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By Sonia Horon for Dailymail.Com Published: 1:33 AM EDT, March 11, 2024 | Updated: 01:48 EDT, March 11, 2024 Advertisement There was no shortage of star power at Vanity Fair’s Oscar party held Sunday at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. Margot Robbie, Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner, Demi Moore and […]

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There was no shortage of star power at Vanity Fair’s Oscar party held Sunday at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills.

Margot Robbie, Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner, Demi Moore and Emily Ratajkowski were just some of the names who showed up for the glamorous occasion.

Barbie star Margot, 33, showed off her toned legs in a tiny, gold-colored corset that cinched around her waist. Draped loosely around her arms was a gold silk coat.

The Australian actress added height to her look with strappy lace-up boots and wore her blonde locks down.

Kim, 43, showed off a very slim figure in a structured white bodycon dress with a dramatic pointed shoulder as she braved a storm.

Emily Ratajkowski wowed in a structured white dress

The dress flattered her tiny waist and shapely hips and was paired with sparkling earrings.

Kardashian wore her raven locks in a flowing side part with bangs flowing over one eye and wore smoky eye makeup.

The star also wore colored contact lenses, which turned her eyes a vibrant hazel color.

She was joined on the red carpet by her family members, including sisters Kylie Jenner, 26, and Kendall Jenner, 28, and mother Kris Jenner, 68, and her boyfriend Corey Gamble, 43.

Lip kit mogul Kylie sizzled in a busty red sequin dress that showed off her ample cleavage.

Her raven braids were parted at the side and styled in a wet look.

Demi, 61, was a vision in a low-cut brown silk dress that clung to her enviable figure.

Barbie star Margot, 33, showed off her toned legs in a tiny, gold-colored corset that cinched around her waist.  Draped loosely around her arms was a gold silk coat

She showed off the sensational look from different angles

Barbie star Margot, 33, showed off her toned legs in a tiny, gold-colored corset that cinched around her waist. Draped loosely around her arms was a gold silk coat

Draped loosely around her arms was a gold silk coat

Draped loosely around her arms was a gold silk coat

The Australian actress added height to her look with strappy lace-up boots and wore her blonde locks down

The Australian actress added height to her look with strappy lace-up boots and wore her blonde locks down

Kim, 43, showed off a very slim figure in a structured white bodycon dress with a dramatic pointed shoulder as she braved a storm

Kim, 43, showed off a very slim figure in a structured white bodycon dress with a dramatic pointed shoulder as she braved a storm

The dress flattered her tiny waist and shapely hips and was paired with sparkling earrings

Kardashian wore her raven locks in a flowing side part with bangs flowing over one eye and wore smoky eye makeup

The dress flattered her tiny waist and shapely hips and was paired with sparkling earrings

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US kills 34 'Iran-backed' militants in 'a taste of what's to come': Photos show aftermath of Biden's revenge strike in which B1 bombers fired 125 missiles at 85 targets in Syria and Iraq in just 30 minutes https://usmail24.com/us-unleashes-30-minutes-hell-syria-iraq-killing-34-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/us-unleashes-30-minutes-hell-syria-iraq-killing-34-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Sat, 03 Feb 2024 15:49:24 +0000 https://usmail24.com/us-unleashes-30-minutes-hell-syria-iraq-killing-34-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

An Iraqi militia official hinted at a desire to de-escalate tensions in the Middle East following US retaliatory strikes in Iraq and Syria. The comments come after photos emerged showing the aftermath of Biden's revenge strike, in which US bombers carried out strikes on 85 targets in Iraq and Syria. The Iraqi headquarters of the […]

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An Iraqi militia official hinted at a desire to de-escalate tensions in the Middle East following US retaliatory strikes in Iraq and Syria.

The comments come after photos emerged showing the aftermath of Biden's revenge strike, in which US bombers carried out strikes on 85 targets in Iraq and Syria.

The Iraqi headquarters of the Hashd al-Shaabi militia, also known as the People's Mobilization Committee, is in ruins after the attacks.

Other images show buildings reduced to rubble after 125 bombs were dropped within 30 minutes on Friday evening in revenge for the deaths of three US soldiers.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that 18 people were killed in the attacks in Syria, while Iraq said the strikes killed another 16 people.

Hussein al-Mosawi, a spokesman for Harakat al-Nujaba, one of the main Iranian-backed militias, said: '[Washington] must understand that every action provokes a reaction.'

In a conciliatory tone, al-Mosawi added that “we do not want to escalate or increase regional tensions.”

President Joe Biden and US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin have both suggested that this targeted retaliation was just the beginning, as eyes now turn to Tehran over a possible retaliation.

A look at the destruction after US warplanes carried out an airstrike on Hashd al-Shaabi's headquarters in Al-Qa'im city of Anbar, Iraq, on February 3, 2024

A look at the destruction after US warplanes carried out an airstrike on Hashd al-Shaabi's headquarters in Al-Qa'im city of Anbar, Iraq, on February 3, 2024

The Pentagon unleashed a volley of missiles on Iranian-backed militias on Friday evening.  Here you can see the ruins of a building in Iraq.

The Pentagon unleashed a volley of missiles on Iranian-backed militias on Friday evening. Here you can see the ruins of a building in Iraq.

A destroyed building is pictured at the site of a US airstrike in Al-Qaim, Iraq, February 3, 2024

A destroyed building is pictured at the site of a US airstrike in Al-Qaim, Iraq, February 3, 2024

Syria has warned that the attacks have “fueled the conflict in the Middle East in a very dangerous way.”

With tensions high in light of the war between Israel and Hamas, both Damascus and Baghdad joined Tehran in accusing Washington of undermining the stability of the region.

The New York Times reported that Washington sees the Iranians choosing to de-escalate the situation rather than trying to engage in a shooting contest.

The Iraqi government confirmed that the attacks killed 16 people, including civilians, and claimed that the US government had not informed them of their attack plan.

Senator Tammy Duckworth, an Illinois Democrat and Iraq war veteran, said CNN: 'I think it's a very strong deterrent. We say: listen, we don't want to go to war. But have a taste of what we can do.

'Please. Eighty-five targets. And I think that's part of the balancing act that we have to do right now.”

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said the overnight operation was “yet another strategic mistake by the US government, which will have no other result than an intensification of tension and instability.”

Hamas, whose unprecedented Oct. 7 attack on Israel has fueled the current spiral of violence in the region, accused Washington of adding “fuel to the fire.”

US-Iraq relations have deteriorated in recent months after Washington carried out earlier airstrikes on Iranian-backed groups in Iraq in response to a wave of attacks on US-led forces since the start of the Gaza war last October.

Images shared on social media showed a series of explosions in the city of Al-Qaim: the first explosions from the US bombs, and then the secondary explosions from the exploding munitions.

Explosions are seen in the Iraqi city of Al-Qaim: the site is believed to be a weapons depot for Al Hashed al Shabi, also known as the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU)

Explosions are seen in the Iraqi city of Al-Qaim: the site is believed to be a weapons depot for Al Hashed al Shabi, also known as the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU)

A plane is seen taking off in a video on X shared by CENTCOM - US Central Command

A plane is seen taking off in a video on X shared by CENTCOM – US Central Command

Al-Qaim Mayor Turki Al-Mahalawi said the attacks hit three houses used as weapons depots by the PMU: al Hashed al Shabi, also known as the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU).

The PMU is backed by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and is believed by Washington to be responsible for many of the 165 attacks carried out on US sites and personnel in the region since October 7.

The United States has about 900 troops in Syria and 2,500 in Iraq as part of an international coalition against the Islamic State, a jihadist organization that once controlled parts of both countries.

Yahya Rasool, spokesman for the Iraqi armed forces, said the attacks were a “violation of Iraqi sovereignty.”

“The city of Al-Qaim and the Iraqi border areas are being subjected to air strikes by US aircraft, at a time when Iraq is doing everything it can to ensure the stability of the region,” Rasool said, according to CNN.

“These attacks are considered a violation of Iraqi sovereignty and undermine the efforts of the Iraqi government, making them a threat that could drag Iraq and the region into undesirable consequences. The consequences will be disastrous for security and stability in Iraq and the region.”

National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said U.S. warplanes “struck more than 85 targets at seven facilities used by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and the militant groups they sponsor,” three of them in Iraq and four in Syria.

In a statement, President Biden said: “Our response began today. It will take place at the times and places of our choosing.”

Two B-1 bombers flew from the US for the mission and hit seven facilities – three in Iraq and four in Syria – linked to the IRGC and Iranian-backed militias

Two B-1 bombers flew from the US for the mission and hit seven facilities – three in Iraq and four in Syria – linked to the IRGC and Iranian-backed militias

Sergeant William Jerome Rivers, 46, of Carrollton, Georgia, died in the drone strike on a US air base in Jordan

Kennedy Ladon Sanders, 24, was one of three American soldiers killed in the drone strike

Sergeant William Jerome Rivers, 46, of Carrollton, Georgia (left) and Specialist Kennedy Ladon Sanders, 24, were killed in the drone strike on a US air base in Jordan

Specialist Breonna Moffett, 23, of Savannah, Georgia, was identified as one of the soldiers killed in the drone strike last weekend

Specialist Breonna Moffett, 23, from Savannah, Georgia, has been identified as one of the soldiers killed in the drone strike

Mick Mulroy, a former Pentagon official in the Trump administration, told The New York Times that the US strikes appeared to target Iranian supply lines, which run through Iraq and Syria.

Mulroy said he believed it was unlikely that many Iranian soldiers would have been killed because Iran had time to move its personnel out of harm's way – likely a deliberate move by the US to avoid unnecessary escalation.

The New York Times reported that a site in the Iraqi city of Akashat was also hit, describing the target as a PMU command headquarters.

The PMU is just part of a coalition of Iranian-backed groups that call themselves the “Axis of Resistance” and claim they are attacking US targets in response to Washington's support for Israeli action in Gaza.

Analysts say Tehran is taking advantage of the chaos and warn that the US must walk a fine line between responding to the deaths of the three soldiers and plunging into war with Iran.

The bodies of three slain American soldiers were returned to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware

The bodies of three slain American soldiers were returned to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware

Sims said the US was “very confident” in the accuracy of its attacks, saying they had been a success.

He said: Early indications are that we hit exactly what we wanted to hit, with a number of secondary explosions linked to the ammunition and logistics sites. We know there are militants using these locations.

“We carried out these attacks tonight with the understanding that there would likely be casualties associated with people who were in those facilities.”

Senator Jack Reed, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he supported the strikes.

“This was a strong, proportionate response,” said Reed, a Democrat representing Rhode Island.

“In fact, the 85 targets hit tonight mark a larger number than the previous administration. Iran's proxy forces in Syria and Iraq have been dealt a major blow, and Iran-affiliated militias in the Middle East must understand that they too will be held accountable.”

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US drops 125 bombs on 85 targets linked to Iran's Revolutionary Guards in devastating airstrikes on Iraq and Syria: Biden warns retaliation for drone strikes that killed three soldiers will continue after long-range bombers and drones strike the Middle East have hit https://usmail24.com/us-begins-airstrikes-syria-response-drone-strike-killed-three-american-soldiers-jordan-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/us-begins-airstrikes-syria-response-drone-strike-killed-three-american-soldiers-jordan-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Fri, 02 Feb 2024 22:41:52 +0000 https://usmail24.com/us-begins-airstrikes-syria-response-drone-strike-killed-three-american-soldiers-jordan-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

The US has launched a devastating wave of airstrikes against Iran's Revolutionary Guards in Iraq and Syria in retaliation for the drone strike that killed three US troops. Multiple long-range bombers and drones hit 85 targets with 125 bombs during the widespread military operation ordered by President Joe Biden on Friday. The president said the […]

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The US has launched a devastating wave of airstrikes against Iran's Revolutionary Guards in Iraq and Syria in retaliation for the drone strike that killed three US troops.

Multiple long-range bombers and drones hit 85 targets with 125 bombs during the widespread military operation ordered by President Joe Biden on Friday.

The president said the attacks will continue “at times and places of his choosing” and warned militias in the Middle East: “If you harm an American, we will respond.”

Two two B-1 bombers flew from the US for the mission and hit multiple targets linked to the IRGC and Iranian-backed militias, including command and intelligence centers and areas where missiles and drones were stored.

Shocking images from Al-Qaim, an Iraqi border town, showed rockets flying from a munitions factory believed to have been hit by US bombers at midnight local time.

The massive operation is the first by the US to hit back after the deadly attack by Iranian-backed militias on the Tower 22 base near Jordan's borders with Syria and Iraq on Sunday.

Sergeant William Jerome Rivers, 46, Specialist Kennedy Ladon Sanders, 24, and Specialist Breonna Moffett, 23, were killed and dozens of troops were injured in the attack that raised further tensions in the Middle East.

President Joe Biden ordered the attacks just hours after attending the dignified transfer ceremony for their remains at Dover Air Force Base.

The US has launched a devastating wave of airstrikes against Iran's Revolutionary Guards in Iraq and Syria in retaliation for the drone strike that killed three US troops.

He held his hand over his heart as he watched their flag-draped coffins being carried across the tarmac after returning to their home turf.

Shortly after the solemn ceremony ended, he authorized the massive response he had been threatening for days.

“Last Sunday, three American soldiers were killed in Jordan by a drone launched by militant groups backed by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC),” Biden said on Friday.

“Earlier today I attended the dignified return of these brave Americans to Dover Air Force Base and spoke with each of their families.

“This afternoon, at my direction, U.S. forces targeted facilities in Iraq and Syria that the IRGC and affiliated militias use to attack U.S. forces.

“Our response started today. It will take place at times and places of your choice. The United States does not seek conflict in the Middle East or anywhere else in the world.

“But let anyone who wants to harm us know this: If you harm an American, we will respond.”

It is unclear what the next steps will be and when they will occur, or whether the days of U.S. warnings have caused militia members to disperse and go into hiding.

But the recent statement by Kataeb Hezbollah, one of the main Iranian-backed militias, suspending attacks on US forces did not affect the government's plans to retaliate.

National Security Council John Kirby said the response to the deadly drone attack will be “layered” and “potentially include multiple actions over time.”

Shocking footage from Al-Qaim, an Iraqi border town, showed rockets flying from a munitions factory believed to have been hit by US bombers at midnight local time

Sergeant William Jerome Rivers, 46, of Carrollton, Georgia, died in the drone strike on a US air base in Jordan

Kennedy Ladon Sanders, 24, was one of three American soldiers killed in the drone strike

Sergeant William Jerome Rivers, 46, of Carrollton, Georgia (left) and Specialist Kennedy Ladon Sanders, 24, were killed in the drone strike on a US air base in Jordan

Specialist Breonna Moffett, 23, of Savannah, Georgia, was identified as one of the soldiers killed in the drone strike last weekend

Specialist Breonna Moffett, 23, from Savannah, Georgia, has been identified as one of the soldiers killed in the drone strike

“At 4:00 p.m. EST on February 2, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) forces conducted airstrikes in Iraq and Syria against the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Quds Force and affiliated militias,” U.S. Central Command said in a statement declaration. .

“US forces struck more than 85 targets, with numerous aircraft, including long-range bombers, flown from the United States.

'The air strikes used more than 125 precision munitions.

“The facilities affected included command and control operations, centers, intelligence centers, rockets and missiles, and unmanned vehicle warehouses, and logistics and munitions supply chain facilities of militia groups and their IRGC sponsors that facilitated attacks on U.S. and coalition forces. .'

The attacks come almost a week after Iranian-backed militias attacked the Tower 22 base near Jordan's borders with Syria and Iraq.

The attacks come almost a week after Iran-backed militias attacked the Tower 22 base near Jordan's borders with Syria and Iraq.

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Bali bombers can return to Malaysia after conviction https://usmail24.com/bali-bombers-plea-agreement-html/ https://usmail24.com/bali-bombers-plea-agreement-html/#respond Mon, 22 Jan 2024 22:10:55 +0000 https://usmail24.com/bali-bombers-plea-agreement-html/

When a jury of military officers is convened this week at Guantanamo Bay, it will be asked to choose a sentence of between 20 and 25 years for two Malaysian detainees who admitted conspiring with an Al Qaeda affiliate that carried out a deadly killing committed. bombing of Indonesia twenty years ago. But behind the […]

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When a jury of military officers is convened this week at Guantanamo Bay, it will be asked to choose a sentence of between 20 and 25 years for two Malaysian detainees who admitted conspiring with an Al Qaeda affiliate that carried out a deadly killing committed. bombing of Indonesia twenty years ago.

But behind the scenes, through a secret deal negotiated with a senior Trump-era official, the men could be returned to Malaysia before the end of the year.

The sentencing proceedings for Mohammed Farik Bin Amin, 48, and Mohammed Nazir Bin Lep, 47, are part of a US government strategy to resolve national security cases at Guantanamo through settlement negotiations. The men spent years in secret CIA prisons after their arrest in 2003. By reaching an agreement, prosecutors avoided lengthy torture lawsuits that involved two capital cases, the September 11 attacks and the bombing of the USS Cole stood.

The two men were captured along with a former Qaeda member, an Indonesian known as Hambali.

Last week they pleaded guilty to conspiracy in two suicide bombings on the holiday island of Bali that killed 202 people on October 12, 2002. As part of the settlement, they were questioned by prosecutors on Sunday and Monday, possibly for use in Mr. Hambali's trial, which prosecutors plan to hold next year.

The testimony is secret for now. But in their plea, they said they had no first-hand knowledge that Mr Hambali was responsible for the attack. They said they later learned from internet news reports that Mr Hambali was wanted for a series of attacks by the Jemaah Islamiyah movement and that they had helped him evade arrest.

Part of the plea deal that provides for their return to Malaysia is also secret.

The judge, Lt. Col. Wesley A. Braun, announced in court that the plea deal limited the jury to a sentence of not less than 20 and not more than 25 years. He did not reveal whether the sentence could be reduced as part of the cooperation agreement.

But the judge made an unusual exception to the requirement that they drop all appeals against their convictions. If they are still at Guantanamo 180 days after a senior Pentagon official approved the sentence, they can ask a federal court for their release.

In addition, Colonel Braun also awarded the defendants a number of undisclosed convictions for the prosecution's failure to provide lawyers with evidence in a timely manner, according to legal staff who saw the ruling. It has not been made public.

The plea deal was reached by Jeffrey D. Wood, who served as supervisor of the war court, or Convening Authority, from April 2020 until about three months ago. His successor, Susan K. Escallier, will assess whether the Malaysian men have fully cooperated with the government and whether any promises by Mr. Wood about a reduced sentence should be kept.

The process is complicated. In the hybrid military-civilian court that President George W. Bush built after the September 11 attacks, the regulator has the power to reduce a prisoner's sentence but not to order a prisoner's release. A federal court judge could do that, but the State Department would have to negotiate an agreement to transfer the detainee to another country that meets the security concerns of the Secretary of Defense.

So there is no immediate prospect of a plane taking the men home – even if it goes to Malaysia's respected jihadist rehabilitation centre.

In their written guilty pleas, the men admitted that they had gone to Afghanistan in June 2000. There, they trained at a Qaeda camp in “basic military tactics, topography and firearms,” ​​including firing assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades.

In late 2001, Mr. Hambali arranged a meeting with Osama bin Laden, in accordance with the agreement. They swore an oath of allegiance to him and agreed to become suicide bombers in an operation that was later canceled. The trainees traveled to Thailand in December 2001 and agreed to help Mr Hambali evade capture. They also surveilled an Israeli aviation counter in Bangkok and obtained weapons and fake passports, and at least one of them collected cash from a Qaeda courier from Pakistan.

It is unclear what this means for Mr Hambali. James R. Hodes, his attorney, has said he is awaiting evidence from the government in preparation for trial. Some of the most sensitive and classified information concerns what CIA agents did to detainees in an overseas prison network, where waterboarding, sleep deprivation, beatings and other abuses were part of a program of now-banned “enhanced interrogation techniques.”

In 2003, according to a Senate study of the CIA programan interrogator told Mr. Hambali that he would never go to court because “we can never let the world know what I did to you.” That investigation was released in 2014 and whatever the interrogator did to Mr. Hambali has not been disclosed.

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Animal photo bombers who couldn’t resist stealing the spotlight https://usmail24.com/animal-photobombers-resist-stealing-spotlight-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/animal-photobombers-resist-stealing-spotlight-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Thu, 08 Jun 2023 12:35:32 +0000 https://usmail24.com/animal-photobombers-resist-stealing-spotlight-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

Lights, camera, photo bomb! These cheeky animals just couldn’t resist stealing the spotlight By Jessica Green For Mailonline published: 03:22 EDT, Jun 8, 2023 | Updated: 04:05 EDT, Jun 8, 2023 Ruining what should have been a “perfect” photo with a silly face or cheeky pose is one of life’s little joys and it’s clear […]

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Lights, camera, photo bomb! These cheeky animals just couldn’t resist stealing the spotlight

Ruining what should have been a “perfect” photo with a silly face or cheeky pose is one of life’s little joys and it’s clear that animals want to get in on the action too.

This collection of images shows that some of the best photobombers are wild creatures or pets, captured with hilarious expressions at just the right moment.

In a gallery curated by Herald Weeklythe selection of photos from around the world proves that an intruder can make your photo even better.

The funny photos feature everything from cats and giraffes to kangaroos and goats.

In one image, a cheeky seal shows that animals are even willing to photobomb each other’s photos as it pops its head up in a photo of some penguins.

Say Cheese! This kangaroo drew attention and made sure they were completely in the camera frame of this person’s photo

Elsewhere, a little boy seems to have grown a pair of pointy ears thanks to a certain pet photobomber standing behind him.

A third image, meanwhile, captures two cats sneaking into the background of a photo of their owner’s dog.

Read on to discover some of the best animal photobombs of all time…

Sealing the show: this cheeky pup shows that animals are even willing to photobomb each other's photos

Sealing the show: this cheeky pup shows that animals are even willing to photobomb each other’s photos

What a mouthful!  This woman was unaware when an animal decided to identify itself in a photo by chewing on the person's face

What a mouthful! This woman was unaware when an animal decided to identify itself in a photo by chewing on the person’s face

What big ears you have!  This little boy seems to have gotten a pair of pointy ears thanks to a certain photobomber standing behind him

What big ears you have! This little boy seems to have gotten a pair of pointy ears thanks to a certain photobomber standing behind him

Hey, don't forget us!  This image shows two cats sneaking into the background of a photo of their owner's dog

Hey, don’t forget us! This image shows two cats sneaking into the background of a photo of their owner’s dog

What about me!  A goat appeared disgruntled for not being seen in the photo, or rather, after noticing their counterpart was getting a snack without them

What about me! A goat appeared disgruntled for not being seen in the photo, or rather, after noticing their counterpart was getting a snack without them

She's got a neck: This giraffe snapped a picture of a person at just the right moment to create this funny image

She’s got a neck: This giraffe bombarded a photo of a person at just the right moment to create this funny image

Grabbing attention: In this image, a person appeared to have the face of a frog after this creature got close to the camera

Grabbing attention: In this image, a person appeared to have the face of a frog after this creature got close to the camera

Looking for ruff!  This driver looked like he had a dog head due to the position of his pet when this photo was taken

Looking for ruff! This driver looked like he had a dog head due to the position of his pet when this photo was taken

You're Not Invited: This cat apparently felt left out and decided to make herself known when a photo was taken

You’re Not Invited: This cat apparently felt left out and decided to make herself known when a photo was taken

Hey, look at me!  This ostrich apparently wanted to be the center of attention when given the chance to be photographed

Hey, look at me! This ostrich apparently wanted to be the center of attention when given the chance to be photographed

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