Military: More than 300 Miramar Marines arriving home

Friday, 30 August 2013

Washington, Aug 31 (Newswire): There's another homecoming for locally based troops who've been at war in Afghanistan.

More than 300 Marines from Miramar Marine Corps Air Station are due to arrive back at the base.

The troops from the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing have spent the last several months in the Helmand province.

More than 10,000 Marines and sailors from this region have served in the war zone this year in what is expected to be the last large-scale deployment of troops from Camp Pendleton and Miramar.

By the end of October, Marine Corps officials have said fewer than 7,000 Marines will be in Afghanistan as the U.S. reduces its overall troop force under President Obama's drawdown plan.
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StarNews editor co-authors bin Laden book

New York, Aug 31 (Newswire): The New York Times reported that a new book co-authored by a StarNews staffer "promises to be one of the biggest books of the year."

The book is "No Easy Day: The Firsthand Account of the Mission That Killed Osama Bin Laden," to be published Sept. 11 by Dutton.

The co-author is local news editor Kevin Maurer, who before joining the StarNews was embedded six times with U.S. Army Special Forces in Afghanistan.

His firsthand source, according to the Times, is a former team leader with U.S. Navy Seal Team Six, who served in the operation that resulted in the death of the al Qaeda leader on May 2, 2011, in Abbottabad, Pakistan. According to Dutton executives, he was present at bin Laden's death.

For security reasons, the team leader is using a pseudonym, "Mark Owen." All other SEALs involved in the operation are also identified by pseudonyms.

"It was an honor to work on 'No Easy Day,' " Maurer said.

He had no other comment, except to note that Owen will donate most of the proceeds from the book to charities that help the families of fallen SEALs.

Times writer Julie Bosman reported that "No Easy Day" had been a "tightly held secret" by Dutton and its parent company, Penguin. Details were confirmed by two publishing executives familiar with the deal.

According to publicity copy provided by one of the executives, the book gives "a blow-by-blow narrative of the assault, beginning with the helicopter assault that could have ended Owen's life straight through to the radio call that confirmed bin Laden's death."
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Afghans: Foreign spies at root of insider attacks

Kabul, Aug 31 (Newswire): The Afghan government blamed foreign spy agencies for a rising number of killings where government soldiers and policemen have gunned down their international partners, and ordered stricter vetting of recruits and screening of those in the 350,000-member Afghan security force.

The United States had no information suggesting that the insider attacks were the work of foreign intelligence services, a senior U.S. defense official said. Instead, he said attacks typically are carried out by Afghans acting on their own, although some might have had help, on occasion, from insurgent networks. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence information about the attacks.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai summoned members of his national security council to the palace for an unscheduled meeting to discuss cases where members of the Afghan security forces or militants wearing their uniforms have turned their weapons on foreign troops. So far this year, there have been 32 insider attacks against coalition forces, resulting in 40 deaths, according to the NATO military alliance. That's up from 21 attacks for all of 2011, with 35 killed.

"The reports presented by the security officials in this meeting blamed the infiltration by foreign spy agencies into Afghan security force ranks as responsible for the rise in the individual shootings," Karzai's spokesman Aimal Faizi said.

He said the foreign agencies were trying to undermine confidence in the Afghan security forces.

"The investigation done so far shows there's definite infiltration by foreign spy agencies," Faizi told a small group of international journalists he invited to the palace to discuss the national security council meeting.

Asked if the foreign spy agencies suspected included those from neighboring countries, Faizi said, "Neighboring countries included, but I don't want to name any country."

In the past, intelligence agencies in neighboring Iran and Pakistan have been accused of enabling Afghan insurgents to destabilize the country.

A senior Pakistani intelligence official denied the country's involvement in the killings. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with the agency's policy.

Iran also has denied allegations that it supports the Taliban.

The U.S.-led coalition has said only about 10 percent of the attacks were related to infiltration by the Taliban insurgency, but that analysis was done before the latest furious spate of seven attacks in 11 days.

Faizi said an Afghan investigation into the killings revealed a strong foreign connection. "That brings us to this conclusion that the foreign spy agencies are involved," he said.

He cited physical evidence collected from gunmen who were interrogated after some of the shootings, adding that the spy agencies apparently were using Taliban fighters or sympathizers as infiltrators.

"There are letters. There are papers that are authorizing them to do different things. There are telephone calls," Faizi said, without disclosing details of the investigation's findings.

Faizi said the foreign spy agencies were instigating insider attacks to undermine confidence in the Afghan forces, but he didn't elaborate about why they would want to do that other than to say that they feared a strong Afghan security force.

President Barack Obama expressed deep concern about the insider attacks and discussed the problem with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, who was already in Kabul to talk to American and Afghan officials about how to halt the killings.

Dempsey has acknowledged that efforts launched a year ago to improve the vetting of Afghan recruits have yet to solve the problem.

Earlier this year, the U.S. commanders assigned some troops to be so-called "guardian angels" — watching over their comrades in interactions with Afghan forces and even as they sleep.

The U.S. also started allowing Americans to carry weapons in several Afghan ministries and started evaluating such visits to Afghan government offices with a stricter eye to security. And earlier this month, U.S. officials ordered American troops to carry loaded weapons at all times in Afghanistan, even when they are on their bases as a precaution against such insider attacks.

Faizi said Karzai's national security team decided at the meeting to further tighten the recruitment and vetting process and strengthen intelligence units within the defense and interior ministries.

The team also decided to investigate the cause of every insider attack and develop cultural training for police and soldiers to prevent personal disagreements between Afghan and NATO forces that have led to some of the shootings. The national security team also said a more comprehensive questionnaire would be introduced to screen recruits and officials will do more to check on members of the security forces with ties to Pakistan or Iran.

"They will study every single case of every individual who is either in the army or the police who has family either in Iran or Pakistan," Faizi said.

This is not a new procedure but one that should command greater attention, he said.

"There are some individuals within the Afghan security forces who still have families either in Pakistan or Iran, so there is still a connection between them and their families in those countries," he said.
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Detecting Alzheimer's early

Islamabad, Aug 31 (Newswire): Building upon a recent discovery that the same Alzheimer's disease process that goes on in the brain also occurs in the eye, researchers have developed a pair of optical tests that can determine the presence of amyloid beta proteins -- found in all Alzheimer's patients -- in the lens of the eye. A device called an interior laser ophthalmoscope can pick up the presence of the amyloid protein.

Since 1980 the number of Americans with Alzheimer's has nearly doubled to 4.5 million. The disease robs people of their memory, while early detection of Alzheimer's has eluded members of the medical field for years. Now a new eye test may help determine if you're at risk and may unlock that mystery.

They say the eyes are the windows to the soul, now they may be the key to saving some people's lives. A new eye test may help in the early detection of Alzheimer's. Dr .Lee Goldstein, a psychiatrist in the Dept. of Psychiatry and Surgery at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, says, "We found the Alzheimer disease process that goes on in the brain also occurs in the lens of the eye."

Dr. Goldstein developed a pair of optical tests that can determine the presence of amyloid beta proteins in the eye lens -- a protein prevalent in the brain of all Alzheimer's patients. The interior laser ophthalmoscope can pick up the presence of the amyloid protein. "What this instrument is capable of doing is picking up those gummy aggregated particles in the lens very early, before you see the cataracts," he says.

The cataract looks like a cloudy arc on the rim of the lens. This is different than the common cataract. To determine if this is an Alzheimer's cataract, Dr. Goldstein injects the eye with special fluorescence drops that bind to the amyloid beta proteins. Under an infrared light, the proteins will glow, indicating Alzheimer's disease.

"If we can get treatments early ... we can slow the disease to the point where we've effectively cured it," Goldstein says. That extra time could give Alzheimer's patients more precious time to live.

This eye test may not only improve patients' chances to start treatment earlier, but it could also speed development of new Alzheimer's drugs.

Researchers at Harvard Medical School have developed two optical tests that could potentially diagnose Alzheimer's disease in its beginning stages. The tests build upon a recent discovery that the presence of telltale proteins in the eye is an early sign of the disease. Such tests can improve patients' chances to start treatment earlier, and may also speed development of new drugs.

The same type of amyloid beta proteins which are a hallmark of Alzheimer's when found in the brain are also found in the lens and fluid of the eye. These proteins produce an unusual type of cataract in a different part of the eye than common cataracts (which are not associated with Alzheimer's). Scientists can detect these proteins by injecting a light-sensitive dye, then shining a laser onto the specific part of the lens where the cataracts tend to form. The molecules in the dye bind to the protein molecules, if they are present, and the light will cause the resulting molecules to glow. This technique is called quasi-elastic light scattering.

Alzheimer's is a slow-moving disease, and in its earliest stages, may merely appear to be mild forgetfulness, and confused with age-related memory change. There may be problems remembering recent events or activities, or the names of familiar people or objects. As the disease progresses, the forgetfulness becomes more severe, interfering with daily activities, such as brushing one's teeth. There are problems speaking, understanding, reading or writing, and eventually the brain damage becomes so severe as to require total care.

As many as 4.5 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's disease. It usually sets in after age 60, and the risk increases with age, although it is not a normal part of the aging process. While only about 5 percent of men and women aged 65-74 have the disease, nearly half of those 85 or older may have it.
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Burger diet boosts kids' asthma and wheeze risk, study finds

Islamabad, Aug 31 (Newswire): Eating three or more burgers a week may boost a child's risk of asthma and wheeze -- at least in developed nations -- reveals a large international study, published in Thorax.

Conversely, a Mediterranean diet, rich in fruit, vegetables, and fish seems to stave off the risk, the research shows.

The research team base their findings on data collected between 1995 and 2005 on 50,000 children between the ages of 8 and 12 from 20 rich and poor countries around the world.

Their parents were asked about their children's normal diet and whether they had ever been diagnosed with asthma and/or have had wheeze.

Just under 30,000 of the children were tested for allergic reactions, to see if diet also influenced their chances of developing allergies.

Diet did not seem to be associated with becoming sensitised to common allergens, such as grass and tree pollen. But it did seem to influence the prevalence of asthma and wheeze.

High fruit intake was associated with a low rate of wheeze among children from rich and poor countries.

Similarly, a diet high in fish protected children in rich countries, while a diet rich in and cooked green vegetables protected children against wheeze in poor countries.

Overall, a Mediterranean diet, high in fruit, vegetables, and fish was associated with a lower lifetime prevalence of asthma and wheeze.

But eating three or more burgers a week was associated with a higher lifetime prevalence of asthma and wheeze, particularly among children with no allergies in rich countries.

A heavy meat diet, however, had no bearing on the prevalence of asthma or wheeze.

The authors say that fruit and vegetables are rich in antioxidant vitamins and biologically active agents, while the omega 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids found in fish have anti-inflammatory properties, so there are biologically plausible links for the findings.

Burger consumption could be a proxy for other lifestyle factors, they add, particularly as the increased asthma risk associated with it was not found in poor countries.
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Probiotics use in mothers limits eczema in their babies, study finds

Probiotics use in mothers limits eczema in their babies, study finds

Islamabad, Aug 31 (Newswire): Mothers who drank milk with a probiotic supplement during and after pregnancy were able to cut the incidence of eczema in their children by almost half, a new study published in the British Journal of Dermatology has shown.

The randomized, double-blind study, conducted by researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), compared mothers who drank one glass of probiotic milk a day to women who were given a placebo. Use of the probiotic milk -- which the mothers drank beginning at week 36 in their pregnancy up through to three months after birth -- reduced the incidence of eczema by 40 percent in children up to age two, the researchers found.

The study is a part of a larger research project at the university called the Prevention of Allergy Among Children in Trondheim, or PACT, an ongoing population-based intervention study in Norway focused on childhood allergy.

Researchers followed 415 pregnant women and their children from pregnancy until the children were two years old. The participants were randomly selected among pregnant women in Trondheim -- and then randomly divided into two groups, one of which was given milk with probiotics, and the other a placebo milk. Mothers in the study did not know whether they were given the probiotic milk or the placebo milk.

"The taste of both products was similar, and the milk was delivered in unmarked milk cartons. This means that neither the participants in the study or the researchers knew who had received probiotic milk or placebo milk," says NTNU researcher Torbjørn Øien, one of the scientists involved in the study. "We can therefore say with great certainty that it was the probiotic bacteria alone that caused the difference in the incidence of eczema between the two groups."

The children were checked for eczema throughout the period, as well as for asthma and allergy at age two. Afterwards, the incidence of asthma, eczema and allergy was compared in the two groups.

"The results showed that probiotic bacteria reduced the incidence of eczema in children up to age two years by 40 percent. And the kids in 'probiotics group' who did have eczema, had less severe cases," explains Christian Kvikne Dotterud, a student in the Medical Student Research Programme at the Department of Community Medicine at NTNU.

The study did not show any effect from the probiotic milk on asthma or allergies, however.
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