a wide-ranging interview.


Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri has said that the solution to ease tensions and help bring stability back to Lebanon is the election of a consensus candidate.


Aoun slammed the government’s failure to appoint military commanders to replace those whose terms of office would soon expire.


"If the government is unable to appoint military commanders, let it go even if we were in this situation," he said.


Aoun denied reports he had proposed the appointment of his son-in-law, Brig. Gen. Shamel Roukoz, as head of the Lebanese Army, but added: “This doesn’t mean I won’t nominate him.”


When asked whether he would accept a deal to appoint Roukoz as Army chief in return for his participation in naming a consensus presidential candidate, he said: "I will not voice support for a [new] president as I did when former President Michel Sleiman was elected; and I will not succumb to external pressure.”


Local newspaper As-Safir has quoted Lebanese Army commander Gen. Jean Kahwagi as saying that he has no intention of extending the term of Roukoz, who heads the Army Commando Unit.


The report came after Defense Minister Samir Moqbel signed a unilateral decree to extend the term of Maj. Gen. Mohammad Khair, the secretary-general of the Higher Defense Council.


In the interview with Al-Hayat, Aoun reiterated his opposition against extending the retirement ages of security and military officials.


On the anticipated dialogue with Christian arch foe Samir Geagea, Aoun said “so far, things are okay.”


Regarding regional and global developments on Syria, Aoun said he believes Washington “is maneuvering to prepare public opinion to enter into a dialogue with (Syrian President Bashar)-Assad."


"We believe a minimum of national unity [should be secured] to face the upcoming transitions,” he said, adding that Gulf states and Iran should also reach an understanding “because this is in everyone's interest."


Aoun said the relationship with Syria “should remain good.”


“But this does not mean that we should be hostile to others,” he said.



Hariri lauds Saudi for "wise" intervention in Yemen


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Can Republicans Get Ahead In The 2016 Digital Race?



Former Gov. Jeb Bush, a 2016 hopeful, takes a selfie with an Iowa supporter earlier this month.i



Former Gov. Jeb Bush, a 2016 hopeful, takes a selfie with an Iowa supporter earlier this month. Scott Olson/Getty Images hide caption



itoggle caption Scott Olson/Getty Images

Former Gov. Jeb Bush, a 2016 hopeful, takes a selfie with an Iowa supporter earlier this month.



Former Gov. Jeb Bush, a 2016 hopeful, takes a selfie with an Iowa supporter earlier this month.


Scott Olson/Getty Images


Just after midnight Monday, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz scooped his own big announcement by about 10 hours. Ahead of a planned speech, he posted the news of his presidential bid on Twitter.


"I'm running for President and I hope to earn your support!" he tweeted.


The tweet, which included a 30-second video, was retweeted more than 3,000 times in 30 minutes. Cruz's announcement generated 5.7 million interactions (likes, posts, comments and shares) Monday on Facebook. And during his planned speech at Liberty University, his staff live tweeted lines from the speech on his account.


Cruz's attention to social media is the first salvo of campaigns trying to get on their digital games ahead of 2016. But there are also signs of how complicated building a digital audience can be. Cruz, for example, still trails some Republican rivals on Twitter, and they all trail Democrat Hillary Clinton. But it's a different story on Facebook, where Clinton is far behind Republicans, like Rand Paul and even Cruz.


But campaigns are not won on Twitter and Facebook — YikYak, Meerkat or Snapchat, for that matter. They're all important, but having a digital strategy for a presidential campaign has evolved in the age of Obama — and it's become something more, including complex behavioral analytics used to reach voters, raise money, and get out the vote.


Republican consultants and the Republican National Committee have pushed hard to learn from the lessons of the 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns. They recognize the growing significance of an effective digital campaign strategy — a lack of which, some said, cost the party in the last two presidential campaigns. The RNC overhauled its digital infrastructure and tried out new strategies in the 2014 midterm elections, which it saw as a good first step — and testing ground — before the next presidential election.


"The left are much better early adapters, and I admire their approach," said Ned Ryun, CEO of American Majority, a conservative group that trains political organizers. Republicans, he said, "need to get over their discomfort ... or they're setting themselves up for another loss."


Shiny New Tools


But it's not always about finding what's new.


"It doesn't have to be this new, big shiny thing," said Brian Donahue, a partner at Republican digital strategy firm Craft. "It's about making a greater investment in existing tools."



CPAC 2015 attendees take a break to check their phones.i



CPAC 2015 attendees take a break to check their phones. Emily Jan/NPR hide caption



itoggle caption Emily Jan/NPR

CPAC 2015 attendees take a break to check their phones.



CPAC 2015 attendees take a break to check their phones.


Emily Jan/NPR


Still, prospective Republican contenders in the 2016 race are looking to show that they can do more than send email. Rand Paul and Jeb Bush both garnered attention for using Meerkat, a live-video streaming app that has become the darling of the South by Southwest sect.


"You're going to see some window dressing to show that candidates are in touch," Donahue said. "There is a risk of coming off gimmicky. We're waiting to see the first candidate to use a selfie stick."


In anticipation of 2016, one big challenge Donahue's team, and others, have is mobile technology.


"You're seeing more and more people relying on mobile devices," he said. "No one has a clamp on that yet."


'Like Changing The Direction Of An Ocean Liner'


Political organizations are building in digital training at the grassroots level, too. Earlier this year, the Conservative Political Action Conference held its first training sessions on "hacking" Facebook and Twitter, and using data-tracking tools such as Open Secrets — a resource for campaign-finance contributions and lobbying data — to keep up to speed on political activity. And in May, the Americans for Prosperity Foundation will hold the Right Online conference, which educates citizen activists on using digital media in the public policy process.


There is interest in learning about digital tactics, Austin James, digital director of Republican political software firm CMDI said. But investment from the campaigns is a different challenge. He said it's hard to convince Republican campaigns to put money into digital strategy when it can't be proven that more Facebook fans directly translates to more votes.


That was certainly the case in 2012, which revealed a large split in digital campaign spending. The Obama campaign reportedly invested $47 million in digital efforts for the president's re-election — 10 times what the Romney campaign spent.


"It's kind of like changing the direction of an ocean liner," James said of getting Republican activists to consider straying from traditional campaign practices of a decade ago.


Translating Digital Into Votes


Cultivating an appealing online persona that voters can get behind is also critical, said Pamela Rutledge, director of the Media Psychology Research Center.


"Even in 2008, [Obama] was aware of social media as a force and he was able to activate a voting population that hadn't previously been engaged," Rutledge said. The Romney campaign, she said, "really misunderstood the reach of social media."


Collecting and managing large amounts of voter and volunteer data to target communications and social media efforts to specific demographics will be a big part of that in 2016. For example, keeping track of public responses to the candidates, Ryun said, allows campaigns to tailor the messaging to best attract a particular audience.


"Having the data will help candidates make better decisions," he said. "If you think a message is resonating, you can use data to back that up."


Seeing Stumbles


It's still early in the 2016 game, but the right has already seen some digital campaign misfires. Jeb Bush's short time chief technology officer, Ethan Czahor, was forced to resign after it was discovered he had had sent disparaging tweets about women, gay people and African-Americans.


"Nobody bothered to read the guy's Twitter feed," Rutledge said, "and it wasn't reflective of the kind of messaging you want in a campaign."


And the digital strategist for another potential candidate, Gov. Scott Walker, resigned just one day after she joined his political team. She left over tweets that criticized Iowa's role in the political process.


But she added that Democrats may well face some big challenges in the digital space, too.


"Yes, the Republicans had problems," Rutledge said, "but you can't assume that just because Obama's team did a good job that Hillary's going to do a good job."


Does Clinton equal Obama?


Clinton, the far-and-away favorite on the Democratic side, but Rutledge points out, that she has been criticized for sending tweets late in the game to share her stance on controversial issues, such as vaccination. She quickened her Twitter response time to about one day when she weighed in on her scandal involving the use of a private email server. But a day can still a lifetime for digital natives.



Ready for Hillary iPhonei

Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images

Ready for Hillary iPhone


Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images



"That's what social media does — it exposes the gaps," she said. "This makes her seem weak."


More important, though, than the rapidity of Clinton's tweets, some Democrats have complained more substantively that the Obama campaign team's knowledge might not filter down to Clinton — or the Democratic Party infrastructure.


The formation of Organizing for Action, for example, the re-branding of the Obama presidential campaign's Organizing for America, rubbed some Democratic National Committee members the wrong way. It was seen by some as a shadow DNC that wouldn't share all of the keys to the castle and was draining the party of resources.


To that end, Clinton has reportedly added two digital strategists from Obama's presidential campaign — Teddy Goff and Andrew Bleeker.


Joe Rospars, chief digital strategist for both of Obama's presidential campaigns, contended that Clinton — or whomever the Democratic Party offers up as their nominee — will still be in better shape digitally than the Republican counterpart.


The DNC, he said, "has an incredible data infrastructure. The party waits for you to become the nominee, and you inherit that."


Rospars noted that no candidate would be operating in the digital sphere alone, which places a major significance on who has the stronger digital team.


"I think if [Hillary] decides to run, there is more talent at the staff level and the grassroots level," Rospars said. But, he added, "Our side has the talent and culture to run a smart, innovative campaign."



Journalist Says Ted Cruz's Message Is Clear That 'Compromise Is For Losers'


When Cruz announced his presidency, he said: "It's time to reclaim the constitution." The New Yorker's Jeffrey Toobin discusses the strict legal philosophy that has shaped Cruz's political agenda.



4 Ways the Affordable Care Act Is Improving the Quality of Health Care in America


American medicine is the best in the world. But waste and inefficiencies in the system have traditionally put your health and your pocketbook at risk. Patients who stay in the hospital longer than they need to could be exposed to infection. Vital information can get lost in the transition from primary care doctors to specialists. And when patients are given different prescriptions from multiple doctors, dangerous drug interactions can occur.


That’s why the Affordable Care Act has been so crucial to tackling these and other challenges and increasing the quality of health care for Americans. Here’s how this landmark law is improving health care for you:


read more


Obamacare Five Years Later: Thriving Or On Political Life Support?



President Obama speaks at the White House Wednesday about the fifth anniversary of his signing of the healthcare law.i



President Obama speaks at the White House Wednesday about the fifth anniversary of his signing of the healthcare law. Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

President Obama speaks at the White House Wednesday about the fifth anniversary of his signing of the healthcare law.



President Obama speaks at the White House Wednesday about the fifth anniversary of his signing of the healthcare law.


Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP


The health care law, the Affordable Care Act, Obamacare. Whatever you call it, five years after President Obama signed the law, it remains polarizing.


Despite fierce political opposition and a rocky rollout, the law has sliced the number of uninsured by a third — 16 million people have signed up of the 48 million uninsured before the law went into effect. But Americans remain deeply split on Obamacare, and its future is unclear. Its fate could be decided in coming months by the Supreme Court — or the 2016 presidential election.


The president took a victory lap Wednesday morning, touting sign ups and affordability — and blasting Republican opposition.




"We have been promised a lot of things these past five years that didn't turn out to be the case — death panels, doom, a serious alternative from Republicans in Congress."




March 25, 2015



"Just five years in, the Affordable Care Act has already helped improve the quality of health care across the board," Obama said at a health care event at the White House. He added, "It's making health care coverage more affordable and effective for all of us. It's working better than many of us, including me, anticipated."


Obama took sharp aim at the law's opponents.


"We have been promised a lot of things these past five years that didn't turn out to be the case — death panels, doom, a serious alternative from Republicans in Congress," Obama said, pausing for effect, as he delivered the line, drawing chuckles from the friendly audience.


The law will be getting a few more signees soon with Sen. Ted Cruz — who led a Green Eggs and Ham-fueled 21-hour speech against the law — admitting Tuesday he would be enrolling through a federal exchange. Cruz, who announced a run for president Monday, had been getting insurance through his wife, who worked for Goldman Sachs, the investment bank. But she is joining his campaign, so Cruz had to get insurance for his family of four, including two young daughters, through his employer — the the U.S. Senate.


If Cruz takes the employer contribution, the move would save the Republican Texas senator and his family thousands of dollars. Even if he doesn't take it, which is unclear at this point, he would still save through the federal exchange compared to signing up directly through a private insurer.


While the law's supporters will relish the irony of one of the most prominent opponents having to sign up, Americans continue to view the law more negatively than positively.


Out of 54 times the Kaiser Family Foundation has asked whether people have a favorable or unfavorable opinion of the law, Americans have only viewed it more positively than negatively eight times. The last time that was the case was November 2012, the month of Obama's reelection.


Since then, it hit a peak unfavorable view of 53 percent in July of last year. In the last several months, the law has migrated back to what has been its homeostasis – a split with the law being viewed slightly more negatively than positively. The latest poll this month, shows a 41 to 43 percent favorable to unfavorable view.



Polls have found that the health care law has remained consistently unpopular.




Polls have found that the health care law has remained consistently unpopular. Kaiser Family Health Foundation Tracking Poll hide caption



itoggle caption Kaiser Family Health Foundation Tracking Poll


In addition to the public opinion challenges the law has faced, there are also the legal ones. The Supreme Court will decide a major case later this year that could decide the future of the law. At question is the constitutionality of state-based subsidies. Conservatives have challenged whether the way the law is written allows people who sign up in states through federal exchanges are actually allowed to do so.


Largely because of opposition in states with Republican governors, just 16 states have set up their own exchanges; seven others have hybrid exchanges that the federal government operates. The 27 states, where the federal government is the only option, account for a significant majority (59 percent) of the uninsured, according to data from the Pew Research Center.


That means if the subsidies are deemed unconstitutional, premiums could skyrocket and effectively gut the law.



Map of state-based exchanges


Kaiser Family Foundation/Pew Research


At the same time, there is a challenge emerging for Republican opponents of the law.


While more people consistently view the law negatively than positively, almost two-thirds (64 percent) of Americans also said that if the subsidies are stripped out, they want Congress to fix the problem, per a Kaiser poll.


Even if the law survives what's sure to be a another close Supreme Court ruling, it will also have to get through a presidential election.


Several potential Republican candidates – and the one declared candidate, Cruz – are going to be hammering the law through another long, slog of a GOP primary season.


"We've made our share of mistakes since we passed this law," Obama conceded Wednesday, "but we know beyond a shadow of a doubt that the policy has worked."


But, as he recedes into lame-duck status during his remaining time in office, it will be up to Hillary Clinton, the likely Democratic standard bearer in 2016, to sell that message, preserve Obama's signature law, and, with it, his legacy.



With Sen. Dan Coats' Retirement, One More Gone From The Old School



Sen. Dan Coats on midterm election night in 2014.i



Sen. Dan Coats on midterm election night in 2014. AJ Mast/AP hide caption



itoggle caption AJ Mast/AP

Sen. Dan Coats on midterm election night in 2014.



Sen. Dan Coats on midterm election night in 2014.


AJ Mast/AP


Senate Republican Dan Coats of Indiana announced Tuesday — probably surprising no one — that he would not seek another term in 2016. Although he has been a stalwart Republican through a turbulent generation in Washington, Coats seems less at home in the hyper-partisan world of Congress today.


While Coats, 71, said his decision was strictly personal and age-related, he did refer to the "terribly dysfunctional Senate" in an interview with the Howey Politics Indiana newsletter.


Coats has had two tours of duty in the Senate, one from 1989 through 1998 and a second beginning with the Tea Party election of 2010. In the 1990s he was seen as a solid and reliable conservative who could occasionally cross the Senate aisle on a given issue. That was an approach to the Senate favored by many at that time.



Sen. Dan Coats, right, talks with Sen. John S. McCain prior to testifying before a Senate Budget Committee hearing in 1995.i



Sen. Dan Coats, right, talks with Sen. John S. McCain prior to testifying before a Senate Budget Committee hearing in 1995. John Duricka/AP hide caption



itoggle caption John Duricka/AP

Sen. Dan Coats, right, talks with Sen. John S. McCain prior to testifying before a Senate Budget Committee hearing in 1995.



Sen. Dan Coats, right, talks with Sen. John S. McCain prior to testifying before a Senate Budget Committee hearing in 1995.


John Duricka/AP


In 1992, for example, Congress was weighing what would become the Family and Medical Leave Act. Coats, a longtime anti-abortion champion, was convinced that granting more time off to new parents would reduce the number of abortions. So he, like his anti-abortion colleague Henry Hyde in the House, embraced the family leave bill. He cast a crucial vote for it in committee and stuck with it through two presidential vetoes and a firestorm of criticism from business lobbies and social conservatives alike.


To honor a personal term-limit pledge, Coats first left the Senate in 1999. He was persuaded a dozen years later when the GOP establishment needed a challenger to Democrat Evan Bayh (who subsequently retired himself). Coats won his party nomination in 2010, defeating two Republicans who were arguably even more conservative. He won easily that November as part of the Tea Party wave of 2010.


He arrived back in Congress to find the place much altered in the dozen years of his absence. In the aftermath of the Obamacare battle, the Senate atmosphere was more brackish than it had been in memory. The filibuster, which had been used more judiciously in earlier decades, had become the minority's weapon of choice on nearly every matter of controversy.


Coats did find occasion to partner with Democrat Ron Wyden of Oregon on a proposed tax reform plan in 2011. Their balanced package was widely praised by various experts and observers but had no real chance of enactment.


These days, he is caught in a crossfire within his own party on two of his guiding principles. As a House member in the 1980s he could be comfortable supporting President Ronald Reagan's tax cuts and, at the same time, an enormous defense buildup. Now, flying with both the defense hawks who want more money for the Pentagon and the budget hawks who want to attack the deficit has become more difficult within the GOP.



Newly sworn-in Sen. Dan Coats, right, shakes hands with Vice President-elect Dan Quayle in 1989 after Coats took the Senate oath. Coats was chosen to succeed Quayle as senator.i



Newly sworn-in Sen. Dan Coats, right, shakes hands with Vice President-elect Dan Quayle in 1989 after Coats took the Senate oath. Coats was chosen to succeed Quayle as senator. Barry Thumma/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Barry Thumma/AP

Newly sworn-in Sen. Dan Coats, right, shakes hands with Vice President-elect Dan Quayle in 1989 after Coats took the Senate oath. Coats was chosen to succeed Quayle as senator.



Newly sworn-in Sen. Dan Coats, right, shakes hands with Vice President-elect Dan Quayle in 1989 after Coats took the Senate oath. Coats was chosen to succeed Quayle as senator.


Barry Thumma/AP


Coats has been a creature of the Congress, one way or another, for four decades. In the 1960s, he graduated from Wheaton College, a religious school also attended by evangelist Billy Graham. Coats served with the Army Corps of Engineers in the Vietnam era and got a law degree from Indiana University. He worked for an insurance company before becoming a staff member in the 1970s for an Indiana congressman named Dan Quayle, primarily serving as the go-guy in the home district office in Fort Wayne.


When Quayle rode the first Reagan landslide to the Senate in 1980, Coats took over his seat in the House. Eight years later, when Quayle became vice president, Coats was appointed to take his place in the Senate. In 1990 he won the right to finish Quayle's term, and in 1992 he won a term in his own right.


Through much of his career, Coats served with Senate legend Richard Lugar, the Republican who chaired both Agriculture and Foreign Relations, and served six terms but was denied a sixth by a Tea Party challenge in 2012. Unlike Lugar, Coats remained in close touch with the state throughout his years in Washington. He was connected to all elements of the state party, including its Tea Party wing and was seen as safe for both renomination and re-election in 2016.


If re-elected in that year, of course, he would have been in office until he was nearly 80. And after spending so much of his life on Capitol Hill, Coats indicated he had other things to do with the rest of it.



Syrian Army, Hezbollah seize two hilltops near border


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Supreme Court Rejects Ruling That Upheld Alabama's Gerrymandering


The U.S. Supreme Court called a district court ruling that upheld Alabama's redistricting plan, which overloaded some districts with black Democrats, "legally erroneous." In a 5-to-4 ruling, the justices rejected the ruling and sent it back to the lower court.


Justice Steven Breyer, who delivered the opinion, was joined by the court's other liberals, Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, as well as Justice Anthony Kennedy, the swing vote. The court's conservatives — Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin Scalia, Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas — dissented. Thomas wrote a separate dissent.


As NPR's Nina Totenberg reported last November, The high court was asked to decide "whether a 2010 state legislative redistricting in Alabama overloaded some districts with black Democrats on the basis of race or party."


Here's the background on the case, from Nina's story:




"In 2000, Democrats controlled the state Legislature, and the redistricting process. They used their power to create districts with black majorities under the Voting Rights Act, while at the same time putting enough reliably Democratic black voters into majority white districts so that white Democratic candidates could build black-white coalitions and have a chance of winning.


"By 2010, Republicans controlled the Legislature, and they set about consolidating the black vote into existing majority-black districts. Under the plan, about one-sixth of all eligible black voters were moved from majority white state Senate districts to majority-black districts. The result was that in some of those districts, the black majority increased to over 70 percent. At the same time, the majority white districts got whiter, and more safely Republican.


"The redistricting came after the 2010 Census showed population shifts that made some existing districts way too big in population terms, and others too small. The Republicans tried to equalize the size of the districts. They also tried to maintain the same number of majority-black districts, [contended] that under the Voting Rights Act, a simple majority of black voters in those districts was not enough. ...


"Democrats disagree, and contend that the GOP plan calls for unconstitutional racial quotas."





Sidon resident killed in Iraq


SIDON: A supporter of fugitive Salafist preacher Ahmad al-Assir was killed while fighting in Iraq, the man's family announced Wednesday.


The family of Nader Mohammad Rifai, a Sidon native, announced that their son had been killed in Iraq, although they refused to disclose how their son was killed or weather he was fighting alongside ISIS.


The family did not even disclose the date of their son’s death.


Rifai is suspected of fighting alongside Assir in a two-day battle with the Lebanese Army in Sidon in June 2013. The attacks resulted in the death of 18 Army soldiers and around 40 of Assir’s followers. The Army also arrested dozens of suspects militants.


Last July, Military Intelligence raided Rifai’s house in Sidon but the man was not there, and his family claimed that they had no knowledge of his whereabouts.


Rifai is the third of Assir’s followers to die outside Lebanon after Fadi Al-Sousi died in Syria last year and Hasan Ghandour was killed in Syria earlier this month.




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Hariri in Ankara to meet Turkish president


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Siniora at STL: Security apparatuses ‘manipulated’ crime scene of Hariri assassination


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ISF detains suspect linked to Azzam Brigades: report


Houthi forces capture key air base near Aden


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Capture of ISIS suspects to spark spate of arrests


BEIRUT: Two terror suspects detained in northeast Lebanon Tuesday could play a vital role in uncovering terrorist networks operating in Lebanon, according to a report published by As-Safir Wednesday.


An Army statement Tuesday said cousins Omar and Bilal Mikati, both from the northern city of Tripoli, belonged to a terrorist organization and were involved in attacks against the Lebanese Army and other terrorist operations.


The two suspects, whose confessions provided valuable information on terror networks and dormant cells operating in Lebanon, were immediately transferred to the headquarters of military intelligence in Yarze, according to the report.


Intelligence gained from the confessions has already led to the arrest of a Syrian terror suspect, according to As-Safir.


Tuesday’s arrest, according to the daily, came after a premeditated plan was carried out by military intelligence, who had been monitoring the cousins’ movements between the Syrian Qalamoun region and the Lebanese town of Arsal, where they were reportedly meeting with area residents in addition to a “well known religious figure.”


Several scenarios for their potential arrest were put in place before military intelligence received confirmation that the duo would be heading to the Bekaa Valley using two fake Syrian IDs.


When the suspects approached an Army checkpoint driving a rented vehicle in the Bekaa town of Hrabta, a military intelligence unit was already stationed near the post and ready to carry out the arrest.


According to As-Safir, Bilal Mikati is believed to have been behind the beheading of Lebanese soldier Ali al-Sayyed, who was killed after being captured by ISIS militants on the outskirts of Arsal in August.


Sayyed was the first of four captives to be killed by ISIS and the Nusra Front.


More than 30 Lebanese servicemen were originally abducted by the militants during a five-day battle with the Lebanese Army. Eight hostages have since been released and four were killed.


According to a report published by Al-Akhbar Wednesday, the cousins fled from the Qalamoun region towards Lebanon after suspicions of a possible assassination attempt against them due divisions among the ranks of ISIS members in the Qalamoun.



Obama Administration Emissions Rules Face Supreme Court Test



Steam from a coal-fired power plant is silhouetted against the sun near St. Marys, Kan. Industry groups say there should be a far more aggressive consideration of costs of regulation than the Obama Administration took into account.i



Steam from a coal-fired power plant is silhouetted against the sun near St. Marys, Kan. Industry groups say there should be a far more aggressive consideration of costs of regulation than the Obama Administration took into account. Charlie Riedel/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Charlie Riedel/AP

Steam from a coal-fired power plant is silhouetted against the sun near St. Marys, Kan. Industry groups say there should be a far more aggressive consideration of costs of regulation than the Obama Administration took into account.



Steam from a coal-fired power plant is silhouetted against the sun near St. Marys, Kan. Industry groups say there should be a far more aggressive consideration of costs of regulation than the Obama Administration took into account.


Charlie Riedel/AP


The Supreme Court hears a challenge Wednesday to Obama Administration rules aimed at limiting the amount of mercury and other hazardous pollutants emitted from coal and oil-fired utility plants. The regulations are being challenged by major industry groups like the National Mining Association, and more than 20 states.


The regulations have been in the works for nearly two decades. Work on them began in the Clinton Administration, got derailed in the George W. Bush Administration, and then revived and adopted in the Obama Administration.


The regulations were subsequently upheld by a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., last year.


They stem from 1990 amendments to the Clean Air Act, which ordered the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, to expedite limits on power plant emissions of mercury and 188 other dangerous air pollutants.


Mercury is considered one of the most toxic pollutants because studies show when it falls from the atmosphere, it readily passes from fish and other sources to a pregnant woman's unborn fetus and fetal brain, causing neurological abnormalities and delays in children. The EPA estimated that seven percent of American women of childbearing age — millions of women — were being exposed to the pollutant in dangerous amounts.


The process for establishing limits, however, is multi-stage. First, the EPA must complete studies to determine whether regulation of these plant emissions is "appropriate and necessary." And only after that does the agency set limits on the pollutant amounts that can be emitted.


Both sides in Wednesday's case agree that cost should be considered in setting pollutant limits. The question is when and how much of a factor cost should be.


At the first stage — deciding whether regulation should be considered at all — the government contends that costs cannot be considered under the law, and it notes that costs are not considered in other similar threshold determinations.


Industry counters that these power plants were meant to be treated differently. It notes that under the regulations issued in the second stage, the estimated price tag is $9.6 billion a year — so it's reasonable for the EPA to balance costs and benefits right from the start.


Industry also maintains that there should be a far more aggressive consideration of costs than the Administration subsequently used in setting the actual limits at the second stage.


Coal-fired utility plants, and to a lesser extent oil-fired plants, are by far the largest source of mercury and other listed air pollutants in the country.


Most utility plants already have pollution controls that comply with the EPA regulations, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. But an estimated 20 percent of existing plants would face the choice of upgrading or shutting down.



Army arrests two suspects in beheading


Tripoli on edge as youths join extremist groups


The killing of Badr Eid has Tripoli residents on high alert, and many believe that the current period of calm cannot...