Headline
** People rescuing an injured passenger from inside a passenger bus hit by a truck on Dhaka-Mawa Expressway in Shologhar area of Shreenagar upazila in Munshiganj on Thursday. ** Motorcycles allowed on Padma Bridge after 10 months ** Commuters charge extra fare, passengers disappointed ** 78 people killed in Yemen stampede ** Moon sighting committee meets today to ascertain Eid day ** 9 killed in road accidents in 3 districts ** US announces new $325 m military aid package for Ukraine ** Eid-ul-Fitr in Saudi Arabia today ** Eid exodus begins ** LPG price cut illusive ** 15 hurt as bus overturns in capital ** New interbank cheque clearing timings set for Eid holidays ** Four women hit by a train die in Tangail ** 12.28 lakh SIM users left Dhaka on Tuesday ** Sylhet engineer threatened over power outage ** People rush to village homes to spend Eid holidays with their near and dear ones. This photo was taken from Sadarghat Launch Terminal on Tuesday. NN photo ** Surge in cases of dehydration, diarrhoea amid summer heat wave ** Padma Bridge construction cost increases by Tk 2,412cr ** PM gives Tk 90m to Bangabazar fire victims ** Textile workers block highway demanding wage, Eid bonus ** Attack on PM's motorcade Ex-BNP MP, 3 others get life term ** Load-shedding increases for demand of electricity during heat wave ** Motorbikes to be allowed on Padma bridge from Thursday ** 5-day Eid vacation begins from today ** Take Nangalkot train accident as a warning about negligence of govt functionaries **

Trump says report on US cyber attacks against Russia is ‘virtual treason’

17 June 2019 AFP, Washington
Trump says report on US cyber attacks against Russia is ‘virtual treason’

Donald Trump called the media corrupt and said journalists are enemy of the people.


US President Donald Trump on Saturday accused The New York Times of "a virtual act of treason," after it reported the US is stepping up digital incursions into Russia's electric power grid.
Current and former government officials have described the classified deployment of American computer code inside Russia's power grid and other targets, the Times reported.
The action is intended partly as a warning but also to leave the US poised to conduct cyberstrikes in the event of a major conflict between the US and Russia, the newspaper said.
Trump tweeted that the accusations were "NOT TRUE," calling the media "corrupt" and repeating accusations that journalists are "the enemy of the people."
"Do you believe that the Failing New York Times just did a story stating that the United States is substantially increasing Cyber Attacks on Russia," he wrote.
"This is a virtual act of Treason by a once great paper so desperate for a story, any story, even if bad for our Country."
The Times report came after an investigation by US special counsel Robert Mueller of alleged hacking by Russia's GRU intelligence agency and social media manipulation by Russia's Internet Research Agency to benefit Trump's election campaign.
Mueller detailed a disturbing number of contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia ahead of the 2016 poll.
Trump claimed the report cleared him of wrongdoing. On the question of obstruction of justice, the report did not conclude Trump committed a crime, but Mueller wrote that "it also does not exonerate him."
In its Saturday report, the Times described "broad hesitation to go into detail with Mr Trump about operations against Russia for concern over his reaction-and the possibility that he might countermand it or discuss it with foreign officials."
The Times also cited National Security Council officials as saying they had no security concerns about the newspaper's reporting on the digital incursions, perhaps indicating that some of the intrusions were meant to be noticed by the Russians. The New York Times, Washington Post and other publications have issued numerous investigative reports into Trump and his administration, with probes also under way by Congressional committees.
In February the publisher of the Times, AG Sulzberger, said Trump's attacks on the press were "reckless" and "dangerous" and threatened to encourage violence against journalists.
 "America's founders believed that a free press was essential to democracy because it is the foundation of an informed, engaged citizenry," he said in a statement.

Times' Russia report is 'virtual treason,' Trump says
Trump slams NYT report on US cyberattacks against Russia as a 'virtual act of treason'
Trump accuses New York Times of 'virtual treason' over Russia cyber warfare report
US President Donald Trump on Saturday accused the New York Times of "a virtual act of treason" after it reported the US is stepping up digital incursions into Russia's electric power grid.
Current and former government officials have described the classified deployment of American computer code inside Russia's power grid and other targets, the newspaper reported.
The action is intended partly as a warning but also to leave the US poised to conduct cyber-strikes in the event of a major conflict between the US and Russia, the newspaper said.
Donald Trump attacks Sadiq Khan in tweets over deaths in London
Read more
Trump tweeted that the accusations were "not true", calling the media "corrupt" and repeating accusations that journalists are "the enemy of the people".
"Do you believe that the Failing New York Times just did a story stating that the United States is substantially increasing Cyber Attacks on Russia," he wrote.
"This is a virtual act of Treason by a once great paper so desperate for a story, any story, even if bad for our Country."
The Times report came after an investigation by US special counsel Robert Mueller of alleged hacking by Russia's GRU intelligence agency and social media manipulation by Russia's Internet Research Agency to benefit Trump's election campaign.
Mueller detailed a disturbing number of contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia ahead of the 2016 poll.
Trump claimed the report cleared him of wrongdoing. On the question of obstruction of justice, the report did not conclude Trump committed a crime, but Mueller wrote that "it also does not exonerate him".
In its Saturday report, the Times described "broad hesitation to go into detail with Mr Trump about operations against Russia for concern over his reaction - and the possibility that he might countermand it or discuss it with foreign officials."
The Times also cited National Security Council officials as saying they had no security concerns about the newspaper's reporting on the digital incursions, perhaps indicating that some of the intrusions were meant to be noticed by the Russians.
The New York Times, Washington Post and other publications have issued numerous investigative reports into Trump and his administration, with inquiries also under way by congressional committees.
In February the publisher of the Times, AG Sulzberger, said Trump's attacks on the press were "reckless" and "dangerous" and threatened to encourage violence against journalists.
"America's founders believed that a free press was essential to democracy because it is the foundation of an informed, engaged citizenry," he said.

Add Rate