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Russia's military police: Exodus of Kurdish forces underway from Syrian-Turkish border

Russian Military Police
© Russian Military Police in Syria, Sputnik/Mikhail Aleyedoin
Russian Military Police in Syria
The formerly US-backed militia previously struck a deal with Damascus, handing control over several cities to the Syrian Arab Army, but Ankara insisted that they could not remain near the Turkish border.

Russian military police will assist in the withdrawal of the Kurdish militia from the Syrian-Turkish border, the Russian Reconciliation Centre for Syria stated on Monday, adding that the militants are also expected to leave Manbij and Tell Rifaat. The pullout is expected to end at 18:00 on Tuesday.

According to Moscow, Russian and Turkish forces will start patrolling the border after the end of the operation.

Comment: See also:


Star of David

Mobster behavior: Israel warns Jordan to 'go thirsty' if land returned to Amman

Israeli soldiers
© AFP
Israeli soldiers patrol the border fence in Naharayim, known in Arabic as Baqoura, an area set to return to Jordanian control next month
If Israeli farmers go, Jordanians 'will feel the thirst'

The son of former Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon says Jordanians will go thirsty if King Abdullah II and the Jordanian government go ahead with their decision to stop leasing two fertile areas to Israel after 25 years.

Writing in an opinion piece for Ynet, Gilad Sharon said: "Diplomacy is a delicate matter, so the Jordanian king should be told very gently: If you push Israeli farmers out of Naharayim and Tzofar, you will remain thirsty.

Eye 2

They Live, We Sleep

"You see them on the street. You watch them on TV. You might even vote for one this fall. You think they're people just like you. You're wrong. Dead wrong." — They Live
They Live
© The LiveWired
We're living in two worlds, you and I.

There's the world we see (or are made to see) and then there's the one we sense (and occasionally catch a glimpse of), the latter of which is a far cry from the propaganda-driven reality manufactured by the government and its corporate sponsors, including the media.

Indeed, what most Americans perceive as life in America — privileged, progressive and free — is a far cry from reality, where economic inequality is growing, real agendas and real power are buried beneath layers of Orwellian doublespeak and corporate obfuscation, and "freedom," such that it is, is meted out in small, legalistic doses by militarized police armed to the teeth.

All is not as it seems.

This is the premise of John Carpenter's film They Live, which was released more than 30 years ago, and remains unnervingly, chillingly appropriate for our modern age.

Best known for his horror film Halloween, which assumes that there is a form of evil so dark that it can't be killed, Carpenter's larger body of work is infused with a strong anti-authoritarian, anti-establishment, laconic bent that speaks to the filmmaker's concerns about the unraveling of our society, particularly our government.

Time and again, Carpenter portrays the government working against its own citizens, a populace out of touch with reality, technology run amok, and a future more horrific than any horror film.

In Escape from New York, Carpenter presents fascism as the future of America.

In The Thing, a remake of the 1951 sci-fi classic of the same name, Carpenter presupposes that increasingly we are all becoming dehumanized.

In Christine, the film adaptation of Stephen King's novel about a demon-possessed car, technology exhibits a will and consciousness of its own and goes on a murderous rampage.

In In the Mouth of Madness, Carpenter notes that evil grows when people lose "the ability to know the difference between reality and fantasy."

And then there is Carpenter's They Live, in which two migrant workers discover that the world is not as it seems. In fact, the population is actually being controlled and exploited by aliens working in partnership with an oligarchic elite. All the while, the populace — blissfully unaware of the real agenda at work in their lives — has been lulled into complacency, indoctrinated into compliance, bombarded with media distractions, and hypnotized by subliminal messages beamed out of television and various electronic devices, billboards and the like.

Chess

Trump: US-China trade deal's phase one ahead of schedule

Trump
© The Telegraph
US President Donald Trump
President Trump says the first phase of a trade deal with China looks to be ahead of schedule.

"We are looking probably to be ahead of schedule to sign a very big portion of the China deal, we'll call it Phase One but it's a very big portion,'' he told reporters before leaving for Chicago. "That would take care of the farmers. It would take care of some of the other things. It'll also take care of a lot of the banking needs."

The president's comments come after Beijing said on Saturday that phase one was "basically complete." Trade representatives from the two countries held a phone call on Friday as they continued to iron out a deal.

The tentative U.S.-China deal is said to include Beijing making concessions on intellectual property, financial services and agriculture. In return, the U.S. agreed not to implement new tariffs on Chinese goods on Oct. 15. A decision has not yet been made about the new tariffs that are scheduled to hit goods made in China beginning Dec. 15.

Pirates

How corrupt American Democrats plundered Ukraine

Oleg Tsarev

Oleg Tsarev
A talk with Oleg Tsarev reveals the alleged identity of the "Trump/Ukraine Whistleblower"

Top Dems are involved in the plundering of the Ukraine: new names, mind-boggling accounts. The mysterious 'whistleblower' whose report had unleashed the impeachment is named in the exclusive interview given to the Unz Review by a prominent Ukrainian politician, an ex-Member of Parliament of four terms, a candidate for Ukraine's presidency, Oleg Tsarev.

Mr Tsarev, a tall, agile and graceful man, a good speaker and a prolific writer, had been a leading and popular Ukrainian politician before the 2014 putsch; he stayed in the Ukraine after President Yanukovych's flight; ran for the Presidency against Mr Poroshenko, and eventually had to go to exile due to multiple threats to his life. During the failed attempt to secede, he was elected the speaker of the Parliament of Novorossia (South-Eastern Ukraine). I spoke to him in Crimea, where he lives in the pleasant seaside town of Yalta. Tsarev still has many supporters in the Ukraine, and is a leader of the opposition to the Kiev regime.

Comment: Accusations, without proof, are accusations. Can Tsarev provide evidence to validate his claims? If factual, these backstories, combined with the full court press by Democrats to unseat Trump, take on a broader, deeper and alarming perspective. It suggests the intensity of the rally for impeachment is but a grand scheme of deflection to mask the magnitude of heinous crimes (allegedly) committed by Biden and a cadre of insider Democrats.

So Ukraine really is the cesspool of corruption it appears to be. No wonder the Democrats fit right in there.


Gift 2

Former Clinton adviser: 'Hillary thinks God put her on Earth to be president'


Comment: Lots of noises out there suggesting she's planning to run again...

Do it, Killary!


HRClinton
© Reuters/Brian Snyder
"In her zeal!" Hillary Clinton on the campaign trail in 2016.
Former adviser to President Clinton Dick Morris said Sunday that Hillary Clinton most likely wants to get into the 2020 presidential race because she thinks "God put her on the Earth" to be president.

Morris told John Catsimatidis on his radio show that the major question revolving around the 2020 election is whether "the ghost of Hillary Clinton" will enter the election.

"My feeling is that she wants to," Morris said. "She feels entitled to do it. She feels compelled to do it. She feels that God put her on the Earth to do it. But she's hesitant because she realizes the timing is bad."

The former adviser said he thinks Hillary Clinton is waiting for an opportunity to jump into the race and particularly for former Vice President Joe Biden to drop out.

Comment: Elsewhere, Slick Willy himself is also putting out feelers...


She has also been appearing for interviews on lots of evening TV shows...

Over at The Graun, they're wetting themselves at the prospect:

hillary 2020
Killary is delusional if she thinks she stands a chance. She must REALLY want to bomb some countries. Her bloodlust is not getting quenched.


Network

Russia, China & India to set up alternative to SWIFT payment system to connect 3 billion people

shanghai
© Getty Images
Members of the BRICS trade bloc Russia, India, and China have decided to connect their financial messaging systems to bypass the SWIFT international money transfer network.

Russia's financial messaging system SPFS will be linked with the Chinese cross-border interbank payment system CIPS. While India does not have a domestic financial messaging system yet, it plans to combine the Central Bank of Russia's platform with a domestic service that is in development.

The new system is expected to work as a "gateway" model when messages on payments are transcoded in accordance with a certain financial system.

Sherlock

Inside 'Objective Medusa', Devin Nunes' historic investigation into Spygate scandal

nunes
© NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty
The following is an excerpt from Lee Smith's forthcoming book, The Plot Against the President: The True Story of How Congressman Devin Nunes Uncovered the Biggest Political Scandal in U.S. History, which will be released October 29.

In mid-March 2017, California congressman Devin Nunes, then Chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI), found out the FBI had obtained a warrant to spy on Donald Trump campaign adviser Carter Page. And they'd used the Steele dossier, opposition research paid for by the Clinton campaign, as evidence.

But Nunes and his committee couldn't say anything, not to the U.S. public, not even to fellow members of Congress. The FBI and DOJ had buried the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant, like so much of the anti-Trump operation, under the heading of classified intelligence.

It marked a low point for Nunes' team. Shortly after, former DOJ prosecutor Kashyap Patel joined them. At first Patel's new colleagues didn't know what to make of him. As a New Yorker, Patel's style sometimes clashed with those of the easygoing Californians, southerners, and midwesterners who made up the HPSCI staff.

Russian Flag

Putin Derangement Syndrome: Craziester and More Craziester

Putin and Trump nested dolls
© Global Look Press / Zamir Usmanov
A nested doll with the image of the Russian President Vladimir Putin and the US President Donald Trump
Remember the Spinal Tap scene where the witless band member explains that because their numbers go to 11 they can always get that little bit extra? Putin Derangement Syndrome went past 11 a long time ago: we need a whole new set of superlatives, "craziest" just won't do anymore.

After writing this compendium of nonsense about Putin from Western sources in 2015, I ran a short series on Putin Derangement Syndrome; I gave up when Putin Derangement Syndrome and Trump Derangement Syndrome merged into a crescendo of craziness, far past what I could have imagined. (And Trump Derangement Syndrome is also passed 11 - "Why Ivanka Trump's new haircut should make us very afraid".)

In the past, American hysteria campaigns against the enemy-of-the-moment ended when their target did. Noriega went to jail, Milosevic died in jail, Hussein and Qadaffi were killed, bin Laden was killed, Aidid - but who remembers him? The frenzy built up and up and stopped at the end before it got to 11. But Putin is still there and growing stronger by the moment. And the frenzy therefore has to go past 10, past 11 and ever upwards. One of the craziest (to say nothing of disgusting) things was this absurd cartoon from the (formerly) staid NYT. But that was a whole year ago.

No longer bare chests, Aspergers, big fish, gunslinger walks - in 2015 they were laughing; today Putin has super powers. Two events sent it past 11. Somebody leaked e-mails from the DNC showing that it was rigging the nomination for Clinton and she lost a 99% certain election. Immediately, her campaign settled on blaming Russia for both.
That strategy had been set within twenty-four hours of her concession speech. [9 November 2016] Mook and Podesta assembled her communications team at the Brooklyn headquarters to engineer the case that the election wasn't entirely on the up-and-up. For a couple of hours, with Shake Shack containers littering the room, they went over the script they would pitch to the press and the public. Already, Russian hacking was the centerpiece of the argument. (From Shattered, quoted here.)
The bogus - bogus because most of the people on his team were part of the conspiracy and knew there was no collusion - Mueller investigation dragged on until - despite the endless "bombshells" - it finally stopped. But the crazies insist... not guilty but... not exonerated! And Trumputin's principal conspiracist rants on.

Pirates

Kremlin: If Baghdadi is actually dead, Trump has made big contribution to fighting terrorism - UPDATES: Remains 'buried at sea' (seriously!)

baghdadi
© Reuters / Alaa al-Marjani
Iraqi youth watch the news of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi death, in Najaf, Iraq October 27, 2019
While Russia still has no independent confirmation that US forces have killed Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, Donald Trump is due credit if they did, Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman has said.

"The news itself can't be taken negatively by the Russian authorities," Dmitry Peskov said. "Indeed, our troops saw American planes and American drones in the area, which may have been on a mission there."

Earlier, the Russian Defense Ministry cast doubt on Washington's claim of al-Baghdadi's death, saying there's no credible data to prove his demise. If confirmed, however, Trump's efforts should be recognized, Peskov believes.
If indeed the information about al-Baghdadi's elimination is confirmed, then we can talk about the US president's significant contribution to the fight against international terrorism.
Moscow's skepticism is not unfounded, seeing as how rumors of al-Baghdadi's grave injury or death have surfaced repeatedly for the past four years, only to be later dispelled. Trump, however, has teased that some footage of his ultimate takedown at the hands of US troops could be released at some point.

Comment: There's little doubt at this point that something took place. Locals saw the explosions and journalists have visited the site of operation, showing rubble of the destroyed building and bodies.




Whether or not Baghdadi was actually killed there is what is doubtful. All we have is the say-so of the military who were apparently able to do an on-the-spot DNA test on the shredded body parts using DNA they already had on file. Russian media are skeptical too:


As Abdel Bari Atwan put it:
I have followed al-Qaida and ISIS closely as a journalist for a long time, and one thing they always do is issue official statements confirming the death of their commanders — if only to fulfil their religious obligation to inform the families, facilitate inheritance procedures and permit their wives to remarry if they choose. But unlike Bush Jr.'s administration, Obama's and Trump's never showed us pictures of their trophies. Their burial places are unknown. This suggests that they have something to hide, and we may not learn the truth about it for decades.
On the off chance that the U.S. military releases footage, a clear image of what appears to be Baghdadi fleeing and whimpering, as Trump put it, would at least go some way to confirming the story so far. Trump is apparently considering releasing some footage, but we're not holding our breath that it will contain anything definitive:
"The question was, 'am I considering releasing video footage of the raid,' and we may take certain parts of it and release it. Yes", Trump said while boarding Air Force One on his way to Chicago.
To compound the absurdity, however, two US defense officials have said Baghdadi's body was buried at sea (!), just like Osama. And no, it's not a joke.

Two Iraqi security officials told Reuters that Ismael al-Ethawi, a close aide to Baghdadi, provided important information after he was arrested by the Turks and handed over to the Iraqis, apparently in February 2018:
"Ethawi gave valuable information which helped the Iraqi multi-security agencies team complete the missing pieces of the puzzle of Baghdadi's movements and places he used to hide," one of the Iraqi security officials said. "Ethawi gave us details on five men, including him, who were meeting Baghdadi inside Syria and the different locations they used," he told Reuters.
...
Ethawi, who holds a PHD in Islamic Sciences, was considered by Iraqi intelligence officials to be one of the leader's top five aides. He joined al Qaeda in 2006 and was arrested by U.S. forces in 2008 and jailed for four years, according to the Iraqi security officials.

Baghdadi later tasked Ethawi with key roles such as delivering religious instructions and the selection of Islamic State commanders. After the group largely collapsed in 2017, Ethawi fled to Syria with his Syrian wife.

Another turning point came earlier this year during a joint operation in which U.S., Turkish and Iraqi intelligence agents captured senior Islamic State leaders, including four Iraqis and one Syrian, the Iraqi security officials said.

"They gave us all the locations where they were meeting with Baghdadi inside Syria and we decided to coordinate with the CIA to deploy more sources inside these areas," said one of the Iraqi officials, who has close ties to multiple security agencies.

"In mid-2019 we managed to locate Idlib as the place where Baghdadi was moving from village to village with his family and three close aides," the official said.

Informants in Syria then spotted an Iraqi man wearing a checkered headdress in an Idlib marketplace and recognized him from a photograph, the official said. It was Ethawi, and they followed him to the home where Baghdadi was staying.

"We passed the details to the CIA and they used a satellite and drones to watch the location for the past five months," the official said.

Two days ago, Baghdadi left the location with his family for the first time, traveling by minibus to a nearby village.

"There it was his last moment to live," the official said.
The timeline they provide is incoherent. Ethawi was arrested by U.S. forces in 2008 until 2012. At some point he joins ISIS, then flees to Syria in 2017. Then, he's arrested in February 2018 and handed over to the Iraqis, only to be "spotted" in Idlib in "mid-2019"? The Reuters article continues:
Baghdadi was also on the run from local enemies in Syria. Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the group formerly known as the Nusra Front and which dominates Idlib, had been mounting its own search for Baghdadi after receiving information he was in the area, according to a commander in an Idlib jihadist group.
...
According to the Idlib commander, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham recently captured another aide to Baghdadi known as Abu Suleiman al-Khalidi, one of three men seen sitting alongside Baghdadi in his last video message. The capture of Khalidi was "the key" in the search for Baghdadi, the commander said.

His comments raised the possibility that Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, which locals say is believed to have contacts with Turkish forces in northwest Syria, may have passed on what it learned to other intelligence agencies.

Baghdadi may have concluded that hiding in Idlib was his best hope after Islamic State was all but wiped out in Iraq and Syria. He could have blended in, while lax security and checkpoints operated by armed groups that rarely search vehicles increased his chances of survival, the commander said.

He said Baghdadi was believed to have been in Idlib for about six months, and that his main reason for being there was to try to hide. But he said Baghdadi was still seen as a major threat because his presence would have attracted supporters in an area where Islamic State has sleeper cells.

Hayat Tahrir al-Sham fighters raided the town of Sarmin about two months ago after receiving information about Baghdadi being there, but he was not found, according to the commander.
CNN reports on another alleged source of information - this revelation also coming from the Iraq government:
One of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's closest collaborators, a relative through marriage, provided key information about the ISIS leader that helped lead to his capture, a senior Iraqi government official told CNN.

Mohammed Ali Sajet -- an ISIS member since 2015, who acted as a guide for Baghdadi -- was detained by Iraqi authorities about two months ago on the outskirts of the capital Baghdad.

A senior official with the Iraqi government told CNN that Sajet provided information about Baghdadi's possible location in Syria, as well as details about a courier that was working with the elusive leader.

"We followed the courier, a raid killed him and that is how we got his wife," said the senior government official. "He had documents that led to his wife."

The official said that the courier's wife led the Iraqis to another location, which had more documents pointing to Baghdadi's whereabouts.

"We give them (the Americans) a tip," said the official. "We used human intelligence and we get closer."

While the Iraqi source said the intelligence was central to the manhunt, multiple officials and countries have claimed to have provided information that led to Baghdadi's capture. It was likely a combination of intelligence gathering between several parties that resulted in Baghdadi's demise.
In an exclusive interview with Saudi-owned Al Arabiya TV station, Sajet said Baghdadi's "hiding tactics were excellent."

"We didn't expect this to happen. Even he didn't expect to be killed due to his security measures," he said, speaking to Al Arabiya from detention in Iraq.

"I met him in an area close to the Syrian-Iraqi border. His security was good. They were tending and herding sheep. He was there, hiding underground and there was a tent above him."

"Their movement was hard due to the tight grip of security forces on the area I saw him in," he added.

"He was talking about deteriorating security status due to the security forces. He wanted to change his location and didn't know how to."

Fadhil Abu-Ragheef, an Iraqi security expert, told CNN that Sajet gave information to the Iraqis, who shared it with the US and ultimately led them to Baghdadi's compound in Syria's northwestern Idlib province.

Sajet told Al Arabiya that another ISIS member told him he had secured a location in Idlib for Baghdadi.

The Iraqis began to gather more information about Baghdadi six months ago, when they captured a group of six ISIS members west of Anbar, according to Abu-Ragheef. Those six individuals led investigators to Sajet.

Some in the group were also related to Sajet by marriage, and were able to paint a picture for the intelligence services about the terror leader's movements. They would move in the desert and were responsible for bringing Baghdadi food, beverages and women. Sajet described the conditions at one of al-Baghdadi's hideouts to Al Arabiya.

"He was in an 8-meter-long underground tunnel with a width of 5 to 6 meters. It had a library, religious books, and the Quran and things of sort. It had lights and various things so the hiding situation was good," he said.
Turkish presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin told reporters there was "intense" military coordination with the US before the Baghdadi operation:
"Our military and intelligence units were in contact with their American counterparts on this issue and they coordinated. Especially...the night when the operation was conducted, we can say there was intense diplomacy between our military authorities. A terrorist organisation nesting in Syria, near our border, or any other region, is not something we can accept", he stated.
And according to the SDF, a second raid in Idlib yesterday resulted in the killing of an ISIS spokesman:
SDF Commander in Chief Mazloum Abdi said on Twitter that IS spokesman Abu Hassan al-Muhajir was "targeted" in a village near the town of Jarablus, near the border with Turkey, in a coordinated operation between SDF intelligence and the U.S. Army.

In a later post on Twitter, SDF spokesman Mustefa Bali said Muhajir had been killed.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a London-based monitoring group, confirmed Muhajir's death, saying he was among five IS members who were killed in a U.S.-led operation backed by the SDF.

"The two U.S.-led operations have effectively disabled top [IS] leadership who were hiding" in northwestern Syria, Bali said, adding that "more still remain hiding in the same area."
For yesterday's coverage, see: