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If passed, the act would save New Yorkers an average of $1,632 a year. brooklyneagle.com/articles/2025/…



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Brooklyn

Israel Secretly Targets U.S. Lawmakers With Influence Campaign on Gaza War – The New York Times nytimes.com/2024/06/05/tec… Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs ordered the operation, which used fake social media accounts urging U.S. lawmakers to fund Israel’s military, according…



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Israel Secretly Targets U.S. Lawmakers With Influence Campaign on Gaza War – The New York Times nytimes.com/2024/06/05/tec… Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs ordered the operation, which used fake social media accounts urging U.S. lawmakers to fund Israel’s military, according…



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Israeli Spies in the US



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Israeli Spies in the US



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The News And Times Blog

Political operations of Abwehr in Germany

The Abwehr, the German military intelligence service, engaged in political operations, including espionage, sabotage, and counter-intelligence, both within Germany and abroad, with its headquarters in Berlin and field offices in various locations, including neutral countries disguised as “War Organizations”. [1, 2, 3, 4]


Here’s a more detailed breakdown of the Abwehr’s political operations:


1. Structure and Organization: [2, 2, 4, 4]
  • Headquarters: The Abwehr’s headquarters were located at 76/78 Tirpitzufer, Berlin, adjacent to the offices of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW). [2, 2, 4, 4]
  • Field Offices: In Germany and occupied countries, field offices were known as “Abwehrstellen” (Asts), with branches called “Nebenstellen” (Nests). In neutral countries, they were called “Kriegsorganisationen” (KO’s) and often disguised as diplomatic missions. [1, 1, 3, 3]
  • Branches: The Abwehr was organized into three main branches: Abwehr I (intelligence), Abwehr II (sabotage and subversion), and Abwehr III (counterintelligence). [5, 5]
  • Abwehr I (Intelligence): This branch was responsible for gathering intelligence, including military, naval, air, and economic intelligence. It was further divided into sections based on geographical areas and specific types of intelligence. [3, 3, 6, 6]
  • Abwehr II (Sabotage and Subversion): This branch focused on planning and executing sabotage operations against enemy targets. [3, 3, 5, 5]
  • Abwehr III (Counterintelligence): This branch was responsible for counter-espionage and protecting the Abwehr’s own operations. [3, 3, 5, 5]
2. Operations: [1, 1, 3, 3, 6, 6, 7, 7]
  • Espionage: The Abwehr sent agents to spy on enemy nations, intercepting communications, and gathering information on military capabilities, troop movements, and strategic plans. [1, 1, 3, 3, 6, 6, 7, 7]
  • Sabotage: The Abwehr engaged in sabotage operations, including disrupting enemy supply lines, damaging infrastructure, and assassinating key figures. [3, 3, 5, 5, 7, 7]
  • Counter-intelligence: The Abwehr worked to identify and neutralize enemy intelligence agents and disrupt their operations. [1, 3, 3, 5, 5, 7]
  • Neutral Countries: In neutral countries, the Abwehr often disguised its activities by attaching personnel to German Embassies or trade missions, known as “War Organizations” (Kriegsorganisationen or KO’s). [1, 1]
3. Key Personnel and Events: [8, 9]
  • Wilhelm Canaris: The head of the Abwehr from 1935 to 1944, Canaris was a key figure in the resistance against Hitler, and he was executed by the Nazis in 1945. [8, 9]
  • Abwehr in Spain: The Abwehr detachment in Spain (Kriegsorganisation Spanien, KO-Spanien) was one of the largest of such groups, led by Captain Gustav Leissner, who acted under the alias “Lenz”. [10]
  • Collaboration with the IRA: The Abwehr attempted to cultivate a working relationship with the Irish Republican Army (IRA), but these efforts were ultimately unsuccessful. [11]
4. Legacy: [7, 7, 12, 12]
  • The Abwehr’s operations during World War II had a significant impact on the course of the war, and its legacy continues to be studied and debated by historians.
  • The Abwehr’s activities provide insights into the nature of intelligence gathering and political operations during wartime. [7, 7, 8, 12, 12, 13]


Generative AI is experimental.



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Political operations of Abwehr in Germany – Google Search google.com/search?q=Polit… The Abwehr, the German military intelligence agency, conducted political operations both within Germany and abroad, including espionage, sabotage, and counterintelligence, with its headquarters in…



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Political operations of Abwehr in Germany – Google Search google.com/search?q=Polit… The Abwehr, the German military intelligence agency, conducted political operations both within Germany and abroad, including espionage, sabotage, and counterintelligence, with its headquarters in…



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Brooklyn News

‘PATH’ of progress? Mayor Adams says homeless outreach teams have cleaned up subways – though riders are unconvinced


Mayor Eric Adams charged on Thursday that his administration has made massive strides in getting those living with homelessness out of the subway system, even as some critics say the impact has been minor.

Hizzoner made the announcement at the 34th Street-Herald Square subway station on March 20 while standing alongside NYPD Chief of Transit Joseph Gulotta and NYC Department of Social Services Commissioner Molly Wasow Park. Adams lauded the Partnership Assistance for Transit Homelessness program (PATH) for engaging with 11,000 unhoused New Yorkers since being implemented in August 2024. He also stated that outreach workers have given shelter, meals, and medical treatment over 3,000 times.

“Allowing people to sleep in our subway system, allowing people to sleep on our streets — it’s just inhumane, and we were unwilling to just walk by our fellow brothers and sisters and see them suffering with mental health issues and act like it does not exist,” Adams said. “PATH is our innovative way to ensure that we use all of our resources to tackle this problem.”

The program also includes the NYPD Transit Bureau, which, along with assisting the outreach teams, has issued 290 summonses and removed 911 people from the transit system for violating quality of life conditions.

“Allowing people to sleep in our subway system, allowing people to sleep on our streets — it’s just inhumane, and we were unwilling to just walk by our fellow brothers and sisters and see them suffering with mental health issues and act like it does not exist,” Adams said.Photo by Dean Moses

Chief Gulotta also pointed out that police have been attempting to zero in on subway recidivists to return to the bowels of the city to commit crimes.

“The Mayor and Police Commissioner put a lot of resources in transit to keep people safe. We made sure we moved them to where they were needed, the platforms and on the trains,” Gulotta said. 

Despite championing the immersive number of individuals the program has reached, some recent reports indicate that very few end up receiving long-term housing.

According to a report by The City news site, of the 955 people whom the outlet tracked who were living on the streets and subways and approved for supportive housing, just 175 of them received a place to live.

Some riders have also made several complaints to amNewYork in recent weeks about the state of mental health in the New York Subway system, stating that despite the numbers, they often see those suffering in plain sight. Still, the mayor looked to ensure the public that his administration was making a difference.

“I understand New Yorkers are feeling that way. That’s why we decided not to ignore it,” Mayor Adams said. “I understand New York is feeling that way. But trust me, you look at the numbers, it shows that what we were doing is actually working.”

“The Mayor and Police Commissioner put a lot of resources in transit to keep people safe. We made sure we moved them to where they were needed, the platforms and on the trains,” Gulotta said. Photo by Dean Moses

Meanwhile, the Coalition for the Homeless, along with the Community Service Society, The Legal Aid Society, and VOCAL-NY, are asking mayoral candidates to prioritize addressing the homeless crisis for any potential incoming administration.

“For too long, mayors and mayoral candidates have promised to address New York City’s longstanding homelessness crisis, and yet year after year, administration after administration, the crisis only persists and worsens,”  said David Jones, president and CEO of the Community Service Society of New York.

Meanwhile, the Coalition for the Homeless, along with the Community Service Society, The Legal Aid Society, and VOCAL-NY, are asking mayoral candidates to prioritize addressing the homeless crisis for any potential incoming administration.Photo by Dean Moses
“I understand New Yorkers are feeling that way. That’s why we decided not to ignore it,” Mayor Adams said. “I understand New York is feeling that way. But trust me, you look at the numbers, it shows that what we were doing is actually working.”Photo by Dean Moses

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Brooklyn News

Geothermal hotel work continues in Bushwick for summer opening


A 10-story hotel, one of a handful of buildings in Brooklyn and beyond to use geothermal heating and cooling, is progressing in Bushwick, with opening slated for the summer, according to the developers. After years of fits and starts, there is now a full grey concrete building, with large windows and a two-story podium, which, judging from what is visible, has a modern and sleek appeal, while still conforming to the area’s industrial feel.

The geothermal aspect of the new development, set to include a pool, spa, and restaurant, has potential to greatly reduce emissions while also drastically reducing utility costs for the building owner. The technology can be challenging to apply in already existing buildings, including historic row houses, but its use in new construction is helping push the technology forward.

Plenty of workers were busy at 25 Stewart Avenue when Brooklyn Paper’s sister site Brownstoner visited in late February. Not much more than a three-story partial skeleton in 2022, the 149-foot-tall concrete structure topped out late last year. All but the top stories are now visible, a row of greenery peeks over a broad terrace ringing the building, and all the windows appear to be in.

The new hotel will include 154 rooms, as well as 35,061 square feet of community facility space, and parking for 138 vehicles, according to building permits. An owner told Brownstoner Wednesday the development team plans to open the hotel this summer, and the spa by October/November, but the team is yet to decide on a hotel operator.

While black netting covers most of the upper floors, the two-story podium and lower levels are exposed, showing a grey concrete facade with big glassy windows and plants atop the podium. While renderings attached to the construction fence depict the podium as light green, along with the balconies on rooms from the third to fifth floors, the latest renderings indicate the facade will be finished in light grey concrete, with darker grey for a setback at the eighth floor.

The site under construction in June 2022.Photo by Anna Bradley-Smith

David Bench of Bench Architecture is working on the hotel, according to permits filed with the Department of Buildings.

Plans for a hotel on the derelict brownfield site were first filed in 2015, but there was little progress until 2021 when it was purchased by 25c LLC for $12.271 million. Over the past couple of years, the team behind the development, which permits show includes Dawson Stellberger, has received approval from the Board of Standards and Appeals for the project’s continuation, following a December 2021 zoning text amendment that required proposed new hotels in protected manufacturing districts to go through a public review process rather than be built as of right.

City records show Stellberger is one of the owners behind a number of other commercial properties in the neighborhood, including music venue Elsewhere, event spaces 53 and 99 Scott Avenue, and coworking space and spa SAA at 154 Scott Avenue. He is also one of the people behind Water Street Associates‘s trendy office tower and event space at 175 Water Street and was involved in the recent purchase of 180 Maiden Lane, both in Manhattan.

Rendering via Bench Architecture
Photo by Anna Bradley-Smith

In a 2021 interview with Brownstoner, architect Nick Liberis of Normal Buildings, who was involved with the project prior to the LLC’s purchase and continued on with the new team and works on the green architecture, said the aim is to reduce the energy usage of the entire building, starting at construction. Liberis has worked on other hotel projects nearby, including the William Vale Hotel and Williamsburg Hotel.

The geothermal energy at the Bushwick hotel will come from around 60 bore holes that go around 300 to 500 feet deep and contain the geothermal pipes, he said. Those pipes will all connect to a larger pipe that then runs to heat pumps in the hotel, creating a geothermal loop.

A rendering attached to the construction fence.Photo by Anna Bradley-Smith

The closed loop uses the constant heat of the water underground (which stays at around 55 degrees year-round) for cooling in summer and heating in winter by conducting a heat transfer through the geothermal pipes and heat pumps. In summer, heat will be pulled from hot air in the hotel and transferred into the ground to cool the hotel. In winter, heat will be drawn from the ground to warm the hotel.

Prior to the wells being drilled, the development team had to conduct significant remediation on the site, which had been used for scrap metal processing and as a car yard.

In 2015, former owners James and Louis Ruggiero, who owned the frying pan-shaped site since at least 2004, filed an application for a permit to build the nine-story, 140-room hotel. A new building permit was issued in 2017. In 2019, with no development on the horizon, an entity linked to developer Yoel Goldman bought the property for $14.3 million. Then, just two years later, the group sold it to 25c LLC, city records show.

This story first appeared on Brooklyn Paper’s sister site Brownstoner