logo
US DOJ to open grand jury probe into Obama officials, source says

US DOJ to open grand jury probe into Obama officials, source says

The Stara day ago
FILE PHOTO: Former U.S. President Barack Obama attends the 60th Presidential Inauguration in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. Julia Demaree Nikhinson/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has directed federal prosecutors to launch a grand jury probe into allegations that members of Democratic former President Barack Obama's administration manufactured intelligence on Russia's interference in the 2016 elections, a source familiar with the matter said on Monday.
The Justice Department said late last month it was forming a strike force to assess claims made by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard about "alleged weaponization of the U.S. intelligence community."
Republican U.S. President Donald Trump has leaped on comments from Gabbard in which she threatened to refer Obama administration officials to the Justice Department for prosecution over an intelligence assessment of Russian interference.
Fox News first reported that Bondi personally ordered an unnamed federal prosecutor to initiate legal proceedings and the prosecutor is expected to present department evidence to a grand jury, which could consider an indictment if the Justice Department pursued a criminal case. The report cited a letter from Bondi and a source. A DOJ spokesperson declined to comment.
Last month, Trump accused Obama of treason, alleging, without providing evidence, that the Democrat led an effort to falsely tie him to Russia and undermine his 2016 presidential campaign. Trump won the 2016 election against Democrat Hillary Clinton.
A spokesperson for Obama had denounced Trump's claims, saying "these bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction."
Gabbard had declassified documents and said the information she released showed a "treasonous conspiracy" in 2016 by top Obama officials to undermine Trump, claims that Democrats called false and politically motivated.
An assessment by the U.S. intelligence community published in January 2017 concluded that Russia, using social media disinformation, hacking, and Russian bot farms, sought to damage Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign and bolster Trump, who won that election.
The assessment determined the actual impact was likely limited and showed no evidence that Moscow's efforts actually changed voting outcomes. Russia has denied it attempted to interfere in U.S. elections.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Kanishka Singh in Washington; editing by Stephen Coates)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Satire of China's TikTok Trojan Horse
Satire of China's TikTok Trojan Horse

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Satire of China's TikTok Trojan Horse

THIS apparent conversation was recorded in a Republican leader's handphone with an erased TikTok account. The phone is alleged to have Chinese component chips and parts, including from Taiwan, capable of being activated by hackers. Both the phone and recording are currently being scrutinised by the FBI. Participants in the hacked conversation include Republican senior senator Mitch McConnell, Republican former secretary of state Mike Pompeo, Republican senator chairing the Senate Intelligence Committee Tom Cotton and Democrat senior senator Mark Warner. McConnell: This is getting too much. According to Howard*, TikTok is on 100 million American phones and Beijing is still adamant not to let us own the tech and control the algorithm. And the Don is giving Byte Dance a third reprieve till September to divest. Cotton: Yup. The Boss says that he has lined up the buyers and that all it needs for us to take over is for Xi (China President Xi Jinping) to sign off. He is very confident his buddy will agree. McConnell: You know I warned them, in the hallowed halls of the Senate, that this was not merely litigation but a stay of execution sought by a hardened criminal. We are not arguing with a legal team, gentlemen; we are negotiating with a serpent that has burrowed into our youth's iPhones. Pompeo: Hey, don't forget I was pushing for it to be banned five years ago. Cotton: Why are our guys still not getting the job done? This is a Chinese Trojan horse sitting in the lawns and dinner tables of the White House and Pentagon. Warner: Hell, not only in Washington. As Mitch says, it is also in my kids' phones and they are on it several times a day at least. Man, it's so bad I have to run to the bathroom every time they are on TikTok and my phone rings. Pompeo: Same here too. Although I'm retired, don't forget I was the director of the CIA and Beijing continues to pay close attention to me. My CIA staff tell me it is not a hundred million. Double that! McConnell: Hahaha Pomp. Everyone knows that you are a closet China lover, especially of China's state oil field equipment. Pompeo: S**t. You can say the same for yourself. That story was from a long time ago. Five years ago while many of you were still arguing over earmarks, I was pushing to ban this app. I saw the Chinese Communist Party's fingerprints on every single viral dance. And here we are now, after two hundred million 'Renegade' dances have infiltrated our nation's very soul. Warner: Look. All of us have some kind of skeleton in the cupboard on China, okay. Let's get serious. I don't know about (Donald) Trump's cronies but I have the legit money all lined up to take control of the Trojan horse. Cotton: Trojan horse? Gentlemen, it is worse. It is a Trojan Horse on wheels, a self-propelled, algorithm-driven Manchurian Candidate that is brainwashing our children with coordinated dance moves. It is not just on the lawns of the White House but also in the homes of our military families, poisoning the minds of future servicemen and women! And now, it is influencing our celebrities and kids to buy Labubu China dolls! Warner: Guys, guys, let's not get bogged down in metaphors. The horse is out of the stable. I have already lined up the capital. We don't need to kill it; we just need to acquire it. The only way to win in this new digital economy is to out-innovate them. Cotton: Yup. It is a prime asset ripe for a leveraged buyout. Warner: I'm talking about an American version, 'FreedomTok', with a user agreement that is five times as long and a much more efficient data-mining operation. We just need to take control of the horse and put a new saddle on it. I – and all Democrats – do not want it to go dark, okay. McConnell: Our problem is Trump. He has turned out to be pro-China. How can we put pressure on him? He is the greatest obstacle to our national security, not Beijing. It is the president. He is behaving like a man who has just discovered that correcting trade deficits is good for his hotels. Now, how do we apply the necessary pressure to realign his priorities? Cotton: I am his friend. I have been one of his staunchest allies. We have broken bread together. I have told him repeatedly about the national security implications of not taking a hard line on TikTok. It is like he thinks the data is going to a friend, not a foe. TikTok is a Chinese digital anthrax, a cybernetic IED (improvised explosive device), guys! Warner: Gentlemen, he is not listening because you are talking about national security. He is talking about a brand. He is looking at another term and he is not going to want to duke with China. He wants to 'deal'. The question is, what are we willing to put on the table that China isn't? Pompeo: For me, the most important outcome is to make it into a social media bible congregation. The true path to victory is not through litigation or acquisition. We must transform the Trojan horse into a Christian horse – a vessel of faith. We will flood the platform with TikToks that are not about dances. It will play Christian rock and have Bible sing-alongs and verses. We will call them 'The Gospel Grinds' and 'The Sermon Swirls'. We can start with a hundred million of our youths, scrolling for joy and finding the word of the Lord. Warner: Whoa. 'Christian horse?' So, the business plan is a hostile religious takeover? We will export digital sermons and prayer groups to a nation that, from all my insider accounts, takes good care, even better care of religious minorities by leaving them alone. This is a far more aggressive strategy than I was thinking. Cotton: Wonderful. A reverse Trojan horse. We do not just infiltrate their country, we send them salvation. A strategic and spiritual offensive all at once. We will call it 'Operation: Holy Hashtag' or 'Buddha Tok?' I will make sure Gordon** hears this so it can appear on Fox. Warner: I don't trust Chang. We hear he is planning a book on 'The Coming US Collapse'. McConnell: You know, perhaps we have been too hasty on the president. I am confident that with a little time, he will bring Xi to agree on this in return for bringing down the tariff rates further. In the meantime, Mark, a more pressing matter. I have several inquiries... friends... acquaintances really... who are keen to understand the financial instruments involved. They have been asking how one gets a 'piece of the pie' when the public offering for our new 'American' TikTok hits the market. Warner: (A dry, knowing chuckle) Well, Mitch, I am glad to see our national security has a clear profit margin. The good news is, a lot of your friends' PACs*** have invested in the venture capital firms that are circling the deal. They are already on the inside. But if they are asking for the real inside track... tell them to get their checkbooks ready for the regulatory committee hearings. That is where the real 'pie' gets baked. Pompeo: Don't forget to count me in. My church can do better work if we can also get on the inside track. Everything I do is for my church! McConnell: Amen. I will see that the Don gets to hear this soon. Warner: You all know Don's just fulla himself... all sound, fury and horses, gentlemen. Before you go, make sure you leave my name out, please. *Commerce Secretary Howard Ludnick ** Gordon Chang, Fox News American Chinese commentator and author of 'The Coming Collapse of China' (2005). Well known for his hawkish rhetoric and continuing predictions on the imminent collapse of China. *** PAC – an abbreviation for 'political action committee': a committee formed by a special-interest group to raise money for their favourite political candidates. Lim Teck Ghee's Another Take is aimed at demystifying social orthodoxy. Comments: letters@

The 13th Malaysia Plan: Strategic clarity in an age of disruption
The 13th Malaysia Plan: Strategic clarity in an age of disruption

New Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

The 13th Malaysia Plan: Strategic clarity in an age of disruption

LETTERS: As economic certainties are breaking apart at the seams by fragmentation, digital disruption and rising protectionism, the tabling of the 13th Malaysia Plan (13MP) under the Madani government could not have come at a more critical juncture. Where once there was predictability and stability, bolstered by robust competition, the global landscape is now dominated by intense strategic rivalry and geo-economic uncertainty. Long a trading nation and a highly open economy, Malaysia must navigate these treacherous waters, exposed to global headwinds, not least the Trump administration's re-imposition of tariffs. The current 19 per cent duty on most Malaysian exports to the US, though a reduction from earlier announcements, reflects a difficult compromise. Exemptions for key sectors such as semiconductors soften the blow, but the overall message is clear: trade is becoming more politicised, and diversification is no longer optional but essential. Some have suggested that Malaysia's arrangement with the US bears little distinction from those secured by its regional peers, or worse, represents a form of quiet capitulation. Such critiques overlook a key reality: economic diplomacy in today's climate is no longer about extracting perfect outcomes, but about managing asymmetries wisely. Malaysia's approach has been guided by strategic calculus, not submission, and herein lies the difference. Malaysia has safeguarded critical policy space, including Bumiputera affirmative action, protective tariffs for strategic industries such as automotive, and the continued issuance of Approved Permits (APs), all while ensuring continued dialogue with Washington. The 13MP responds to these realities with a forward-looking framework that positions the country for resilience and renewal. It outlines a vision of strategic autonomy rooted in structural reform, domestic capacity-building and constructive global engagement. Building Strength for a Digital and Industrial Future A central theme of the 13MP is the development of Made by Malaysia products, anchored in existing policy documents such as the New Industrial Master Plan 2030. In addition to prioritising research, commercialisation and innovation, the 13MP supports high-growth sectors, aims to attract high-impact investments, and strengthens the nation's talent base. This ambition is writ large in the commitment to artificial intelligence and digital transformation. Malaysia must move beyond backend assembly in global value chains. The RM10 billion investment by Nvidia, partnering Khazanah Nasional, reflects international confidence in Malaysia's capacity to become a regional pivot for high-performance computing, AI infrastructure and data governance. Yet, this is only the beginning. The 13MP envisions nurturing home-grown innovation, making domestic firms more competitive and equipping Malaysians for the technological frontier. It advances these goals by strengthening industry-academia collaboration, supporting the AI ecosystem under the National AI Roadmap, and promoting agile governance through regulatory sandboxes. At its core, the 13MP is about economic, institutional and societal resilience. The focus is on value creation and long-term quality investment, where public spending and policy incentives serve strategic objectives, not the least being boosting domestic value capture and supporting high-impact sectors. As for the National Energy Transition Roadmap, gearing the nation towards a low-carbon, high-value economy, the kicker is in catalytic projects and investment opportunities in green hydrogen, solar manufacturing and grid modernisation. Energy resilience and environmental stewardship are crucial to ensure we aren't left at the starting block in the global green economy race while laying the foundation for new industrial ecosystems that align with long-term national interests. Reclaiming Global Relevance Through Economic Diplomacy Malaysia's tradition of non-alignment remains a key advantage. Our credibility with both East and West, combined with a reputation for moderation and consistency, positions us to bridge divides in a fractured global order. The 13MP builds on this by encouraging deeper engagement with emerging markets, reinforcing commitment to multilateral platforms such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, and reaffirming Malaysia's leadership role in Asean as well as participation in BRICS. Economic diplomacy, in this regard, is not incidental but a core pillar of the 13MP, demonstrating the inextricable link between domestic reform and global positioning. By expanding trade relations with sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America and leveraging existing trade agreements, the 13MP seeks to fortify resilience in an era of shifting power and contested norms. Its call for fairness, predictability and sovereignty in digital and trade governance reflects long-term strategic interests. Still, the 13MP is only as strong as its execution. While Malaysia has never lacked for vision, the adage that between the ideal and the reality falls the shadow of incoherence and failure sometimes still rings true. Nevertheless, we take heart that the 13MP introduces mechanisms for inter-agency coordination, performance tracking and institutional accountability. This is vital considering that we were once dragged down by a system that prioritised form over substance. And, in order to truly appreciate the role of the 13MP in today's context, we must move beyond outdated critiques and assess what national planning means in an era of complexity and disruption. It has become fashionable among some commentators to dismiss Malaysia's five-year plans as relics of Soviet-style economic totalitarianism. But this ignores both the evolution of the planning process and the complexity of modern governance. Unlike Stalinist central planning, the 13MP does not attempt to micromanage the economy, nor does it presume to absolutely override market mechanisms. Instead, it provides strategic clarity in areas where the market alone cannot resolve collective dilemmas such as climate resilience, energy security, digital infrastructure and regional inequality. Clearly, Adam Smith's "invisible hand" has remained largely invisible in times of economic turmoil. Intervention, where strategically planned and executed, is imperative. Most importantly, the 13MP is not a promise of overnight transformation. Real change demands political will, technocratic skill and broad societal alignment. It calls for the courage to move beyond antiquated paradigms and the discipline to commit to long-term thinking. In the end, the 13MP represents a new understanding of development. It is not about managing scarcity or distributing subsidies, but about unlocking potential, building strategic capacity and preparing for a future that will not wait. If we approach the implementation of the 13MP with the same earnestness and clarity with which it was conceived, Malaysia can do more than weather the global storm. We can reclaim our agency, shape our regional future and advance a model of shared prosperity rooted in resilience, inclusion and innovation. A tall order, no doubt, but by no means unattainable

Oil prices rebound from 5-week low on Trump threats on Russian crude buyers
Oil prices rebound from 5-week low on Trump threats on Russian crude buyers

New Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Oil prices rebound from 5-week low on Trump threats on Russian crude buyers

TOKYO: Oil prices climbed on Wednesday, rebounding from a five-week low in the previous day, on concerns of supply disruptions after US President Donald Trump's threats of tariffs on India over its Russian crude purchases. Brent crude futures rose 29 cents, or 0.4 per cent, to US$67.93 a barrel by 0119 GMT while US West Texas Intermediate crude was at US$65.44 a barrel, up 28 cents, or 0.4 per cent. Both contracts fell by more than US$1 on Tuesday to settle at their lowest in five weeks, marking a fourth session of losses, on oversupply concerns from OPEC+'s planned September output hike. "Investors are assessing whether India will reduce its Russian crude purchases in response to Trump's threats, which could tighten supply, but it remains to be seen if that will actually happen," said Yuki Takashima, economist at Nomura Securities. "If India's imports remain steady, WTI is likely to stay within the US$60-70 range for the rest of the month," he said. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, together known as OPEC+, agreed on Sunday to raise oil production by 547,000 barrels per day for September, a move that will end its most recent output cut earlier than planned. The OPEC+ pumps about half of the world's oil and had been curtailing production for several years to support the market, but the group introduced a series of accelerated output hikes this year to regain market share. At the same time, US demands for India to stop buying Russian oil as Washington seeks ways to push Moscow for a peace deal with Ukraine could upset supply flows as Indian refiners seek alternatives and Russian crude is redirected to other buyers. Trump on Tuesday again threatened higher tariffs on Indian goods over the country's Russian oil purchases over the next 24 hours. Trump also said declining energy prices could pressure Russian President Vladimir Putin to halt the war in Ukraine. New Delhi called Trump's threat "unjustified" and vowed to protect its economic interests, deepening a trade rift between the two countries. Nomura's Takashima also pointed to industry data showing crude inventories in the US, the world's biggest oil consumer, as supportive for the oil market. US crude inventories fell by 4.2 million barrels last week, sources citing American Petroleum Institute figures said on Tuesday. That compares with a Reuters poll estimate of a 600,000 barrels draw for the week to August 1. The US Energy Information Administration is due to release its weekly inventory data on Wednesday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store