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The Internet is the most important development in the history of communication. The machine does not isolate man from the great problems of nature but plunges him more deeply.

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US President Barack Obama statement on mass shooting at Orlando nightclub

President Barack Obama delivers a statement on the mass shooting at a nightclub in Orlando, Florida, at the White House in Washington, DC, USA, 12 June 2016. (Photo: EPA)

In my most recent column, I discussed President Obama’s disgraceful reaction to the Islamic terrorist massacre of innocents in Orlando. Not to be outdone by his own wrongheadedness, he one-upped himself Tuesday with another doozy.

People often criticize Donald Trump’s personalization of political issues, especially through his tweets, such as when he tweeted, “Appreciate the congrats for being right on radical Islamic terrorism, I don’t want congrats, I want toughness & vigilance. We must be smart!”

No matter how self-focused he is, however, Trump will never be a match for his narcissistic superior Barack Obama, who trotted back to the lectern Tuesday not to express rage against the Islamist perpetrator of this abominable shooting or the radical ideology that spawned it but to throw a public tantrum in response to criticism of his woefully ineffective policies in fighting terrorism. Trump had gotten under his thin skin.

You would think Obama might reserve some emotion for the victims of the carnage or reassure Americans that he intends to ramp up his nonexistent war on terror, but you would be wrong. Few public leaders possess the stunning insensitivity and self-directedness that could lead to such an inappropriate misdirection of outrage.

You might also think that if Obama is going to turn his fire on Trump, he would at least be doing it on behalf of his would-be successor, Hillary Clinton. She, after all — not Obama — will be running against Trump in November, barring some developments that might change that scenario. But you would be wrong again, for his invective was about Obama and Obama alone, not the victims, not America, not Americans, not Clinton and not the Democratic Party. Just Barack. He apparently regards the presidency more as a pulpit from which to defend himself against slights than as a platform from which to reassure the American people, who are sorely in need of some glint of hope that he has the faintest inkling of the threats we face.

Even liberal media outlets, Obama’s usual defenders, were talking about how unpresidential his comments were. “This was the chance for the president to try to bring us together,” said Mike Rogers, former head of the House Intelligence Committee, to CNN’s Jake Tapper. “I think he is so focused on this presidential campaign he let himself go. I just don’t think it looked presidential.”

Obama began by congratulating himself on his “tough” policies and successful record against terrorism — a curious message on the heels of the Orlando slaughter — before launching into a familiar partisan tirade. His protests notwithstanding, everyone knows the Islamic terrorist threat overseas and at home is growing to an alarming level because he still has no strategy — mainly because he won’t acknowledge the threat.

Next, Obama warned that we should “stop making it easy as possible for terrorists to buy assault weapons.” He continued, “Reinstate the assault weapons ban.” Seven-plus years into his presidency, he is still following Rahm Emanuel’s advice that “you never want a serious crisis to go to waste.”

From there, Obama descended into a petulant, sarcastic rant, mocking the critics of his refusal to utter the phrase “radical Islam,” as if they were purely engaged in a meaningless semantic distinction rather than condemning Obama’s recklessly apologetic mindset toward our enemy.

It seems that every time there is an attack by radical Islamists against innocent people, Obama’s first instinct is to defend the religion of Islam, caution against a backlash against Muslims, which rarely occurs, and condemn those who are rightly outraged over the religion’s non-coincidental connection to the various perpetrators. (Hint: They are radical Islamists.)

Obama sneeringly asked what it would change or accomplish if he used the label “radical Islamists,” complaining that this was a “political distraction,” “partisan rhetoric” and a “political talking point.” If labels mean so little, we might ask, why does Obama refuse to call the Islamic State group by the name most Americans call it, ISIS, instead of calling it ISIL? What, pray tell, is in a name?

Obama argues, disingenuously, that by saying “radical Islamist,” we are tainting and alienating an entire religion. But why would it alienate peaceful Muslims to emphasize that it is only the radical among them who are engaged in these activities? Isn’t that a defense of the religion proper?

Even more troubling is Obama’s contention that using the term makes us less safe because it fuels “ISIL’s notion that the West hates Muslims, making young Muslims in this country and around the world feel like no matter what they do, they’re going to be under suspicion and under attack.”

But radical Islamists attack and kill people not because of their rhetoric or their leaders’ policies but because they believe they have a God-ordained duty to subjugate and kill “infidels.” They recruit by pointing not to injustices but to Quranic scriptures commanding the extinguishment of nonbelievers.

Obama has been in denial and mollycoddling this deadly threat for over seven years, and where has it gotten us? We are seeing a dramatic increase in the threat; that’s where. It’s no wonder Obama is so defensive in the aftermath of yet another massacre. His approach is dangerous, and his policies are making us strikingly less safe. So instead of changing directions — something he’s congenitally incapable of doing — he attacks his rightful critics.

Well, he can save his phony indignation and propaganda, because few are buying them anymore. America is less safe not simply because Obama’s rhetoric doesn’t comport with reality but because his thoughts and actions don’t.
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If labels mean so little, why does

David-Jolly-Bill-Nelson-AP

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., left, holds a news conference after the terror attack at Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Fla., on Sunday, June 12, 2016. Rep. David Jolly, right, holds a press conference. (Photos: AP)

In the wake of the Orlando terror attack, two Florida lawmakers have announced they have proposed legislation aiming to curb terrorist attacks and gun violence.

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., announced Wednesday that he is filing a bill that would allow the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to be notified when a person with possible ties to terrorism purchases a gun. Omar Mateen, 29, a Muslim U.S. citizen born to Afghan parents who opened fire and killed at least 49 people, was “on the radar” and previously investigated by the FBI at least two times.

But Mateen was removed from from the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Database.

Sen. Nelson, a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee and former member of the Intelligence Committee, wants any individual who is, or has been investigated for possible ties to terrorism to be entered into the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), which gun shop owners use to run background checks on prospective gun buyers.

If a background check is conducted for a prospective gun buyer who is, or has been investigated for potential ties to terrorism, Nelson’s bill would require that the NICS system automatically notify the appropriate division of the FBI.

FBI Director James Comey previously said “once an investigation is closed there is then no notification of any sort that is triggered by that person then attempting to purchase a firearm when the cases were closed as inconclusive.”

Sen. Nelson’s bill would not automatically bar someone previously investigated for possible ties to terrorism from purchasing a firearm, but rather require these individuals be entered into the NICS system and that the FBI be notified if any of those individuals attempt to purchase a firearm.

The bill now heads to the Senate’s Judiciary Committee for consideration.

However, Sen. Nelson, who is up for reelection in November, also cosponsored a far more strict measure that would, among other things, bar known or suspected terrorists on government watch lists from purchasing a firearm. Gun rights and Second Amendment advocates oppose the idea of banning those on government lists from purchasing firearms because 1) there is no mechanism to dispute your status on the list and 2), anyone could be put on the list with less than convincing evidence.

“Sen. Nelson is doing the reelection dance with this maneuver,” said PPD’s senior political analyst Richard Baris. “He publicly proposed a very narrow measure that wouldn’t harm his electoral prospects in a rather pro-gun state, but less publicly threw his support behind a much less popular proposal.”

Another Florida lawmaker agrees, and is attempting to address this deal-breaker.

Rep. David Jolly, R-Fla., District-13, drafted legislation this week that says a person on the terror watch list would only be temporarily prohibited from purchasing a firearm.

“It is common sense that if you are on a national terror list and can’t fly on a plane, you should not be allowed to buy a gun,” Rep. Jolly said. “But the fact is the existing proposal repeatedly pushed by some in Congress to ban firearm purchases by those on the no-fly list is fatally flawed because it provides no due process or recourse protections for innocent law-abiding individuals wrongfully or mistakenly included on the list.”

According to PPD’s research, Rep. Jolly’s legislation is the first ever to propose due process protections for lawful gun owners who are wrongly or mistakenly added to watch and no-fly lists. Under Rep. Jolly’s proposal, if the person attempts to purchase a firearm and is denied because they are on a watch list, then they must be notified they are on the list within 10 days from the time of attempted purchase.

Further, the bill states an individual is entitled to a due process hearing within 30 days before a federal judge, at which time the federal government must demonstrate “by a preponderance of the evidence” that the individual should be on the watch list and barred from purchasing a firearm. The individual is entitled to see all unclassified evidence against them, and the proceeding remains private to protect the privacy of the individual and the interest of the government.

“The fundamental issues are obvious. Law abiding individuals should be protected under the Second Amendment and have the right to purchase firearms. Dangerous individuals should not,” Rep. Jolly said. “And both should be afforded due process under the law.”

In the wake of the Orlando terror

mid-atlantic-manufacturing-aluminium-raw-materials-reuters

A worker in the mid-Atlantic manufacturing sector works with raw aluminum materials. (PHOTO: REUTERS)

The Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey, the Philadelphia Federal Reserve’s gauge of manufacturing activity in the mid-Atlantic region, rose in June. The survey increased to a positive 4.7 in June, up from negative 1.4 the month prior. The median economist forecast was for a flat reading of zero.

A reading above zero indicates expansion.

While the Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey was generally positive in June, other broad indicators continued to reflect general weakness in business conditions. First, the survey’s subindex for the labor market indicate continued weakness in employment conditions.

The employment index was negative for the sixth consecutive month, declining from –3.3 in May to –10.9 in June. Even though almost 72% of the firms reported no change in employment this month, the percentage reporting decreases (20%) far exceeded the percentage reporting increases (9%). The average workweek index edged up slightly but remained negative, at –13.1.

manufacturing-business-outlook-survey

Special Questions (June 2016)

1. How will your firm’s total production for the second quarter compare with that of the first quarter?*
Change attributable to:
% of firms Seasonal factors Business conditions Other
Increase 44.4% 23.6% 16.7% 2.8%
No change 13.9%
Decrease 40.3% 9.7% 29.2% 1.4%
2. For the upcoming third quarter, how much growth do you expect at your plant compared with the second quarter?
Significant acceleration 1.4% % of firms reporting acceleration: 44.9%
Some acceleration 26.1%
Slight acceleration 17.4%
No change 29.0%
Slight deceleration 13.0% % of firms reporting deceleration: 26.1%
Some deceleration 11.6%
Significant deceleration 1.4%
3. If you expect to increase production in the third quarter, how will this be accomplished?
Hiring additional workers 22.6%
Increasing work hours of current staff, without hiring additional workers 29.0%
Increasing productivity of current staff, without hiring additional workers 41.9%
Other 6.5%
*Subtotals may not sum to totals because of incomplete answers.

The Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey, the Philadelphia

Weekly-Jobless-Claims-Graphic

Weekly Jobless Claims Graphic. Number of Americans applying for first-time jobless benefits.

The Labor Department said Thursday Weekly jobless claims rose by 13,000 to 277,000 for the week ending June 11, higher than the estimate for 270,000. The prior week was unchanged at 264,000.

The four-week moving average–which is widely considered to be a better gauge, as it irons out volatility–was 269,250, a decrease of 250 from the previous week’s unrevised average of 269,500.

A Labor Department analyst said there were no special factors impacting this week’s initial claims and no state was triggered “on” the Extended Benefits program during the week ending May 28. This marks 67 consecutive weeks of initial claims below 300,000, the longest streak since 1973.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending May 28 were in Alaska (3.5), Puerto Rico (2.6), Wyoming (2.6), West Virginia (2.5), New Jersey (2.3), Pennsylvania (2.3), Connecticut (2.2), California (2.0), Illinois (1.9), and Massachusetts (1.9).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending June 4 were in Pennsylvania (+2,049), Ohio (+1,830), Wisconsin (+1,341), Louisiana (+452), and Kentucky (+300), while the largest decreases were in California (-9,038), Georgia (-1,251), New Jersey (-1,214), Missouri (-1,202), and New York (-853).

The Labor Department said Thursday Weekly jobless

consumer-price-index-tv

(Photo: REUTERS)

The Labor Department said Thursday the Consumer Price Index (CPI) found prices at the consumer level rose 0.2% in May, missing the median economist forecast. Prices were expected to increase by 0.3%. The so-called core CPI, which excludes the volatile food and energy components, rose 0.2% higher and matched economists’ expectations.

In the 12 months through May, the CPI gained just 1.0% after rising 1.1% in April.

The Federal Reserve has set a 2% inflation target for inflation regarding interest rate changes and tracks a separate measure that is currently showing 1.6%. The U.S. central bank on Wednesday refused to hike interest rates and left them unchanged. The policy-making committee said it expected inflation to remain below its target through 2017.

The Labor Department said the Consumer Price

nsa-headquarters

June 6, 2013: A sign stands outside the National Security Agency (NSA) campus in Fort Meade, Md. (Photo: AP)

The FBI had the Orlando gunman under watch — twice — and, after much consideration, decided to stop following him. Was this a mistake? Obviously, tragically so.

But in this massive lost opportunity to prevent a slaughter dwells a positive sign for our ability to stop future attacks. Law enforcement at least had its eye on him. Scarier would have been that it had never heard of Omar Mateen.

Protests against government surveillance programs tend to grow in the quiet stretches between terrorist outrages. Absence of immediate fear is when the critics can best downplay the stakes — that even one miscreant can kill large numbers, and with weapons far deadlier than assault rifles.

It’s when privacy advocates have the most success portraying surveillance programs as highly personal invasions of ordinary folks’ privacy. Actually, there’s nothing very personal in the National Security Agency’s collection of our communications metadata. Basically, computers rummage through zillions of emails and such in search of patterns to flag. The humans following leads have zero interest in your complaints about Obamacare, as some foes of the surveillance programs have ludicrously claimed.

In the Orlando case, co-workers had alerted the authorities to Mateen’s radical rantings. The FBI put him on a terrorist watchlist, monitoring him for months. He was taken off when investigators concluded he was just mouthing off. The FBI had reason to probe him again, but again he was turned loose.

That was a failure, but a failure highlighting a weakness in the surveillance laws. The FBI dropped the case because the standard for showing probable cause — evidence of a crime or intent to commit one — is too high for needle-in-haystack terrorism investigations.

(Note that a local sheriff was able to use Mateen’s ravings as reason to have him removed from security guard duty at the St. Lucie County Courthouse in Fort Pierce, Florida.)

The bureau clearly erred in expecting a real terrorist to be informed. That Mateen had expressed sympathy for both al-Qaida and the Islamic State — groups in conflict with each other — was apparently seen as a sign that the man wasn’t seriously engaged in their politics.

Perhaps not, but he seriously approved of their bloody activities. That should have spelled danger, especially when added to his history of mental instability and spousal abuse and possible sexual confusion (an apparently new consideration).

But the FBI has been dealing with thousands of cases of potential homegrown terrorists not unlike Mateen. It must also consider that expressing support for a terrorist organization is protected by the First Amendment right to free speech.

We need a new standard for potential terrorists inspired by online jihadist propaganda. Meanwhile, the public should back law enforcement’s stance on encryption. Recall the FBI’s battle to force Apple to unlock the iPhone of Syed Rizwan Farook, the San Bernardino gunman.

Privacy advocates have harshly rapped President Obama for defending the government surveillance programs he himself once criticized. There’s a simple difference between them and him (and then and now): Obama receives the daily threat reports, and they don’t.

Government surveillance programs do need rules. Court review is important. But it simply isn’t true that public safety can be maintained in the age of lone-wolf terrorism without considerable surveillance. And the risks advocates ask us to take on in the name of privacy should be addressed honestly.

The parade of major terrorist attacks — Paris, San Bernardino, Brussels and now Orlando — has sped up. The more horror the less the public cares about reining in surveillance activities. Defenders of privacy should recognize this reality and more carefully choose their battles. The quiet times seem no more.

Protests against government surveillance programs grow in

Obama-NRA

File Photo: President Barack Obama, left, and the NRA cap logo. (Photos: AP/Gallup)

Most of the mass killings by gun in the United States in recent years — Columbine, Virginia Tech, Aurora, Newtown, Charleston, San Bernardino and now Orlando — took place in venues where local or state law prohibited carrying guns, even by those lawfully licensed to do so. The government cheerfully calls these venues “gun-free zones.” They should be called killing zones.

As unspeakable and horrific as is the recent slaughter in Orlando, it has become just another example of the tragic consequences of government’s interfering with the exercise of fundamental liberties. After a while, these events cease to shock; but they should not cease to cause us to re-examine what the government has done to us.

We know from reason, human nature and history that the right to defend yourself is a natural instinct that is an extension of the right to self-preservation, which is itself derived from the right to live. Life is the great gift from the Creator, and we have a duty to exercise our freedoms to preserve life until its natural expiration. But the lives we strive to preserve should not be those actively engaged in killing innocent life.

The Framers recognized this when they ratified the Second Amendment, which the Supreme Court recently held was written to codify — and thus prevent the government from infringing on — the pre-political right to own and use modern-day weapons for self-defense or to repel tyrants.

The term “pre-political” derives from the language of the Second Amendment, which protects “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms.” The constitutional reference of “the” right to keep and bear arms makes clear that the Framers recognized that the right pre-existed the government because it stems from our humanity. That’s why pre-political rights are known as fundamental or natural rights.

Because the right to use modern weaponry for the defense of life, liberty and property is natural, we should not need a government permission slip before exercising it, any more than we need one to exercise other natural rights, such as speech, press, assembly, travel and privacy.

Yet since the Progressive era 100 years ago — ushered in by Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson and enabled by nearly every president since — the government has taken the position that it can care for us better than we can care for ourselves. So it has severely curtailed our rights and left us reliant on the government itself for protection.

The modern-day massacres are proof beyond a doubt that the government cannot protect us.

In the Orlando tragedy, the man who killed 49 and wounded 53 used a handgun and a rifle. The handgun accepted magazines containing 17 bullets, and the rifle accepted magazines containing 30 bullets. The killer, using both weapons, fired more than 250 times last Sunday morning. That means he reloaded his weapons about a dozen times. Each time he reloaded, he stopped shooting, as it is impossible for any person to shoot and reload simultaneously.

We know from forensics that the killer was a poor shot. We can deduce from that knowledge that he was a slow reloader. One learns to shoot first and reload later. It is likely that it took between three and seven seconds each time he reloaded the handgun and longer with the rifle. In those time periods, any trained person carrying a handgun in that Orlando nightclub could have wounded or killed him — and stopped the slaughter.

Don’t expect to hear that argument from the gun control crowd in the government. It is the same crowd that has given us the killing zones. It is the same crowd that does not trust you to protect yourself. It is the same crowd that ignores the reality that in the post-World War II era, there is not one recorded example in the U.S. of a person in a restaurant or bar getting drunk and shooting his lawfully carried handgun.

Hillary Clinton called the rifle the Orlando killer carried a “weapon of war.” It is not. It is the same rifle that her Secret Service detail carries. Many of her acolytes have called it an assault rifle. It is not. It fires one round for each trigger pull. True assault rifles — not those that the politicians have renamed assault rifles because they have a collapsible stock and a bayonet holder (I know this sounds ridiculous, but it is true) — fire numerous rounds per trigger pull. They have been outlawed on U.S. soil since 1934.

What do we have here?

We have a government here that is heedless of its obligation to protect our freedoms. We have a government that, in its lust to have us reliant upon it, has created areas in the U.S. where innocent folks living their lives in freedom are made defenseless prey to monsters — as vulnerable as fish in a barrel. And we have mass killings of defenseless innocents — over and over and over again.

How dumb are these politicians who want to remove the right to self-defense? There are thousands of crazies in the U.S. who are filled with hate — whether motivated by politics, self-loathing, religion or fear. If they want to kill, they will find a way to do so. The only way to stop them is by superior firepower. Disarming their law-abiding victims not only violates the natural law and the Constitution but also is contrary to all reason.

All these mass killings have the same ending: The killer stops only when he is killed. But that requires someone else with a gun to be there. Shouldn’t that be sooner rather than later?

Most of the mass killings by guns

Obama-Clinton-Orlando-Terror-Attack

Hillary Clinton, left, speaks at the Cleveland Industrial Innovation Center, while President Barack Obama, center, delivers a statement on the terror attack at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, on June 12, 2016. (Photos: AP/EPA)

“America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.” — Abraham Lincoln

I have been trying to wrap my head around the Left’s response to Orlando. But I can’t. It is incomprehensible.

Where do I start?

How about the fact that the Left has put their drive for a different demographic footprint in America above national security and the safety of individual Americans. There is no doubt that President Obama and his utterly incompetent national security staff have slow rolled the fight against the Islamic State. This has allowed ISIS to metastasize across North Africa, advance into Europe and achieve a foothold in our own country.

There is no doubt the ill-advised removal of all American troops from Iraq led to the rise of this terrorist cancer. However, the push to bring in tens of thousands of people who we cannot properly vet is simply dangerous and subversive. Of course some of them will attack us. You cannot deny that reality and expect it to away. But the Left and their media cohorts are trying very hard to do just that.

It’s Donald Trump’s fault. He’s the problem, not the guy who just murdered 49 people. The media and any “progressive” you talk to will deny all day long that we were attacked by an evil political movement. It’s the NRA’s fault. It’s the Christian’s fault. And the oldie but goodie, it’s Bush’s fault.

No, it’s the fault of a radical jihadist who was enabled by the Obama administration who refused to lead the global community to rid the world of a terrorist movement, just as bad as Naziism or communism.

While this is going on, you have one of the chief enablers, Hillary Clinton, running for the presidency, while she is under investigation for damaging the national security of our country by her subversive email practices. I won’t even go into her debacles in the Middle East while she was secretary of state.

The Democrats have nominated and will vote for her anyway. This means the end of the Democratic Party as a valid American institution. They are now a corrupt movement, through and through, only concerned about their own power. The rule of law is paramount to the success of our society and yes, we inherited that from the British Empire, as distasteful as that is to you Mr. President. The Left wants to destroy this facet of our exceptionalism. They want us to be just like Mexico, run by an elite oligarchy. This is a threat to America and it is coming from within our own borders.

The Left wants to destroy the Second Amendment. We inherited this crucial right after fighting a long conflict against an aggressor. The right is not there for self defense, not to allow you to hunt and fish, but to protect against a tyrannical government. Do you really think Obama would have stopped with just abusing his political opposition with the IRS and other federal agencies if that right didn’t exist? The list of his abuses of power is long and distinguished and scary.

The Left wants us to disarm to achieve more power over ordinary Americans. That’s what socialism is all about Bernie Bros! If they will put the safety of one of their key constituents, the LGBT community, beneath their drive to satisfy overseas Islamic leaders, how long do you think it will be before they harm America in other ways in order to satisfy their self interests?

Teddy-Roosevelt-immigration-1907What does the Left want? They want to destroy the shining city on the hill. They want to destroy America as you and I know it. They want to destroy her excellence, her power, her greatness, her ability to be a force for good in the world. And they want money, and power, as much as they can get before the American lights go out.

These are all threats that can, and will if left unchecked, destroy this great country. November is an important election indeed.

I’ll end with a quote from Teddy Roosevelt, “We should insist that if the immigrant who comes here does in good faith become an American and assimilates himself to us …” In other words, we will open our doors with open arms to anyone, as long as they want to become Americans!

(This article first appeared on L. Todd Wood’s Threat Assessment via The Washington Times. Check out his latest book below.)

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Barack Obama and the Left have put

Kurds-Turkey-Syria-Islamic-State

June 15, 2015: In this photo taken from the Turkish side of the border between Turkey and Syria, in Akcakale, southeastern Turkey, Kurdish people wave a Free Syria Army group flag in the outskirts of Tal Abyad, Syria. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

In a report released Wednesday, more than 50 humanitarian and human rights organizations active in Syria allege the United Nations (U.N.) had violated its principle of impartiality by allowing the Syrian regime to control the flow of aid deliveries.

The report entitled “Taking Sides: The United Nations’ Loss Of Impartiality, Independence And Neutrality In Syria,” was released by a human rights group called The Syria Campaign. It cites testimony gathered during numerous interviews with current and former U.N. workers, as well as others on the ground.

The report claims that the U.N. has granted the regime of Bashar al Assad “effective veto over aid deliveries to areas outside of government control, enabling its use of siege as a weapon of war.”

Others, including U.N. insiders, have leveled the same criticism against the U.N.

“There has been a systematic failure in the U.N.-led response. Rather than basing its response on need, it has developed into a billion-dollar response program that is largely controlled by the regime and its proxies,” Roger Hearn, former head of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency in in Damascus, told Al Jazeera.

The U.N. has not responded to a request for comment or the report, but it has said previously that a tougher stance on the Syrian regime could jeopardize aid operations.

In a report out Wednesday, humanitarian and

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