Tag Archives: governments

A 4% Link Tax: Why the Government’s Draft Bill C-18 Regulations Just Increased the Chances of No News on Meta and Google in Canada – Michael Geist – Michael Geist –

  1. A 4% Link Tax: Why the Government’s Draft Bill C-18 Regulations Just Increased the Chances of No News on Meta and Google in Canada – Michael Geist Michael Geist –
  2. Global National: Sept. 1, 2023 | Canada unveils proposed regulations in Online News Act Global News
  3. Meta and Alphabet would owe at least 4% of annual revenue in Canada to news outlets under draft regulations pushed by Justin Trudeau Fortune
  4. Canada tries to address news law concerns, Facebook not convinced Reuters Canada
  5. Meta, Canada remain at odds after Canadian attempts to clarify new law The Hill
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Legislature passes bill aimed at averting Milwaukee financial crisis, lifting aid to local governments – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

  1. Legislature passes bill aimed at averting Milwaukee financial crisis, lifting aid to local governments Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  2. Wisconsin shared revenue: Senate approves Milwaukee bankruptcy avoidance plan | FOX6 News Milwaukee FOX6 News Milwaukee
  3. MKE Teachers union calling shared revenue deal an ‘attack’ on Milwaukee students WISN 12 News
  4. Shared revenue plan gives money back to Wisconsin cities but creates school funding controversy WeAreGreenBay.com
  5. What the Wisconsin shared revenue agreement could mean for K-12 education Fox11online.com
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Bitcoin Officially Enters a Macro Uptrend Ahead of the “Halving Event” Next Year, but the US Government’s 41,500 BTC Stash Remains a Major Threat – Wccftech

  1. Bitcoin Officially Enters a Macro Uptrend Ahead of the “Halving Event” Next Year, but the US Government’s 41,500 BTC Stash Remains a Major Threat Wccftech
  2. Top Crypto Analyst Says Bitcoin (BTC) ‘On the Cusp’ of Making History The Daily Hodl
  3. I asked ChatGPT Bitcoin’s price trajectory, it gave me this warning AMBCrypto News
  4. Bitcoin Price Prediction as BTC Bulls Hold $28,000 Level – Can BTC Push Past $30,000 Zone This Weekend? Cryptonews
  5. Bitcoin, Ethereum Technical Analysis: BTC Nears $29000 to Start April, as ETH Also Rebounds – Markets and Prices Bitcoin News Bitcoin News
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Sanders voices support for mass protests against Israeli government’s ‘extreme’ actions – The Hill

  1. Sanders voices support for mass protests against Israeli government’s ‘extreme’ actions The Hill
  2. Far-right group attacks Arabs at pro-overhaul protest, chants ‘may your village burn’ The Times of Israel
  3. Israel protests – news: Far-right groups attack Arabs at pro-Netanyahu march The Independent
  4. Shikma Bressler: Protests will continue; coalition still intends ‘to enact Netanyahu’s dictatorship’ The Times of Israel
  5. Netanyahu urges protesters from both sides to avoid violence, ahead of rival Jerusalem rallies The Times of Israel
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Huge protest in Israel over rightwing government’s judicial changes | Israel

An estimated 100,000 people took to the streets of Tel Aviv on Saturday night in what protesters described as a “fight for Israel’s destiny” over sweeping judicial changes proposed by the new far-right government.

Israel’s longtime prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, returned to office last month at the helm of a coalition of conservative and religious parties that make up the most right-wing government in the country’s history.

The new administration has accused Israel’s supreme court of leftwing bias and overstepping its authority, and is seeking to curb the court’s powers by giving the Knesset more control over judicial appointments and severely restricting its ability to overturn laws and government decisions.

The Tel Aviv protest, along with smaller demonstrations in Jerusalem, Haifa and Beersheba, were sparked by fears that the far-reaching proposals undermine democratic norms. Since Israel has no formal constitution, the supreme court plays an important role in keeping government ministers in check.

Netanyahu – himself on trial on corruption charges, which he denies – has defended the plans. His opponents say the proposed changes could help the prime minister evade a conviction or even see the case dropped altogether.

Israeli opposition leader and former prime minister, Yair Lapid, as well as several other figures from across the country’s political spectrum, addressed demonstrators in central Tel Aviv on Saturday as the crowd waved the blue and white national flag and held placards reading “No to dictatorship”.

“We have here in the streets representatives of many groups who don’t usually come out to protest, but they are here, even sworn rightwingers,” said one speaker, the celebrated novelist David Grossman.

“This immensely diverse group is prepared to put aside its differences, and fight this existential fight … In its 75th year, Israel is in a fateful struggle for its character, for its democracy and for the status of its rule of law.”

A protester holds a placard in a demonstration in Tel Aviv on Saturday night. Photograph: Eyal Warshavsky/Sopa Images/Rex/Shutterstock

Noya Matalon, 24, a law student at Tel Aviv University, said: “The last big protest movement in Israel was about taking Netanyahu down, but it’s not a matter of right and left any more. Everyone – Arabs, Jews, even people who agree we need some reforms to the judicial system – everyone is saying they are scared.”

The musician Ollie Danon, 23, cancelled a show scheduled for Saturday night so he and audience members could join the protests instead. “There’s a crisis in engagement in politics here after five elections in a short space of time. There was a sense it was just all about Bibi,” he said, using Netanyahu’s nickname.

“This is bigger than Bibi now, though; it’s an emergency situation. I believe the supreme court does need reform. Its rulings usually support the occupation [of the Palestinian territories], and somehow now it’s the left wing who are out protesting to defend it. It’s all absurd.”

Saturday’s gatherings build on similar demonstrations over recent weeks, including one in Tel Aviv last weekend that drew 80,000 people, nationwide protests by students, and one outside a Tel Aviv court. Roee Neuman, one of the organisers, said more street protests are planned, as well as strike action.

“I am optimistic things can change, even if I am not optimistic about the state of Israel at the moment. We are going to increase our efforts: we are coordinating strikes in sectors that would never normally get involved, like lawyers, doctors and the tech industry. We can block roads.

“It’s difficult to predict what will happen, but I think if it starts hitting the economy they will have to listen.”

In addition to the growing protest movement, the prime minister has faced pressure from Israel’s attorney general after a ruling last week that disqualified key ally Aryeh Deri from holding a government post because of a conviction of tax offences.

Netanyahu was forced to fire the Shas party leader during Sunday’s cabinet meeting, declaring as he did so that “the high court decision ignores the will of the nation”.

The coalition also faced an early test on Friday in the form of a disagreement between cabinet members over dismantling a new Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank.

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Noem blocks South Dakota business with certain companies owned or controlled by ‘evil foreign governments’

South Dakota Republican Gov. Kristi Noem signed an executive order Friday that prevents the state from doing business with particular telecommunications companies owned or operated by “evil foreign governments.”

The order, according to Noem’s office, blocks business with companies associated with the governments of China, Iran, North Korea, Russia, Cuba and Venezuela. 

Kristi Noem, governor of South Dakota, speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando Feb. 25, 2022.
(Tristan Wheelock/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

In addition, Noem’s office said the order, known as Executive Order 2023-02, requires that “every state contract include a clause certifying the contractor is not owned, influenced, or affiliated with these countries.”

“It is critical that we protect South Dakotans from evil foreign governments,” Noem said after signing the order, which will take effect next week. “This order ensures that these countries cannot leverage telecommunications or state contract procurements to gain access to crucial state infrastructure and data.”

SOUTH DAKOTA GOVERNOR BANS TIKTOK FOR STATE AGENCIES, WARNING OF SECURITY THREAT

“Maintaining the cybersecurity of South Dakota state government is necessary to continue to serve South Dakota citizens,” the order states. “The Chinese Communist Party has increasingly purchased vital agricultural land necessary to the nation’s food independence and real property near critical infrastructure, such as real property near a military base in Grand Folks, North Dakota.”

Additionally, the order stated that South Dakota is “home to critical infrastructure vital to national security” and that “cybersecurity vulnerabilities may lead to real-world consequences for South Dakota residents.”

KRISTI NOEM SAYS BIDEN ADMIN BLOCKED JULY 4 MT. RUSHMORE FIREWORKS FOR THIRD STRAIGHT YEAR

“Countries including Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea have engaged in increasingly aggressive cyber-attacks on the United States’ assets, including Iranian financially-motivated ransomware operations, Russian phishing attempts, Chinese targeted extractions of corporate data, cyber-attacks on crucial ports since 2013, and the cyber and physical targeting of electric grid stations in Washington, North Carolina, and other states in late 2022,” the order noted.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping.
(Getty Images)

Last November, Noem made headlines when she signed an executive order prohibiting state agencies — or those who contract with them — from accessing the China-owned social media app TikTok and warned the Chinese Communist Party is ripping information from users.

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“It’s off our networks. It’s blocked off of our servers. Any state employee, anybody who contracts with the state of South Dakota, anybody who uses any of our systems no longer will be able to download or utilize this app because of the national security threat that it is,” Noem told Fox News at the time.

Accessing the app will be a criminal offense, she said, adding TikTok poses a threat to the Mount Rushmore State and the personal data of all South Dakotans and, by extension, Americans.

Fox News’ Charles Creitz contributed to this article.

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Iran: Niece of supreme leader calls on foreign governments to cut ties with Iranian regime



CNN
 — 

Farideh Moradkhani, a niece of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has called on foreign governments to cut ties with the Iranian regime in a video statement released two days after she was arrested.

Farideh Moradkhani, a well-known rights activist opposed to the Iranian regime, was arrested on Wednesday when she went to the prosecutor’s office to serve a court order, according to a tweet from her brother Mahmoud Moradkhani.

In a video statement shared by her brother two days later, Farideh Moradkhani called on people around the world to urge their governments to cut ties with the Iranian regime amid protests sweeping the nation, and to ask their governments to “stop any dealings with this regime.”

“Oh, free people, be with us and tell your governments to stop supporting this murderous and child-killing regime. This regime is not loyal to any of its religious principles and does not know any laws or rules except force and maintaining its power in any possible way,” she said.

“Now in this critical moment in history, all of humanity is observing that Iranian people, with empty hands, with exemplary courage and bravery are fighting with the evil forces,” she said. “At this point in time, the people of Iran are carrying the burden of this heavy responsibility alone by paying with their lives.”

Farideh Moradkhani said Iranians were at war with governments who support the Iranian regime, and called on democratic countries to recall their representatives from Iran and expel the representatives of Iran from their own countries.

“What is urgently needed is not to support this regime that killed thousands of Iranians in four days in November 2019 while the world was only watching,” she added.

Farideh and Mahmoud Moradkhani are the children of Ali Tehrani, a cleric and longtime opposition figure who was married to the supreme leader’s sister Badri Hosseini Khamenei. Tehrani died last month.

In a statement shared on Thursday, Human Rights Activists news agency (HRANA) confirmed Farideh Moradkhani’s arrest on Wednesday and said she was “imprisoned after an appearance at Evin courthouse to serve her 15-year sentence.”

HRANA had previously reported that she was last arrested by security forces in January this year, and released on bail “until the end of legal proceedings.” Farideh Moradkhani has been detained on previous occasions “due to her civil activities”, according to HRANA.

CNN cannot independently verify when Farideh Moradkhani recorded the video statement shared by her brother on YouTube on Friday, and has reached out to Mahmoud Moradkhani for clarification.

Iran’s ongoing protest movement was initially sparked by the death of 22-year-old woman Mahsa Amini in the custody of Iran’s morality police in September.

The unprecedented national uprising has taken hold of more than 150 cities and 140 universities in all 31 provinces of Iran, according to United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Chief Volker Turk.

More than 14,000 people, including children, have been arrested in connection with the protests, according to Turk. He said that at least 21 of them currently face the death penalty and six have already received death sentences.

The violent response of Iran’s security forces toward protesters has shaken diplomatic ties between Tehran and Western leaders.

Over the weekend, Khamenei praised the country’s Basij paramilitary force for its role in the deadly crackdown on anti-regime protesters.

Meeting with Basij personnel in Tehran on Saturday, Khamenei described the popular protest movement as “rioters” and “thugs” backed by foreign forces and praised “innocent” Basij fighters for protecting the nation.

The Basij is a wing of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard and has been deployed to the streets as protests have swelled.

Correction: A previous version of this story erroneously stated that Farideh Moradkhani was arrested after the release of her video statement. This has been corrected.

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Foreign governments spent over $750,000 at Trump hotel, report shows

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Officials from six nations spent more than $750,000 at former president Donald Trump’s hotel in Washington as they were trying to influence his administration, according to documents turned over to congressional investigators.

The records obtained by the House Committee on Oversight and Reform from Mazars USA, Trump’s former accounting firm, show that the governments of China, Malaysia, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates spent more money at Trump International Hotel — renting rooms for up to $10,000 a night — than previously known as they sought to influence the Trump administration’s foreign policy.

“These documents sharply call into question the extent to which President Trump was guided by his personal financial interest while in office rather than the best interests of the American people,” Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.), chairwoman of the committee, said in a statement Monday. “These documents, which the Committee continues to obtain from Mazars, will inform our legislative efforts to ensure that future presidents do not abuse their position of power for personal gain.”

The hotel records show lavish spending by foreign officials. Malaysia’s prime minister spent $1,500 on a personal trainer during his eight-day, $259,724 stay at Trump’s hotel, for example, and the Saudi Defense Ministry spent $85,961 at the hotel for members of a Saudi delegation, which included $10,500-a-night suites. Officials from Qatar spent more than $300,000 over three months ahead of a meeting between Trump and the Arab country’s emir.

The Oversight Committee’s findings from financial documents build on extensive reporting by The Washington Post detailing how Trump’s hotel profited from foreign governments during his time in office and the blurred lines between his business and his administration.

Last year, Maloney and Rep. Gerald E. Connolly (D-Va.) released hundreds of pages of financial documents related to the Trump property from the General Services Administration — the agency that leased the federally owned property to Trump’s company — and estimated that the Trump hotel had received $3.7 million over three years in payments from foreign governments.

Trump and the Oversight Committee reached a deal in September after years of litigation that would finally allow the panel to see a limited range of Trump’s records with Mazars to review his compliance with presidential ethics and disclosure laws.

The records released Monday cover a limited period, but Maloney has requested additional documents from the National Archives, including all documents and communications related to the Trump hotel or hotel stays at Trump-owned properties, documents and communications related to foreign payments to the Trump hotel, and documents and communications related to Chinese or Russian tourism at the Trump hotel or stays by Chinese or Russian officials.

The committee also found that Republican lobbyists with close ties to the Trump administration who were working on behalf of these countries spent tens of thousands at the Trump hotel during the same periods.

Elliott Broidy, vice chairman of the Trump Victory Committee and vice chairman of the Republican National Committee at the time, stayed at the Trump hotel “for four nights during the Malaysian Delegation visit and spent $5,345 over the course of September 2017,” Maloney wrote to acting archivist Debra Steidel Wall in a letter laying out the committee’s findings. Broidy later pleaded guilty to acting as an unregistered foreign agent and admitted to secretly lobbying the Trump administration on behalf of Malaysian and Chinese interests.

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Europe’s debt market strains force some governments to rework trading rules

Oct 31 (Reuters) – Some euro zone countries have eased rules for the banks that manage the trading of their government debt to help them cope with some of the most challenging market conditions in years, officials told Reuters.

Out of 11 major euro area debt agencies Reuters contacted, officials in the Netherlands and Belgium told Reuters they have loosened various market-making obligations dictating how actively these banks should trade their debt.

France, Spain and Finland said their rules are already structured to automatically take account of market tensions. Germany and Austria said they do not set such rules.

As the European Central Bank unwinds years of buying the region’s debt, while the war in Ukraine, an energy shock and turmoil in Britain are making investors wary of loading up on government bonds, debt managers are adjusting to a less liquid, more volatile market.

That in turn, could raise borrowing costs for governments, already squeezed by climbing interest rates and energy-related spending, and bring more uncertainty for institutions, such as pension funds, which seek in government debt safety and stability.

Euro zone government debt bid-ask spreads, the difference between what buyers are offering and sellers are willing to accept and a measure of how smooth the trading is, have risen up to four-fold since the summer of 2021, data compiled by MarketAxess (MKTX.O) for Reuters showed. The data tracked German, Italian, French, Spanish and Dutch bonds, markets which account for the vast majority of euro zone debt with nearly 8 trillion euros outstanding.

Bond bid-ask spreads soar

LOOSENED OBLIGATIONS

Wider spreads mean more volatility and higher transaction costs. So governments expect, and some formally require their primary dealers – banks that buy government debt at auctions and then sell to investors and manage its trading – to keep those tight.

In markets with formal requirements, they also face other “quoting obligations” to ensure the best possible liquidity. Those obligations have been loosened in some countries to account for heightened market stress.

Jaap Teerhuis, head of dealing room at the Dutch State Treasury, said several of its quoting obligations, including bid-ask spreads, had been loosened.

“Volatility is still significantly higher compared to before the (Ukraine) war and also ECB uncertainty has also led to more volatility and more volatility makes it harder for primary dealers to comply,” he said.

Liquidity has been declining since late 2021 as traders started anticipating ECB rate hikes, Teerhuis said. The Netherlands then loosened its quoting obligations following the invasion of Ukraine.

Belgium’s quoting obligations also move with changes in trading conditions. But it has relaxed since March the rules on how many times per month dealers are allowed to fail to comply with them and has also reduced how much dealers are required to quote on trading platforms, its debt agency chief Maric Post said.

The two countries also loosened rules during the COVID-19 pandemic. Belgium’s Post said that lasted only four months in 2020, but it has kept obligations looser for much longer this time.

Finland said it has not changed its rules, but could not rule out acting if conditions persist or worsen.

Outside the bloc, Norway has also allowed dealers to set wider bid-ask spreads.

In Italy, debt management chief Davide Iacovoni said on Tuesday it was considering adjusting the way it ranks primary dealers each year to encourage them to quote tight spreads. Such rankings can affect which banks get to take part in lucrative syndicated debt sales.

Debt offices where obligations adapt automatically said attempts to enforce pre-determined bid-ask spreads in volatile markets would discourage primary dealers from providing liquidity and cause more volatility.

“If the market is too volatile, if it’s too risky, if it’s too costly, it’s better to adjust the bid-offer to what is the reality of the market than to force liquidity,” France’s debt chief Cyril Rousseau told an event on Tuesday.

Britain’s September sell-off highlighted how liquidity can evaporate fast in markets that are already volatile when a shock hits. In that case, the government’s big spending plans triggered large moves in debt prices, forcing pension funds to resort to fire sales of assets to meet collateral calls.

‘FRAGMENTED MARKET’

Allianz senior economist Patrick Krizan said with bond volatility nearing 2008 levels, a fragmented market for safe assets was a concern.

The euro zone is roughly 60% the size of the U.S. economy but it relies on Germany’s 1.6 trillion euro bond market as a safe haven – a fraction of the $23-trillion U.S. Treasury market.

In the case of a volatility shock “you can very easily fall into a situation where some markets are really drying up,” Krizan said. “For us it’s one of the biggest risks for the euro area.”

For example, the Netherlands like Germany has a top, triple A rating. But like other smaller euro zone markets it does not offer futures, a key hedging instrument, and so far this year the premium it pays over German debt has doubled to around 30 basis points.

Smaller governments pay premium over bigger rating peers

Efforts by debt officials are welcomed by European primary dealers, whose numbers have dwindled in recent years because of shrinking profit margins and tougher regulation.

Two officials at primary dealer banks said that fulfilling the quoting obligations in current conditions would force them to take on more risk.

“If (issuers) want private sector market-making, it needs to be profitable, or why would anyone do it? And it can’t be if rates move around 10-15 basis points a day,” one said of moves of a scale that had rarely been seen in these markets in recent years.

($1 = 0.9970 euros)

Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli and Dhara Ranasinghe; additional reporting by Belen Carreno in MADRID, Lefteris Papadimas in ATHENS and Padraic Halpin in DUBLIN; editing by Tomasz Janowski

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Retired Military Can Make 7 Figures With Foreign Governments: WaPo

  • Hundreds of retired military officials took jobs in foreign governments since 2015, per WaPo report.
  • They often accept highly lucrative positions that pay up to seven figures in salary and benefits.
  • Some of the countries these veterans work for have committed human rights violations, per WaPo.

Hundreds of retired military officials took high-paying jobs in foreign governments, at times making up to seven figures in salary and benefits, despite how some of the countries have been accused of human rights violations, according to a report.

A new investigation by The Washington Post found that more than 500 retired military personnel have taken jobs with foreign governments since 2015, and a majority of the positions were located in North Africa or the Middle East, including consulting jobs for Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Defense. 

The jobs are also highly lucrative, The Post found through a Freedom of Information Act request.

Australia’s government, for example, offered former senior US Navy officials more than $10 million for consulting deals. In Azerbaijan, one retired US Air Force general was offered a consulting job with a pay of $5,000 a day.

In comparison, an active four-star general with more than two decades of experience receives up to $203,698 a year in basic pay, according to The Post.

Saudi Arabia, which has been repeatedly accused of human rights violations, has hired at least 15 retired US generals and admirals as consultants for the country’s Defense Ministry, The Post reported. 

One former Navy Seal was hired as a special operations advisor for $258,000 a year.

Saudi Arabia’s offense against outside dissenters also has not stopped US military officers from taking work from the country.

In 2018, Jamal Khashoggi, a columnist for The Post, was killed inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. The country’s officials later admitted that Saudi agents carried out a “rogue operation” without the knowledge of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. However, the CIA determined that the crown prince ordered the assassination.

Still, dozens of military personnel have accepted jobs contracted from Saudi Arabia since Khashoggi’s killing.

Retired general James L. Jones, who served as national security advisor during the Obama administration, has two Virginia-based consulting firms — Ironhand Security LLC and Jones Group International LLC — that have contracts with Saudi Arabia.

In an interview with The Post, Jones said that he was encouraged by the Trump administration to accept more contracts from the country’s Defense Ministry. According to Jones, his companies have four such contracts, with 53 US citizens in Riyadh. Eight are retired generals and admirals, and 32 are former lower-ranking military personnel, The Post reported.

“Nobody ever came to us and said, ‘Hey, we think you ought to pull out,'” Jones told The Post. “I don’t know what the alternative would have been if we had pulled away. I was worried that (the Saudis) would possibly drift off to other relationships with the Chinese and the Russians, and I didn’t think that would be very good.”

Charles Wald, a retired four-star Air Force general, who accepted a job to work in Riyadh for one of Jones’ firms said there was considerable debate on whether to stop working for Saudi Arabi after Khashoggi’s killing.

“We asked ourselves, are we basically turning a blind eye toward immorality? Or supporting a legitimate government,” Wald told The Post. The firm decided to stay.

Other military personnel has taken jobs in Indonesia or the United Arab Emirates.

Under the Emoluments Clause Restrictions, the Consitution states that retired US military personnel, which generally applies to those who served at least 20 years in uniform and are eligible to receive a pension, cannot receive consulting fees, gifts, jobs, or titles from foreign governments without expressed approval from Congress.

The Post found however that approval is almost always granted. Out of the 500 requests since 2015, about 95% were approved. The Post also reported that some people negotiated jobs with foreign governments during active service.

There is no penalty for violating the law and enforcement is rare, according to the publication.

One of the more prolific cases of a former US military officer being penalized for accepting fees from a foreign government was Michael Flynn, the former national security advisor to Donald Trump.

An investigation by the Defense Department found that Flynn received about $450,000 from Russian and Turkish sources in 2015, a year after he retired from the Army, according to The Post.

Flynn pled guilty in December 2017 for lying to the FBI about his ties to a Russian ambassador. Trump pardoned Flynn in November 2020.

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