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Saturday, January 6, 2024

US Warship Downs Houthi Drone Over Red Sea "In Self-Defense"

 US Central Command (CENTCOM) has announced yet another intercept of a launch out of Yemen which had targeted commercial vessels in the Red Sea. 

CENTCOM described that the Saturday incident saw the USS Laboon guided-missile destroyer down a drone over the Red Sea, after it came near near several commercial ships in international waters.

There were no casualties or damage to ships from the "unmanned aerial vehicle launched from Iranian-backed Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen," according to the US statement.

Further, the military statement suggests that US warships may have been targeted by the drone, given it says the USS Laboon shot the inbound drone down "in self-defense".

The Biden administration has previously been accused of downplaying that there's actually been attempted Houthi attacks directly on American warships and naval assets. This would of course be an act of war, and the White House is said to be belatedly drawing up plans to hit back at Houthi launch positions, in an offensive manner (and not just defensive intercepts).

This hasn't happened yet, as the US is apparently pursuing a policy of restraint, not wanting a bigger regional war to break out with Iran, which has long backed the Houthis.

But the contradiction is that Washington has done nothing to impose any kind of limits or conditions on Gaza's air campaign, which has resulted in unprecedented Palestinian civilian deaths.

Meanwhile the Pentagon has issued a lot of 'final warnings' as Red Sea attacks have persisted weekly & now daily...

The Houthis say their 'war on Red Sea shipping' and on Israel itself will continue so long as Israel drops bombs on Gaza civilians. Meanwhile things have only escalated across the region, including Iran-backed militant attacks on US bases in Iraq and Syria. 

These attacks across Iraq-Syria have led to an escalation in the Pentagon response, which most recently saw a very high-ranking and influential Iraqi militia leader killed. This has enraged the Iraqi government in Baghdad, given the commander, identified as Mushtaq Taleb al-Saidi, had been integrated with national forces, and was considered a key ally.

Below is a policy note exploring the implications of the growing tit-for-tat in the region, via Peter Tchir's Academy Securities.

* * *

What has Happened:

  • Yesterday [Jan.11], a U.S. drone strike in Baghdad killed Mushtaq Taleb al-Saidi, who was deputy head of operations for the Popular Mobilization Force (PMF), a network of Iran-backed militia groups.
  • Since the war between Israel and Hamas began on October 7th, there have been over 100 attacks on U.S. and allied forces in Iraq and Syria by Iran-backed militia forces.
  • Iraq’s prime minister, who had the backing of Iran-aligned factions and militias when elected, called the attack “unjustified” and a “dangerous escalation and a violation of Iraq’s sovereignty.”
  • On Tuesday, as reported in our previous SITREP, a suspected Israeli drone attack killed Saleh al-Arouri (Hamas deputy leader) in Beirut.
  • In addition, an Israeli strike on Wednesday night killed a Hezbollah commander in southern Lebanon and Israel has warned of more significant military action if a diplomatic deal is not reached to pull Hezbollah forces away from the Lebanese border.
  • Finally, the U.S., the UK, and other key allies issued “a final warning” to the Houthi rebels this week to cease its attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea or face consequences.

Why it Matters:

“First, it's important to understand that deterrence is the product of three factors: capability, will, and the adversary’s perception of those capabilities and that will. If the first two factors are missing—or inordinately low—or the adversary doesn’t believe that the U.S. has the will to use their capabilities, then deterrence fails. This is the current situation. The proof is in the actions that commercial shipping companies have taken in halting their transit of the Red Sea. We have warships in the region—capability—but if we’re not going to use them to ensure free movement through the Red Sea—will—and the adversary believes that we won’t use them—perception—then we won’t be successful in deterring further aggression on the part of the Houthis and Iran. A strong response to the initial Iranian-backed Houthi attacks could have prevented this situation (i.e., strikes against the Houthi command & control apparatus, launch, storage, and maintenance sites). The solution is that we should stop just shooting down arrows and kill the archers. But the Biden administration has been hesitant to address the source of these attacks over concerns of escalation. Which raises a second point—escalation has already occurred—it was initiated by the Iranians, Houthis, Hamas, Hezbollah, and other Iranian proxy groups.” – General David Deptula

“General Deptula lays it out nicely. Only comment I’d add is that the U.S. must produce a full array of attack options (both arrows and archers) that will punish Iranian proxies where they currently enjoy sanctuary. That is not an expansion of the current state of affairs; it is appropriate and would meet every legal prescription of proportionality. Not surprisingly, Iran is overreaching. The Iranian leadership, specifically the IRGC leadership, must know with certainty that their only sanctuary is within the borders of Iran.” – General Spider Marks

“General Deptula’s deterrence formula is how a great power imposes its will on a lesser power through military means. The current U.S. approach is not working, considering the continued attacks on U.S. forces in the region and the disruption of commerce through the Red Sea. The U.S. is failing to deter Iran and its proxy forces, and its deterrence strategy must be reset. The U.S. foreign policy is allowing bad actors to challenge the international order. The U.S. needs to escalate its response in compliance with international law to de-escalate the situation. How quickly and with how much force must be calibrated per General Marks’ salient points of proportionality and self-defense.” – General Robert Walsh

“While there is always the risk of a miscalculation that leads to escalation, I think that these recent events, while linked to multiple ongoing conflicts (many that predate 7 October), are not necessarily indicative of irreversible momentum toward broader escalation. Each participant (Israel, Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran, Houthis, or the U.S.) can adjust the rheostat as desired. These events could continue to play out as transactional, but limited in scope and scale, and are not indicative that a broader conflict is imminent or inevitable. I would not look at these as fully coordinated events, but rather as transactional. I’m not surprised to see ISIS claim the attacks in Iran which do not follow suit with how Mossad would traditionally strike in Iran proper. While it may seem counterintuitive given the strikes in Gaza, the Israeli government has been relatively surgical in their actions with respect to Iran to minimize casualties/collateral damage.

A possibly unanticipated outcome is that we may see a policy shift in Iraq. A deliberate strike in Baghdad has drawn the ire of the current regime (not that they haven’t complained during previous strikes) and may be enough for Iraq to consider a reduction (if not an elimination) of the U.S. military presence in Iraq. Lately, there is more being written in the news and opinion pieces about the risk to U.S. forces in Syria and Iraq and questioning the mission. Another factor is whether the U.S. is willing to begin to strike Houthi infrastructure should maritime attacks continue. All that said, I would assess with moderate confidence that none of the nation states are looking to expand the conflict into a direct war and will continue to measure their responses. Where the U.S. is struggling is how to establish deterrence.” – General Robert Ashley

“The U.S. desires to de-escalate, not escalate, but the challenge is that the same military response can be used to achieve both results. There are plenty of historical examples of U.S. administrations aggressively addressing such threats, resulting in Iran (and others) choosing to back down due to the sudden and high costs that they have incurred. Aggressive action (sinking ships, shooting down aircraft, and killing forces attacking civilian targets) may be our best chance to de-escalate Iran’s actions. It is doubtful that Iran will back down without a serious punch in the nose.” – General Mastin Robeson

“The bottom line is that escalation will occur by proxies if we don’t change our response and reset our deterrence level. We don’t have the initiative and many allies are not joining our efforts to deter Houthi strikes against shipping. They also see that our policy and posture are not working. The strike in Baghdad is a response that may have unintended consequences. It is possible that the Iraqis can expel or reduce U.S. forces in Iraq which could have a major impact on counterterrorism operations ongoing in Iraq and Syria. If we want an effective deterrent at this point, we will need to increase our response to attacks at a 1-1 level.” – General Frank Kearney

Please see (link) and attached PDF for full report.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-warship-downs-houthi-drone-over-red-sea-self-defense

Superiority of iRhythm's Zio Long-Term Continuous Monitoring Service Eyed

 IRTC announced that the results from the Cardiac Ambulatory Monitor EvaLuation of Outcomes and Time to Events (CAMELOT) study have been published in the American Heart Journal (AHJ).

The peer-reviewed manuscript, titled “Comparative Effectiveness and Healthcare Utilization for Ambulatory Cardiac Monitoring (ACM) Strategies in Medicare Beneficiaries,” reveals that the Zio long-term continuous monitoring service (LTCM), which features up to 14 continuous days of monitoring, was independently associated with the highest yield of clinical arrhythmia encounter diagnosis and lowest likelihood of retest. The retrospective study of almost 300,000 patients makes CAMELOT the largest published real-world comparative effectiveness analysis of ambulatory cardiac monitoring.

“Our findings reveal significant variation in selection of monitoring devices, which can be influenced by patient characteristics and other factors. However, long-term continuous monitoring — and iRhythm’s Zio LTCM in particular — was independently associated with a higher probability of an arrhythmia diagnosis being documented and a lower probability of repeat testing," said Matthew Reynolds, MD, MSc, a cardiac electrophysiologist at Lahey Hospital & Medical Center and the study's lead author. “LTCM also minimized subsequent health care spending, compared to traditional Holter monitors or non-continuous event monitors. We believe these findings may be useful for clinicians in choosing the best type of monitor for different clinical scenarios.”

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2024/01/05/2804624/0/en/Largest-Ever-Real-World-Evidence-Study-of-Ambulatory-Cardiac-Monitoring-Demonstrates-Clinical-Superiority-of-iRhythm-s-Zio-Long-Term-Continuous-Monitoring-Service.html

GM robotaxi unit Cruise offers $75,000 to resolve California agency probe

 General Motors Cruise robotaxi unit offered late on Friday to pay $75,000 to resolve an investigation by the California Public Utilities Commission over its failure to disclose details of an Oct. 2 pedestrian crash.

In December, the commission ordered Cruise to appear at a Feb. 6 hearing, citing it for misleading the commission "through omission" on the extent and seriousness of the accident and for "misleading public comments" on interactions with the panel.

Cruise, which fired nine executives last month after the incident, asked instead for the hearing to be deferred and sought an alternative mode of dispute resolution.

Cruise, which has retained law firm Quinn Emanuel to examine its response to the Oct. 2 incident, said in its filing on Friday the investigation was expected to be completed with findings made public before Feb. 6.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/GENERAL-MOTORS-COMPANY-6873535/news/GM-robotaxi-unit-Cruise-offers-75-000-to-resolve-California-agency-probe-45684619/

Trump rallies in Iowa on third anniversary of Jan. 6 attack on Capitol: Watch live

 


Former President Trump will make two more “Commit to Caucus” campaign stops in the Hawkeye State on Saturday, as the Jan. 15 Iowa caucuses inch closer.

Trump remains the clear front-runner in the GOP primary, according to national polling. According to The Hill/Decision Desk HQ polling averages, he leads the field in Iowa with 51.6 percent support.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley trail at 18 percent and 17.1 percent, respectively. 

The former president’s stops in Newton and Clinton come on the third anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. On Friday, President Biden and Trump exchanged fiery words surrounding the violent insurrection.

Trump is expected to give remarks in Newton at 2 p.m. EST and in Clinton at 5 p.m. EST.

https://thehill.com/video-clips/4393272-trump-iowa-third-anniversary-jan-6-watch-live/

GOP lites cast doubt on whether Biden can win legitimately in 2024

 A number of the Republican presidential candidates are refusing to commit to accepting the results of the 2024 election if President Joe Biden wins.

NBC News and The Des Moines Register sat down with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy this week in Iowa and asked all three of them if they would accept a Biden victory in November.

In particular, DeSantis’ and Ramaswamy’s reluctance to readily accept the possibility that Biden could achieve a legitimate victory reflects the continuing hold on the GOP of former President Donald Trump’s unfounded belief that the 2020 election was stolen from him — three years after his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol to try to stop Congress from certifying Biden’s win.

Even Republicans who don’t accept Trump’s belief that he won in 2020 recognize that many voters in the party don’t fully trust the system any longer.

DeSantis told NBC News correspondent Dasha Burns on Thursday that he would accept the results “if it was a transparent victory.” But he still raised the possibility of fraud.

“If it was a transparent victory, obviously you accept the results, but I don’t know what Democrats have up their sleeve,” he said. “I mean, what you’re saying is if there was fraud, I’m just supposed to turn a blind eye. I’m not going to do that.”

Ramaswamy similarly raised concerns.

“If that’s how it goes, through a free and fair election system, then obviously I will accept the results of an electoral process,” he told Burns on Wednesday. “But what I will tell you is this: We need an electoral process we can trust and believe in.” Ramaswamy’s criteria for that included single-day voting, which is no longer the norm in most states.

“I think that in some ways, this question is based on a fictitious premise that people who are allowed to run for president even are able to run for president. We’re having a discussion about one of the two major candidates being removed forcibly from the ballot,” Ramaswamy added. “So we have major forms of election interference staring us in the face.”

Ramaswamy was referring to decisions in Colorado and Maine that have determined Trump is ineligible to be on the primary ballot. The Supreme Court agreed Friday to hear Trump’s appeal of the decision in Colorado, as the decisions move through the legal system.

Haley also said the country needs to “make sure we always do what it takes to protect the integrity of the election process,” and that there were “a few states that haven’t done that yet.”

But she also said more definitively that she would accept the results, adding, “I am assuming that we’re gonna have an election that is fair, that is strong, and that people can be proud of.”

“So, you’re confident you will be able to accept the results in November?” Burns asked.

“Yeah, of course,” Haley replied.

In May, Trump told CNN that he would accept the results — but also added an “if” clause.

“Yes, if I think it’s an honest election, absolutely, I would,” he said.

Trump is already raising the possibility of rigged elections. His campaign is out with a mailer in Iowa accusing DeSantis of “trying to rig” the Jan. 15 caucuses.

DeSantis said Thursday that he doesn’t believe Trump will accept the caucus results if he loses.

“If he doesn’t win this time, he’s going to say the same thing,” DeSantis said in his interview. “It doesn’t matter what happens, he will say the same thing. That’s just how he rolls.”

It’s a demonstration of how the 2020 election results, and the Jan. 6 attack, continue to hang over this election cycle’s contest — even though DeSantis told NBC News on Thursday that it doesn’t come up on the trail.

“I’ve not had a single question in Iowa about Jan. 6. I mean, I’ve taken hundreds and hundreds of questions,” he said.

But Trump still faces legal jeopardy for, among other things, a case around whether he conspired to overturn the 2020 election results. And all the candidates have continued to get questions about whether they’d pardon the former president, should he be convicted. (DeSantis, Haley and Ramaswamy have all said they would.)

Voters, too, have followed the Republican candidates’ lead in already expressing skepticism about the legitimacy of the 2024 election results.

Barb Forney, 60, a Republican in Ames, Iowa, who is supporting Ramaswamy this year, told NBC News on Friday that it was “not conceivable” that Biden could have a legitimate win in November.

“It was rigged, if he wins. My honest belief is that I don’t think he can win,” said Connie Lendt, a 69-year-old DeSantis supporter in Woodward, Iowa.

Trump has publicly embraced his supporters who found themselves in legal trouble in connection with the Jan. 6 attack, promising to pardon them and championing their cause.

When asked what lessons they took away from the attack on the U.S. Capitol — which left five people dead and about 140 police officers injured — the candidates had very different answers.\Haley called it a “terrible day” and said the country “can never let that happen again.”

“I don’t know anybody that saw what happened that didn’t have their heart fall to their stomach,” she added.

Ramaswamy, however, said he still needs to hear more of the “facts” around that day, wondering “how many federal agents or informants were in the field.” His second takeaway was that “systemic censorship” led up to Jan. 6.

“If you tell people they cannot speak, that’s when they scream. If you tell people they cannot scream, that’s when they tear things down,” he said.

DeSantis said he believed the attack had been “politicized by the left.”

“I think people went to protest and I think it got out of hand,” he added.

In a speech Friday in Iowa, Trump was once again raising doubts about the electoral process and getting his supporters ready for the prospect of election interference by Democrats.

“Joe Biden is a threat to democracy," he said. "He's weaponizing law enforcement for a high-level election interference. It's all about election interference."

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-election/republicans-cast-doubt-whether-biden-can-win-legitimately-2024-rcna132584

We're already spending more money on the border, and it's getting worse

 President Joe Biden's position on the disaster at the U.S.-Mexico border is that it is the result of Congress failing to do its job. He, Biden, didn't create the problem; instead, it was Congress, by which Biden means Republicans, who have neglected a terrible situation.

That is pretty much the opposite of the truth. The flow of immigrants illegally crossing into the United States has skyrocketed under Biden. Last month, Border Patrol officers encountered about 10,000 people a day crossing illegally into the U.S. Back in the Obama years, when Biden was vice president, 1,000 a day was considered a crisis. Now, it's 10 times that.

The current catastrophe resulted from one act: Upon taking office, Biden signaled to the world that if you enter the United States illegally, you will be allowed to stay. Since then, millions have come — lowest estimate 6 million, and perhaps many more than that — and only a small portion has been turned away. That has created an enormous magnet to draw immigrants, nearly all of whom do not have a legitimate claim of asylum. It is a problem entirely of Biden's creation.

Biden blames much of the influx on poverty. Yes, lots of people in the poorer parts of the world would like to come to the U.S. for more money and a better life. But that has been true for a long time. What changed in January 2021 was that Biden opened the door — come, and you can stay.

Instead of recognizing what he has done, Biden has blamed Congress. The president, along with Hill Democrats and their allies in the press, all argue that if Congress would just spend more money on the border — Biden is currently asking for about $14 billion in new, supplemental spending — then the problem could be solved, or at least lessened.

On the other side, Capitol Hill Republicans know that most of the $14 billion, were Congress to approve it, would go to accommodating and facilitating the current flow of illegal crossers, and then relocating them all around the U.S. That would only increase the incentive for more millions to come. It would be precisely the wrong thing to do.

"What the White House is proposing is more money to process and allow more illegals into the country," House Speaker Mike Johnson said this week on CNN during a visit to the border. "We need to do the opposite of that ... Listen to the deputy chief of U.S. Border Patrol who was with us last night, and he told us in his own words, he said, 'It's as if I'm at an open fire hydrant. I don't need more buckets to dump the water. I need to turn the flow off.'"

Now, Johnson and his fellow House Republicans have prepared a report on how much money has already been spent on the border during the Biden years. The spending has been going up, up, up, and it just brings more illegal border crossers. "Congress has appropriated more funds, always beyond President Biden's budget requests, and seen record crossings at the border," the report says.

Look at the numbers. In fiscal 2021, according to the report, Congress appropriated $4.869 billion for Border Patrol operations and southwest border surge funding. In fiscal 2022, that figure grew to $6.235 billion. In fiscal 2023, it grew to $7.153 billion. Altogether, that is a 47% increase in funding for the border during the Biden years. During that same time, the report notes, monthly encounters with illegal crossers at the border have grown from 163,043 in fiscal 2021 to 230,549 in fiscal 2022 to 266,762 in fiscal 2023. That is a 63% increase. And so far, in fiscal 2024, the number has jumped again, to 308,933.

Biden wants even more money. Of the $14 billion request, House Republicans say, "much of it falls within the parameters of managing the crisis — processing tents, medical services, consumables, etc. — that have little to do with actual border security and interior enforcement and more to do with processing illegal immigration into the interior as fast as possible."

The problem seems clear: The president of the United States has to stop the flow. He could do that by not allowing those tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, of illegal crossers to remain in the U.S. He does not need to go around and find people who have been in the U.S. for 20 years and deport them. He needs to return illegal crossers to Mexico before they have spent 24 hours in the U.S. If they have an asylum claim to make, they can wait in Mexico while it is processed. If Biden were to do that, and he has the full authority to do so, word would get out very, very quickly, and the current firehose flow would become a trickle.

But so far, the president has refused to act. He just wants more money to continue on his current disastrous course. And he has Democrats and many in the media seemingly on his side. When Johnson visited the border and did an interview with CNN, he was asked: "You're at the border today, and I presume you're seeing a very dire situation, hardworking border agents who can't do their jobs with what they have. They need more money. They need more colleagues. They need more beds for asylum-seekers. They need more funding. How come the House has not yet touched this $14 billion supplemental request from the Biden administration?"\

What do to when faced with such a question? Keep trying to explain what is really happening. But Republicans control just one part of the government, the House, and that by the barest of majorities. Democrats control the White House and the Senate. As head of the executive branch, the president has the power to enforce the law, and apparently, if he chooses, not to enforce the law. It's hard to imagine the border disaster improving unless Biden either changes his mind or leaves office.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/gop-spending-border-getting-worse

Media Matters Democrat mega-donors ‘mistakenly’ revealed in court filing

 The left-wing advocacy group Media Matters for America is being bankrolled by some of the biggest Democratic megadonors in the country, according to a new report. 

The Washington Free Beacon reported Thursday that Media Matters, a liberal nonprofit often cited by legacy news organizations as a media watchdog, might have “mistakenly” identified some of its biggest donors in a November filing to the New Mexico attorney general’s office. 

According to the filing obtained by the Free Beacon, Media Matters’ biggest donor was Deborah Simon of the shopping mall giant Simon Property Group, who gave $4 million to the nonprofit.

As the Free Beacon noted, Simon had been outspoken in her pledge to defeat former President Trump ahead of the 2020 presidential election and has collectively given $53 million to various Democratic campaigns and causes since 2018. 

The next highest donation to Media Matters came from the Gill Foundation, which contributed nearly $3 million, according to the form.

The foundation is run by tech entrepreneur and gay rights activist Tim Gill, a major power player in Colorado Democratic politics. 

Other top donors include the Stephen Silberstein Foundation, the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation and Bain Capital co-chairman Joshua Bekenstein and his wife Anita, all giving between $1.75–1.9 million, according to the Free Beacon.

Media Matters was founded in 2004 by Democratic activist and staunch Clinton ally David Brock.

The left-wing advocacy group Media Matters for America is being bankrolled by some of the biggest Democratic megadonors in the country, according to a new report.mediamatters.org
The Washington Free Beacon reported Thursday that Media Matters might have “mistakenly” identified some of its biggest donors in a November filing to the New Mexico attorney general’s office.FOX News

Since its founding, Media Matters has built a reputation for organizing pressure campaigns against conservative voices it opposes, including boycott movements. 

Brock left Media Matters in 2022 to aid President Biden against House Republicans in their congressional probes into the Democrat. 

Critics have slammed Media Matters earning a tax-exempted status despite being an overtly political organization.

It was the subject of mockery in 2020 when it received a federal Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan between “$1-2 million” from the Trump administration despite its constant criticism of Trump’s response to the COVID pandemic, including the PPP. 

Media Matters made headlines in the fall with its war against X owner Elon Musk.

Elon Musk fired back filing a lawsuit against Media Matters, alleging the group “completely misrepresented the real user experience” in order to mislead advertisers.POOL
The group published a report alleging ads from major companies including IBM, Apple, Disney, Lionsgate and Paramount were appearing alongside antisemitic content, prompting them to pull their ads from the platform. 

Musk fired back filing a lawsuit against Media Matters, alleging the group “completely misrepresented the real user experience” in order to mislead advertisers.

Media Matters did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

https://nypost.com/2024/01/05/media/media-matters-democrat-mega-donors-mistakenly-revealed-in-court-filing-report/