Friday, 1 November 2013

Joe Hart dropped by Manchester City after catalogue of errors in goal

Joe Hart
Joe Hart has suffered a series of mistakes which have led to Manuel Pellegrini dropping him from the Manchester City team. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA
Joe Hart has been dropped by Manchester City for Premier Leaguegame against Norwich City but the goalkeeper is determined to win his place back and is not considering his future with the club, despite the decision potentially having consequences for the Englishman's World Cup hopes next summer.
Manuel Pellegrini's decision gives Costel Pantilimon the chance to establish himself as City's first-choice goalkeeper, with it being understood that the Romanian may have otherwise made a formal transfer request in January.
Hart was informed that he would be dropped by Pellegrini after training at the Etihad, with the 26-year-old understood to be disappointed and at the same time appreciative of the manner in which the Chilean explained his decision.
This follows the issues Hart had with Pellegrini's predecessor, Roberto Mancini, and his man-management style.
With Hart aware that this is a major season for club and country asEngland are also preparing for the summer tournament in Brazil, the goalkeeper is intent on rolling with the metaphorical punches.
Hart has paid the price for a catalogue of errors while Pantilimon impressed during City's Capital One Cup win at Newcastle in midweek, keeping a clean sheet. Although Pellegrini refused to confirm who will start, Pantilimon trained behind the starting defence in the buildup to the game.
The manager remained coy when asked at Friday's press conference which keeper he would pick: "Tomorrow you will know the XI that starts. It's a decision I have to take every week." The England No1 has been under intense pressure because of high-profile mistakes this season, the latest of which came in the loss at Chelsea last weekend.
Regarding whether Hart would have been disappointed to be dropped for the midweek win at Newcastle, the manager said: "You must ask Joe, I can't answer for him how disappointed. All of you saw what happened [against Chelsea]."
Asked if he has to be careful with Hart because of his perceived fragile confidence, Pellegrini added: "I am very careful with all the players, not only Joe. I think tomorrow we will see what happens with Joe Hart. I don't want to continue talking about Joe Hart. I don't want to continue with Joe Hart because I have not told the players who will play. Tomorrow we will see and after I can answer your question."
However, Pellegrini admitted he is concerned at points dropped due to defensive errors this campaign. "Yes, of course [we] are conscious about that. We lost at least four points away that we deserve more, but football has these things and we must recover those points. I think we are in a good way."
Pellegrini added: "Every player of the squad has his right to play and I have to decide every week who will play. Maybe you ask Costel because he does not play too often, but I always see the players every day."
Pantilimon would have contemplated his future had he not been selected to face Norwich as the Romanian believes he has been patient enough awaiting a chance and having now lost his place in his national squad, the 26-year-old wants regular first-team football.
City's captain Vincent Kompany, who has a thigh injury, may not now be available until after the international break in three weeks' time, Pellegrini added.

Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud killed in CIA drone strike

Hakimullah Mehsud photographed in 2008
Hakimullah Mehsud, photographed in 2008. Photograph: A Majeed/AFP/Getty Images
The CIA's secret drone campaign claimed one of its highest profile scalps on Friday with the killing of the chief of the Pakistani Taliban by an unmanned aircraft in the country's lawless tribal areas.
Hakimullah Mehsud, the feared leader of an alliance of militant groups attempting to topple the Pakistani state, was killed when a missile struck a compound in the village near the capital of North Waziristan, according to militant, US and Pakistani sources.
Although his death has been misreported in the past, informants in the tribal area said they were confident one of the country's most vicious militant leaders was dead.
"He was targeted as he was returning to his home from a nearby mosque where he had been holding discussions with his comrades," said a military officer based in a city close to the semi-autonomous Federally Administered Tribal Areas, which is home to many Islamist terrorist groups.
"He was right at his front door and at least three missiles were fired."
A senior US intelligence official told the Associated Press the US received positive confirmation on Friday morning that he had been killed.
Militant and official sources added that Mehsud's driver and bodyguard were also among a total of five people killed.
Although Mehsud's four year tenure as head of Pakistan's most feared militant group has been marked by horrific attacks that have killed scores of soldiers, government officials and civilians, his death looked set to spark fury among some politicians who believe the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) should be brought in to peace talks.
All political parties unanimously supported government attempts to negotiate with the TTP at a meeting in September. Just this week Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif announced that talks between the two sides had finally begun.
Pakistan mapCredit: Guardian graphics
A government official claimed Mehsud had been discussing the matter with fellow fighters just before he was killed, while the Taliban said a government peace delegation was in Miran Shah at the time of the attack.
The country's rightwing religious parties are likely to interpret the drone strike as a deliberate attempt by the US to scupper peace talks with an organisation that swears allegiance to Mullah Omar, the leader of the Afghan Taliban, which fights against Nato troops in neighbouring Afghanistan.
Sharif, who held meetings with US president Barack Obama in Washington DC last week, has repeatedly called for an end to drone strikes, despite persistent suspicions that Pakistan continues to give secret backing to the attacks.
But the US was never likely to turn up an opportunity to kill Mehsud, the mastermind of a devastating suicide bomb attack on a CIA station in Khost province in eastern Afghanistan in 2009 in which seven CIA officers died.
The ingenious plot involved a Jordanian triple agent who the CIA believed was working for them but was in fact taking orders from Mehsud. The suicide bomber was ushered into the military base to brief CIA officers on al-Qaida, and detonated his explosive vest once he had reached the inside of the base.
Mehsud later appeared in a video alongside the Jordanian, who said he carried out the attack in retribution for the death of another former Pakistani Taliban leader, Baitullah Mehsud, who was killed in an American drone strike in August 2009.
Saifullah Mahsud, director of the Pakistani thinktank FATA Research Centre, said the movement was unlikely to be overly affected the killing of its leader.
"It's a very decentralised organisation," he said. "They've lost leaders to drone strikes before."
A burly man in his mid-30s who wore shoulder length hair, Hakimullah Mehsud became leader of the TTP following the killing of former leader and fellow tribesman Baitullah Mehsud.
Hakimullah Mehsud's death comes just weeks after the TTP chief took the risky and unusual step of granting an interview to a BBC cameraman who had travelled to Pakistan's lawless north-west.
The interview was conducted in open air despite the non-stop presence of drones in the sky.
Earlier on Friday Pakistan's foreign ministry condemned the drone attack as a "violation of Pakistan's sovereignty and territorial integrity".
In May, a drone strike killed Mehsud's second-in-command, and one of his most trusted lieutenants was captured in Afghanistan last month.

Hacking phones of royal staff led to story on Prince Harry essay, court told

Prince Harry, pictured here at the start of his training at the Sandhurst military academy
Prince Harry, pictured here at the start of his training at the Sandhurst military academy. Photograph: Daniel Berehulak/Getty Images
Hacking the phones of royal staff led the News of the World to run a story that Prince Harry had broken the rules at Sandhurst by asking an aide for help with an essay, the jury in the phone-hacking trial has been told.
Clive Goodman, the former News of the World royal editor, told the paper's then-editor, Andy Coulson, that Harry had asked his private secretary Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton, a former soldier, for help on an essay about the Iranian embassy siege while studying at the military training academy.
Andrew Edis QC, leading the prosecution, said Lowther-Pinkerton's voicemail messages had been hacked by Glenn Mulcaire a private investigator working for the now defunct paper. One message was from Harry asking the aide if he "had any information at all" about the 1980 siege, "because I need to write an essay quite quickly on that but I need some extra info. Please please email it to me or text me".
The court heard that Goodman was seeking a response from Clarence House on the allegations, but did not want to be "too precise" and mention the embassy siege because it might might expose their source.
When Clarence House told them it was not against the rules for cadets to seek advice on websites and books, Goodman and Coulson were in email exchange on December 5 2005.
Edis read aloud the emails in court: "What's happening on your story?"
Goodman replied: "Just finished the calls. Need to go through the tapes … as we know that's not exactly what he asked for but I couldn't press forward on that without exposing the source. As we know Harry wasn't only asking for websites. He was asking for information which is a different thing altogether."
Edis said: "It means that if they say that what he was asking about was information about the Iranian embassy siege, everyone would know that they hacked his voicemail."
Other royal stories obtained through hacking included one about Prince William being shot during a night exercise at Aldershot, Edis said.
On another occasion, in April 2006, Coulson emailed Goodman about a story concerning Harry and a woman, asking: "How do we know Harry true?"
Goodman replied that it was from "the same source we had on a retainer". The email read: "We absolutely know it to be true, but I have to blag a confession out of Paddy [Harverson, Clarence House PR] tomorrow. That might not be too difficult because I know from the info that his worst nightmare is that this woman is so upset she'll start making a fuss."
It continued: "We can't get to her ourselves because there's no full name, no address … but Paddy doesn't know that and will hopefully walk straight into the snare."
On another occasion, Goodman emailed news editor Ian Edmondson that a story about William had come "from William himself". When asked to explain, Goodman wrote back: "Not on email."
Edis said Goodman and Coulson "knew what was going on. These are really quite explicit emails. Although they are not as explicit as they might be". They were being "careful and guarded", he told the jury.
"They are being as careful as they can be but the truth, I'm afraid, is still there to be seen despite that. That's what we suggest."

GCHQ and European spy agencies worked together on mass surveillance

BND NSA GCHQ DGSE
In this photo illustration, the logos of intelligence agencies the NSA, BND, GCHQ, DGSE are displayed on folders. Photograph: Ulrich Baumgarten via Getty Images
The German, French, Spanish and Swedish intelligence services have all developed methods of mass surveillance of internet and phone traffic over the past five years in close partnership with Britain's GCHQeavesdropping agency.
The bulk monitoring is carried out through direct taps into fibre optic cables and the development of covert relationships with telecommunications companies. A loose but growing eavesdropping alliance has allowed intelligence agencies from one country to cultivate ties with corporations from another to facilitate the trawling of the web, according to GCHQ documents leaked by the former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden.
The files also make clear that GCHQ played a leading role in advising its European counterparts how to work around national laws intended to restrict the surveillance power of intelligence agencies.
The German, French and Spanish governments have reacted angrily to reports based on National Security Agency (NSA) files leaked by Snowden since June, revealing the interception of communications by tens of millions of their citizens each month. US intelligence officials have insisted the mass monitoring was carried out by the security agencies in the countries involved and shared with the US.
The US director of national intelligence, James Clapper, suggested to Congress on Tuesday that European governments' professed outrage at the reports was at least partly hypocritical. "Some of this reminds me of the classic movie Casablanca: 'My God, there's gambling going on here,' " he said.
Swedenwhich passed a law in 2008 allowing its intelligence agency to monitor cross-border email and phone communications without a court order, has been relatively muted in its response.
The German government, however, has expressed disbelief and fury at the revelations from the Snowden documents, including the fact that the NSA monitored Angela Merkel's mobile phone calls.
After the Guardian revealed the existence of GCHQ's Tempora programme, in which the electronic intelligence agency tapped directly into the transatlantic fibre optic cables to carry out bulk surveillance, the German justice minister, Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger, said it sounded "like a Hollywood nightmare", and warned the UK government that free and democratic societies could not flourish when states shielded their actions in "a veil of secrecy".

'Huge potential'

However, in a country-by-country survey of its European partners, GCHQ officials expressed admiration for the technical capabilities of German intelligence to do the same thing. The survey in 2008, when Tempora was being tested, said the Federal Intelligence Service (BND), had "huge technological potential and good access to the heart of the internet – they are already seeing some bearers running at 40Gbps and 100Gbps".
Bearers is the GCHQ term for the fibre optic cables, and gigabits per second (Gbps) measures the speed at which data runs through them. Four years after that report, GCHQ was still only able to monitor 10 Gbps cables, but looked forward to tap new 100 Gbps bearers eventually. Hence the admiration for the BND.
The document also makes clear that British intelligence agencies were helping their German counterparts change or bypass laws that restricted their ability to use their advanced surveillance technology. "We have been assisting the BND (along with SIS [Secret Intelligence Service] and Security Service) in making the case for reform or reinterpretation of the very restrictive interception legislation in Germany," it says.
The country-by-country survey, which in places reads somewhat like a school report, also hands out high marks to the GCHQ's French partner, the General Directorate for External Security (DGSE). But in this case it is suggested that the DGSE's comparative advantage is its relationship with an unnamed telecommunications company, a relationship GCHQ hoped to leverage for its own operations.
"DGSE are a highly motivated, technically competent partner, who have shown great willingness to engage on IP [internet protocol] issues, and to work with GCHQ on a "cooperate and share" basis."
Noting that the Cheltenham-based electronic intelligence agency had trained DGSE technicians on "multi-disciplinary internet operations", the document says: "We have made contact with the DGSE's main industry partner, who has some innovative approaches to some internet challenges, raising the potential for GCHQ to make use of this company in the protocol development arena."
GCHQ went on to host a major conference with its French partner on joint internet-monitoring initiatives in March 2009 and four months later reported on shared efforts on what had become by then GCHQ's biggest challenge – continuing to carry out bulk surveillance, despite the spread of commercial online encryption, by breaking that encryption.
"Very friendly crypt meeting with DGSE in July," British officials reported. The French were "clearly very keen to provide presentations on their work which included cipher detection in high-speed bearers. [GCHQ's] challenge is to ensure that we have enough UK capability to support a longer term crypt relationship."

Fresh opportunities

In the case of the Spanish intelligence agency, the National Intelligence Centre (CNI), the key to mass internet surveillance, at least back in 2008, was the Spaniards' ties to a British telecommunications company (again unnamed. Corporate relations are among the most strictly guarded secrets in the intelligence community). That was giving them "fresh opportunities and uncovering some surprising results.
"GCHQ has not yet engaged with CNI formally on IP exploitation, but the CNI have been making great strides through their relationship with a UK commercial partner. GCHQ and the commercial partner have been able to coordinate their approach. The commercial partner has provided the CNI some equipment whilst keeping us informed, enabling us to invite the CNI across for IP-focused discussions this autumn," the report said. It concluded that GCHQ "have found a very capable counterpart in CNI, particularly in the field of Covert Internet Ops".
GCHQ was clearly delighted in 2008 when the Swedish parliament passed a bitterly contested law allowing the country's National Defence Radio Establishment (FRA) to conduct Tempora-like operations on fibre optic cables. The British agency also claimed some credit for the success.
"FRA have obtained a … probe to use as a test-bed and we expect them to make rapid progress in IP exploitation following the law change," the country assessment said. "GCHQ has already provided a lot of advice and guidance on these issues and we are standing by to assist the FRA further once they have developed a plan for taking the work forwards."
The following year, GCHQ held a conference with its Swedish counterpart "for discussions on the implications of the new legislation being rolled out" and hailed as "a success in Sweden" the news that FRA "have finally found a pragmatic solution to enable release of intelligence to SAEPO [the internal Swedish security service.]"
GCHQ also maintains strong relations with the two main Dutch intelligence agencies, the external MIVD and the internal security service, the AIVD.
"Both agencies are small, by UK standards, but are technically competent and highly motivated," British officials reported. Once again, GCHQ was on hand in 2008 for help in dealing with legal constraints. "The AIVD have just completed a review of how they intend to tackle the challenges posed by the internet – GCHQ has provided input and advice to this report," the country assessment said.
"The Dutch have some legislative issues that they need to work through before their legal environment would allow them to operate in the way that GCHQ does. We are providing legal advice on how we have tackled some of these issues to Dutch lawyers."

European allies

In the score-card of European allies, it appears to be the Italians who come off the worse. GCHQ expresses frustration with the internal friction between Italian agencies and the legal limits on their activities.
"GCHQ has had some CT [counter-terrorism] and internet-focused discussions with both the foreign intelligence agency (AISE) and the security service (AISI), but has found the Italian intelligence community to be fractured and unable/unwilling to cooperate with one another," the report said.
A follow-up bulletin six months later noted that GCHQ was "awaiting a response from AISI on a recent proposal for cooperation – the Italians had seemed keen, but legal obstacles may have been hindering their ability to commit."
It is clear from the Snowden documents that GCHQ has becomeEurope's intelligence hub in the internet age, and not just because of its success in creating a legally permissive environment for its operations. Britain's location as the European gateway for many transatlantic cables, and its privileged relationship with the NSA has made GCHQ an essential partner for European agencies. The documents show British officials frequently lobbying the NSA on sharing of data with the Europeans and haggling over its security classification so it can be more widely disseminated. In the intelligence world, far more than it managed in diplomacy, Britain has made itself an indispensable bridge between America and Europe's spies.

Diego Costa: better than Ronaldo

Diego Costa: better than Ronaldo
Diego Costa has not had an easy time of late. Away from his Atlético duties, he has had to deal with the tough decision of abandoning the Brazil national side to join the 'La Roja' cause. Despite this difficult time, the Atlético striker has still managed to produce the goods in every game.
Apart from Costa's spectacular record for Atlético, the striker is beating records for fun and only two players this century have been able to score more goals in as many games. Costa is the current Pichichi in La Liga and his record of 11 goals in 10 games has only been achieved by Leo Messi and Samuel Eto’o. The Argentine, who has scored eight goals this season, scored 13 in the first 10 games in the last two seasons. Cameroon international Eto’o achieved the same feat playing for the Catalan side.
Diego Costa's record of 11 goals is something that even Cristiano Ronaldo has not been able to better since he joined Real Madrid. However, the Portuguese did manage to equal the tally on two occasions – 2010/11 and 2012/13 -, but this is somewhat surprising given that we are talking about a player who has been considered one of the best in the world for some time.
Another superstar player, Radamel Falcao, who is now at Monaco, has also failed to beat Costa's record. The Colombian netted 10 times in as many games last season, also for Atlético.

Hot shot Bale


Gareth Bale scored twice on Wednedsday against Sevilla and more importantly showed the first signs of the quality that persuaded Real Madrid to bring him to Spain. Starting his first game in the Bernabéu, he brought the crowd to its feet with the power and quality of his left foot.
Ancelotti played him on the right after the failed experiment as a more classic 'number 9' against Barcelona last Saturday. And Bale did not disappoint, hitting three powerful shots with his left foot that surprised those present. He took just 13 minutes to beat the Sevilla keeper Beto.
His first goal was an unstoppable left footed drive that finished off a wonderful move in which Ronaldo, Isco and Benzema also participated. Bale took the ball and struck it with the inside of his left boot, the ball flying into the back of the net for his second goal for his new side and his first in the Bernabéu.
Just two minutes later he forced a great save from Beto with another left footed rocket. Next up came his most powerful drive of the night from the edge of the area that grazed the bar.
With his confidence sky high, he did not hesitate to grab the ball when his side was awarded a free kick after a foul on Ronaldo. There was a quick glance towards the Portuguese star as if to ask for permission, but Bale was already placing the ball in the best position for another shot on goal. With the help of a deflection from the arm of Alberto Moreno the ball ended up in the back of the net and Bale had doubled his tally.
"I am happy to play in such a crazy game, I felt good and I knew I had to be patient. Now I am going to work hard to keep improving and I hope to be fully fit soon", he said afterwards.

Real doubles Diego López's pay

Real doubles Diego López's pay
Real Madrid is extremely satisfied with how Diego López is performing: from the very beginning when he had to substitute the injured Casillas right up to this season, during which he has become Ancelotti's preferred choice in goal.
Only a few weeks ago he signed a new contract effectively doubling his earnings. The duration of his contract has not changed however, despite the substantial increase in his pay. Under the new terms, Diego López will stay at Real Madrid for the next four years, until the end of the 2016-2017 season. He will be 32 in November and will end his contract aged 35.
These drastic changes to his contract, which were agreed after several months of negotiations, include a fixed amount, a variable amount, and a percentage of his image rights. The agreement was reached without any major difficulties, in so much as the club was willing to negotiate new terms. With one thing and another, the goalkeeper stands to earn over €4.5 million before deductions.
As is becoming customary with Real Madrid regarding contractual upgrades, nothing has been made official. The club will most probably wait until the end of the season before issuing a full statement, so as not to divert attention from the team's sporting targets.