Dense Fog Advisory issued December 16 at 10:30PM PST until December 17 at 10:00AM PST by NWS Los Angeles/Oxnard CA

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* WHAT…Visibility one quarter mile or less in dense fog.

* WHERE…Santa Barbara County Southeastern Coast, Ventura County
Beaches, and Ventura County Inland Coast.

* WHEN…Until 10 AM PST Wednesday.

* IMPACTS…Low visibility could make driving conditions hazardous.
If driving, slow down, use your headlights, and leave plenty of
distance ahead of you.

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Wind Advisory issued December 16 at 10:30PM PST until December 18 at 4:00AM PST by NWS Los Angeles/Oxnard CA

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* WHAT…North winds 15 to 25 mph with gusts up to 35 mph.

* WHERE…Santa Barbara County Southwestern Coast and Santa Ynez
Mountains Western Range.

* WHEN…Until 4 AM PST Thursday.

* IMPACTS…Gusty winds will blow around unsecured objects. Tree
limbs could be blown down and a few power outages may result.
Winds this strong can make driving difficult, especially for high
profile vehicles. Use extra caution.

Secure outdoor objects.

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Air Force purchasing two 747-8 planes from Lufthansa to support future Air Force One program

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By Alexandra Skores, CNN

(CNN) — The US Air Force announced plans Tuesday to purchase two Boeing 747-8 aircraft to support its future presidential airlift program, with an Air Force official confirming it would acquire the planes from German carrier Lufthansa.

At a price tag of $400 million, the Air Force said in a statement that it is “procuring two aircraft to support training and spares for the 747-8 fleet” as it prepares to replace the 747-200 models that currently serve as Air Force One in the coming years.

“Given the 747-8i is no longer in active production, and is a very different aircraft than the 747-200, it is important for the Air Force to establish an overall training and sustainment strategy for the future Air Force 747-8i fleet,” the branch said.

The first plane will be delivered early next year and the second is expected to be delivered before the end of 2026. The move comes after the Air Force announced the long-delayed delivery of the first of two new Boeing 747-8 aircraft, slated for use as Air Force One, is now expected in mid-2028. President Donald Trump also has his donated Qatari jet in production, which he previously predicted could be ready for his usage by February, despite deep skepticism from experts and former aviation officials.

Lufthansa told CNN it is continuing “the rollover” of its 747 fleet in 2026, which includes the removal of two 747-400 and two 747-8 aircraft, but declined to comment on a buyer.

CNN has reached out to the White House for comment on the matter.

Trump and former presidents have long-awaited new planes from Boeing. One of the current planes used for transport by the president has been in use since 1990.

Boeing’s contract to replace two Air Force One jets had an original delivery date of 2022. An Air Force official earlier this year suggested that the first plane could potentially be delivered by 2027, a year or two earlier than Boeing had previously predicted. The latest delivery timeline provided by the Air Force of mid-2028 would still mean that Trump could be flying in one of the new aircraft before the end of his term.

There’s also the Qatari jet that many are doubtful will be ready by February.

Earlier this year, Trump announced he would accept the donated gift from Qatar to use as Air Force One. Many are skeptical of the legality and ethics of accepting such a gift while others are worried about the threat to security, based on how much goes into a jet fit for the leader of the United States.

The-CNN-Wire
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In wake of Syria attack that killed two US soldiers, Trump faces complicated ally and echoes of Afghanistan

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By Zachary Cohen, CNN

(CNN) — When an attacker killed two US service members and a civilian interpreter in Syria over the weekend, President Donald Trump vowed “very serious” retribution against those responsible, and officials were quick to describe the assailant as a “lone gunman” who was a member of ISIS.

However, a spokesman for Syria’s Ministry of Interior Affairs acknowledged Saturday that the attacker had been part of the country’s Internal Security service. Trump, as well as Syrian leaders, were quick to distance the gunman from the country’s fledgling government that has received strong American support in recent months.

Days later, ISIS has not claimed responsibility for the attack and multiple sources familiar with the investigation, including US and Syrian officials, tell CNN that the shooter’s ties to the terror group are less clear-cut than both governments have publicly claimed.

But the attack demonstrates how the new regime in Syria continues to grapple with extremist elements within the country, including among members of its own army, the sources said. It’s also an echo of the so-called green-on-blue attacks that US forces suffered in Afghanistan – where troops worked alongside local forces but took casualties as that nation attempted to forge a new military.

Initial indications suggested the shooter had affiliations with the Syrian security forces at some point, according to a US official. Whether those affiliations were in the past or present remains unclear, but efforts are underway to better understand the individual’s background and the circumstances of the attack itself.

Hundreds of American troops remain in Syria as part of an ongoing mission to root out ISIS. The slain soldiers, Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres Tovar, 25, of Des Moines, Iowa, and Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard, 29, of Marshalltown, Iowa, were deployed as part of a rotation of the Iowa National Guard.

Trump will be meeting with the families of the two killed soldiers on Wednesday at Dover Air Force Base as they receive the remains of the service members, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Tuesday.

The mission that those soldiers were performing has brought the Trump administration together with the new Syrian regime, which took control of the country after toppling Bashar al-Assad’s government last year.

US officials have heavily invested in supporting Syria’s new president, Ahmed al-Sharaa who previously led a US-designated terrorist group and until recently had a $10 million US bounty on his head but who has attempted to transition what had been a hodgepodge resistance force into a governing authority in the country.

“The [Syrian] army is comprised of fighters from the Revolution and includes folks of all background, some with extremist ties,” one former US official who recently traveled to Damascus and met with senior Syrian officials said. “They are trying to transition but as the attack the other day highlighted there are still extremist elements within the country.”

US and Syrian officials have privately echoed that sentiment, noting that Syria’s forces are currently made up of an array of fighters from different backgrounds and with varying extremist views and affiliations.

The Ministry of Interior Affairs spokesman, Nour Eddin al-Baba, told Syrian state television that the attacker had been flagged for a security review and that Syrian officials had alerted the US-led international coalition against ISIS in Syria about preliminary information “indicating a possible breach or expected ISIS attacks.”

“However, (coalition) forces did not take the Syrian warnings into account,” al-Baba added.

Yet the source with knowledge of the current US-Syrian cooperation efforts questioned how mu

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