Puppet MastersS


Attention

Kosovo endgame: A perfect storm of betrayal

Kosovo-Albanian and US flags
© Outside The Beltway
It is difficult to avoid the impression that the denouement of the Kosovo political saga is approaching at an accelerated pace. On September 4 an important meeting will be held in Washington, with President Trump's attendance at some stage strongly suggested. Its purpose is to sort out the finer details of what should soon be unveiled as a "comprehensive and legally binding" settlement between Serbia and its province of Kosovo. Kosovo has been illegally occupied by NATO since 1999 and was spurred on in 2008 to unilaterally proclaim its "independence."

A few preliminary facts need to be stated before embarking on an analysis of the current maneuverings.

Comment: Divide, subvert and conquer is the US' first instinct and calling card.


Beaker

What is Gilead's role in the war on hydroxychloroquine?

hydroxychloroquine symbol
© creativeneko/hutterstock
Is Gilead, the maker of Remdesivir, waging war on HCQ (hydroxychloroquine)? Attacks on the drug have been continuous ever since Dr. Didier Raoult used this quinine derivative to save the lives of COVID-19 patients last March. The first attempt to discredit HCQ was a hastily compiled Veterans' Administration hospital system study last April. Notably, one of the study's authors had in the past received numerous grants from Gilead, with one grant in 2018 totaling nearly a quarter of a million dollars.

After deep flaws in the V.A. study were exposed, Surgisphere came to the rescue in May with a "15,000 patient" megastudy allegedly compiled from hospitals all over the world. This strategy succeeded: following its publication in the Lancet and the NEJM, all outpatient use of HCQ was severely restricted in the U.S., Australia, and most of Europe.

When the Surgisphere scam was exposed, both articles were quietly retracted, and the editor-in-chief of the Lancet tried to wash his hands of this embarrassing incident by denouncing Surgisphere's "monumental fraud." However only a few days earlier, Lancet editors played a major role in persuading the WHO to suspend all trials for HCQ. Who put them up to it?

Comment: See also:


Pistol

Senior US Intelligence official died by suicide in June, 2020

Anthony Schinella
© Screenshot/U.S. House Armed Services CommitteeAnthony Schinella, the National Intelligence Officer for Military Issues, testifying at a House Armed Services Committee meeting on June 21, 2018.
One of the nation's highest-ranking intelligence officials died by suicide at his home in the Washington, D.C., area in June, but the U.S. intelligence community has remained publicly silent about the incident even as the CIA has conducted a secret investigation of his death.

Anthony Schinella, 52, the national intelligence officer for military issues, shot himself on June 14 in the front yard of his Arlington home. A Virginia medical examiner's report lists Schinella's cause of death as suicide from a gunshot wound to the head. His wife, who had just married him weeks earlier, told The Intercept that she was in her car in the driveway, trying to get away from Schinella when she witnessed his suicide. At the time of his suicide, Schinella was weeks away from retirement.

Soon after his death, an FBI liaison to the CIA entered Schinella's house and removed his passports, his secure phone, and searched through his belongings, according to his wife, Sara Corcoran, a Washington journalist. A CIA spokesperson declined to comment for this story.

As NIO for military issues, Schinella was the highest-ranking military affairs analyst in the U.S. intelligence community, and was also a member of the powerful National Intelligence Council, which is responsible for producing the intelligence community's most important analytical reports that go to the president and other top policymakers.

No Entry

'No thanks': Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler denies Trump's offer to send federal aid amid riots - UPDATE: Antifa kills Trump supporter

portland police
© Nathan Howard/Getty Images
Portland Democratic Mayor Ted Wheeler rejected President Donald Trump's offer of federal assistance Friday as Portland enters its 93rd night of protests.

The President offered to send federal assistance to protect federal courthouses, according to a tweet from Aug. 22.


"We don't need your politics of division and demagoguery. Portlanders are onto you. We have already seen your reckless disregard for human life in your bumbling response to the COVID pandemic. And we know you've reached the conclusion that images of violence or vandalism are your only ticket to reelection," Wheeler's statement read.


"There is no place for looting, arson, or vandalism in our city. There is no room here for racist violence or those who wish to bring their ideology of hate into our community. Those who commit criminal acts will be apprehended and prosecuted under the law."

Comment: Trump's response, from Friday:


Wheeler's grandstanding hasn't stopped protesters from besieging and occupying his own apartment building:






UPDATE: Less than two days later, this: Trump supporter shot dead in Portland protest clash - after mayor Wheeler refuses support from Trump








Bad Guys

Turkey allied with terrorists using drinking water as weapon of war against 1 million Syrians

water station
© Syrian Observatory for Human RightsThis file picture shows Allouk water station near the border town of Ra’s al-Ayn in Syria’s northeastern province of Hasakah.
Syria's Permanent Representative to the United Nations Bashar al-Jaafari says Turkey uses drinking war as a weapon of war against ordinary people in the country's northeastern province of Hasakah.
"The sufferings of people in the Jazira Region are neither limited to the criminal practices of Daesh nor the crimes being committed by the illegal international coalition, which loots Syria's resources. Their ordeal is escalated by the crimes of US and Turkish troops and those of their associated separatist militants and members of terrorist groups," Jaafari said during a virtual UN Security Council session on the situation in Syria on Thursday.
The Syrian diplomat noted that more than one million civilians in Hasakah and surrounding neighborhoods are thirsty, suffering from the lack of drinking water for more than 20 days.

Comment: See also:


Propaganda

Austria's Russiagate victim, ex-vice-chancellor Strache tells RT: 'I was set up by Mafia'

Austrian Vice-Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache
© REUTERS/Leonhard FoegerFormer Austrian Vice-Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache
It took one "leaked" tape of a right-wing politician's meeting with a fake Russian oligarch's niece to topple the Austrian government in 2019. Ex-vice-chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache now says it was a "criminal network" plot.

Austria's right-wing government imploded in spectacular fashion last summer, after two German newspapers, Der Spiegel and the Suddeutsche Zeitung, published excerpts from a videotape of Vice-Chancellor Strache negotiating a 'quid pro quo' deal with the supposed "niece of a Russian oligarch" in Ibiza.

The woman was later revealed to be a Bosnian student, posing as a Russian femme fatale, and the tapes turned out to be from 2017, but that didn't save Austria's ruling coalition.

Comment: See also:


Compass

Rittenhouse incident is being used by Democrats to INCREASE police powers (once they take power)

Kyle Rittenhouse
Kyle Rittenhouse didn't go to Kenosha to shoot protestors; he went to protect the property and lives of the people who were threatened by a rampaging mob that had already destroyed large parts of the city. That's why he was there. He went to fill the security vacuum the Democrat governor and mayor created when they failed to perform their sworn obligation to protect the people in their charge. They didn't do that, they left the city and its merchants exposed to the erratic and violent behavior of looters, vandals and arsonists. Which is why Rittenhouse showed up. He was there to stop the criminal gangs from doing more damage than they'd already done.
"People are getting injured and our job is to protect this business... If someone is hurt, I'm running into harms way. That's why I need my rifle to protect myself," Rittenhouse told a reporter from the Daily Caller.
Unfortunately, Rittenhouse was attacked by a crowd on the property he was protecting, and a man was shot in the head. The man who was killed appears to be Joseph Rosenbaum, "a registered sex offender for a crime involving a minor." Videos of the victim have popped up on Twitter but we have no way of verifying them at this time. What we know for certain is that Rittenhouse is responsible for the shooting deaths of two men and another who was wounded.

USA

Republican convention proved beyond doubt that the neocons control Trump

trump
© REUTERS/Carlos BarriaU.S. President Donald Trump delivers his acceptance speech as the 2020 Republican presidential nominee during the final event of the Republican National Convention on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, U.S., August 27, 2020.
Mike Pompeo's address to the RNC while chasing weapons sales illustrates just how President Trump is keeping the neocons in his administration happy by enabling the business of war across the world.

"I'm speaking to you from beautiful Jerusalem, looking out over the old city," said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, America's top diplomat and de facto government public relations chief, as he addressed the Republican National Convention from a foreign country. Imagine if the scene had been slightly different, and Pompeo had beamed into the Republicans' big election campaign showcase from Red Square: "Hi, I'm Mike Pompeo, your Secretary of State, looking out over the Kremlin."

One of these scenarios is not like the other in terms of how it's received by the US political establishment. Pompeo's Washington critics were far more interested in trying to pin a technical foul on him for mixing official government business with partisan political cheerleading than questioning his actual choice of location.

From Israel, Pompeo railed about the multilateral nuclear deal with Iran signed under President Barack Obama, from which Trump withdrew the US. He said that Trump "squeezed the Ayatollah, Hezbollah and Hamas," whatever that means.

"In the Middle East, when Iran threatened, the president approved a strike that killed the Iranian terrorist Qasem Soleimani," Pompeo said, ignoring the fact that the top Iranian general was an ally of the US against Al-Qaeda in the wake of the terrorist attacks on US soil on September 11, 2001, and played a critical role in the defeat of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS). Israel may have wanted him dead, but the US didn't have to oblige.

Snakes in Suits

Five years after refugee influx, Merkel 'would do the same'

Merkel
An asylum seeker takes a selfie with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, in Berlin on September 10, 2015 at the beginning of Europe's migrant crisis
Five years after Germany controversially took in hundreds of thousands of migrants, Chancellor Angela Merkel said Friday she would do the same again as she rides a wave of popularity for her handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

"I would make essentially the same decisions," Merkel said at her annual summer press conference in Berlin, in response to a question about whether she regretted her 2015 policy to keep the border open to an influx of asylum seekers.

"When people are standing at the German-Austrian border or the Hungarian-Austrian border, they have to be treated like human beings," she said.

Comment: Merkel will leave power and others will be left to deal with the chaos she helped create: And check out SOTT radio's: The Truth Perspective: Weapons of Mass Migration: Interview with Michael Springmann on Europe's Migrant Crisis


Cards

Trump and Dems take turns playing 'Russian card' - which only proves it's the joker

ballot box joker card vote
© Getty Images / Glow Images
As the White House stakes pile up, both sides are playing the "Russian card" and claiming Moscow's interference. Yet at the same time, both sides are apt to deny their opponents' claims of such interference - when it suits them.

And what that proves is the fingering-Russia game is a charade. So, can both the Republicans and the Democrats be simultaneously right and wrong?

President Donald Trump earlier this month claimed that the use of mail-in voting would be a disaster leading to "the most corrupt election in our nation's history." This was because, according to Trump, Russia would "grab batches" of ballots to defraud electorates.