2014-09-04

First up, this from the McClatchy Washington Bureau:

In face of Russian aggression, Obama tells Baltic states NATO, US have their back

President Barack Obama accused Russia of fomenting violence in Ukraine and told the Baltic states that NATO and the United States military will respond if Russia attacks a member of the alliance.

Speaking in Estonia before traveling to a NATO summit, Obama pledged that the three countries independence “will always be guaranteed by the strongest military alliance the world has ever known.”

He said the former Soviet Republics had successfully embraced democracy, but that Russia’s aggression against Ukraine threatens that progress.

From the McClatchy Washington Bureau, Cold War revitalization:

NATO may create quick-strike force over Ukraine crisis

President Barack Obama and allied leaders will respond to Russian aggression in Ukraine by moving to set up a quick-strike force of several thousand troops at the NATO summit this week in Wales.

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Monday the new multinational force would be part of a “Readiness Action Plan (that) responds to Russia’s aggressive behavior,” adding that “it equips the alliance to respond to all security challenges wherever they may arise.”

Rasmussen acknowledged that a NATO conference originally scheduled to focus on Afghanistan will now be dominated by the Ukraine crisis when heads of the 28 member nations gather Thursday and Friday in Newport on Wales’ southern coast off the Bristol Channel.

From the Guardian, vroom-vroom:

Nato summit: US and UK to debate military options for tackling Isis

Britain will discuss possibilities with US, including joining in air attacks in Iraq, and chance of rescue attempt for threatened Brit

The United States and Britain will discuss a range of military options for tackling Islamic State (Isis) at the Nato summit, opening in Wales on Thursday, ranging from joining in air attacks in Iraq and possibly Syria, to providing more arms to the Kurds and Iraqi government forces fighting them on the ground.

The British military will also discuss internally and with its US counterparts, following their own failed attempt last month, the realistic chances of special forces mounting a rescue operation to save the Briton threatened by Isis with beheading.

On Wednesday, after a meeting of the government emergency group Cobra, the British foreign secretary Philip Hammond said the UK government had to discuss the wider threat posed to the British public as well as the individual British citizen under threat.

From Sky News, a declaration:

US Vows To ‘Degrade And Destroy’ Islamic State

A video is released showing an IS militant killing a US reporter – and warning that a kneeling British hostage will be next.

Barack Obama has vowed that justice will be done against the Islamic State after it beheaded a second American journalist.

The US President said America would “not be intimidated” by IS violence and promised to “degrade and destroy” its forces.

He spoke after a video was released apparently showing a masked IS militant killing US reporter Steven Sotloff – and warning that a British hostage will be next.

The Independent covers a stumbling block:

Tory anti-terror laws in trouble after Lib Dems raise serious legal concerns

David Cameron’s plans to tighten the anti-terror laws are in trouble amid a deepening split inside the Coalition.

The Liberal Democrats have warned they will not be bounced into backing new legislation, and would not allow the Conservatives to blame them for blocking a crackdown.

Lib Dem sources claim Mr Cameron overreached himself when he floated new laws last Friday without considering whether they were workable, saying that the problem was not Lib Dem opposition, but doubts among Government legal advisers.

In the Commons, the Prime Minister vowed that plans to toughen the laws so that terror suspects could be forced to relocate to another area “will go ahead.”

From intelNews, spooky blowback continues:

Turkey summons US chargé d’affaires to protest spying claims

The government of Turkey has summoned the interim head of the United States diplomatic mission in the country to lodge an official protest over reports that Washington has been spying on Turkish leaders for nearly 10 years.

German publication Der Spiegel said on Sunday that American intelligence agencies, with the help of British operatives, have engaged in “intensive spying” of Turkish government officials since at least 2006. The German newsmagazine said the information was based on internal documents released by American defector Edward Snowden, a former employee of the US National Security Agency who is currently living in Russia.

The documents show that the NSA, which conducts worldwide communications interception on behalf of the US government, places Turkey “ahead of Cuba” when it comes to intelligence collection in the service of American national security.

From the Guardian, takin’ it to the judge:

NSA bulk collection of phone data under scrutiny as federal case opens

Justice Department officials face pointed questions on opening day of case that could push NSA privacy to supreme court

Federal judges pointedly questioned a Justice Department lawyer on Tuesday about the National Security Agency’s bulk collection of US phone data, in the opening day of case that represents a major step toward a supreme court ruling on the constitutionality of the program.

A three-judge panel from the second circuit court of appeals aimed skeptical questions at assistant attorney general Stuart Delery about the scope and breadth of the call-records dragnet, reported last year by the Guardian thanks to leaks from Edward Snowden.

Judge Gerard Lynch, a Barack Obama appointee, asked what was “so uniquely valuable about phone records” that compelled the NSA to collect all domestic phone records, in bulk, without individual suspicion of terrorism, espionage or any other wrongdoing.

From The Hill, if they support it, can it really be reform?:

Holder, spy chief support Senate NSA reform bill

Attorney General Eric Holder and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper are lending their support to the Senate’s effort to rein in the National Security Agency, a boost for advocates of reform.

The two sent a letter this week to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) in support of his bill to end the NSA’s bulk collection of Americans’ phone records.

“Overall, the bill’s significant reforms should provide the public greater confidence in our programs and the checks and balances in the system,” Holder and Clapper wrote in the joint letter, which Leahy released on Wednesday.

On to hackery, first with Businessweek:

Does Apple’s HealthKit App Have a Nude Celebrity Photo Problem?

The nude photos stolen from Jennifer Lawrence, Kate Upton, and other female celebrities could spell trouble for Apple’s forthcoming health-care app. It wouldn’t be a stretch for those following news of the leaked photos to worry about trusting their iPhones with intimate health data.

Apple (AAPL) has already acknowledged that “certain celebrity accounts were compromised by a very targeted attack on user names, passwords and security questions” while denying “any breach in any of Apple’s systems.” But that carefully worded defense may not reassure those nervous users busy taking their own private pictures off iCloud, Apple’s online storage program.

Apple’s new app, HealthKit, is expected to combine data from activity trackers and medical records in one place. The company is expected to discuss the program and associated tools with developers at a high-profile event on Sept. 9. The idea is to let other app developers tap into health data, with permission from the iPhone user. “You can allow the data from your blood pressure app to be automatically shared with your doctor. Or allow your nutrition app to tell your fitness apps how many calories you consume each day,” promises a preview of HealthKit on Apple’s website.

From Business Insider, another kind of blowback:

Apple Shares Tank After The Celeb Nude Scandal, And Pacific Crest Tells Everyone To Sell

Last week, the company was flying high as anticipation built for the iPhone 6, and the iWatch, which are expected to be announced next week. The stock was hitting new all-time highs, trading up to $103.20, but today it’s back under $100.

It all came to a screeching halt over the weekend for Apple, when nude photos of celebrities hit the web. Apple’s weak security on iCloud, where the photos were backed up, was blamed for the photos hitting the web.

The timing couldn’t be worse. Apple is about to roll out a new mobile payments feature, as well as health tracking data tied to your iPhone. Most of that data is likely to be stored right on the phone, and therefore more secure. However, most people won’t understand that delineation. Most people will think, “If Apple can’t be trusted with photos, can it be trusted with banking data and health data? “

Summing up with Jimmy Kimmel Live [and catch that “commercial” at the end:

Jimmy Kimmel’s Leaked iCloud Photo

Program notes:

Nude and intimate photos of Jennifer Lawrence, Kate Upton and many other stars were posted online over Labor Day weekend, believed to have been hacked from their Apple iCloud accounts. It’s embarrassing, especially for Jimmy since he happens to be one of the people who got caught up in this.

Nextgov covers other implications:

What Does Alleged iCloud Hack Mean For Federal Agencies?

Most federal agency employees with iPhones probably don’t have to worry about hackers ogling naked photos of them saved in Apple’s iCloud backup system.

But they might have cause for concern about attackers targeting the cloud service to peer at sensitive government information, cybersecurity experts warn.

The problem, experts say, is a lack of awareness. iCloud, by default, automatically backs up a user’s device over Wi-Fi every day, according to Apple’s website.

Federal employees could be uploading sensitive information when they work on their personally owned iPhones — unless agencies take action. And it is not clear that they are.

The Los Angeles Times covers another hackery consequence:

Hacker may have sent bomb threat at O.C. schools; no explosives found

Police in Fountain Valley now say they believe a 17-year-old student’s email account was hacked and that there’s no evidence he sent a threatening message that forced the closure of Fountain Valley High School and an adjoining continuation school as police searched for weapons and explosives.

Teachers and administrators have been allowed back on the campuses but are being escorted by police officers, part of a final precautionary step before the schools are reopened, police said.

All classes, though, have been canceled for the day.

From MIT Technology Review, oh joy:

Networked Home Gadgets Offer Hackers New Opportunities

Connected appliances such as TVs can provide hackers a way into your house.

Connecting a new appliance to your home’s Wi-Fi network or broadband modem could increase the risk that data such as passwords will be taken from computers in your house. Such is the warning from antivirus company Kaspersky Lab in a forthcoming report on the side effects of more and more home devices being connected to the Internet.

By now most consumers are aware that security is a major problem for their laptops and PCs, says David Jacoby, a security researcher at Kaspersky Lab. But they don’t realize that appliances like TVs, DVD players, and printers that connect to a home network are vulnerable to similar threats. What’s more, most such devices have no security protections built in whatsoever, he says (see “Securing the Smart Home, from Toasters to Toilets”). “Consumers need to understand that the devices that they buy might be vulnerable,” says Jacoby.

Jacoby recently hacked several Internet-enabled devices connected to his own home network, including his TV, printer, router, and remote storage devices. He came up with a laundry list of flaws in several everyday products, and is working with manufacturers to fix them before making a report public to highlight the severity of the problem.

Network World covers hackery in Latin America:

Attack hijacks DNS settings on home routers in Brazil

An ongoing attack in Brazil tricks users into visiting malicious websites that attempt to silently change the Domain Name System settings of their home routers.

If the attack is successful, the routers are reconfigured to use rogue DNS servers that redirect victims to phishing pages when they open banking sites, said Fabio Assolini, a security researcher at Kaspersky Lab, in a blog post Tuesday.

The attack starts with spam emails that tell recipients they’re being cheated and asks them to click on a link. The link leads to an adult content website that in the background forces browsers to load specifically crafted URLs.

SecurityWeek covers another vulnerability:

Enterprises Warned of DDoS Attacks Leveraging Linux Malware

Akamai Technologies has published a threat advisory to warn organizations of attacks where cybercriminals are infecting Linux servers with malware capable of launching powerful distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks.

According to the alert released Wednesday, attacks leveraging Linux malware dubbed IptabLes and IptabLex have been launched against the entertainment industry and other verticals. The threats are designed to target Linux distributions such as Debian, CentOS, Ubuntu and Red Hat, and have been placed on servers by exploiting vulnerabilities in Apache Struts, Apache Tomcat, the open source search and analytics engine Elasticsearch, and other software components.

According to the alert, attackers are leveraging flaws in these programs to breach servers and escalate their privileges, which enables them to drop and execute the malicious binary. Administrators can detect infections by looking for files named “.IptabLes” or “.IptabLex” in the “/boot” directory. However, Akamai points out that these are post-infection indicators since these are not the names of the malicious files at the moment when they’re dropped.

And from Nextgov, downgrading a threat:

Instagram Identity Theft: New Spam Bots are Copying Real Accounts, Pic-for-Pic and Word-for-Word

On Instagram, if it looks like you, and talks like you, and posts like you, it may not actually be you. A new wave of spam bots are apparently avoiding detection by Instagram’s filters by copying real people… picture for picture, word for word.

The harmless-but-creepy occurrence was revealed in an article on The Verge, whose own video director Christian Mazza recently had his account hijacked… and he’s not the only one.

Others are reporting the same thing, and though it’s not causing any issues — the bots are literally just copying your profile photo, setting up under a new username and then reposting some of your images, caption and all — it’s oddly unsettling to know that someone out there might be pretending to be you.

We said downgrading, because they miss one key implication: By stealing the work of others and reposting it as their own, they could sell the photos for commercial use and collect money right due to the actual photographer. Odd that Nextgov would miss the implication.

Popular Science covers a mystery:

Mysterious Phony Cell Towers Could Be Intercepting Your Calls

Every smart phone has a secondary OS, which can be hijacked by high-tech hackers

Like many of the ultra-secure phones that have come to market in the wake of Edward Snowden’s leaks, the CryptoPhone 500, which is marketed in the U.S. by ESD America and built on top of an unassuming Samsung Galaxy SIII body, features high-powered encryption. Les Goldsmith, the CEO of ESD America, says the phone also runs a customized or “hardened” version of Android that removes 468 vulnerabilities that his engineering team team found in the stock installation of the OS.

His mobile security team also found that the version of the Android OS that comes standard on the Samsung Galaxy SIII leaks data to parts unknown 80-90 times every hour.  That doesn’t necessarily mean that the phone has been hacked, Goldmsith says, but the user can’t know whether the data is beaming out from a particular app, the OS, or an illicit piece of spyware.  His clients want real security and control over their device, and have the money to pay for it.

To show what the CryptoPhone can do that less expensive competitors cannot, he points me to a map that he and his customers have created, indicating 17 different phony cell towers known as “interceptors,” detected by the CryptoPhone 500 around the United States during the month of July alone. Interceptors look to a typical phone like an ordinary tower.  Once the phone connects with the interceptor, a variety of “over-the-air” attacks become possible, from eavesdropping on calls and texts to pushing spyware to the device.

From the Guardian, more corrupt cop capering:

Plebgate: Met obtained phone records of Sun political editor without consent

Tom Newton Dunn said to be unaware of intervention which led to arrest of officer on suspicion of leaking information to paper

Police investigating the Plebgate saga obtained the telephone records of the political editor of the Sun without his consent, despite laws which entitle journalists to keep their sources confidential.

The Metropolitan police report into the scandal reveals that the force arrested an officer on suspicion of leaking information to the Sun after an analysis of Tom Newton Dunn’s phone records.

The Met also obtained call records to the Sun newsdesk to try to identify a second potential source to the Plebgate scandal.

France 24 drones on:

US extends Niger drone capabilities in cooperation with France

The United States is preparing to redeploy drones already in Niger to set up a forward base in the Sahara closer to Islamist militants blamed for attacks across the region, according to US military and Defence Department officials.

In a move that illustrates growing cooperation between France and the US to combat militant Islamism in Saharan Africa, Washington deployed unarmed surveillance drones to Niger in 2013.

The move followed a French-led military operation that destroyed an al Qaeda enclave in neighbouring northern Mali.

And the U.S. Naval Institute News covers another step toward Skynet:

Navy’s Next Fighter Likely to Feature Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence will likely feature prominently onboard the Pentagon’s next-generation successors to the Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet and the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor.

“AI is going to be huge,” said one U.S. Navy official familiar with the service’s F/A-XX effort to replace the Super Hornet starting around 2030.

Further, while there are significant differences between the U.S. Air Force’s vision for its F-X air superiority fighter and the Navy’s F/A-XX, the two services agree on some fundamental aspects about what characteristics the jet will need to share.

From Shanghai Daily, a hazard of online shopping:

Online customer gets body bag for posting poor rating

A LOCAL customer was sent a dead body bag in an act of revenge for posting low ratings on an online shop based in Fujian Province.

The customer, surnamed Xue, had ordered a pair of shoes from the online shop on taobao.com, China’s largest online shopping platform. He received the shoes three days later but gave a poor rating to the shop because of the poor quality of the shoes and its slow delivery.

In return, he was bombarded with over 80 phone calls before being sent the body bag.

And the New York Times debunks a myth:

Deportations Don’t Lower Crime Rates, Study Says

Six years after the federal government opened an immigration enforcement program intended to improve public safety, deporting hundreds of thousands of people, many of them convicted criminals, a new study has concluded that the program has had “no observable effect on the overall crime rate.”

The finding “calls into question the longstanding assumption that deporting noncitizens who commit crimes is an effective crime-control strategy,” said the study, conducted by two law professors at the University of Chicago and New York University.

The analysis, scheduled for publication in the November issue of The Journal of Law and Economics, a journal for peer-review research, coincides with the Obama administration’s internal review of the program, known as Secure Communities. Jeh Johnson, the homeland security secretary, has suggested that he might overhaul the program, saying it needs “a fresh start.”

From the London Telegraph, inviting more terrorism?:

IRA suspects protected by human rights as ‘comfort letters’ are annulled

Theresa Villiers, Northern Ireland Secretary, warns recipients of comfort letters that they can no longer rely on them to avoid prosecution

Theresa Villiers has refused to name the IRA suspects sent “comfort letters” because it would breach their human rights, despite admitting more could have been sent in error.

The Northern Ireland Secretary confirmed the Government was effectively annulling the assurances given to the so-called IRA “on-the-runs” that they no longer faced prosecution.

The Daily Telegraph disclosed on Wednesday that recipients of the letters, sent out in the years after the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, are to be told they are not worth the paper they are written on and they will still be pursued by police.

While BBC News warns of woes for those already behind bars:

Ministry of Justice fined over prison data loss

The Ministry of Justice has been fined £180,000 for “serious failings” in the handling of confidential data.

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) said the penalty was related to the loss of a hard drive containing the details of almost 3,000 prisoners at Erlestoke prison in Wiltshire.

The disk was not encrypted.

The records, lost in 2013, included material on organised crime, prisoners’ health and drug misuse, and information about inmates’ victims and visitors.

And from TheLocal.de, a point we’ve been regularly making:

Sinti, Roma are most discriminated against

A new study has found that the Sinti and Roma people encounter more discrimination than any other group in Germany, with more than a fifth of Germans supporting their deportation.

The study found that 22 percent of respondents were for their deportation.

The head of the Federal Anti-discrimination Agency, which conducted the survey, is calling for politicians to act against discrimination of the Roma and Sinti populations in Germany.

“People don’t know anything about the Sinti and Roma. Their image is dominated by what people see on the streets,” Christine Lüders said on Wednesday on her appearance on ZDF’s morning news show, Morgenmagazin.

After the jump, the latest from Asia including a fascist visit and legal reforms Down Under, Al Qaeda expands to the subcontinent, a body count in Pakistan and protest suspicions, anger at a draconian sedition law in Malaysia, Chinese drone boasting, Sino/Canadian peace feelers, a political realignment in Japan, tightening those Indo/Japanese ties, and why LA’s 911 operators hate Facebook. . .

From the Guardian, a call for reform in Australia:

Law Reform Commission seeks right to sue for victims of privacy violations

Major changes to Australia’s privacy laws recommended for those whose ‘private space’ is intruded upon

Victims of misuses of private information and intrusions into private space in Australia should have a right to sue for violations of privacy, a major report from the Australian Law Reform Commission says.

In a report released on Wednesday the commission recommended the federal government should introduce a right to sue for major breaches of privacy in Australia.

The long-anticipated report suggests substantial changes to Australia’s privacy law to allow victims of abuses of privacy to take legal action, while attempting to balance the right to freedom of speech and ensure that journalists’ ability to report on matters of public interest is not affected.

The Guardian again, this time with visiting fascists:

Greek neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn’s visit slammed by community groups

Leaders of Greek-Australian community, unions and lobby groups condemn Golden Dawn’s policies and ‘hateful attitudes’

Senior leaders of the Greek-Australian community have joined the heads of other ethnic lobby groups and union officials to denounce a proposed visit by European MPs representing Greece’s neo-Nazi party, Golden Dawn.

“The planned visit to Australia in October by two members of the extremist Greek political party, Golden Dawn, is a matter that should concern all Australians,” the statement, signed by the honorary secretary of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocesan Council, Nicholas Pappas, among others, said.

Golden Dawn’s Australian branch announced last week that two of the ultra-nationalist group’s MEPs, former military commanders Eleftherios Synadinos and Georgios Epitideios, would visit later in the year to raise awareness and funds.

Next up, the Express Tribune covers a new NGO:

Al Qaeda establishes new branch in Indian subcontinent

Al Qaeda has announced a new branch in the Indian subcontinent, the SITE intelligence group said on Wednesday.

In a video released by al Qaeda’s media arm, As-Sehbab, the group’s chief Ayman Al-Zawahiri announced the creation of “Qaedat al-Jihad.”

Chief of al Qaeda’s Shariah Committee for Pakistan, Asim Umar, will be the leader of the new branch. Ustad Usama Mahmoud will be the branch’s spokesperson.

United Press International counts bodies:

Pakistani military claims 910 terrorists killed in Waziristan offensive

The Pakistani military announced Wednesday that it has killed 910 suspected militants during a combined ground offensive and airstrike operation targeting the Taliban in the North Waziristan area

The Pakistani military announced Wednesday that it has killed 910 suspected militants during a counterterrorism operation in North Waziristan that began in June.

Wednesday’s update comes after a summer-long military operation that involved both a ground offensive and airstrike operation undertaken with the objective to “finish off” the Taliban “once and for all.”

Since June, “security forces have cleared major towns of Miranshah, Mirali, Datta Khel, Boya and Degan, which were considered strong holds of terrorists,” the military reported Wednesday. The intelligence-led counterterrorism operations resulted in the recovery and destruction of 27 Improvised Explosive Device factories and “Huge cache of arms and ammunition, communication equipment, and other logistics facilities, used by Terrorists.”

The military noted that 82 soldiers were killed and another 269 injured in the offensive.

Al Jazeera America looks for the hidden hand:

Why Pakistanis see the hand of the military in protest turmoil

Analysis: Marginal politicians have brought government to its knees, but many believe generals are guiding protesters

From a security perspective, the timing of the protests could not be worse. Pakistan has launched an offensive against domestic Taliban insurgents in the northwest, just as NATO forces count down the weeks to their departure from neighboring Afghanistan. With extremist fighters running rampant through Syria and Iraq, no one needs a political vacuum in the nuclear-armed state under the noses of whose army Osama bin Laden once hid.

Many longtime Pakistan watchers, however, are wondering how two marginal political leaders – Imran  Khan, a former national cricket captain turned politician, and Tahir ul-Qadri, a moderate cleric with a taste for fiery rhetoric – could bring the government to a halt for almost three weeks. But the answer may lie less in the mass appeal of Khan and Qadri than it does in the covert tussle of Pakistan’s generals with the country’s civilian rulers.

Rather than seizing power, as they have done three times before, the soldiers who arrived at PTV headquarters on Monday actually helped clear the studios of demonstrators. Yet, within hours evidence started to emerge that the top brass may have been secretly urging on Khan and Qadri and their 50,000 or so supporters.

From Channel NewsAsia Singapore, opposing a crackdown:

Malaysia’s opposition to protest sedition law

Bullet Anwar Ibrahim’s Parti Keadilan Rakyat plans a series of protests to press the Malaysian government to drop all charges brought under the sedition law and abolish the legislation, a lawmaker said on Wednesday (Sep 3).

Fourteen people have been charged since 2010 – including three opposition legislators in the past two weeks and a respected university lecturer on Tuesday – and several others investigated.

Prime Minister Najib Razak pledged two years ago that his United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), the centrepiece of the Barisan Nasional coalition, would abolish the Sedition Act. The pledge was part of broad promises of liberalisation to shore up sagging voter support. But the reforms have foundered amid conservative resistance within UMNO, and the opposition says a crackdown is under way to thwart its own growing electoral success.

The British colonial government introduced the law in the 1940s to curb criticism of authorities amid a communist uprising. Convictions bring up to three years in prison. The Act remains in force and its use has accelerated, especially since elections in May 2013 in which the opposition won the majority of the popular vote yet failed to take parliament.

On to China and a boast from Want China Times:

US Predator not as good as China’s CH-4 drone: Chinese media

The People’s Liberation Army’s CH-4 unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) is receiving high-profile publicity in China after being touted as being superior in all key indicators to the American MQ-1 Predator.

The CH-4, otherwise known as the Cai Hong-4 or Rainbow-4 drone, was developed by the China Academy of Aerospace Aerodynamics of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC). The drone was most recently on display at the 2014 Tianjin International UAV and Model Exhibition on Aug. 29, just days after its use in the multinational Peace Mission 2014 military exercise in Inner Mongolia featuring member nations of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.

PLA Air Force spokesperson Shen Jinke said on Aug. 26 that during Peace Mission 2014 the CH-4 was “tasked with surveillance, reconnaissance, and ground attacks, [and] will play a vital role in fighting terrorism.” Feng Aiwang, commander of the exercise’s PLA Air Force battle group, later said that the CH-4 hit every one of its targets in several missile firings, with national broadcaster CCTV also airing rare footage of a missile hitting a simulated enemy vehicle.

Reuters covers a hint of rapprochement:

Canada, China quietly hold top-level meeting on strained ties

Senior officials from Canada and China met quietly in Ottawa last week to discuss relations that have deteriorated so badly that they could threaten Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s planned visit to China in November.

Canada sees China as an important trading partner and in early 2012 Harper went to Beijing to pitch the idea of Canada as a potential oil supplier. The closeness of the ties are in question after two high-profile incidents.

In late July, Canada accused Chinese hackers of being responsible for an attack on a government computer. In early August, China detained a Canadian couple, Kevin Garratt and Julia Dawn Garratt, on suspicion of spying.

Reuters issues a nudge:

China’s Xi urges Japan to face history on anniversary of surrender

Chinese President Xi Jinping urged Japan to learn from its past military aggression on Wednesday, as China commemorated Japan’s World War Two surrender on a newly appointed Victory Day amid tense ties between the two Asian giants.

Xi and fellow members of the Politburo Standing Committee, the apex of power in China, presided over a pomp-filled ceremony at the Museum of the War of the Chinese People’s Resistance Against Japanese Aggression in Beijing.

“China will never allow any denial and distortion of this history of aggression or any return to militarism,” state media quoted Xi as saying.

China’s state-owned Global Times was more explicit:

Xi urges anti-Japanese aggression spirit in future development

President Xi Jinping called for the Chinese people to carry on the national spirit of the Anti-Japanese War as the country is expecting many “great battles” in its future development.

China cultivated the great national spirit of Anti-Japanese War during the war against Japanese aggression, said Xi, addressing a symposium held to mark the 69th anniversary of victory in Anti-Japanese War.

“The great national spirit, with patriotism at its core, was a decisive factor for the victory, while the mainstay role of the Communist Party of China (CPC) played during the war was also crucial,” Xi said.

Reuters covers a shift:

Japan PM Abe appoints China-friendly lawmakers to key posts

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe picked two veteran lawmakers with friendly ties to China for top party posts on Wednesday in an apparent signal of hope for a thaw in chilly ties with Beijing and a summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

The change in executives in Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) was twinned with a cabinet reshuffle in which Abe gave the health and welfare portfolio to a reform-minded lawmaker, kept core ministers and boosted the number of women in an effort to polish his image.

In a move welcomed by Tokyo stock market players, Abe drafted Yasuhisa Shiozaki, 63, a proponent of an overhaul of Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF), to head the ministry of labor, health and welfare, which oversees GPIF.

From the Japan Times, aspiration:

China hopes new Cabinet will work toward better relations

China expressed hope Wednesday that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s new Cabinet lineup will help ease the tense relations between the two nations.

“We hope that Abe’s Cabinet members will all be active promoters of the improvement and development of Sino-Japanese relations,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said during a regular press briefing.

He declined to discuss any specific appointments, saying he was unaware of what changes had been made and that Beijing would not comment on Japan’s internal affairs.

Jiji Press covers more hints of things ahead:

Kishida Vows to Enhance Dialogue with China, S. Korea

Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida vowed Wednesday to promote dialogue between Japan and its two Asian neighbors of China and South Korea.

At a news conference after the cabinet shakeup the same day, Kishida said he wants to enhance communication with South Korea because the country is an important neighbor that shares basic values with Japan.

Noting Japan and China bear strong responsibility for peace and stability in the region, Kishida expressed his eagerness to help the two countries hold high-level political talks in the near future.

He also said he will make utmost efforts toward a comprehensive solution to all pending issues with North Korea, such as nuclear and missile development and abductions of Japanese nationals.

While Kyodo News covers another schema:

Abe entrusts job of winning support for security changes to Eto

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe tapped former Senior Vice Defense Minister Akinori Eto on Wednesday to achieve his goal of legislating Japan’s biggest postwar security policy change.

Eto, a 58-year-old Liberal Democratic Party lawmaker, will be tasked with addressing concerns that Japan may depart from its pacifist stance, and winning public support for a legal basis to allow Japan’s military to defend allies under armed attack even when Japan itself is not.

The Cabinet approved in July reinterpreting the U.S.-drafted Constitution to allow Japan to exercise the right to engage in collective self-defense, but Japan still needs to revise a series of existing laws during the regular Diet session next year to accommodate the controversial decision.

From Want China Times, done deals:

Japan, India sign economic and military agreements in Tokyo

Japan and India have agreed to step up economic cooperation and hold joint military drills during Indian prime minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Japan, reports our Chinese-language sister newspaper Want Daily.

Modi and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe on Monday signed multiple trade and energy agreements, under which Japan will double its investment in India’s infrastructure over the next five years, providing 50 billion yen (US$476 million) in financing and loaning US$100 million to India with a low interest rate, as well as helping the country construct a thermoelectric system.

The two sides also agreed to strengthen cooperation on defense, facilitate dialogue between foreign affairs and defense ministers, hold regular ocean joint drills with the US Navy and accelerate exports of Japan’s amphibious aircraft ShinMaywa US-2 aircraft to India.

While the Mainichi covers another source of insecurity:

App showed location, other flight data on ‘Japanese Air Force One’

An app for tablet computers and smartphones allowed users to see the location and other pieces of flight data about the so-called “Japanese Air Force One,” government aircraft used by members of the imperial family and the prime minister when they visit foreign countries, Defense Ministry officials said Wednesday.

In mid-August, the ministry asked the Swedish company that produces the application to withhold information on the aircraft for security reasons, the officials said, adding that the ministry later confirmed that such information was no longer available on the app.

The Flightradar24 service, the app version of which can be downloaded onto various portable devices, tracks flights using signals called “ADS-B” that are broadcast by aircraft to avoid midair collisions. Information on the signals is supplied by aviation enthusiasts around the world.

And for our final headlines, final proof of shark-jumping,. First up, this from  Business Insider:

Watch Will Smith Do An Amazing Synchronized Segway Dance At Burning Man

Finally, this from the Los Angeles Times:

911 calls about Facebook outage angers L.A. County sheriff’s officials

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