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Bad Guys

Best of the Web: Pakistan-India showdown: What you're not being told

Pakistani soldiers
© AFP / Aamir Qureshi; India Home Guard Global Look Press / Abhisek Saha / ZUMAPRESS.comPakistani soldiers
A recent terrorist attack in Kashmir could set the stage for a major conflict between India and Pakistan as India begins bombing Pakistani territory. As always, the root causes of these are being ignored by the media.

On February 14, India was rocked by a suicide-bombing which took place inside Jammu and Kashmir. The attack targeted a convoy of security personnel vehicles, killing at least 42 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) officers (as well as the bomber himself).

Responsibility for the attack was claimed by a Pakistan-based Islamist group called Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM). JeM's main goal is to steal Kashmir away from India and unite it with Pakistan, to ensure that Pakistan is ruled by Sharia law, and to drive Western forces out of Afghanistan. Its other eventual priority is to drive all Hindus and non-Muslims from the Indian subcontinent.

The attack has drawn such negative publicity that the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), finally agreeing on something for once, identified India as a victim of terrorism and asked member states to cooperate actively with New Delhi to bring these attackers to justice.

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TV

Best of the Web: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro interviewed by ABC News: 'The people around Trump are nuts'

Maduro interview ABC
© ABC NewsNicolas Maduro is pictured during an interview with ABC News on Feb. 25, 2019.
Embattled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has accused the U.S. government of trying to fabricate a crisis, which is "doomed to failure," in an attempt to start a war in South America.

In his first interview with an American television network in years, Maduro said, "The extremist Ku Klux Klan government that Donald Trump directs wants a war over oil, and more than just oil," describing Venezuela as a "pacifist, humble nation."

A lightly edited transcript of Maduro's interview ABC News Anchor and Chief National Affairs Correspondent Tom Llamas, which aired on World News Tonight, follows here:

Black Cat

Best of the Web: Meet Juan Guaido's first 'ambassador': Fake Twitter diplomat Maria Faría slammed by Costa Rica for 'unacceptable entry'

Maria Faría venezuela costa rica ambassador
© CB24Maria Faría, fake ambassador appointed by fake president Guaido
Maria Faría, the daughter of a would-be Hugo Chávez assassin, illegally barged into Venezuela's embassy in Costa Rica and declared herself ambassador. The embarrassing stunt highlighted everything wrong with Juan Guaidó's reality-show government.

While tweeting that she had taken charge of Venezuela's Embassy in Costa Rica on February 20, Maria Faría demonstrated that she was more familiar with the conventions of social media than those dictating international diplomacy.

"In fulfillment of the diplomatic functions, assigned by President Juan Guaido", tweeted Faría, referring to the US-appointed leader of Venezuela's parallel coup government, "we assume control of the administrative headquarters of the Embassy of Venezuela in San Jose".

The surprise announcement came early Wednesday morning from inside the Embassy, leading many to wonder how Faría, or "@Mandyfaria26" - who describes herself in her Twitter bio as the "Diplomatic Representative for the Venezuelan Republic" in Costa Rica - was able to secure access to the Embassy.

Red Flag

Best of the Web: Michigan transgender activist on trial for burning down own home in hoax 'hate crime' that killed five pets

Transgender activist Nikki Joly
Transgender activist Nikki Joly, right
When the home of Nikki Joly burned down in 2017, killing five pets, the FBI investigated it as a hate crime.

After all, the transgender man and gay rights activist had received threats after having a banner year in this conservative town.

In the prior six months, he helped open the city's first gay community center, organized the first gay festival and, after 18 years of failed attempts, helped lead a bruising battle for an ordinance that prohibits discrimination against gays.

For his efforts, a local paper named him Citizen of the Year.

Comment: Another ideologically-possessed and pathological activist trying to hoax their way into the greater reaches of victimhood status. These people should be in institutions, not government.

Do not miss: The Jussie Smollett Hate-Crime Hoax is Nothing New in Trump's America


Star of David

Best of the Web: Has the UK elite's slavish pro-Israel agenda finally gone too far?

hezbollah party lebanon
© Aziz Taher/ReutersSupporters of Lebanon's Hezbollah party parade to mark the last day of Ashura ceremony in Beirut, Lebanon October 1, 2017.
Hezbollah's defeat of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in the July war of 2006 was heroic and an essential redress to the Middle East power balance. I supported Hezbollah's entirely defensive action then and I continue to applaud it now. That, beyond any shadow of a doubt, makes me guilty of the criminal offence of "glorifying terrorism", now that Sajid Javid has proscribed Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation. I am unrepentant and look forward to the prosecution.

A large majority of the public, and certainly almost everyone who remembers that 2006 invasion, would revolt from my being prosecuted on those grounds. The very absurdity of it is a sure measure that Sajid Javid has simply gone too far in naming Hezbollah - the legitimate political party representing in parliament the majority rural population in Southern Lebanon - as a terrorist organisation.

Comment:


Caesar

Best of the Web: Victory: Syria's Assad visits ally Iran for first time since Western war to kill him began

assad khamenei
© Reuters / SANAAllahu akbar
Syrian President Bashar Assad has made his first public visit to Iran - his country's closest regional ally - since the beginning of the Syrian conflict eight years ago.

Syrian state television reported the visit on Monday, showing footage of Assad meeting with Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) reported that the two had agreed to "continue cooperation at all levels for the interests of the two friendly nations."


Comment: Humanitarianists and Israel-firsters are having aneurysms right about now.

8 years of proxy war, 15 years of black-ops and psy-ops, all probably costing well over a trillion dollars. And half a million dead Syrians. And a culture shock in Europe from millions of refugees.

And yet Assad's still there defending his country from the combined forces of the greatest (though also the most effeminate) war machine ever amassed on Earth.

We salute you.


Wall Street

Best of the Web: How Ebay Founder Pierre Omidyar is Funding a Globalist Disinformation Factory

Pierre Omidyar
© YouTube ScreenshotPierre Omidyar is pictured during an interview on technical innovation published by The Henry Ford, a Dearborn-based museum.
A select group of national news "stakeholders" gathered at an undisclosed location for what was described as a "semi-secret" workshop somewhere in Canada on January 26. The meeting had been convened to determine how and to whom a "news industry bailout" of $645 million in Canadian government subsidies to private and supposedly independent media outlets would be disbursed. It was a striking event that signaled both the crisis of legitimacy faced by mainstream media and the desperate measures that are being proposed to answer it.

Jesse Brown, a Canadian journalist who participated in the meeting, complained that the first thing he noticed about it "was that one major public 'stakeholder' wasn't represented: the public." Inside what amounted to a smoke-filled room that was off limits to most Canadian citizens, Ben Scott - a former Obama administration official who also served in Hillary Clinton's State Department - presided over the discussions. Today, as the director of policy and advocacy for the Omidyar Network, Scott works for one of the most quietly influential billionaires in helping to shape the media landscape and define the craft of journalism itself.

Bad Guys

Best of the Web: Ex-Iraqi PM lets cat out of bag: 'US president Obama created ISIS to take over our country'

Daesh
© REUTERS / Muhammad Hamed
Former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki previously accused the administration of the 44th US president of being responsible for the rise of Daesh, which "caused bloodshed" in the Arab world.

Iraq's former prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, told a local TV station on Sunday that the administration of ex-US President Barack Obama had played a crucial role in the creation of Daesh* by allowing the terrorist group to occupy Iraqi territories, PressTV reported.

Maliki, who served as prime minister between 2006 and 2014, reportedly said that the United States had provided Iraq with intelligence and aerial images, locating with great precision positions of Daesh terrorists, who had lined up behind Iraqi borders in Syria.


Comment: And he's not the only official stating the obvious: See also:


Blackbox

Best of the Web: Alternative History of Al-Qaeda: Anwar al-Awlaki - jihadist, spy, or both?

Awlaki
Just another coincidence... Senior Al Qaeda leader Anwar Al Awlaki was clicking glasses together at the Pentagon with American military brass just months after the 9/11 attacks in 2001. Also, "coincidentally," he had in fact met at least one of the several alleged hijackers. He also, just before being liquidated by a US drone attack in 2011, allegedly funded the terror cell responsible for the recent Paris shootings.
Anwar al Awlaki rose to notoriety in the 2000s as a leading internet jihadist whose lectures and videos were very popular among the emerging Islamist movement. But his history with Al Qaeda, and in particular his contacts with the 9/11 hijackers while under investigation by the FBI, pose serious questions. Was Awlaki a terrorist, or a spy, or both? Was he working for US intelligence while acting as a spiritual leader to several of the hijackers? In this episode we take a critical look at Awlaki, his life, his FBI file and why he became the first American to be killed in a US drone strike.


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Rocket

Best of the Web: Prove a negative: Politics trump intel in US-Russia nuke treaty pullout

Russia Missile
Russian missile development facilities, undisclosed location
The United States has a track record of asking nations to prove a negative when it comes to compliance with arms control agreements, and then holding them to account when they fail to do so. The deficit of integrity over U.S. claims against Iraq regarding weapons of mass destruction and Iran and its nuclear program speaks volumes about how corrupt America's policymaking apparatus has become. Now the United States is making the same mistake again by pulling out of the INF Treaty, which it claims Russia violated.

"A high degree of confidence is required before the United States will publicly charge another party with violation of an international agreement." Acting Deputy Director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA) Thomas Graham, Jr. delivered those remarks during testimony before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in 1994. At that time, the ACDA served as the lead agency regarding arms control compliance. The intelligence community supported the ACDA's mission of making firm compliance judgments by providing the necessary intelligence information and analysis.

ACDA was supported in this effort by the CIA's Arms Control Intelligence Staff, or ACIS. ACIS provided intelligence support tailored for the specific compliance monitoring and verification requirements stemming from arms control agreements such as the INF Treaty and the Strategic Arms Reductions Treaty (START). It brought a different skill set and mindset than the work being done by the CIA's Nonproliferation Center, or NPC, whose targets were less structured and far more nebulous and nuanced. It was one thing to assess that nation A was exporting technology capable of supporting nuclear enrichment to nation B; it was far different to determine that Russia had destroyed its silos to the depths mandated by a treaty.

For the former, there was far more latitude in interpreting data used to make assessments. The latter required a level of specificity that was unforgiving and often difficult to achieve.