Puppet MastersS


Oil Well

Sen. Rick Scott: Big Oil's bought-and-paid-for point man on Venezuelan regime change

Rick Scott venezuela oil cartoon
© Alianzia for Progress
500 million reasons to be one of the Senate's most fanatical cheerleaders for toppling Venezuela's leftist government.

While National Security Advisor John Bolton, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and Florida Senator Marco Rubio have helped drive the Trump administration's maximum pressure-style campaign against Venezuela, Rubio's counterpart, Senator Rick Scott, has been every bit as fanatical about regime change in Caracas.

Speaking to a packed house of former government officials, oil executives, and lobbyists at a June 20th Atlantic Council event entitled "Russian Influence in Venezuela: What Should the United States Do?," Scott launched into a tirade against Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

Eye 1

U.S Universities push back on FBI request to monitor Chinese-Sponsored Students

St. Johns, Cambridge
© MJH Photobraphy / Shutterstock
FBI officials have advised at least 10 American universities since 2018 to monitor certain Chinese nationals amid fears that Chinese propaganda is seeping into U.S. academia.

But administrators of the institutions the FBI briefed, which are member schools of the Association of American Universities (AAU), have pushed back on the FBI's non-mandatory advice due to their skepticism of the threat posed by visiting Chinese students and scholars affiliated with Chinese state-affiliated research institutions, NPR reported Friday.

"We are being asked what processes are in place to know what labs they are working at or what information they are being exposed to," Fred Cate, vice president of research at Indiana University, told NPR. "It's not a question of just looking for suspicious behavior - it's actually really targeting specific countries and the people from those countries."

Comment:
U.S. Colleges Raise $47 Billion in Ninth Straight Record Year

U.S. colleges raised $46.7 billion in the 12 months through June 2018, the ninth straight record year, as the lengthy bull market for stocks helped spur contributions.

Harvard University, the country's richest school, pulled in the most money at $1.4 billion, according to a study released Feb. 11 by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education.
Top Fund raisers in US universities



Star of David

Israel attempts to bolster diplomatic cover for its planned bloodbath in Lebanon

Key figures in Israel's government apparently believe that the grand scale of planned attacks on Lebanese civilians and civilian infrastructure will result in so much destruction and death that it will help to ensure an Israeli victory.

Israel bombs Lebanon
© Lefteris Pitarakis | APAli, last name not given, stands amongst torn family photographs damaged by Israeli soldiers at their family home in the southern village of Maroun el-Ras, Lebanon, Aug. 23, 2006. The house which was occupied for several days by Israeli forces was littered with soldiers' belongings, empty food cans and water bottles.
During a conference hosted on Tuesday by the Mossad-linked Shurat HaDin or Israel Law Center (ILC), Israel's Public Security and Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan demanded that international laws on warfare be amended because current international law pertaining to warfare "serves terrorists."

Erdan claimed that groups like Lebanon's Hezbollah use existing international laws of war "to destabilize the ability of democracies to defend their citizens" and "force [democracies] to fight against terrorists with their hand chained behind their backs." The ILC's director, Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, seconded Erdan's claim but argued that changing international law is difficult, thus making it more practical to change how existing laws of war are interpreted, a task she suggested be performed by military prosecutors.

According to the Jerusalem Post, the laws currently governing international warfare are aimed specifically at reducing the suffering of civilians and, as the Post article suggested, Erdan wanted to change these measures aimed at protecting civilians prior to the "next war" between Israel and Lebanon because in that war "Israel will have no choice but to harm Hezbollah rocket sites and Lebanese infrastructure." Erdan's argument hinges on the commonly repeated accusation by Israeli officials that Hezbollah uses civilians as cover for military operations, but a comprehensive 249-page study by Human Rights Watch found that not to be the case. In fact, the study found that even "a simple movement of vehicles or persons - such as attempting to buy bread or moving about private homes - could be enough to cause a deadly Israeli airstrike that would kill civilians."

Comment: Israel routinely ignores international laws, yet attempts to rein in its savagery have been tepid at most. However there is growing public outrage over its treatment of the Palestinians fueling support for the BDS movement. Israel's morally bankrupt leaders cannot see that twisting international laws and interpretations will only produce what they fear most.


Newspaper

Trump on stalled coup in Venezuela: 'Regime change takes time and we have 5 different strategies'

Maduro supporters protest
© Reuters/Carlos Garcia RawlinsSupporters of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro protest in Caracas.
US President Donald Trump has denied that US efforts to oust Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro have lost momentum, telling reporters "things take time" and that he has five alternative strategies for Venezuela.

Speaking at a press conference at the end of the G20 Summit in Osaka on Saturday, Trump was asked about his earlier response to the suggestion that the US had lost momentum in Venezuela, to which he replied it "takes time."

"Problem is so many people are leaving Venezuela, it's, like, going to be a ghost town. It's a very bad thing that's happening in Venezuela, nobody has seen anything quite like it, actually," he told reporters.

Comment: Maduro claims advisor responsible for coup attempt in Venezuela is a CIA agent


Headphones

Andrew Yang accuses NBC of cutting off his mic at second Dem debate

Andrew Yang
© MSNBCAndrew Yang
At an event following the first Democratic debate, 2020 candidate Andrew Yang claimed that NBC had cut his mic as he vied for attention on the crowded debate stage.

In a video posted to Twitter, Yang seems to be addressing supporters after the debate, saying, "...there were also a few times when I just started talking, being like, hey, I'd like to add something there, and my mic was not on."

Yang's comments come off the heels of two explosive Democratic debates.

Comment: Here's the clip of Yang's alleged muting




Chess

Trump to allow US companies to sell products to Huawei

trump and xi
President Trump said Saturday he will allow U.S. companies to sell products to Chinese tech giant Huawei, offering a concession to China following talks with President Xi Jinping.

"U.S. companies can sell their equipment to Huawei," Trump said at a news conference in Osaka, Japan, the site of the Group of 20 (G20) summit. "We're talking about equipment where there's no great national security problem with it."

Huawei is on a Commerce Department "entity list" that requires U.S. companies to get permission from Washington before selling components to the Chinese firm.

Trump also signed an executive order in May declaring a "national emergency" that empowers the White House to bar foreign tech companies deemed security threats from doing business in the U.S.

Network

Trump offers to 'shake hands' with N. Korea leader Kim at DMZ

kim and trump
President Trump (L) and Marshal of the Republic Kim Jong Un (R)
U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday expressed his willingness to "shake hands" with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the Demilitarized Zone on the border of the two Koreas, eliciting a positive response from Pyongyang.

"We may be meeting Chairman Kim," Trump said at a press conference before heading to South Korea after the Group of 20 summit in Osaka. "Kim Jong Un was very receptive and he responded, so we'll see."

If his third face-to-face contact with Kim is realized, it would be a casual meeting rather than a formal summit, Trump suggested, but he added he is still not sure whether the meeting will take place.

Trump also said he would feel "very comfortable" stepping into North Korea by crossing the DMZ if he meets with Kim.

Russian Flag

Putin: Russia 'will NOT ask' US to lift sanctions

Luzhniki stadium
© AFP / Dmitry SerebryakovThe Luzhniki stadium and the main building of the Moscow State University in Moscow
Moscow is not going to ask Washington to remove sanctions on Russia, but if the US finally decides to do it, Russia will respond in kind, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced on the sidelines of the G20 summit.

Speaking to the media on Saturday, the Russian leader said he has no idea about the future of US sanctions, and that it's up to the American side how to build relations with Moscow.

"I hope common sense will finally prevail," he said regarding sanctions. "We definitely won't ask about anything... If there is interest, we will willingly respond in kind and will do everything to change the situation for the better."

Quenelle

China rejects US 'sanctions' on Iranian oil, vows to protect its energy security

Oil tanker
© Reuters / StringerOil tankers docked in Nantong, China
China will not jeopardize its energy security and will continue to import Iranian oil, a top diplomat said, rejecting the unilateral US crusade against the Islamic Republic at the expense of a cornerstone non-proliferation deal.

"We do not support the US policy of reducing Iran's oil exports to zero," Fu Cong, director-general of the Chinese foreign ministry's department of arms control said in Vienna.

"We reject the unilateral imposition of sanctions," the diplomat added, on the sidelines of talks aimed at preserving the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), from which the US withdrew last year.

Comment: No doubt this is about more than just China's energy security: Far from quiet on the US vs Russia-China front

See also:


Hardhat

"Point of no return": Nord Stream 2 takes alternative route amid Danish stalling

nord stream 2
© Reuters / Anton Vaganov
The pipeline that would double the flow of natural gas from Russia to Germany will bypass Danish territory after authorities in Copenhagen dithered for 2 years without responding to permit request, the building consortium said.

Nord Stream 2 AG, the company building the pipeline under the Baltic Sea, said on Friday it would withdraw the permit application to lay the pipes southeast of the Danish island of Bornholm. The application was sent to the Danish Energy Agency (Energistyrelsen) in April 2017, but never received a response.

The measure was needed to protect the shareholders and European investors from Austria, France, Germany and the Netherlands from the risk of "further delays and financial losses," the consortium said in a statement. Applications for two other proposed routers, which would bypass Danish territorial waters, were filed in August 2018 and April this year, and are still pending.

Comment: See also: