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Trump newly undercuts top U.S. intelligence chief on Russia  President Donald Trump said Wednesday that the Russian government is no longer trying to meddle in U

S. elections, contradicting his director of national intelligence, who has said that Kremlin-ordered attacks are ongoing

 In response to a shouted question from a reporter as to whether Russia was still targeting the U

S., Trump shook his head and said "no." He quickly followed with a brief monologue arguing that his administration has been tougher on Russia than any of its predecessors and that "President Putin knows that better than anybody, certainly better than the media

"  At her Wednesday press briefing, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders denied that the president had said Russia is no longer attacking the U

S. but that he instead had been saying "no" to taking additional questions from reporters

She said the White House believes the threat of Russian election interference remains

 "The president said thank you very much and was saying 'no' to answering questions," Sanders said, despite the fact that Trump kept on talking to reporters after the exchange

"The president and his administration are working very hard to make sure that Russia is unable to meddle in our elections as they have done in the past and as we have stated

"  Pressed by MSNBC reporter Hallie Jackson on the president's earlier exchange with reporters, Sanders said that she had spoken to the president about his remark and that he was not answering a reporter's question when he said "no

" The press secretary insisted that she was not walking back the president's comments, telling reporters, "I'm interpreting what the president said

I'm not reversing it." Morning Cybersecurity A daily briefing on politics and cybersecurity — weekday mornings, in your inbox

By signing up you agree to receive email newsletters or alerts from POLITICO. You can unsubscribe at any time

 The president's assertion that Russia's is no longer launching attacks against the U

S. contradicts remarks from Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, who said last month that "it is 2018, and we continue to see Russian targeting of American society in ways that could affect our midterm elections

"  The Office of the Director of National Intelligence did not immediately respond to a request for comment

 It was the second time in as many days that the White House has sought to argue that the president either did not say or did not mean something that he was clearly captured on video saying

Trump has come under withering criticism over the last 48 hours over his remarks at a bilateral press conference on Monday with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, where the U

S. president said "I don't see any reason" why Russia "would" be behind 2016 cyberattacks intended to impact that year's U

S. presidential election.  Trump's willingness to accept Putin's denial that the Kremlin had been involved over the assessment of his own intelligence agencies prompted a tidal wave of rebukes, which in turn pushed Trump to take a rare step — admitting a mistake — on Tuesday when he told reporters that he had meant to say that he saw no reason why Russia "wouldn't" have been behind the 2016 attacks

 It's also not the first time that Trump has directly undercut Coats in recent days

 In an interview with CBS News on Saturday, Trump said he doesn't know if he agrees with a warning from Coats that the U

S. digital infrastructure is vulnerable to a large-scale attack.  "Well, I — I don't know if I agree with that

I'd have to look. But I have a lot of respect for Dan," Trump said. "And that's where he is, and that's what he does

Again, we're working on it very hard. We're upgrading things at a very rapid pace

" Trump-Putin meeting Trump plays semantics on Russian meddling  Coats has not been silent as Trump has undermined his statements

On Monday, after Trump publicly sided with Putin over U.S. intelligence agencies on Russia's election meddling, Coats issued a blunt statement backing the intelligence community

 "The role of the Intelligence Community is to provide the best information and fact-based assessments possible for the president and policymakers," said Coats, who took over as U

S. director of national intelligence in March 2017. "We have been clear in our assessments of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and their ongoing, pervasive efforts to undermine our democracy, and we will continue to provide unvarnished and objective intelligence in support of our national security

"  Coats also has had a rocky history with Trump. It was reported in June 2017 that Coats had told associates that Trump asked him if he could help get then-FBI Director James Comey to back off the agency's investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn

 Coats reportedly decided that such an action would be inappropriate.

For more infomation >> Trump newly undercuts top U.S. intelligence chief on Russia - Duration: 8:21.

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S. Korea asks U.S. for exemption from new 25% auto tariffs - Duration: 0:53.

South Korea's finance chief has asked the Trump administration to exempt Korean vehicles

from Washington's soon-to-be imposed tariffs of 25 percent.

Kim Dong-yeon made the request to U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Saturday, local

time,... on the sidelines of the G20 meeting in Argentina.

He called the tariffs unjust,... and said trade with South Korea has contributed to

higher employment and investment in the U.S.

A delegation led by Seoul's trade minister also made a similar argument to U.S. finance

officials in Washington last week.

It argued that U.S. concerns about the automobile industry are already reflected in the two

countries' newly revised free trade agreement,... and said such tariffs will only negatively

affect the American economy.

For more infomation >> S. Korea asks U.S. for exemption from new 25% auto tariffs - Duration: 0:53.

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North Korea's provocation level has dimmed sharply in recent months: U.S. Commander - Duration: 0:38.

The commander of U.S. forces in South Korea says North Korea's level of provocation toward

the U.S. changed months before President Trump's summit in Singapore with North Korean leader

Kim Jong-un.

In a video link interview at the Aspen Security Forum over the weekend,...

General Vincent Brooks says they "saw a big change occur after the November 29th 2017

missile launch",... noting that the North have "gone now 235 days without a provocation".

Brooks added the challenge now,... is to continue to make progress with North Korea,...

adding the current level of diplomacy is "like tulips blooming in the spring."

For more infomation >> North Korea's provocation level has dimmed sharply in recent months: U.S. Commander - Duration: 0:38.

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Seoul's NSC chief describe his meetings in U.S. "helpful to ensure ongoing talks - Duration: 0:53.

Our top story this morning...

Valuable negotiations to ensure the ongoing North Korea-U.S. denuclearization talks and

efforts to improve inter-Korean relations will achieve success in a relatively speedy

manner.

That's how President Moon Jae-in's National Security Adviser described his meetings with

U.S. officials as he returned from Washington on Sunday.

Chung Eui-yong said he was able to reaffirm the common goal of establishing peace on the

Korean Peninsula through complete denuclearization as well as their resolve to maintain close

coordination and share related information based on strong South Korea, U.S. alliance.

Chung, however, said he did not discuss the UN report on the reported arrival of North

Korean coal shipments to South Korea.

For more infomation >> Seoul's NSC chief describe his meetings in U.S. "helpful to ensure ongoing talks - Duration: 0:53.

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U.S. rep. Beto O'Rourke on Inside Texas Politics - Duration: 8:55.

For more infomation >> U.S. rep. Beto O'Rourke on Inside Texas Politics - Duration: 8:55.

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U.S. to closely monitor whether Chinese yuan has been manipulated: Mnuchin - Duration: 1:44.

The trade war between the world's two largest economies may now lead to a currency war as

the U.S. Treasury Secretary says Washington will closely review whether the Chinese yuan

has been manipulated.

Steven Mnuchin also reiterated that the U.S. could end up imposing tariffs on every single

product imported from China.

Kim Hyo-sun reports.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin says Washington is monitoring the recent weakness

of the Chinese yuan to see whether the currency has been manipulated.

According to CNBC, Mnuchin stressed during an interview in Brazil that the U.S. will

review very carefully whether Beijing has manipulated the yuan.

He explained that such a review is carried out as part of the U.S. Treasury's bi-annual

report on currency manipulation.

In April and October each year, the U.S. Treasury releases a list of countries whose currency

practices need monitoring and designates countries as currency manipulators.

Pundits say the U.S. may label China as a currency manipulator in its report released

in October,... following the Trump administration's additional tariffs imposed on goods imported

from the country.

Mnuchin also threatened China, saying President Trump's earlier comments that he's ready to

slap tariffs on every single Chinese good imported to the U.S.,... which amounts to

some five hundred U.S. billion dollars could become reality.

Stating that he thinks Beijing is manipulating its currency during an interview with CNBC

last Friday,...

President Trump warned China that he's ready to take the ultimate step on Chinese imports

should the need arise.

Kim Hyo-sun, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S. to closely monitor whether Chinese yuan has been manipulated: Mnuchin - Duration: 1:44.

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Group Of Angry Protesters Denounce Secretary Of State Mike Pompeo - Duration: 1:23.

For more infomation >> Group Of Angry Protesters Denounce Secretary Of State Mike Pompeo - Duration: 1:23.

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U.S. to closely monitor whether Chinese yuan has been manipulated: Mnuchin - Duration: 1:48.

The trade war between the world's two largest economies may now lead to a currency war as

the U.S. Treasury Secretary says Washington will closely review whether the Chinese yuan

has been manipulated.

Steven Mnuchin also reiterated that the U.S. could end up imposing tariffs on every single

product imported from China.

Kim Hyo-sun reports.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin says Washington is monitoring the recent weakness

of the Chinese yuan to see whether the currency has been manipulated.

According to CNBC, Mnuchin stressed during an interview in Brazil that the U.S. will

review very carefully whether Beijing has manipulated the yuan.

He explained that such a review is carried out as part of the U.S. Treasury's bi-annual

report on currency manipulation.

In April and October each year, the U.S. Treasury releases a list of countries whose currency

practices need monitoring and designates countries as currency manipulators.

Pundits say the U.S. may label China as a currency manipulator in its report released

in October,... following the Trump administration's additional tariffs imposed on goods imported

from the country.

Mnuchin also threatened China, saying President Trump's earlier comments that he's ready to

slap tariffs on every single Chinese good imported to the U.S.,... which amounts to

some five hundred U.S. billion dollars could become reality.

Stating that he thinks Beijing is manipulating its currency during an interview with CNBC

last Friday,...

President Trump warned China that he's ready to take the ultimate step on Chinese imports

should the need arise.

Kim Hyo-sun, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S. to closely monitor whether Chinese yuan has been manipulated: Mnuchin - Duration: 1:48.

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'Historic mistake' to allow US president to meet with Putin: Former Obama adviser - Duration: 7:17.

A former national security adviser to President Barack Obama said Donald Trump's "national security team needs to know everything" about the lengthy one-on-one meeting he had with Vladimir Putin, calling the meeting a "historic mistake" and saying it would have been for any U

S. president. "We need to know everything, and the president's national security team needs to know everything," Susan Rice, who also served as ambassador to the United Nations during Obama's first term, said Sunday on "This Week

" "It was a historic mistake to allow the president of the United States, not just Donald Trump, but any president, frankly, to sit for two hours without any note takers, without any aides present with one of the most adversarial leaders of the world relative to the United States

" Trump and Putin met in Helsinki on Monday during a summit that led to multiple walk-backs by the White House in the days following

Trump and Putin met, with only their interpreters present, for more than two hours

Trump's own director of national intelligence, Dan Coats, said during the Aspen Security Forum Thursday he didn't "know what happened in that meeting

" "I think as time goes by and the President has already mentioned some things that happened in that meeting, I think we will learn more," Coats said at the forum

"If he had asked me how that ought to be conducted, I would have suggested a different way

But that's not my role. That's not my job." "Very predictably," Rice told ABC News Chief Anchor George Stephanopoulos, "the Russians are feeding their line of what happened

We are hearing no rebuttal or comment from the United States. Russia is dictating the public perception, the global public perception of what transpired in that meeting and we have no basis for countering it

It's a very, very uncomfortable and indeed dangerous situation for the United States to be in

" The two presidents also held a joint press conference on Monday. Trump appeared to accept what he called Putin's "strong" and "powerful" denials of Russian government election interference over the conclusions of every U

S. intelligence agency. During the press conference, Trump said, "My people came to me -- Dan Coats came to me and some others -- they said they think it's Russia

I have President Putin. He just said it's not Russia. I will say this: I don't see any reason why it would be

" On Tuesday, Trump said he needed to "clarify" one word he said during the press conference

"In a key sentence in my remarks, I said the word 'would' instead of 'wouldn't,'" Trump told the cameras during a meeting with members of Congress in the Roosevelt Room

"The sentence should have been: I don't see any reason why I wouldn't -- or why it wouldn't be Russia

So just to repeat it, I said the word 'would' instead of 'wouldn't.'" Asked by Stephanopoulos whether Rice thinks Trump is "compromised by Russia," she said she doesn't "know what his motivations are

" "I think that's a legitimate question, and it has been reinforced . sadly, this week, by that tragic display by sycophancy in Helsinki where the president called into question yet again, standing next to Vladimir Putin, a dictator, the integrity of our intelligence community," she said

Rice said she's "not opposed to the notion of engaging the Russians," but said that a second summit between the two leaders doesn't "make sense

" "There are things to discuss with the Russians, but we should have come into that meeting very well prepared, pressing our grave concern about Russian interference in our elections," she said

"There's no inherent problem with two leaders, even from hostile countries, engaging in dialogue

I support that. But you must come prepared. You must come to advance the United States' agenda, not to lie prostrate for the Russian agenda

" Stephanopoulos asked Rice about an interview Trump did with CNBC Friday in which he said, "Obama was a patsy for Russia

He was a total patsy." "That kind of language is ridiculous. It's offensive and it doesn't frankly reflect well on President Trump," Rice said

"Any American president should stand up for the United States of America, in the present and, historically, when meeting with Vladimir Putin

"

For more infomation >> 'Historic mistake' to allow US president to meet with Putin: Former Obama adviser - Duration: 7:17.

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North Korea's provocation level has dimmed sharply in recent months: U.S. Commander - Duration: 0:40.

The commander of U.S. forces in South Korea says the level of provocations from North

Korea directed toward the U.S. fell sharply in the months before President Trump's summit

in Singapore with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

In a video link interview at the Aspen Security Forum over the weekend,...

General Vincent Brooks said they "saw a big change occur after the November 29th 2017

missile launch",... noting that the North has now gone "235 days without a provocation".

Brooks added the challenge now... is to continue to make progress with North Korea,...

and that the current level of diplomacy is "like tulips blooming in the spring."

For more infomation >> North Korea's provocation level has dimmed sharply in recent months: U.S. Commander - Duration: 0:40.

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Donald Trump threatens Iran's president: 'Never, ever threaten the US again or you will suffer' - Duration: 6:45.

 Donald Trump has warned Hassan Rouhani, the Iranian president, to never threaten the US again, saying he would not "stand for your demented words"

   The US president issued the direct threat on Twitter after the Iranian leader cautioned Mr Trump about pursuing hostile policies against Tehran, saying "war with Iran is the mother of all wars"

 A war of words has escalated as Iran faces increased US pressure and looming sanctions after Mr Trump's decision to withdraw the United States from a 2015 international deal over Iran's nuclear programme

 The rhetoric echoes the threats exchanged between Mr Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un before relations thawed earlier this year

   Using capital letters, Mr Trump told Mr Rouhani to "be cautious".  Addressing a gathering of Iranian diplomats at the weekend, Mr Rouhani left open the prospect for peace

But he warned: "Mr Trump, don't play with the lion's tail, this would only lead to regret

"  "America should know that peace with Iran is the mother of all peace, and war with Iran is the mother of all wars," Mr Rouhani said, according to the state new agency IRNA

 "You are not in a position to incite the Iranian nation against Iran's security and interests," Mr Rouhani said, in an apparent reference to reported efforts by Washington to destabilise Iran's Islamic government

 In Washington, US officials familiar with the matter told Reuters that the Trump administration had launched an offensive of speeches and online communications meant to foment unrest and help pressure Iran to end its nuclear programme and its support of militant groups

 Current and former US officials said the campaign painted Iranian leaders in a harsh light, at times using information that is exaggerated or contradicts other official pronouncements, including comments by previous administrations

 Mr Rouhani scoffed at Mr Trump's threat to halt Iranian oil exports and said Iran has a dominant position in the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, a major oil shipping waterway

 "Anyone who understands the rudiments of politics doesn't say 'we will stop Iran's oil exports'

we have been the guarantor of the regional waterway's security throughout history," Rouhani said, cited by the semi-official ISNA news agency

 Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday backed Rouhani's suggestion that Iran may block Gulf oil exports if its own exports are halted

Iran nuclear deal | Related content  Mr Rouhani's apparent threat earlier this month to disrupt oil shipments from neighbouring countries came in reaction to efforts by Washington to force all countries to stop buying Iranian oil

 Iranian officials have in the past threatened to block the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation for any hostile US action

 On Sunday, Iran's ground forces commander became the latest military figure to back Mr Rouhani's apparent threat, the semi-official news agency Tasnim reported

 "The Strait of Hormuz region must either be safe for all or be insecure for everyone," said General Kioumars Heydari, quoted by Tasnim

 Separately, a top Iranian military commander warned that the Trump government might be preparing to invade Iran

 "The enemy's behaviour is unpredictable," Tasnim quoted military chief of staff General Mohammad Baqeri as saying

 "Although the current American government does not seem to speak of a military threat, according to precise information it has been trying to persuade the U

S. military to launch a military invasion (of Iran)," Baqeri said.  Iran's oil exports could fall by as much as two-thirds by the end of the year because of new US sanctions, putting oil markets under huge strain amid supply outages elsewhere

 Washington initially planned to shut Iran out of global oil markets completely after Mr Trump abandoned the deal that limited Iran's nuclear ambitions, demanding all other countries stop buying Iranian crude by November

 But the United States has somewhat eased its stance, saying it may grant sanction waivers to some allies that are particularly reliant on Iranian supplies

(

For more infomation >> Donald Trump threatens Iran's president: 'Never, ever threaten the US again or you will suffer' - Duration: 6:45.

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United States Cavalry - Duration: 3:34.

For more infomation >> United States Cavalry - Duration: 3:34.

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BIGGEST CORRUPTION IN THE US YET – GINGRICH READY TO TAKE IT ON ! - Duration: 10:42.

BIGGEST CORRUPTION IN THE US YET – GINGRICH READY TO TAKE IT ON !

"Trump administration is corrupted !" "Trump does the unthinkable !" "US falls in the

hands of Russian lovers !" . Hold on now , don't get mad.

This is just a preview.

A sarcastic way of criticizing fake media.

Yet mainstream media takes this serious.

So serious that they even make themselves believe these stories.

But wait.

Has it always been like this ? Let's see how things went for Obama.

He went in office and media praised him for a long time.

He left office and his administration was worshiped as unmistakable.

Any scandals involving Obama ? Quite a lot actually.

unfortunately not many came to the light of day in mainstream media.

Well Newt Gingrich has enough.

Time to end the corruption.

In a short interview with him he express his concerns about the current situation.

He especially made a very clear point about John Podesta having dinner with Justice Department

officials while Clinton's case was well under investigation.

FBI Director James Comey wasn't going to get away from this one either.

Gingrich had a lot to say about him especially about being the first lying director.

In the end he makes a clear point about why Trump won the elections and why he should

stay there.

There are a lot of critical news going unnoticed and mainstream media wants to make sure it

stays that way.

Comment below and tell them how you feel

about that !

For more infomation >> BIGGEST CORRUPTION IN THE US YET – GINGRICH READY TO TAKE IT ON ! - Duration: 10:42.

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Reminder: Women Migrants Are Fleeing Countries The U.S. Helped Decimate - Duration: 3:38.

Reminder: Women Migrants Are Fleeing Countries The U.S. Helped Decimate

Since the day Donald Trump began his run for the presidential office, he has promoted the idea that people who flee to the U.S.

are bringing their problems here.

But as his administration takes ruthless steps to discourage asylum-seekers, experts and advocates are working to remind Americans — and the world — that some of the violence driving people to seek shelter in the U.S.

has its roots in American foreign policy.

Take domestic violence.

Today, a large proportion of people trying to enter the U.S.

across the Mexican border are Central American women and children fleeing abusive family members.

In June, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced the U.S.

would no longer recognize domestic violence as a valid basis for an asylum claim, saying, "the asylum statute does not provide redress for all misfortune.".

But domestic violence in Central America is not the product of random misfortune, advocates for these asylum-seekers say. The region's civil wars, which became bigger and more brutal because of U.S.

intervention, created a generation of abusers and decimated the institutions that ought to have kept survivors safe.

The steady flow of migrants fleeing Central America "is not something that is independent from what the United States has done in the past," explained Cecilia Menjívar, a University of Kansas professor who studies the causes of Central American migration to the U.S.

"It's very much a consequence of the actions of the United States.".

For many decades, but particularly in the 1980s, the United States funneled billions of dollars in military aid to authoritarian Central American governments with the stated goal of combating communism.

The funding, equipment and training transformed civil wars in Guatemala and El Salvador into conflicts of exceptional brutality.

Government forces, sometimes trained by the United States, often exterminated whole villages.

In El Salvador, a country of a few million people, 75,000 people died; roughly a fifth of the population fled.

In Guatemala, a truth commission would later blame the degree of brutality on training military officers received at the U.S.-run School of the Americas.

For more infomation >> Reminder: Women Migrants Are Fleeing Countries The U.S. Helped Decimate - Duration: 3:38.

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Racial segregation in the United States - Duration: 2:52.

For more infomation >> Racial segregation in the United States - Duration: 2:52.

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Reminder: Women Migrants Are Fleeing Countries The U.S. Helped Decimate - Duration: 11:49.

Cindy Karp via Getty Images For many decades, the United States funneled billions of dollars in military aid to authoritarian Central American governments with the stated goal of combating communism

 Since the day Donald Trump began his run for the presidential office, he has promoted the idea that people who flee to the U

S. are bringing their problems here.  But as his administration takes ruthless steps to discourage asylum-seekers, experts and advocates are working to remind Americans — and the world — that some of the violence driving people to seek shelter in the U

S. has its roots in American foreign policy.  Take domestic violence. Today, a large proportion of people trying to enter the U

S. across the Mexican border are Central American women and children fleeing abusive family members

In June, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced the U.S. would no longer recognize domestic violence as a valid basis for an asylum claim, saying, "the asylum statute does not provide redress for all misfortune

"  But domestic violence in Central America is not the product of random misfortune, advocates for these asylum-seekers say

 The region's civil wars, which became bigger and more brutal because of U.S. intervention, created a generation of abusers and decimated the institutions that ought to have kept survivors safe

 The steady flow of migrants fleeing Central America "is not something that is independent from what the United States has done in the past," explained Cecilia Menjívar, a University of Kansas professor who studies the causes of Central American migration to the U

S. "It's very much a consequence of the actions of the United States."  For many decades, but particularly in the 1980s, the United States funneled billions of dollars in military aid to authoritarian Central American governments with the stated goal of combating communism

The funding, equipment and training transformed civil wars in Guatemala and El Salvador into conflicts of exceptional brutality

Government forces, sometimes trained by the United States, often exterminated whole villages

In El Salvador, a country of a few million people, 75,000 people died; roughly a fifth of the population fled

In Guatemala, a truth commission would later blame the degree of brutality on training military officers received at the U

S.-run School of the Americas. U.S. funding, equipment and training transformed civil wars in Guatemala and El Salvador into conflicts of exceptional brutality

 Today, El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, where the majority of people crossing the U

S.-Mexico border come from, have some of the highest rates of deadly violence against women on the planet

 "We enabled something to get bigger; we enabled a great deal more violence, than would have happened otherwise," said Terry Karl, a professor of Latin American studies at Stanford University

 The violence today is the aftershock, Karl said. Those conflicts allowed gangs to seize control of large parts of the region and establish a vast network of trafficking routes, while also compromising or destroying the countries' social institutions

Many of those gangs even originated in the United States – they are a product of violence in Los Angeles that caused an earlier wave of migrants to form their own gangs for protection, only to later return to their home countries

Today, police and the judiciary are struggling to keep extreme levels of crime in check

 Experts have argued that not punishing perpetrators of wartime atrocities fuels the current cycles of violence that plague these countries

 In 2001, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights said the failure in Guatemala to hold people accountable "is one of the most important factors contributing to the persistence of such violations, as well as criminal and social violence

"  "Since these crimes were never punished and the state [of Guatemala] has refused to acknowledge its responsibility for these acts, these sadistic practices became 'normal' to thousands of men who were asked to carry out these orders," Claudia Paz y Paz Bailey, the former Attorney General of Guatemala, argued in a recent declaration supporting a woman's asylum claim

"It is possible that some of those responsible for the widespread violence against women (and others) in Guatemala today are the same perpetrators from the war

"  We enabled something to get bigger; we enabled a great deal more violence, than would have happened otherwise

Terry Karl, a professor of Latin American studies at Stanford University.  The characteristics of many domestic abusers, she continued – "their sense of power and their presumption that they would never be held accountable for their crimes" – are essentially the same as those people who committed atrocities during the war

"This has contributed to the creation of a climate of impunity, and the message that these types of crimes are not considered to be of any importance either to the society or to the state

"  Many asylum cases have made the connection between the violence of the wars and domestic violence explicit

 In 1982, a Salvadoran woman named Olimpia Lazo-Majano fled to the United States after escaping an army sergeant in her small town who repeatedly raped and beat her

According to court documents, the sergeant, identified as Rene Zuniga, told her his job was to kill "subversives," a term used by the government to describe civilians that the military or state-backed security forces had tortured or killed for their perceived sympathies toward guerrilla forces

 Zuniga held her at gunpoint with his service weapon the first time he raped her; other times, he held a pair of hand grenades to her forehead and threatened to blow her up with a bomb

If he killed her, he said, "I can just say that you are contrary to us, subversive

"  "Zuniga had his gun, his grenades, his bombs, his authority and his hold over Olimpia because he was a member of this powerful military group," wrote a panel of judges who ordered a lower court to grant her asylum

"Persecution is stamped on every page of this record."  Rody Alvarado Peña, whose case helped inch the United States toward accepting domestic violence as a valid basis for an asylum claim, said her husband's violence stemmed from the time he served in the Guatemalan army

Alvarado, who fled to the United States in May 1995 and asked for asylum, said her husband's military service loomed large during many of his beatings

"To scare her," according to her court files, "he would tell her stories of having killed babies and the elderly while he served in the army

"  Her road to asylum was a long one. For 14 years, her case was batted back and forth between immigration court, the country's top immigration court, and two U

S. attorneys general. None of them could come to an agreement on whether domestic violence qualified her to claim asylum, until 2009, when she was finally granted permission to stay

 One of the courts noted how it struggled to describe how abhorrent they found her husband's abuse and marveled that she was even able to escape

Often, when he used stories of his military service to frighten her, he said the same connections would allow him to find her anywhere in Guatemala

"You can't hide," he once said. "Even if you are buried underground, you can't hide from me

" Download Do you have information you want to share with HuffPost? Here's how

Molly Redden Senior Politics Reporter, HuffPost Suggest a correction MORE: United States Immigration Politics And Government Society And Culture Domestic Violence

For more infomation >> Reminder: Women Migrants Are Fleeing Countries The U.S. Helped Decimate - Duration: 11:49.

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Trump launches astonishing attack on 'US stupidity' as he meets Putin for summit - Duration: 4:33.

</form>  Donald Trump has launched an astonishing attack on the "stupidity" of his own nation ahead of his first summit with Vladimir Putin today

 The US President said relations between the US and Russia have "never been worse" as the pair prepare to meet in Helsinki this morning

 Trump took aim at the probe into possible links between his election campaign and Moscow as he faces pressure to question Putin over Russian interference in the 2016 vote

 "Our relationship with Russia has NEVER been worse thanks to many years of U.S. foolishness and stupidity and now, the Rigged Witch Hunt!" he tweeted

 The two leaders are set to meet in Helsinki, Finland on Monday, but it appears both are entering with low expectations

  Ahead of the summit, Trump admitted to ITV he doesn't know yet if Putin is his friend or enemy

 Trump appeared upbeat during a breakfast meeting with Finnish President Sauli Niinistö before the summit with Putin

 Asked what he would say to the Russian president, Trump replied: "We'll be just fine, thank you

"  A Russian government source told the state-run RIA Novosti news agency that Putin denies the allegations of election interference, but is ready to discuss the issue

 Earlier, Trump hit out at the election probe, accusing his predecessor Barack Obama of failing to act on Russian meddling

 Trump tweeted: "President Obama thought that Crooked Hillary was going to win the election, so when he was informed by the FBI about Russian Meddling, he said it couldn't happen, was no big deal, & did NOTHING about it

 "When I won it became a big deal and the Rigged Witch Hunt headed by Strzok!"  The president was referring to embattled FBI agent Peter Strzok, who had criticised Trump in text messages and was accused of being biased to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton

 Trump has repeatedly referred to special prosecutor Robert Mueller's probe into election meddling as a "witch hunt"

 He echoed Putin's position that the US is to blame for poor relations between the countries, tweeting: "Our relationship with Russia has NEVER been worse thanks to many years of U

S. foolishness and stupidity and now, the Rigged Witch Hunt!"  The Republican president has denied any collusion took place between his campaign and the Kremlin to help him defeat Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton

 Last week, the US Justice Department indicted 12 Russians for stealing Democratic Party documents

Read More Top Stories from Mirror Online  Syria and nuclear weapons are expected to be discussed when Trump and Putin hold a 1:1 bilateral meeting at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki just after 11am UK time (1

20pm local time in Finland).  The leaders will then take part in an expanded bilateral meeting and working lunch before holding a joint press conference

 Protesters gathered hours before the meeting at a large security cordon that surrounds the palace and a number of streets

 Trump has told CBS News he is going into the talks with "low expectations", while Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told Russia's RT TV station that he also had low expectations

 Trump is meeting Putin on neutral ground in Helsinki after controversial visits to the UK and a Nato summit in Brussels

 The pair met at last year's G20 and APEC summits, but this is their first one-on-one summit

 Trump told ITV's Good Morning Britain he doesn't know yet if Putin is his friend or enemy

 The US president said: "I don't know him. I met him a couple of times, I met him at the G20

I think we could probably get along very well.  "Somebody said, 'Are you friends or enemies?' I said, 'Well it's too early to say, but right now I say we're competitors'

"

For more infomation >> Trump launches astonishing attack on 'US stupidity' as he meets Putin for summit - Duration: 4:33.

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Zlatan Ibrahimovic Says He Could Have Been The US President - Duration: 3:49.

 ce then has put on an impressive display clocking up 12 goals in his first 15 games

 When the 36-year-old was asked in which ways he had changed 'soccer' culture in the US, he answered in a very Zlatan-way: "I don't know if I changed it, I just keep doing my job

They're lucky I didn't come 10 years ago because I would be the President today."  via GIPHY I don't think Donald Trump will be too worried, somehow

 The player isn't known for his self-deprecation, having previously been quoted as saying: "I can't help but laugh at home perfect I am

" And who can forget his response when asked what he was going to buy his other half for an engagement gift? Telling reporters: "What do you mean, 'present?' She got Zlatan

"  During the World Cup, Zlatan made a bet with former LA Galaxy player David Beckham ahead of England's match against Sweden

Credit: PA He bet Becks that if Sweden won the pair would go on a trip to Ikea and the former-England captain would have to pay for whatever Zlatan wanted

 However, if England won, Becks made Zlatan vow to attend an England game at Wembley, wear an England shirt, and eat fish and chips at half time

Sounds like quite a pleasant evening out if you ask me - far better than a trip to Ikea, which is 100 percent guaranteed to end in a fight with whoever you go with

 As we now all know, England beat Sweden 2-0 and Zlatan promised to honour the bet, telling Becks over social media: "I'm coming

Congrats."  Speaking to BBC the Swede reached out to Beckhan, saying: "David, we made a bet, I lost

I'm coming to Wembley to watch an England game in an England shirt and eat fish and chips so that's it

 "Just give me time to breath and cool down after the loss but it's okay, I'm looking forward to the game

" Featured Image Credit: PA

For more infomation >> Zlatan Ibrahimovic Says He Could Have Been The US President - Duration: 3:49.

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Justine Damond's family to file US civil lawsuit - Duration: 2:45.

The family of Australian life coach Justine Damond Ruszczyk, who was shot dead by a Minneapolis police officer, will file a civil lawsuit in the US

If successful, the lawsuit could result in a multimillion dollar payout to her family

The family's lawyer, Bob Bennett, a specialist in representing victims of police shootings in Minnesota, is expected to file the civil rights complaint in the US Federal Court in Minneapolis on Monday

Ms Damond, 40, formerly of Sydney, was dressed in her pyjamas at her Minneapolis home just before midnight on July 15 last year when she heard what she feared was a woman being raped

She called police and when a squad car arrived in an alley behind her house she approached it in the darkness

Mohamed Noor, who is no longer a police officer, was allegedly sitting in the front passenger seat of the police vehicle, shot across his partner and out the window at Damond Ruszczyk

The bullet hit her in the stomach and she died at the scene.Noor has been charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter

Ms Damond's US fiance, Don Damond, and family and friends last week held vigils in Minneapolis and Sydney to commemorate the first anniversary of her death

Mr Damond told the gathering in Minneapolis that the pain he has endured was unimaginable

-AAP

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