Puppet Masters
Giorgos Moutafis, 38, was denied entry to Turkey after landing in Istanbul on Saturday and was sent back to Athens. He was kicked out of the country less than an hour after German Chancellor Angela Merkel had left, having visited a refugee camp in Gaziantep, the newspaper pointed out. He intended to go to Libya from Turkey.
"I was told at the passport control that my name was on a blacklist and that I'm not allowed to enter Turkey. Then my passport was taken from me until the early morning. I had to spend the night in a room in the airport. The reasons why I'm on this list were not explained to me," Moutafis said.
He added that he entered Turkey six months ago with no problems, and that he cannot explain why he could have been banned since then.
Moutafis is an internationally-acclaimed journalist and filmmaker, who has covered stories for outlets such as Newsweek, TIME, the New Yorker, Der Spiegel, the Guardian, Al Jazeera, CBS, CNN and the BBC, among others. He received the 2014 Press Freedom Award from Reporters Without Borders.
At the same time, Ri stressed that his country has the right to maintain a nuclear deterrent and will not be bullied by international sanctions. Korea's foreign minister asserted that it was the US that had pushed the North to develop nuclear weapons as a self-defense strategy, adding that the only thing that could dissuade the country from carrying out its tests, would be for the US to halt its military exercises with Seoul.
"It is really crucial for the United States government to withdraw its hostile policy against the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea] and as an expression of this stop the military exercises, war exercises, in the Korean Peninsula. Then we will respond likewise," he said in Korean. If the drills were to be stopped "for some period, for some years, new opportunities may arise for the two countries and for the whole entire world as well," he observed. Ri arrived in New York on Friday for an official UN ceremony, where over 160 countries signed on to a climate change deal reached last year.
In response to Ri's comments, a US official told AP that participating in military exercises in South Korea demonstrates the US' commitment to the region and provides an opportunity to update existing military techniques. "We call again on North Korea to refrain from actions and rhetoric that further raise tensions in the region and focus instead on taking concrete steps toward fulfilling its international commitments and obligations," said the official on condition of anonymity.
Pyongyang views American exercises in the South as a rehearsal for an actual invasion of the North. This is not the first time such a proposal has been made, but the US continues to insist that North Korea must make the first move by giving up its nuclear ambitions.
Comment: And the dialog games begin. "Full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."
Furthermore, DWN reports that on April 25th, the U.S. President will hold a summit meeting in Hannover, Germany with the leaders of Germany (Angela Merkel), Italy (Matteo Renzi), France (Francois Hollande), and Britain (David Cameron). The presumed objective of this meeting is to agree to establish in the NATO countries bordering on Russia a military force of these five countries, a force threatening Russia with an invasion, if or when NATO subsequently decides that the 'threat from Russia' be 'responded to' militarily.
The deployment will expand the US military presence in the country from just 50 special operations forces to 250 service members, the Wall Street Journal said, citing senior US officials.
The president signed off on the plan only recently after his advisers convinced him that increased US presence would help the Pentagon make new gains against the Islamic State (Daesh), a terror group outlawed by the United States, Russia and other nations, which is in control of large swaths of Syrian land.
Comment: Further reading:
Sometimes, the ways of hiding a foreign invasion of a country can become almost irrelevant, and the only thing that actually still matters is whether the time appears to be ripe, to resume, or escalate, a war that one remains determined to win. So it is with the US Government under Barack Obama, who still remains determined to replace Bashar al-Assad by a fundamentalist Sunni proponent of Sharia law.
How the Syrian talks broke down: Al-Qaeda was facing defeat
According to a report from der Spiegel that cites government sources, the US is calling for strong German support in its fight against Russia in Eastern Europe. Washington talks about the need for "deterrence" and urges [Germany] to agree to more participation in the plan to station both outgoing and incoming units at NATO's eastern border.
The US is expecting to receive troops and military equipment, mostly from the UK and Germany, to beef up its NATO presence in the Baltic States, Poland, and Romania. US President Barack Obama announced this at the National Security Council, according to the report.
Comment: Further reading:
The bottom line is that the 'Masters of the Universe' in Washington and Wall Street can't have Germany cosying up to Russia, and the best way to ensure that is to keep Europe's leading economy weighed down in costly, protracted legal affairs. Then again, Merkel may just be thanking her lucky stars that Germany isn't being accused of having a part in the 9/11 attacks.
Die amerikanische imperium: German car emissions 'scandal' is a petulant act of industrial sabotage
How did this come about in a world where a mere six years earlier events hardly seemed to suggest such a deterioration in political relations, especially between the European Union and the Russian Federation?
To answer this question it is necessary to understand the strategic military policy of the United States today.
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond made his remarks in a Telegraph interview on Sunday. Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) are seeking to turn Libya into a "bolthole" for launching attacks on mainland Europe or Western ships at sea, Hammond argued.
"It wouldn't make sense to rule anything out because you never know how things are going to evolve," Hammond told The Telegraph. "But if there were ever any question of a British combat role in any form - ground, sea or air - that would go to the House of Commons."
The Foreign Secretary warned that there is a possibility that IS could send terrorists across the Mediterranean to Italy in order to mount attacks, adding that British cruise liners and commercial ships have already been warned to avoid the coast off the Libyan city of Sirte.
Comment: Libya, like Iraq and Afghanistan is a gift that keeps on giving, providing neocons with endless excuses to keep meddling in the affairs of other countries, all in the name of 'spreading democracy'. Of course it must never be mentioned these same neocons created those "sh*t shows" to begin with.
Some officials in Washington genuinely believe Russia has armored ground forces in Syria, claiming Russia moved its own artillery towards Aleppo — unproven information based on anonymous sources in Pentagon, published by Wall Street Journal. These persons believe that if the US fails to react with force, this will be viewed by Moscow as a sign of American timidity, which will further encourage Russia to perform risky and aggressive actions.
FARS quoted military sources as saying that the Syrian troops attacked Daesh forces in the territories between the recently-liberated cities of Quaryatayn and Palmyra and along the strategically important Palmyra-Raqqa highway, in an assault that lefty dozens of terrorists dead and many more wounded.
"A number of hilltops have been recaptured in the Bardeh Mountains and the government forces have started to fortify their positions in the newly-captured lands," the sources said.
"The Russian government says it has sent troops to fight alongside Kurdish units in northwestern Syria and is providing weapons to Iraqi Kurds in a tactic that could upstage a long-standing US alliance with the stateless ethnic group and increase Moscow's influence in the region," according to The Wall Street Journal.















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