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Wikileaks Releases Half A Million Diplomatic Cables From "Year Zero" Of The Modern Era

Coming on the sixth year anniversary of the infamous "Cablegate", when on this day in 2010 Wikileaks made global headlines when it unveiled classified cables sent to the US State Department, revealing assessments of countries and details of eavesdropping, this morning WikiLeaks released more than half a million US diplomatic cables from 1979, covering various diplomatic events and incidents such as the Iranian revolution, Osama bin Ladin's departure of his native Saudi Arabia for Pakistan to support the Mujahideen, the siege of Mecca, Saddam Hussein becoming president of Iraq and much more.

Frontrunning: November 28

  • Trump Alleges That ‘Millions of People’ Voted Illegally (WSJ)
  • Oil slip sends dollar, bond yields skidding (Reuters)
  • Italian Lenders Slide on Vote Worries to Drag Down Europe Stocks (BBG)
  • OPEC makes last-ditch bid to save oil deal as tensions grow (Reuters)
  • How Iran, Russia Could Derail Oil-Production Deal (WSJ)
  • Tug of War Delays Some of Trump’s Key Appointments (WSJ)
  • French conservatives back Fillon for president, left flounders (Reuters)
  • How to Kill the Volcker Rule? Don’t Enforce It (WSJ)

Juppe And Fillon Clash For Republican Nomination As France Picks Marine Le Pen's Opponent

Juppe And Fillon Clash For Republican Nomination As France Picks Marine Le Pen's Opponent

Following last weekend's latest latest "stunning" political outcome, in which French former PM Francois Fillon trounced pollsters' favorite Alain Juppe in the first round of the French conservative primary and which saw the latest political career termination for former president Nicolas Sarkozy, on Sunday the two former prime ministers are going head-to-head in a runoff vote for France's center-right presidential nomination, with the victor expected to face a showdown against a resurgent Marine Le Pen in the May 2017 presidential election.

These Are The 48 Organizations That Now Have Access To Every Brit's Browsing History

Last week, in a troubling development for privacy advocates everywhere, we reported that the UK has passed the "snooper charter" effectively ending all online privacy. Now, the mainstream media has caught on and appears to be displeased. As AP writes today, "after months of wrangling, Parliament has passed a contentious new snooping law that gives authorities — from police and spies to food regulators, fire officials and tax inspectors — powers to look at the internet browsing records of everyone in the country."

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