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Timberwolves player Shabazz Muhammad says Carmelo Anthony is the hardest guy to guard in the NBA

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carmelo anthony

Carmelo Anthony's reputation as one of the NBA's best scorers is well established.

Even in a down season in which Anthony may sit out the second half of the year because of knee trouble, he's still averaging 24 points per game on 44% shooting, 34% from three.

Earlier this season, Paul Pierce described why Anthony is so tough to defend, naming Anthony's array of offensive moves, from posting up, shooting, and driving to the rim.

In preparation for the Rising Stars Challenge at All-Star Weekend, Minnesota Timberwolves guard Shabazz Muhammad answered who's the toughest player to guard.

"I'd say probably Carmelo because he's always trying to score the ball. That's something, especially for a guy like me who likes to score the ball, it's hard to play defense on a really talented guy, too."

Muhammad acknowledged that having to exert that energy on both sides of the floor is exhausting, but it's part of the process of becoming a two-way player.

Muhammad's comments echo Pierce's feelings, too. Pierce noted on Anthony, "You can't take one second off when you're matched up against him."

For players like Muhammad or Pierce whose primary duties are to score, being matched up with one of the best scorers in the NBA is a difficult task. While there are a number of players who play both ends of the court at elite levels, teams will sometimes intentionally match their best scorers against weak offensive players to preserve their energy. Conversely, great defenders who guard the other team's best scorers usually have a decreased role in the offense to preserve their energy.

Anthony's ability to make defenders work hard every possession is just one giant matchup problem he creates for opponents.

SEE ALSO: Future Hall-Of-Famer Explains Why Carmelo Anthony Is The Hardest Player To Guard In The NBA

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NOW WATCH: Cristiano Ronaldo, wearing a wig and glasses, surprised a young fan on the streets of Madrid


Oprah Winfrey asked this unorthodox interview question to find an executive for her television network

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Oprah Winfrey

When Oprah Winfrey searched for a president for her television network, the Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN), she whittled down applicants with a question that made some people very uncomfortable, she says at a recent presentation at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. One woman even burst out crying.

It was: "What is your spiritual practice?"

First of all, the woman who cried was immediately taken out of the running, Winfrey says. But for those who protested that they weren't religious, Winfrey clarified that she wasn't asking about religion, she was asking about their inner relationship with themselves.

She was getting at, "What do you do for yourself? What do you do to keep yourself centered?" she says.

She asks this because she considers her "secret to success" the fact that she is grounded in her own self and looks for others who are, as well. If we know who we are and what we want from life, Winfrey believes, then we can build meaningful relationships with others to make our visions reality.

"Everybody wants to fulfill the highest, truest expression of yourself as a human being," Winfrey says. "And because I understand that, I understand that if you work in a bakery and that's where you want to be, and that may be what you've always wanted to do ... then that's for you. And there's no difference between you and me, except that's your platform, that's your show. So my understanding of that has allowed me to reach everyone."

You can watch the full Stanford video segment below, via Slideshare:

SEE ALSO: Why Richard Branson is so successful

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NOW WATCH: How To Respond To 8 Illegal Interview Questions

Kanye West held his first fashion show with Adidas and it was pretty bizarre

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Kanye West Fashion Show

Hip-hop superstar and part-time fashion designer Kanye West just debuted his first fashion show Thursday night in New York City.

And it was pretty interesting. It also started an hour late.

Titled "Yeezy: Season 1", West finally got to show off what he's been working on the the help of the Adidas Originals design team.

But there was much more to the show than just clothing.

Kanye show

According to the Refinery 29, a recording of West saying "I'm here to crack the pavement and make new ground. There's a lack of creativity in every field … people are afraid to create. I want people to think awesome is possible" played on loop during the show, along with the debut of a song off his upcoming album, "Wolves."

With the collection, West aims to "absolve consumers of dressing's daily stress." The pieces in the collection were designed to be "freely combined in infinite ways," according to Dazeen.

The models lined up in nine rows and as each row came forward one by one to show off their designer threads, the lights went up to "blinding intensity."

As for the clothes themselves, there were a lot of comically oversized top pieces and a healthy amount of artful distressing. Some were clearly inspired by military wear, while others took a tech-wear vibe. Most of it fit pretty slouchy.

Throughout, the color palette remained pretty neutral — mostly grays and muted greens.

Adidas called it "a study in contrasts like street-luxury and vintage-new, the clothing shapes a new modern wardrobe." 

Refinery called it "meh." The line didn't impress critics, who said it was "nothing revolutionary."

Kanye Fashion ShowA exception was the thick white soled Yeezy Boost sneaker, which has been riding the hype train for quite a while pending its release Saturday. The trainer-style shoe recieved praise for looking better on the foot than in product shots.

Another highlight was an oversized backpack one model wore.

Many of the models wore nude-colored tights, which covered much of their body  — some, even including their hair. The tights were the product of the show's collaboration with contemporary performance artist Vanessa Beecroft, presumably to accentuate the clothing pieces the models were wearing. 

Pretty much every celebrity West has ever been connected to was at the show in support, including Anna Wintour, Rihanna, Justin Bieber, Spike Jonze, Alexander Wang, Diddy , Jay Z, and Beyonce.

One harsh critic, West's daughter North, reportedly starting crying when the show started and had to be carried out. 

"Maybe she was just scared for her daddy. She just wanted people to stop being mean to her daddy. Because she knows that her daddy loves the world and just wants to make it a more beautiful place,"West said in response.

Check out more of the pieces below.

Kanye Fashion ShowKanye Fashion ShowKanye Fashion ShowKanye Fashion ShowKanye Fashion Show

And check out the video of the full show below.

 

SEE ALSO: 4 Winter Accessories Every Man Should Own

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10 ways to make your Android phone run faster

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android rocket

When you invest hundreds of dollars in a new smartphone, you expect it to last for a while.

Unfortunately, there are tons of tiny factors that could be slowing down your phone that you might not even be aware of.

If you're Android phone is feeling sluggish, try a few of these easy fixes. 

First, restart your phone.

It's easy to forget that our phones need a good restart every once in a while, just like any other type of computer. Before you take any other measures, try shutting down or restarting your phone. 



Make sure your system is up to date.

If your phone is running slow, it's possible that you may not have installed the latest Android software update. Head over to Settings >About device >Software update to see if there are any updates available. 



Delete old photos, apps, and anything else you don't need anymore.

If your phone is still slow, try getting rid of files you don't need. It's easy to forget to delete old photos and music files, but getting rid of content is one of the easiest ways to get your phone running smoothly again. Apps could be using resources from your phone to perform processes in the background, which could be slowing down your phone. The less clutter, the better. 



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Google's co-founders are about to sell $4.4 billion worth of shares (GOOG)

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larry page sergey brin planes

Google cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin are going to sell about $4.4 billion worth of company shares, according to a new filing with the SEC (which we first spotted thanks to Footnoted). 

As of January 30, 2015, Brin and Page held approximately 44.6 million shares of Google Class B stock and another 44.6 million shares of Class C stock.

Under the new trading plan just filed, they will sell approximately 2 million shares of each Class B common stock they own (which will automatically convert to Class A shares upon sales), as well as another 2 million shares of each of their Class C non-voting stocks.

After the transactions are complete, they will collectively own about 40.6 million shares of Class B stock and another 40.6 million shares of Class C stock, the filing says.

With both classes of Google stocks trading at approximately $550 a share, the total 8 million shares they plan to sell translates to roughly $4.4 billion. The filing didn't specify when exactly the selling will take place, but as they did in the past, it will be extended over a period of time to minimize market impact, the filing said.

It's worth noting that even after Page and Brin sell $4.4 billion worth of shares, they'll retain majority control of Google. Following the sales, Brin and Page will own only 11.9% of Google's outstanding Class A and Class B common stock, yet still hold 52% of the voting power.

This is possible because of its dual-class share structure. Class B shares, mostly owned by Brin, Page, and Google Chairman Eric Schmidt, hold 10X the voting power of the common Class A stock. The Class C stocks have no voting power at all. It's why Class B shares are often called "Super-voting" shares.

Google founders Larry Page and Sergey BrinDual-class structure is now pretty common among tech companies, as Facebook, Linkedin, and Box all have adopted this model. But Google was one of the first companies to bring this to the mainstream when they went public in 2004.

It was very rare to see investors allow this form of stocks because it would give too much control to ownership, when the company is supposed to be publicly owned. Prior to Google, it was mostly family-run media companies, like The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, that had this model, all under the name of protecting editorial independence.

Google duly acknowledged this in its S1 back in 2004, as it wrote, “We are creating a corporate structure that is designed for stability over long time horizons...By investing in Google, you are placing an unusual long term bet on the team, especially Sergey and me, and on our innovative approach.”

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NOW WATCH: 5 Awesome Google Features You Didn't Know About

Apple may have hundreds of people working on an electric car that looks like a minivan

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tim cook

Adding to the recent reports about an Apple vehicle, the Wall Street Journal reports that Apple has hundreds of people working on an electric vehicle under the code-name "Titan."

The current design apparently looks like a minivan.

This is just the latest story this week about Apple building a car. It seemed like a far-fetched idea a month ago, but now?

To recap:

Jony Ive

Now, the Journal adds a lot more detail to these reports.

Apparently the project has been underway for more than a year and has hundreds of people working on it. It's reportedly being led by Steve Zadesky, a former Ford engineer who also helped build the iPhone. Johann Jungwirth, the chief of research and development at Mercedes-Benz in North America, was hired away in September to help run the project, too.

Apple investigates new product areas all the time, and there's a chance this won't ever come to market, but the size of the team and the executives hired to work on it make it seem pretty serious. Plus, apparently Steve Jobs was talking about an iCar in 2009, and chief designer Jony Ive has had a bit of an obsession with the poor design of American cars.

Tim Cook coyly hinted last year that Apple had projects that nobody knew about. It appears that this vehicle is one of them.

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NOW WATCH: 14 things you didn't know your iPhone headphones could do

This calendar beautifully captures the biggest holidays in major religions and countries

Why you should watch 'Breaking Bad' in one chart

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You still haven't watched "Breaking Bad"? Even after the Emmys, the national obsession, and the feverish recommendations of anyone you ask? Oh, so you watched the first two episodes and thought they were cool, but the main character was unlikable, and it seemed like a little too much to get into?

Look. If you need to be convinced that AMC's masterpiece is worth starting and sticking with, then just look at the following graph. It comes from the very useful site Graph TV, which lets you plot the IMDB ratings of any show over time.

Site founder Kevin Wu said "Breaking Bad" had one of the most dramatic graphs he has seen. Not only does it get extremely high ratings, but it keeps going up.

"It seems to just get better within each season and season by season,"Wu wrote in an email.

breaking bad graph tv

SEE ALSO: You should watch 'Better Call Saul'

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Relationship expert: 'Fifty Shades of Grey' says something important about the erotic mind of women

J.J. Abrams received tons of emails harassing him about the new ‘Star Wars’ lightsaber

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star wars episode 7 lightsaber



When the first teaser trailer for “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” premiered in Nov., fans were torn over the appearance of a new three-pronged lightsaber.  

Some loved it. Others hated it. (What was the point of those mini lightsabers on the side, some asked. Clearly, they’re not going to protect your hands.) 

During a recent interview with Collider at the Visual Effects Society Awards, Abrams said he hasn’t been able to avoid the controversy either. 

jj abrams star warsIn fact, the “Star Wars: Episode VII” director says he has fielded a lot tons of emails and analysis both defending and arguing against the practicality and logistics of the new lightsaber.  

“I will say that what has been funny ... is since the lightsaber has come out, I cannot tell you how many contradictory emails I have received from people who have both defended it with unbelievably detailed graphics,” Abrams told Collider. “I've gotten things that are nuts. And I’ve gotten people who have shown how it will kill you and how it doesn’t make any sense.” 

“It’s been the funniest thing to see the arguments that have developed over this thing,” added Abrams. 

Perhaps, most famous was late-night host Stephen Colbert’s defensive graphic and accompanying explanation of the new lightsaber in Dec. claiming the three-pronged design in "perfect."

stephen colbert star wars lightsaber

Abrams added that the three-pronged lightsaber underwent a “number of conversations.”

“It was a sketch that became a whole thing,” said Abrams. “This was not done without a lot of conversation. It’s fun to see people have the conversation that we had, but in reverse.”

“Star Wars: Episode VII” is in theaters Dec. 18, 2015. 

Watch the interview with Abrams via Collider below:

 

SEE ALSO: Why George Lucas isn't making more "Star Wars" movies

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What it's like when Apple features your app in the App Store (AAPL)

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Tim Cook Apple App Store

There are more than one million apps in the App Store, and sorting through them isn't always easy. That's why the featured spots on the front page of Apple's App Store are so coveted among developers. 

Obviously earning one of these spots leads to more downloads and a general increase in the popularity of your app. But gaining one of those spots isn't easy, and there's no real way to guarantee it will ever happen.

One startup founder described what it was like the first time his app was featured by Apple.

"You wake up one day and your servers start to crash," Henry Kang, the founder and CEO of StyleIt said to Business Insider. 

StyleIt is an app that essentially functions as your own personal stylist. You can snap a photo of something you currently own, like a pair of boots or a sweater, and the app will analyze the photo to present other articles of clothing that match with it. You can also purchase these items from directly within the app.

Kang and his team launched the app last spring, and Apple featured it for the first time in December. Apple doesn't notify publishers when they're apps are selected to be featured —Kang said he found out after he noticed his app was running slowly and their servers were crashing. His inbox was flooded with user signups.

When Apple first featured the app in December, there was a surge in popularity that has died down a bit since, Kang said. But since it's been featured that first time, it's now featured in a few different categories other than the front page including Lifestyle and Best of January.

StyleIt.JPG

One of the most exciting things about the success that comes from being featured is watching your ranking in the app store rise. 

"I remember taking screenshots when we passed Target and Walgreens," Kang said. 

The toughest hurdle for developers and app creators, however, is that there's no real way to catch Apple's attention. There's no formula or list of prerequisites that tells you how to get your app featured in the App Store. It's mostly luck, but Kang said constantly updating your product to add new features probably helps. And, of course, your app has to actually be good. 

There are a few ways to get your app noticed other than being featured by Apple. When marketing your app, keep it simple and focus on one main feature, Siraj Salim, a partner at Apppli- App Development & Start Up Accelerator, wrote in a Quora thread

SEE ALSO: Steve Jobs sent this inspiring email to a startup that helped design one of the first iPad apps

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Check out these 15 cars that need to make a comeback

Here's how a $50 drop in oil prices affects every country in the world (BLK, OIL, USO)

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The oil crash has affected oil importers and exporters differently.

The 50% plunge in oil prices will provide a roughly $1.7 trillion gain for consumers in oil-importing nations, according to the investment-management firm BlackRock. But exporters will suffer, especially countries that are counting on revenues from higher oil prices to balance their budgets.

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REVEALED: The demographic statistics that make LinkedIn's audience so valuable to businesses

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LinkedIn Uusers Pew

LinkedIn is perhaps the most overlooked social network. But overall it is actually more popular than Twitter, generally considered the number two social network in the U.S. The latest data shows a higher proportion of U.S. adults on the internet (22%) have used LinkedIn, compared to the percentage who have used Twitter.  

LinkedIn is a valuable platform for brands interested in its highly educated, relatively mature, professional audience. 

In a new report from BI Intelligence, we unpack data from over a dozen sources to understand how social media demographics are still shifting. 

Access The Full Report And Its 20 Charts By Signing Up For A Free Trial >>

Here are a few of the key takeaways from the BI Intelligence report:

The report is full of charts (over 20 charts) and data that can be downloaded and put to use.

In full, the report:

For full access to all BI Intelligence reports, briefs, and downloadable charts on the digital media industry, sign up for a free trial.

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NOW WATCH: 14 things you didn't know your iPhone headphones could do

These are the questions one writer says can make you fall in love with a stranger

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screenshot/"(500) Days Of Summer"

What if love weren't as passive as we tend to picture it being?

What if, instead of stumbling into it as a result of chance or fate, we actively choose it?

In 1997, State University of New York psychologist Arthur Aron tested the idea that two people who were willing to feel more connected to each other could do so, even within a short time.

The experiment is featured prominently in a recent Modern Love column in The New York Times, in which the author pointed to the questions as the springboard into her own romance; more on that here.

For his study, Aron separated two groups of people, then paired people up within their groups and had them chat with one another for 45 minutes. While the first group of pairs spent the 45 minutes engaging in small talk, the second group got a list of questions that gradually grew more intimate.

Not surprisingly, the pairs who asked the gradually more probing questions felt closer and more connected after the 45 minutes were up. Six months later, two of the participants (a tiny fraction of the original study group) even found themselves in love— an intriguing result, though not a significant one.

Here are the 36 questions the pairs in Aron's test group asked one another, broken up into three sets. Each set is intended to be more intimate than the one that came before.

Set 1

1. Given the choice of anyone in the world, whom would you want as a dinner guest?

2. Would you like to be famous? In what way?

3. Before making a telephone call, do you ever rehearse what you are going to say? Why?

4. What would constitute a "perfect" day for you?

5. When did you last sing to yourself? To someone else?

6. If you were able to live to the age of 90 and retain either the mind or body of a 30-year-old for the last 60 years of your life, which would you want?

7. Do you have a secret hunch about how you will die?

8. Name three things you and your partner appear to have in common.

9. For what in your life do you feel most grateful?

10. If you could change anything about the way you were raised, what would it be?

11. Take four minutes and tell your partner your life story in as much detail as possible.

12. If you could wake up tomorrow having gained any one quality or ability, what would it be?

Set 2

13. If a crystal ball could tell you the truth about yourself, your life, the future or anything else, what would you want to know?

14. Is there something that you’ve dreamed of doing for a long time? Why haven’t you done it?

15. What is the greatest accomplishment of your life?

16. What do you value most in a friendship?

17. What is your most treasured memory?

18. What is your most terrible memory?

19. If you knew that in one year you would die suddenly, would you change anything about the way you are now living? Why?

20. What does friendship mean to you?

21. What roles do love and affection play in your life?

22. Alternate sharing something you consider a positive characteristic of your partner. Share a total of five items.

23. How close and warm is your family? Do you feel your childhood was happier than most other people’s?

24. How do you feel about your relationship with your mother?

Set 3

25. Make three true "we" statements each. For instance, "We are both in this room feeling _______."

26. Complete this sentence: “I wish I had someone with whom I could share _______.”

27. If you were going to become a close friend with your partner, please share what would be important for him or her to know.

28. Tell your partner what you like about them; be very honest this time, saying things that you might not say to someone you’ve just met.

29. Share with your partner an embarrassing moment in your life.

30. When did you last cry in front of another person? By yourself?

31. Tell your partner something that you like about them already.

32. What, if anything, is too serious to be joked about?

33. If you were to die this evening with no opportunity to communicate with anyone, what would you most regret not having told someone? Why haven’t you told them yet?

34. Your house, containing everything you own, catches fire. After saving your loved ones and pets, you have time to safely make a final dash to save any one item. What would it be? Why?

35. Of all the people in your family, whose death would you find most disturbing? Why?

36. Share a personal problem and ask your partner’s advice on how he or she might handle it. Also, ask your partner to reflect back to you how you seem to be feeling about the problem you have chosen.

Try them out, and let us know what happens.


NOW WATCH: Adam Savage Of 'MythBusters' Says This Scientific Fact Blows His Mind

 

READ MORE: Here's the big problem with the idea of 'falling' in love

SEE ALSO: Scientists say one behavior is the 'kiss of death' for a relationship

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NOW WATCH: Why You Should Have Only 3 Things In Mind When Looking For Love


This is the simplest explanation of why Putin is so opposed to NATO

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Putin's suspicion of NATO can be boiled down to one simple explanation: geography. 

At the height of the Cold War and the Soviet Union's power, the USSR and its allied Warsaw Pact countries encompassed half of Europe and almost the entirety of Central Asia. But after the demise of the USSR in 1989, lands once within Moscow's orbit quickly peeled away to join NATO. 

Today, only Belarus remains firmly within Moscow's influence, and even that partnership has teetered recently

NATO expansion after Cold War map

For Putin, the peeling away of countries from Russia towards NATO comes as both an existential threat and a personal insult. As a former agent in the KGB and an avowed nationalist, Putin has dreams of resurrecting the glories of Imperial Russia — a goal that is seriously hampered by the inclusion of what Putin would deem rightful Russian lands, such as the Baltics, into the NATO alliance. 

With this in mind, it is easy to see why Putin signed off on Russia's new military doctrine in December 2014. The doctrine, which placed explicit focus on NATO being Moscow's main existential enemy and threat, called on the further militarization of three geopolitical frontlines: the Russian Baltic Sea exclave of Kaliningrad near Poland, the annexed Crimean peninsula, and the Arctic. 

Putin almost certainly saw the uprising in Ukraine — during which the country's pro-Russian leadership was replaced in favor of a more western-friendly one in the beginning of 2014 — as the last straw. The subsequent annexation of Crimea and the backing of separatists in the east served to delay Ukraine's eventual pivot towards the European Union and NATO. 

"Expanding NATO further into post-Soviet space is a red line with Russia, and the US is frankly not in a position to challenge it without running a huge risk," Greg Scoblete of RealClearWorld told Forbes. "Put bluntly, Russia will be able to invade eastern Ukraine faster than the West could admit Ukraine into NATO to deter Russian aggression."

Indeed, Ukraine called for full integration into NATO in August 2014 once Russian armaments began to freely enter into the country. But NATO has steep membership requirements and there's no current timetable for admitting Ukraine into the alliance.

UKRAINE

Today, Putin continues to consider the change in leadership Ukraine to be illegitimate and yet another tool of NATO expansion aimed at hemming in Russia. 

"This is not the army, per se, this is a foreign proxy, in this case a foreign NATO legion, which, of course, doesn't pursue the objective of national interests of Ukraine," Putin said at the end of January. "They have entirely different goals, and they are tied with the achievement of the geopolitical goals of containing Russia." 

Despite a previous ceasefire agreed between Russia, Ukraine, and the separatists in September, Russian support for the rebels continued to flow into the country. Russian troops also have been reported fighting in the front lines, helping the separatists to roll back the Ukrainian army in key battles such as at the one fought recently at the Donetsk Airport

This Russian support has helped to ensure that Ukraine remains divided and in a perpetual state of instability and even conflict — thereby preventing any complete turn by Kiev towards NATO and the EU. 

Russia VS NATO_07

SEE ALSO: The new Economist cover says it all

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NOW WATCH: The Taiwan Navy Just Unveiled A Stealth Missile Warship Dubbed The 'Carrier-Killer'

Here's video of the US Navy testing a 'game-changing' new missile

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Tomahawk Missile

The US Navy has successfully altered a Raytheon Tomahawk land-attack missile (TLAM) to be able to hit a moving target at sea, USNI News reports

In a Jan. 27 test off of San Nicolas Island, California, the Navy launched a TLAM that was guided into a moving maritime target through directions given by a Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet flying overhead. TLAMs are capable of changing their direction mid-course.

Deputy Secretary of Defense Bob Work, the Pentagon's second-highest-ranked civilian, praised the successful test of the missile during a keynote speech at the WEST 2015 conference. He said the missiles were part of the Pentagon's "Third Offset Strategy," an initiative focused on research into new long-range weapons. 

"A big part of the Third Offset Strategies is to find new and innovative ways to deploy promising technologies," Work said. "This is potentially a game-changing capability for not a lot of cost. It's a 1,000-mile anti-ship cruise missile."

TLAMs are already used for land-attack missions against static targets. By converting TLAMs into missiles capable of penetrating thickly armored vessels at sea, the Navy plugs a serious gap in its weapons capabilities. According to USNI News, TLAMs that have been converted into anti-ship missiles could be used aboard the Navy's newer guided-missile destroyers, which cannot use the service's antiquated RGM-84 Harpoon anti-ship missile. 

The new converted TLAMs would have a range of almost 1,000 nautical miles, allowing the US to maintain a considerable edge over rival naval powers. One of China's most threatening new military advancements is its development of its own advanced anti-ship cruise missiles. However, these missiles would have just half the range of a converted TLAM. 

If fully adapted, the newest iteration of the TLAM will function as a stop-gap measure until the Navy's next-generation Long-Range Anti-Ship missile is ready for action. 

Here's how last month's test went down.

The Tomahawk missile, after being outfitted with new sensors, was guided into a moving target by an overhead Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet.

Tomahawk

The test was successful. The missile penetrated a moving maritime target, a milestone for the Tomahawk weapons system.

Tomahawk

Here is a video of the converted TLAM in action. 

SEE ALSO: These weapons could be China's most threatening military advancement for the US

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NOW WATCH: The Taiwan Navy Just Unveiled A Stealth Missile Warship Dubbed The 'Carrier-Killer'

Top US analyst: We made 5 dangerously wrong assumptions about China

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china

Michael Pillsbury is director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Chinese Strategy and a top defense policy advisor. He worked on China policy and intelligence issues for the White House during several US administrations. The following post is an excerpt from his book, "The Hundred-Year Marathon."

I was among the first people to provide intelligence to the White House favoring an overture to China, in 1969.

For decades, I played a sometimes prominent role in urging administrations of both parties to provide China with technological and military assistance.

I largely accepted the assumptions shared by America’s top diplomats and scholars, which were inculcated repeatedly in American strategic discussions, commentary, and media analysis.

We believed that American aid to a fragile China whose leaders thought like us would help China become a democratic and peaceful power without ambitions of regional or even global dominance.

Every one of the assumptions behind that belief was wrong—dangerously so.

The error of those assumptions is becoming clearer by the day, by what China does and, equally important, by what China does not do.

False assumption #1: 
Engagement brings complete cooperation

chinaFor four decades now, my colleagues and I believed that “engagement” with the Chinese would induce China to cooperate with the West on a wide range of policy problems. It hasn’t. Trade and technology were supposed to lead to a convergence of Chinese and Western views on questions of regional and global order. They haven’t. In short, China has failed to meet nearly all of our rosy expectations.

Take, for example, weapons of mass destruction. No security threat poses a greater danger to the United States and our allies than their proliferation. But China has been less than helpful — to put it mildly — in checking the nuclear ambitions of North Korea and Iran.

In the aftermath of 9/11, some commentators expressed the belief that America and China would henceforth be united by the threat of terrorism, much as they had once been drawn together by the specter of the Soviet Union. These high hopes of cooperating to confront the “common danger” of terrorism, as President George W. Bush described it in his January 2002 State of the Union address, by speaking of “erasing old rivalries,” did not change China’s attitude. Sino-American collaboration on this issue has turned out to be quite limited in scope and significance.

False assumption #2: 
China is on the road to democracy

incense chinaChina has certainly changed in the past thirty years, but its political system has not evolved in the ways that we advocates of engagement had hoped and predicted. The idea that the seeds of democracy have been sown at the village level became the conventional wisdom among many China watchers in America. 

My faith was first shaken in 1997, when I was among those encouraged to visit China to witness the emergence of “democratic” elections in a village near the industrial town of Dongguan. While visiting, I had a chance to talk in Mandarin with the candidates and see how the elections actually worked. The unwritten rules of the game soon became clear: the candidates were allowed no pubic assemblies, no television ads, and no campaign posters.

They were not allowed to criticize any policy implemented by the Communist Party, nor were they free to criticize their opponents on any issue. There would be no American-style debates over taxes or spending or the country’s future. The only thing a candidate could do was to compare his personal qualities to those of his opponent. Violations of these rules were treated as crimes.

False assumption #3: 
China, the fragile flower

china phoneIn 1996, I was part of a U.S. delegation to China that included Robert Ellsworth, the top foreign policy adviser to the Republican presidential nominee, Robert Dole.

In what appeared to be a forthright exchange of views with Chinese scholars, we were told that China was in serious economic and political peril — and that the potential for collapse loomed large. These distinguished scholars pointed to China’s serious environmental problems, restless ethnic minorities, and incompetent and corrupt government leaders — as well as to those leaders’ inability to carry out necessary reforms. 

I later learned that the Chinese were escorting other groups of American academics, business leaders, and policy experts on these purportedly “exclusive” visits, where they too received an identical message about China’s coming decline. Many of them then repeated these “revelations” in articles, books, and commentaries back in the United States. 

Yet the hard fact is that China’s already robust GDP is predicted to continue to grow by at least 7 or 8 percent, thereby surpassing that of the United States by 2018 at the earliest, according to economists from the International Monetary Fund, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and the United Nations. Unfortunately, China policy experts like me were so wedded to the idea of the “coming collapse of China” that few of us believed these forecasts. While we worried about China’s woes, its economy more than doubled.

False assumption #4: 
China wants to be — and is — just like us

news conference chinaIn our hubris, Americans love to believe that the aspiration of every other country is to be just like the United States. In recent years, this has governed our approach to Iraq and Afghanistan. We cling to the same mentality with China.

In the 1940s, an effort was funded by the U.S. government to understand the Chinese mind-set. One conclusion that emerged was that the Chinese did not view strategy the same way Americans did. Whereas Americans tended to favor direct action, those of Chinese ethnic origin were found to favor the indirect over the direct, ambiguity and deception over clarity and transparency. Another conclusion was that Chinese literature and writings on strategy prized deception.

Two decades later, Nathan Leites, who was renowned for his psychoanalytical cultural studies, observed:

Chinese literature on strategy from Sun Tzu through Mao Tse-tung has emphasized deception more than many military doctrines. Chinese deception is oriented mainly toward inducing the enemy to act in expediently and less toward protecting the integrity of one’s own plans. 

False assumption #5: 
China’s hawks are weak

freedom birds geese letting go flying free china

In the late 1990s, during the Clinton administration, I was tasked by the Department of Defense and the CIA to conduct an unprecedented examination of China’s capacity to deceive the United States and its actions to date along those lines.

Over time, I discovered proposals by Chinese hawks (ying pai) to the Chinese leadership to mislead and manipulate American policymakers to obtain intelligence and military, technological, and economic assistance. I learned that these hawks had been advising Chinese leaders, beginning with Mao Zedong, to avenge a century of humiliation and aspired to replace the United States as the economic, military, and political leader of the world by the year 2049 (the one hundredth anniversary of the Communist Revolution).

This plan became known as “the Hundred-Year Marathon.” It is a plan that has been implemented by the Communist Party leadership from the beginning of its relationship with the United States.

When I presented my findings on the Chinese hawks’ recommendations about China’s ambitions and deception strategy, many U.S. intelligence analysts and officials greeted them initially with disbelief. Chinese leaders routinely reassure other nations that “China will never become a hegemon.” In other words, China will be the most powerful nation, but not dominate anyone or try to change anything.

The strength of the Hundred-Year Marathon, however, is that it operates through stealth. To borrow from the movie Fight Club, the first rule of the Marathon is that you do not talk about the Marathon. Indeed, there is almost certainly no single master plan locked away in a vault in Beijing that outlines the Marathon in detail. The Marathon is so well known to China’s leaders that there is no need to risk exposure by writing it down. But the Chinese are beginning to talk about the notion more openly — perhaps because they realize it may already be too late for America to keep pace.

chinaI observed a shift in Chinese attitudes during three visits to the country in 2012, 2013, and 2014. As was my usual custom, I met with scholars at the country’s major think tanks, whom I’d come to know well over decades. I directly asked them about a “Chinese-led world order”— a term that only a few years earlier they would have dismissed, or at least would not have dared to say aloud. However, this time many said openly that the new order, or rejuvenation, is coming, even faster than anticipated. When the U.S. economy was battered during the global financial crisis of 2008, the Chinese believed America’s long-anticipated and unrecoverable decline was beginning.

I was told — by the same people who had long assured me of China’s interest in only a modest leadership role within an emerging multipolar world — that the Communist Party is realizing its long-term goal of restoring China to its “proper” place in the world. In effect, they were telling me that they had deceived me and the American government. With perhaps a hint of understated pride, they were revealing the most systematic, significant, and dangerous intelligence failure in American history. And because we have no idea the Marathon is even under way, America is losing.

china celloExcerpted from THE HUNDRED-YEAR MARATHON: China’s Secret Strategy to Replace America as the Global Superpower by Michael Pillsbury, published February 10, 2015 by Henry Holt and Company, LLC. Copyright © 2015 by Michael Pillsbury. All rights reserved.

SEE ALSO: Top China analyst: Beijing has been duping the US since Mao

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Hungary and Russia: The Viktor and Vladimir show

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putin and orban"Jatszoter" (playground) proclaims HVG, a magazine, above a graphic of Hungary as a seesaw. Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, is at one end, Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, at the other.

It is a fitting image, given that Mr Putin is due in Budapest on February 17th, two weeks after Mrs Merkel. His visit will mostly be about renewing Hungary's gas contract which expires this year, says Viktor Orban, the prime minister, who wants what he calls a "flexible" arrangement. For his part, Mr Putin wants to show the world that he is not as isolated as some claim.

The Ukraine crisis, and Mr Orban's links with Russia, have put Hungary in the spotlight. Georgia's prime minister has just visited; Turkey's president is expected soon. Western fears of Mr Orban's autocratic drift have intensified. He caused considerable alarm around the European Union in July 2014 when he declared that Hungary would remain a democracy but become an "illiberal state", citing the examples of Russia, Turkey and China. Mrs Merkel criticised the term on her visit, but was firmly rebuffed by her host.

On Ukraine, Mr Orban is vacillating between a desire for closer ties with Russia and his obligations as a member of the EU and NATO. Russia is Hungary's biggest trading partner outside the EU, and supplies most of its gas. Moreover, America's loss of interest and influence in central Europe points to a greater focus on Germany and Russia, argues Mr Orban.

The cancellation of Russia's planned South Stream gas pipeline was a blow. Cheap gas is a fundamental pillar of the government's populist policies, says Peter Kreko of Political Capital, a Budapest think-tank. "The question is what kind of political price President Putin will try and exact. He wants to exert pressure on the EU's weakest links to break European unity."

putin orbanMany in the West think the cosying-up between Mr Orban and Mr Putin has gone too far. Hungary has taken a EUR10 billion ($11 billion) loan from Russia to upgrade its ageing nuclear power plant. The contract was negotiated in secret and not put out to tender. (Officials cite reasons of national security.)

Last year Mr Orban also broke ranks over EU sanctions on Russia, claiming that they did more harm to Europe than to Russia. Hungary has repeatedly called for autonomy for ethnic Hungarians in western Ukraine. Such calls were seen as further weakening the embattled government in Kiev, helping Moscow.

But Mr Orban has since come back into line, supporting Ukraine's sovereignty and stressing Hungary's commitment to NATO. He has courted Germany, on whose economy and investment Hungary depends most heavily. European governments understand Hungary's position on energy, says one Western diplomat, but dissent from the EU's common position is not an option: "EU member states agree a policy and we all follow it, especially in a high-stakes environment like this one."

Russia's relations with Hungary are "isolated from the overall situation in the world," says Vladimir Sergeyev, Russia's ambassador to Hungary. Yet this seems implausible. Ukraine, which borders Hungary, casts a long and ever darkening shadow. Doomsday scenarios include the break-up of the country, which could push waves of refugees across the border. Some 200,000 ethnic Hungarians live in western Ukraine, and many could seek sanctuary. Mr Orban may yet have to seesaw back towards the West.

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NOW WATCH: 11 Facts That Show How Different Russia Is From The Rest Of The World

Why a mysterious black briefcase follows the US president everywhere

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nuclear football

The so-called nuclear "Football" is a black leather briefcase that contains top-secret items capable of allowing the US president to authorize a nuclear attack while away from fixed command centers such as the Situation Room in the White House.

Officially referred to as the "president's emergency satchel," the unsophisticated-looking portable Football is hand-carried by one of five military aides and is always within reach of the commander in chief, just in case.

According to Bill Gulley, a former director of the White House Military Office, the ubiquitous Football does not contain a doomsday red-button keypad but rather these four items:

  • a 75-page black book of retaliatory nuclear-strike options printed in black and red ink
  • another black book with a list of classified sites to shelter the president
  • a manila folder containing 10 pages of instructions on how to operate the Emergency Broadcast System
  • an index card with authentication codes

Sometimes an antenna can be seen poking out of the briefcase, which suggests that there may be communications equipment inside.

football with antenna

The nickname Football comes from "Dropkick," a code name given to a secret nuclear-war plan, according to former US Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. Initiating a Dropkick would require one of these Footballs, Smithsonian Magazine explains.

The military aides selected to carry the briefcase are trained to administer the president for a nuclear attack in minutes.

"You're always kind of on edge," recalls then-Air Force Major Robert Patterson, who toted the Football for President Clinton.

"I opened it up constantly just to refresh myself, to always be aware of what was in it, all the potential decisions the president could possibly make," Patterson told the Associated Press.

nuclear footballThe ubiquitous Football is always in the same airplane, helicopter, car, and elevator alongside the president. When the president is at home, the Football is stored in a secure location inside the White House, the AP reports.

According to Patterson, some aides chased after Clinton while he jogged around the White House compound — all the while lugging the 45-pound briefcase.

The lethal luggage first appeared during Kennedy's administration, shortly after the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. It became immediately clear to top national security officers that the president needed unlimited access to nuclear war plans after he reportedly posed the following questions during a National Security Council meeting:

kennedy nuclear football

Fifty-three years later, the regularly updated Football represents the incredible military might and tremendous responsibility that follows the president everywhere.

SEE ALSO: A story about JFK explains the dangers of smoking weed in the White House

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NOW WATCH: The Taiwan Navy Just Unveiled A Stealth Missile Warship Dubbed The 'Carrier-Killer'

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