Puppet Masters
More than 23,000 terrorists killed
In 2018, Syrian government forces, which gained significant military experience under the direction of Russian military advisers, took control of the de-escalating areas of Eastern Ghouta, Homs and the South, the Russian Chief of Staff said.
"[During the operations] more than 23,000 terrorists were eliminated. 387 villages of Islamist radicals were liberated," Gerasimov said.
In addition, more than 230,000 people were withdrawn from de-escalating areas through humanitarian corridors without casualties among civilians and moderate Syrian opposition groups. More than 40,000 fighters from moderate armed opposition groups have joined the Syrian army, Gerasimov added.
The military recalled that the active phase of the operation to liquidate ISIS in Syria ended in December last year and that today the militants remain only in the region east of the Euphrates River, a territory mostly controlled by the United States.
Powerful radar field
Among other equipment and weapons of the Russian Army, Gerasimov reported that Russia has finalized full radar coverage of its borders.
The overnight assault lasted nearly three hours before the militants overran the outpost and took nine other soldiers hostage, council members Dadullah Qani and Gul Ahmad Faqiri said on December 9.
They said the attackers took all of the post's equipment with them.
Provincial police spokesman Mohibullah Mohib said three militants were also killed and four others were wounded in the battle.
Comment: So it seems the Taliban won this one.
Taliban spokesman Qari Yousof Ahmadi posted a video on Twitter showing what he said were the captured soldiers.
Washington Post columnist David Ignatius said, citing US intelligence officials speaking on conditions of anonymity, that Saudi officials sought to obtain Pegasus, state-of-the art mobile spyware, from Israeli cyber intelligence firm NSO Group Technologies.
The Saudis reportedly carried out some of the transactions with NSO via its Luxembourg-based affiliate called Q Cyber Technologies. Despite some Israelis voicing concerns about sharing the powerful malware with Riyadh, the sources claimed that the Israeli government gave its consent to the purchase of Pegasus by Riyadh.
This was seen as a win-win situation, the report says, given that the Israeli "gained a secret Sunni Arab ally against Iran" as well as an opportunity to spy on Riyadh through cyber security cooperation, while the Saudis acquired new tools to combat their "internal enemies."
Comment: It's worthy of note that the US and UK have particularly strong ties with both Israel and Saudi Arabia:
- Colluding in war crimes: Britain's unreported military alliance with Israel
- UK secretly training Saudi troops for war on Yemen, 'against Geneva conventions'
- U.S., British and Saudis thwart Freedom and Democracy in Yemen - again
- How British Zionism created both the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Israel
But none of those lies point to Russian collusion with the Trump campaign.
"Totally clears the president. Thank you!" Mr. Trump tweeted shortly after the filing.
Mr. Mueller's team said last month that Manafort, who pleaded guilty in September and promised to cooperate with prosecutors, had lied "on a variety of subject matters."
Comment: CNN cranks up the spin machine:
The court documents provide new insights into the Mueller probe itself, including why the proposed Trump Tower Moscow project was relevant to Russian election meddling and potential new contacts between Cohen and Russian officials seeking to arrange a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. They reveal that a Russian national who claimed connections to the Russian government spoke with Cohen in 2015 and offered "political synergy" with the Trump campaign.
Cohen contacted the Kremlin through their public website (anyone can write to the Kremlin) about a real estate deal. He was politely rebuffed and directed to a business convention being held in Moscow.
Kremlin corroborates story emailed them about Trump Tower deal, shares email
In addition, the documents also detail how Manafort was directly in touch with a senior Trump administration official earlier this year as well as his contact with Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian national who Mueller's team says has ties to Russian intelligence services, though the details of those interactions are redacted.
Oooh, spooky spy stuff. Except that: "Konstantin Kilimnik, an employee of Manafort's consulting firm who, together with Manafort, represented pro-Russian former Ukrainian President Victor Yanukovych."
Another indictment in Manafort case names Russia-linked defendant
Prosecutors say Trump directed Cohen
For the first time, federal prosecutors say that Trump directed Cohen to make payments designed to silence women who claimed affairs with Trump.
When Cohen pleaded guilty in August to campaign finance violations connected to the payments, Cohen stated in court that he had been directed by Trump.
But the sentencing memo from the Manhattan US Attorney's office, which was filed separately from Mueller's team, was the first time the government has stated Trump's role in the payments. Trump has denied the affairs, and he has not been accused of any crimes related to the payments.
The original issue was whether the payments were made with campaign funds. People pay off other people for reasons that may not be pristine, but are not illegal. Out-of-court settlements are made all the time by big corporations for the express purpose of preventing unflattering information to become public. Think vaccine injury cases.
Trump: Cohen payments were from him, not the campaign
"In particular, and as Cohen himself has now admitted, with respect to both payments, he acted in coordination with and at the direction of Individual-1," prosecutors wrote in a reference to Trump.
Lying liars
Mueller's team documents a number of lies told by Cohen and Manafort -- and has the proof to back it up.
Manafort's legal team has disputed that he lied to the special counsel since entering into a cooperation agreement -- which would violate that agreement -- but Mueller has texts. The court filing cites a text exchange in which Manafort authorized an associate to speak to a Trump administration official on his behalf.
So put the texts out there.
In all, Mueller accuses Manafort of lying on five separate matters.
Cohen's lies, some of which he admitted to in a guilty plea last week, included lying to the special counsel investigators about the Trump Tower Moscow project after offering to cooperate. Mueller's team says he eventually took responsibility for his lies, later explaining he was trying not to contradict his congressional testimony.
There are now three officials in Trump's orbit accused of lying to the special counsel: Manafort, Cohen and former Trump campaign official Rick Gates who pleaded guilty to lying during one of his early meetings with Mueller's team.
Still no Russian collusion. Remember that?
Trump Tower Moscow is relevant to meddling
Mueller's memo lays out how the Trump Tower Moscow project is relevant to Russia's election meddling during the 2016 campaign.
The fact that Cohen continued to work on the proposal through June 2016, not ending in January as he falsely testified -- and he discussed it with Trump -- was material to both the ongoing congressional and special counsel investigations, the special counsel said.
Mueller said that the continued work on Trump Tower Moscow "occurred at a time of sustained efforts by the Russian government to interfere with the US presidential election."
The special counsel memo states that Cohen's false statements to investigators about the Moscow project "obscured the fact that the Moscow Project was a lucrative business opportunity that sought, and likely required, the assistance of the Russian government."
Which was refused.
The argument in Cohen's filing underscores that the overlap of business and politics is relevant to the special counsel's inquiry.
False public statements also key to investigation
The special counsel's office made clear that it sees not just lies to investigators but also false public statements as significant in the Cohen sentencing memo.
Prosecutors explained that Cohen's effort to lie about the Moscow project continuing through June 2016 were an effort to alter the investigation.
"The defendant amplified his false statements by releasing and repeating his lies to the public, including to other potential witnesses. By publicly presenting this false narrative, the defendant deliberately shifted the timeline of what occurred in the hopes of limiting the investigation into possible Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election -- an issue of heightened national interest."
Earlier in the week, the special counsel stressed that Michael Flynn's false statement also impacted what others said publicly.
"Several senior members of the transition publicly repeated false information conveyed to them by the defendant about communications between [Flynn] and the Russian ambassador regarding the sanctions," Mueller wrote.
If anyone is lying here, it's Mueller. Flynn misremembered a date, which was then spun into "lying to the FBI". Even Comey said so.
Interestingly, Mueller redacts the rest of the paragraph. So if the impact was explained, it is still a secret.
The emphasis on public statements could offer clues at how prosecutors view the relevance of efforts to misdirect in formulating the first public statement about the 2016 Trump Tower meeting aboard Air Force One the next year.
One of the questions that Mueller wanted to ask Trump, as seen in the questions that were given to the President's lawyers earlier this year, focused just on that: "What involvement did you have in the communication strategy, including the release of Donald Trump Jr.'s emails?"
Why did Manafort try to hide contacts with administration officials?
One of the mysteries in the Manafort court filing: Who was he allegedly contacting in the Trump administration during 2018 -- and why?
Mueller accuses Manafort of lying about multiple contacts with Trump administration officials, including a senior administration official. Mueller cites a May 2018 text exchange authorizing an associate to contact one official, and a Manafort colleague describing a February 2018 contact with the senior official.
It's not clear why Manafort was conducting the outreach -- but Mueller's team signals in the filing that it likely has the answer.
"A review of documents recovered from a search of Manafort's electronic documents demonstrations additional contacts with Administration officials," the filing states.
The documents were not 'recovered'. They were grabbed from Manafort's home a pre-dawn SWAT-style raid that collected nothing that hadn't already been given to Congress. Mueller was throwing his weight around because he could.
Why Mueller still thinks Cohen's credible
While the special counsel's office does not make a recommendation to give Cohen reduced prison time, Mueller still says that Cohen was a cooperative witness.
And Mueller's team makes a reference to Cohen's credibility, which is poised to be a key question if any of the information Cohen provides is used in other cases the special counsel is pursuing -- especially given that Mueller documents how Cohen even lied to the special counsel.
In the court filing, Mueller's team notes that the information that Cohen provided "has been credible and consistent with other evidence obtained" in the special counsel's ongoing investigation, which signals the special counsel investigators independently corroborated what Cohen told them.
Mueller outlined four areas where Cohen cooperated, which include his own contacts with "Russian interests" during the 2016 campaign, "useful information" concerning Russia-related matters, contacts with people connected to the Trump White House and "the circumstances of preparing and circulating his response to the congressional inquiries."
Cohen was less useful to Manhattan US Attorney's office, which said that the information Cohen provided to the New York Attorney General's office in their ongoing case against the Trump Foundation "warrants little to no consideration as a mitigating factor."
"After cheating the IRS for years, lying to banks and to Congress, and seeking to criminally influence the Presidential election, Cohen's decision to plead guilty -- rather than seek a pardon for his manifold crimes -- does not make him a hero," prosecutors wrote.
Translation: "Our Russian collusion/impeachment case is going down the tubes, and Cohen, Manafort and Gates are the best we've got."
"The Paris Agreement isn't working out so well for Paris. Protests and riots all over France. People do not want to pay large sums of money, much to third world countries (that are questionably run), in order to maybe protect the environment. Chanting 'We Want Trump!' Love France," Trump tweeted from the White House early on Saturday.
Comment: The French foreign minister also weighed in:
The French foreign minister demanded that Donald Trump doesn't meddle into the country's affairs. Earlier the US leader blamed the Paris climate change agreement for sparking anti-fuel tax protests that swept France.See more: Yellow Vests Rise Against Neo-liberal King Macron
Jean-Yves Le Drian said that "we do not take domestic American politics into account and we want that to be reciprocated."
"Leave our nation be," he insisted further.

China's Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng said on Saturday that the detention of Huawei's chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou "ignores the law and is unreasonable".
Meng Wanzhou has been held since December 1 in Canada on an American extradition request and faces US fraud charges related to sanctions-breaking business dealings with Iran.
The 46-year-old executive was arrested in Vancouver while changing planes, ratcheting up tensions between the US and China just as the countries' leaders agreed to a truce in their trade war.
Comment: Justin Trudeau cements his position as an Empire toady.
- Political prisoners of Empire: Canada arrests Huawei CFO in Vancouver on behalf of US
- 'Arrogant jingoist policy': Lavrov blasts Washington's 'revolting' request to arrest Huawei CFO
"The arrest has shocked and angered China while in Canada the large Chinese population must wonder how safe they are. The background to the arrest is fairly simple. Huawei has become a global competitor in the global phone market and their 5G phones are cutting edge technology and so not welcomed by competing phone companies in, US, Japan, south Korea, France, and Sweden, who are so afraid of the competition that they and their governments have spread stories that the phones are loaded with spyware and are "a danger to national security."
[...]
The pretext for her arrest is that Huawei has violated US sanctions against Iran. But the "sanctions" imposed on Iran by the US recently are illegal under international law, that is under the UN Charter that stipulates that only the Security Council can impose economic sanctions on a nation. The latest American sanctions are not approved by the Security Council. Sanctions imposed unilaterally by one nation against another are not legal and are in violation of international law. There is, therefore, no law that she or Huawei is violating. There is no legal justification for her arrest by the Canadians who are detaining her without legal justification.
The Canadian prime minister claims he had no hand in this arrest, yet admits he knew about it days before hand. But he cannot claim that since the police that arrested her and the prosecutors handling the file are federal officials and so he must have been involved. John Bolton in the US also admitted that he knew that this was going to happen several days in advance so there must have been communication between he Canadian authorities and the American authorities at a high level to set this up."
I can also confirm that most of the areas to be bombed by the RuAF and the SAF have been conveniently depopulated in accordance with a plan to provide citizens with corridors enabling them to escape the clutches of the barbaric terrorists led by Abu Muhammad Al-Jawlaani.
However, we must expect another false flag operation involving CW in Idlib. There are scores of British independent contractors who are assisting the terrorists and, as I wrote before, the canisters of gas have been deployed to Idlib City whence they will, doubtlessly, be used to create the illusion of joint Syrian-Russian malfeasance. Hundreds of citizens will be sacrificed for this act of pure treachery by MI6's contractors in Syria. With France having deployed an electronic warship to the Eastern Mediterranean, the Dupuy de Lome, on November 23, 2018, we can also expect involvement by Paris in the upcoming battle.
Aimen Dean, who joined Al-Qaeda in 1997, said the trick all began with a letter written by the former US think-tank Project for the New American Century, which was sent to former President Bill Clinton in 1998. It urged Clinton to invade Iraq and "make it a beacon of democracy and to establish American hegemony."
That letter, Dean says, was signed by 18 people including Dick Cheney, Condoleezza Rice, and Jeb Bush, who would all "later become the architects of the Iraq war and the Bush administration."
The next piece of the puzzle apparently lies in a line written by the same think-tank in one of its publications in 2000: "Further, the process of transformation, even if it brings revolutionary change, is likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event - like a new Pearl Harbor."
Bin Laden's deputy seized on that notion, according to Dean. "He said, 'we should give them a Pearl Harbor...that's exactly where we want them to be...[the US] must smash [Iraq] in order for us to build an Islamist structure.'"
Comment: Dean's story is most likely true, but it's only one piece of the truth. 9/11 was in all likelihood an operation supporting the interests of at least 3 groups: al-Qaeda, elements of the Mossad (who shadowed many of the hijackers in Florida and New Jersey, and who had advanced knowledge of the collapse of the WTC towers), and elements in the U.S. government (CIA Alec Station, PNAC, and associated individuals who sheltered at least two of the hijackers while they were in the U.S. and who propagandized the fake al-Qaeda/Iraq connections and the Anthrax attacks). Not all of those involved necessarily were aware of the others' involvement. It's unlikely Jeb Bush, Rich and Cheney knew everything, for instance.
The American contingent were happy to use the opportunity to implement their PNAC strategy, al-Qaeda were happy to eliminate secular leaders in the Middle East using American firepower, and the Israelis were happy that the war on terror legitimized their destruction of Palestine and the destabilization of the Arab world.

Saudi Arabia's Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman escorts White House senior advisor Jared Kushner and his wife White House senior advisor Ivanka Trump at the Global Center for Combatting Extremist Ideology in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia May 21, 2017
Trump son-in-law and senior presidential adviser Jared Kushner remained in close contact with the Saudi crown prince and became MBS's "most important defender inside the White House" after Khashoggi's killing, the New York Times has reported, citing former US intelligence officials, individuals briefed by the Saudis, and people familiar with internal White House deliberations.
One Saudi official said to have been briefed on the conversations told the newspaper that Kushner offered MBS advice on how to weather the fallout over the Khashoggi case, and recommended that the crown prince resolve conflicts in the region.
Comment: Kushner is a political neophyte who's proved useful idiot for Saudi Arabia. Trump's loyalty to family is admirable, but in this case, it is leading him and his foreign policy in the region astray. The future consequences could be devastating.
- Saudi Crown Prince MBS reportedly bragged that Kushner gave him CIA intel about his 'enemies' days prior to corruption crackdown
- 'Wunderkinds' Kushner and Saudi Crown Prince wreak havoc
- Secret service agent blocks reporter's Kushner-Saudi questions
- Some of Trump's lawyers concluded Kushner should step down
- Kushner receives $30M from Israeli firm while shaping ME/Israeli policy
- Is Jared Kushner a Trump loyalist or Kissinger protege?
The Israeli TV station Hadashot has cited sources as saying that the country's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is interested in formalising formal ties between the Jewish state and Saudi Arabia ahead of the November 2019 elections in Israel.
The sources singled out unnamed US officials and Yossi Cohen, chief of the Israel national intelligence agency Mossad, who are allegedly dealing with the issue. Netanyahu has yet to comment on the Hadashot report.
Earlier, the Times of Israel reported that the Jewish state is in talks with Saudi Arabia and other Arab states to prompt them to establish formal diplomatic relations with Israel.
In late October, Israeli media quoted the United Arab Emirates news website Al-Khaleej as saying that Saudi Arabia and Israel had held covert meetings "in Washington and London" which resulted in the clinching of a deal worth an estimated $250 million.













Comment: In line with the surge of Taliban attacks, US bombing in Syria also seems to have increased in recent months: Mostly women and children among the 40 murdered by another US-led airstrike in Syria's Deir Ez-Zor