Thursday, 1 May 2014

US military intelligence chief stepping down

US military intelligence chief stepping down
WASHINGTON: The head of the US Defense Intelligence Agency and his deputy will step down later this year, officials said Wednesday, but denied reports they were being forced out.
Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, who had served as director of the DIA since July 2012, and deputy David Shedd, said in a joint memo to employees that 'they will depart the agency and retire by early Fall 2014,' according to an agency statement.Their 'retirements have been planned for some time,' said Pentagon press secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby in an email.
Flynn played a key role in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, serving under General Stanley McChrystal as part of US efforts to dismantle insurgent networks through raids by special operations forces.
But The Washington Post, citing unnamed sources, said Flynn was being pushed out of office after disagreements with other senior figures, including Michael Vickers, the undersecretary of defense for intelligence and a former CIA officer.The DIA is undergoing dramatic changes under a plan to deploy more spies in the field, and Flynn´s efforts to speed up the transformation proved 'disruptive,' according to his critics, the Post reported.
US defense officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, rejected the report and said Flynn and Shedd both had planned to retire for a number of months.
The intelligence agency´s statement said the pair had led a 'transformation' that 'helped reshape DIA culture,' allowing 'the agency to nimbly respond to recent crises without having to create special task forces or move people.'Flynn´s successor has not been announced but the Post said it would likely be Lieutenant General Mary Legere, who would be the first female officer to lead the agency if nominated and confirmed by lawmakers.

Sing or I'll shoot you

Sing or I\'ll shot you
Islamabad- In a surprising incident when famous singer Nadeem Abbas was forced to sing for more than pre-decided time on gunpoint at the wedding of the son of Chairman Senate Nayyar Hussain Bukhari in the leader’s presence, local media reported today.

According to reports, Chairman Senate had invited popular local singer Nadeem Abbas on his son’s wedding. The “Bismillah Karan” singer was booked for two hours but he willfully sang for one more hour. But when the singer stopped after hearing the Fajr call of prayer, Chairman Senate’s brother Sibti Shah wielded a gun and forced him to keep singing or get shot. But strangely, when singer refused despite the threat and complained to Chairman Senate Mr. Bukhari, he looked sideways and did not even take notice of his brother for terrorizing the singer.

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

What have you done, Pep? Guardiola has turned unbeatable Bayern into Barcelona 2012

The Catalan was meant to take Jupp Heynckes' treble winners to the next level but he has instead turned them into the worst version of his former Blaugrana side
Stefan Effenberg told Goal after Bayern Munich’s 1-0 loss to Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabeu last week that Pep Guardiola’s “system had reached its limit”. On Tuesday night in Bavaria, it reached its nadir as his European champions were thrashed 4-0 at home by Carlo Ancelotti's men.
After Bayern’s stunning demolition of Manchester Ciy at the Etihad earlier in the season, it appeared as if Guardiola was poised to create Bayern 2.0. Instead, he has turned last season’s treble winners into Barcelona 2012.
The Catalan had claimed after his side’s first-leg defeat in the Spanish capital that he was proud of his players’ performance. He felt that they deserved credit for having a 78 per cent share of possession. It immediately evoked memories of Xavi pathetically clinging to possession stats after Barcelona had been humiliated 7-0 on aggregate by Bayern in the semi-finals of last year’s Champions League. Keeping the ball should be a means to an end. For Xavi and former Barca boss Guardiola, it seems, possession has become the end in itself.
MATCH FACTS | Bayern 0-4 Madrid

 Shots
 On Target
 Possession
 Corners
 Bookings
 Red cards
BAYERN
19
4
69%
9
1
0
MADRID
13
5
31%
3
1
0
Serious questions must now be asked of Guardiola’s footballing philosophy. ‘Tika-taka’ was a revolutionary style of play. It transformed Barcelona into one of the most aesthetically pleasing sides the game has ever seen. They were also incredibly successful - until teams worked out how to play against the Blaugrana; how to shut them down, how to isolate Lionel Messi. When Guardiola left Camp Nou in 2012, Barca had become predictable, one-dimensional. Just like Bayern in recent weeks and months.
It wasn’t supposed to be like this. After taking over Jupp Heynckes' treble-winners last summer, Guardiola was supposed to take Bayern Munich to the next level. Instead, he has taken them backwards.
And now his CV will come under review. Once again, the role of La Masia in his success at Camp Nou will be highlighted. As will Barca's over-reliance on Messi. The critics will argue that it's easy to stick to one's principles when arguably the greatest player of all time is always there to defend them.
There's also the fact that Guardiola failed embarrassingly during his time at Camp Nou to adequately address Barcelona’s glaring defensive deficiencies (Dmytro Chygrynskiy, anyone?).
Worryingly, during his one-year sabbatical, Guardiola does not seem to have improved, developed, evolved. The same failings and flaws are still there. The same oversights are being made. All season long, it has been clear that Bayern are vulnerable in the centre of defence. All season long, they have held a ludicrously high line. Both were brutally exposed by Madrid over the course of 180 excruciating minutes for Bayern fans, who now know how their Barcelona counterparts felt just 12 months ago.
Having already claimed the Bundesliga in record-breaking time, and with a DFB-Pokal final against Borussia Dortmund to come, Guardiola could yet claim a double in his first season in Bavaria. However, asDie Welt made clear on Tuesday morning: “Only the Champions League counts.” Guardiola took over one of the strongest squads the European game has ever seen and Bayern did not just fail to defend their title, they did so spectacularly.
Indeed, the Munich daily Abendzeitung had told Bayern's players "You are the kings!" ahead of Tuesday's meeting with Madrid. The fans had also come to the Allianz Arena expecting to see an inauguration. Instead they experienced humiliation. And Guardiola must take all of the blame for that.

Schmelzer flattered by Liverpool talk

The full-back says he is happy at Signal Iduna Park despite links with Anfield and is looking forward to the end of the season and Germany's World Cup campaign
Marcel Schmelzer has admitted that he is flattered to hear of Liverpool's reported interest in his services but insists he sees no reason to leave Borussia Dortmund.
The Germany full-back has impressed this season after missing the early part of the campaign through injury, but with Erik Durm having emerged as competition, it had been suggested that BVB would be willing to cash in on the 26-year-old.
"Of course I look forward to hearing things like that and it's nice when top clubs are interested in you," he told WAZ.
"But I still have a contract with Borussia Dortmund until 2016 and I feel very, very good at BVB."
Schmelzer has been on the sidelines lately but says he will be fit to feature in his side's DFB-Pokal final as well as Germany's World Cup campaign.
"I'm feeling good again. I have been in full training since Friday and I'll be ready for the last home game against Hoffenheim next weekend.
"I don't know whether I'll play, only time will tell. I was out for five and a half weeks. We'll see how this week goes. I'm looking forward to the last few games.
"The highlight will be Berlin and my first World Cup this summer. I hope to get back some rhythm from the games against Hoffenheim and Hertha.

Guardiola needs Messi... and Messi needs Guardiola

Bayern's humiliation to Madrid and Barca's decline shows that the Catalan coach and Argentine attacker are not the same without one another
The wrong kind of messy. Pep Guardiola held his hands up and admitted on Tuesday night that his Bayern Munich team had been made to look very much second best by Real Madrid in their 4-0 defeat at home to the Spanish side. It was the heaviest defeat in the Catalan's coaching career and raised question marks over the suitability of his possession philosophy at the Allianz Arena. Without Lionel Messi to turn to, Pep's powers appeared dramatically diminished.
At Barcelona, Guardiola knew the club inside out and implemented a style of play already familiar for the entire squad. The Catalans' one touch passing plan is instilled in footballers from a young age at La Masia. Pep had lived and breathed that football as a player, just like Xavi, Andres Iniesta, Lionel Messi et al. So when he took over as coach and inherited that golden generation of players, the diamond was there. It just needed to be polished.
After winning the treble last season under Jupp Heynckes, Bayern's diamond was already polished, just not quite like how Pep liked it. Instead of adapting to his new players, however, Guardiola wants those footballers to get used to the methods that made his Barca side so brilliant between 2008 and 2012. But there's one problem: there's no Messi.
Bayern's spectacular success last season owed more to team ethic than individual brilliance. Arjen Robben and Franck Ribery both shone, but were more suited to the football favoured by Heynckes - attacking spaces from deeper positions. The Frenchman may have been his side's outstanding player overall, but it was all about the collective and he didn't deserve to win the Ballon d'Or because individually, he wasn't and isn't the best. Meanwhile, Messi won all four Ballons d'Or during his time under Guardiola. He also made the difference on nights like Tuesday.
Magic moments | Messi and Pep hit the heights together at Barcelona
Pep knows that. After winning the treble with Barca in 2008-09 and adding three more trophies to make it six out of six in his second season, Guardiola admitted: "Without Leo, we would be a very good team and we would be competitive. But we wouldn't have been able to achieve all that we have if he were not with us."
Barca's style was all about pulling opponents out of position with highly complex passing and possession play which is designed to open up spaces and allow goalscoring opportunities. But Bayern not only appeared unable to create such scoring chances against Madrid, but they don't have a player like Messi to take advantage of those gaps when they do. As Pep's reign wore on at Camp Nou, it became more and more about dragging defenders away and empowering Messi, hence the Catalans' increased reliance upon the Argentine and his improved scoring rate in each season at Camp Nou.
Hopes that Mario Gotze could fulfill a similar role since signing from Borussia Dortmund in the summer seem somewhere between fanciful and far-fetched. So Guardiola is left with a problem. His philosophy remains valid, yet is missing the X-factor the Argentine added at Camp Nou.
"The reason we lost today and didn't play well is because we didn't have possession of the ball," the 43-year-old said on Tuesday night. "We didn't pass the ball as we should have done. Possession for me is the most important thing in football.
"I know there are a lot of teams that sit back and launch counterattacks, but I feel something different. We have done it so often! I like to play with the ball. There are no valid arguments now because with this defeat it won't seem credible, but I can't change what I feel. Madrid launched counterattacks because it was impossible not to, but I like football played with the ball. We need to reflect upon whether, with this team, these players can adapt to my ideas."
That last line is perhaps key. Can these footballers adapt to Pep's methods? Obviously they have to a certain extent, given their domestic success this term, yet results against the top teams have been poor. Whereas Guardiola's great Barca side always raised their game for the clashes with Europe's elite clubs, his Bayern have been unable to do so - at least not yet.

Arsenal and Manchester United were both beaten by Bayern in Champions League knockout ties, but neither have threatened to win the continental competition in several seasons now, while the Bavarians needed a late leveller and then penalties to edge out Chelsea in the Uefa Super Cup at the beginning of the season and have lost two out of three games against domestic rivals Dortmund, conceding seven goals in the process, before back-to-back losses versus Madrid this last week.
IN NUMBERS
Pep & Messi at Barcelona
4The Argentine won the Ballon d'Or after each of his four seasons under Guardiola.
14In their time together at Camp Nou, Barca won 14 trophies out of a possible 19.
15During that period, Barca played 15Clasico clashes against Madrid, losing just two. They've lost four since.
38Messi's goals from the right in 2008-09. He then scored 47, 53 and 73 in the next three seasons.
211In total, the Argentine netted 211 goals in 219 games under Pep, improving every single season.
Defending was a problem again on Tuesday, with three of the four goals coming from set pieces and two of those via the head of Sergio Ramos. "We played badly," Guardiola said. "And when you play badly, you also defend badly."
That's true. Guardiola's Barca often defended badly, too. "We don't know how to defend," he once said. "We defend by attacking and by having the ball." And in moments of crisis, Messi was there to get them out of trouble. In Clasico clashes in particular, the Argentine popped up with remarkable regularity to score when his side were on the ropes. At times, it papered over obvious cracks. But often, the weaknesses weren't even noticed amid the spectacular successes and wonderful wins.
In an albeit superb season at Bayern overall, such successes have been few and far between against the top teams. Likewise at Barcelona. As prolific as ever against smaller sides, Messi was unable to inspire the Catalans when it mattered most: versus Madrid in the final of the Copa del Rey and against Atletico in the Champions League quarter-finals.
In four full seasons under Guardiola, Messi scored 38, 47, 53 and then 73 goals, was never injured, claimed the Ballon d'Or each year and almost always delivered in the biggest matches. None of that was a coincidence. Pep put Leo on a special fitness and diet programme at the Catalan club, cutting out visits to his favourite Argentine restaurant in Barcelona and late-night sessions watching football from his homeland on television. He also made Messi feel important, dispensing with Zlatan Ibrahimovic and later benching David Villa to keep his star player happy. It worked.
But since the signing of Neymar, the 26-year-old now no longer feels as important as he once did. And following the departure of Guardiola, some of his dietary discipline has also been lost. Earlier this month, the Argentine organised a barbecue for the Barca squad days before a crucial Champions League game against Atletico, something that would have been unthinkable under Guardiola. Such details may seem harmless, yet they helped make Messi the best in the world and currently that title is held by Cristiano Ronaldo, who claimed the Ballon d'Or in January and broke Leo's record for goals scored in a single edition of the Champions League by reaching 16 strikes in the competition on Tuesday.
Messi may reclaim the Ballon d'Or next year, while Barcelona can be brilliant once again in the coming campaigns. Likewise, Pep will surely succeed in making Bayern great as he settles in at the Allianz Arena, brings in more players and builds on his opening season in Germany. But without each other and the spectacular synthesis we witnessed between 2008 and 2012, Pep and Leo may never hit those heady heights again.

Ronaldo: Madrid will show we're best in Europe

The Portuguese was delighted with his side's victory over Bayern and is determined to win the final to show the world what the Blancos are made of
Cristiano Ronaldo is determined to show Real Madrid are the best team in Europe in the Champions League final after thrashing holders Bayern Munich 5-0 on aggregate in the semi-finals of the competition.
Madrid recorded a 4-0 win at the Allianz Arena on Tuesday after previously winning the first leg 1-0, with the Portuguese attacker scoring twice after Sergio Ramos' four-minute double propelled the Blancos to a healthy 2-0 second-leg lead.
The former Manchester United man said it was a monkey off the back of the Madrid club, who had fallen at the semi-final hurdle in the past three European cups, and is determined to go all the way now.
"We deserve to be in the final and everyone - the coach and all his staff - deserve to be congratulated because we played very well. Now we're going to enjoy the final and try to win," Ronaldo told the official Uefa website.
"We have to show that we're the favourites out on the pitch. It's always 50-50 going into a final anyway, irrespective of who the teams are, so we're going do our best and prove we're the best team in Europe.
"As I said at the very start of the Champions League, we have to take it step by step and game by game because we know that whoever we meet in the final will be a very tough opponent. I don't care who we face in the final. It will be in my country and I want to win the Champions League."
Ronaldo broke the record for most goals in a European cup campaign, with his double on Tuesday taking him to 16, and he praised team-mate Gareth Bale for providing him with a slice of history.
"I was looking for it and I knew I needed one goal but I was not going to be mad if it didn't happen," he added. "It was a great ball from Bale. The whole team helped me.
"I'm really happy to break the Champions League record but what I want is to win it and we're very excited."
Madrid will either meet Atletico Madrid or Chelsea in next month's showpiece in Lisbon

Reus refuses to answer contract questions

Reus bejubelt sein Tor gegen Mainz
The 24-year-old has been linked with a move to Manchester United but has offered no comment on reports he could sign a new deal at Signal Iduna Park
Borussia Dortmund forward Marco Reus says he is becoming bored of questions about his future and refused to confirm whether he has been offered a new contract.
The in-form 24-year-old was reportedly offered a new contract with BVB which would see his €35 million buyout clause, which becomes active in 2015, eliminated in return for a healthy payrise.
However, when quizzed about his current agreement, the Germany international sought to remain tight-lipped but stressed that he has no problems with life at the Westfalenstadion.
"I'm not saying anything about my contract," he told Bild.
"But I do have the time to emphasise how good I feel at Dortmund."
Reus has scored 10 goals in as many games for Jurgen Klopp's side and helped secure a point at Bayer Leverkusen on Saturday to seal a second-placed finish.