Puppet Masters
Nathalie Tocci, a special adviser to High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy (HRVP) Federica Mogherini, reiterated the EU's position on tensions with Iran on BBC radio's Today programme on Tuesday: "the United States has violated the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action" and is not "living up" to its side of the bargain.
"We still don't have actually verifiable proof as to exactly what happened and who did what," she said regarding the recent attack on oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman.
The new images show the same episode earlier featured in a very low-quality black and white video released by the US military. The new pictures - clearer and colored - appear to be screengrabs from aerial footage of the incident.
The pictures show a speedboat, said to be Iranian, approaching the Japanese-owned tanker Kokuka Courageous from the starboard side and removing a device that Pentagon insists is a limpet mine. According to Washington, this imagery somehow proves that Tehran was behind the attack.
Comment: Thanks, Pentagon!
Those grainy black-and-white versions sucked.
In a statement Monday, Acting US Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said he approved US Central Command (CENTCOM)'s earlier request to increase forces to "address air, naval, and ground-based threats in the Middle East."
Comment: The silver lining in all this is that it is now clear as day that Trump is not the leader of the US government...
- Convenient 'tanker attacks' as US seeks war with Iran
- Another false-flag: Two more oil tankers attacked in Gulf of Oman, possibly with torpedoes - UPDATES
- US accuses Iran of sabotaging Saudi tankers
- Tankers incident in Gulf of Oman - Is it an invitation to war?
By the start of 2019, nine countries, namely the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea possessed as many as 13,865 nuclear heads, of which 3,750 are operational and an estimated 2,000 are being kept in a state of alert, the report added.
The figures represent a decrease from the figures of 2018 when the institute estimated the number of warheads to be around 14,465 is due in large part to Russia and the US reducing their arsenals in line with the 2010 Treaty on Measures for the Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms (New START) while also making unilateral reductions.
Both countries collectively own more than 90 per cent of all nuclear weapons, the report said. SIPRI's figures come as Israel launches a strong campaign against Iran's nuclear capability.
In September 2018, Director General of Israel Atomic Energy Commission Zeev Snir said that Tel Aviv would develop and fortify its nuclear facilities in response to Iranian threats.
"We have learned this from media reports. We certainly call on all the sides to show restraint. We would certainly prefer not to see any steps that could introduce additional escalation to the region that is already not calm," Peskov told reporters.
Meanwhile, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov said on Tuesday that Washington's plans to build up its military presence in the Middle East as means of putting pressure on Iran can only be seen as an intention to provoke war in the region.
"Now, when we are witnessing continuing US attempts to increase political, psychological, economic and military pressure on Iran, such actions are quite provocative, I think. They cannot be viewed otherwise than a policy to provoke a war," Ryabkov told reporters.
Comment: More from Sputnik on Japan's reservations:
The Japanese government expressed concern on Tuesday over the United States' plans to deploy additional 1,000 troops to the Middle East following the recent attacks on oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman.
"It is a matter of deep concern that tensions will escalate in the region of the Middle East", Japan's Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasutoshi Nishimura told a briefing, as cited by Kyodo news agency.
The groundbreaking project, which will enable firms listed in the UK and mainland China to raise funds on each other's stock market, is seen as a major step for Beijing in its efforts to internationalise its markets. It had originally been scheduled to launch in December.
Huatai Securities, one of China's largest brokerages, made its trading debut on the London Stock Exchange at 8am local time as it became the first company to trade via the new link. Investors in the UK capital were able to buy and sell global depository receipts in Huatai, which has raised US$1.54 billion through the flotation.
The listing, marked by an inauguration ceremony in London, could open the floodgates for dozens of mainland Chinese firms to raise funds on the European bourse. As the trade war with the US rages, Beijing is keen to open up more investment doors around the world.
"With the development of the Shanghai-London stock connection scheme, foreign companies that have financing demands will be able to use it to raise funds in China," Fang Xinghai, a vice-chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, told the annual Lujiazui Forum last week.
In an interview with RT's Sophie Shevarnadze, Nathalie Tocci said Trump has "been led into a very different direction" than the one he might otherwise have gone in without input from Bolton.
Asked why she didn't trust Trump's claims that he does not want regime change in Iran, Tocci said "Bolton clearly has a different position - and he seems to be the one writing the administration's policy on Tehran. Unfortunately at the moment it seems to me that the US's Iran policy has a very clear author and that author is not the president of the United States."
Merkel felt unwell while she greeted Zelensky outside the chancellery amid hot weather in Berlin. The two leaders were listening to a band, playing national anthems of the two countries, when Merkel started shaking and swaying around a little, footage from the scene shows.
Following the anthems, Merkel managed to get herself together and was seen walking quickly alongside Zelensky into the chancellery. The German leader later told reporters that she has fully recovered after drinking several glasses of water.
"Since then I have drunk at least three glasses of water - I obviously needed that and so I'm doing very well now," she said.
Former CIA technician Joshua Schulte, who leaked documents confirming the CIA can spy on people through their "smart" appliances, along with a mind-boggling array of other sophisticated hacking tools, "smuggled contraband cellphones into the [Metropolitan Correctional Center], created encrypted email accounts and secret social media accounts, and drafted misleading 'articles' for public dissemination that were not only fraught with misinformation but also contained classified information," a US government memorandum filed Monday claims. The memo adds that Schulte has "gone to extraordinary lengths... to try to blackmail the Government into releasing him by disclosing and threatening to disclose more classified information."
Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman filed to block Schulte's request to end the extreme restrictions - including solitary confinement - placed on him in prison, arguing Schulte has only himself to blame for the harsh measures, which forbid contact with anyone outside his immediate family and lawyer.

US Navy aircraft carrier the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea, June 3, 2019.
The IRIB television channel quoted Iranian Admiral and Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani as saying that Tehran is in charge of security in the Gulf.
"We have always said we guarantee the security of the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz," Ali Shamkhani was quoted as saying by the state broadcaster IRIB.
Mr Shamkhani also called on US forces to leave the area.
"We repeat our stance and call on U.S. forces to finish their presence in the region as they are the main source of crisis and instability."
Comment: See also:
- Convenient 'tanker attacks' as US seeks war with Iran
- Another false-flag: Two more oil tankers attacked in Gulf of Oman, possibly with torpedoes - UPDATES
- US accuses Iran of sabotaging Saudi tankers
- Tankers incident in Gulf of Oman - Is it an invitation to war?
- Trump loses big: The axis of Western hegemony just overplayed their hand against Iran















Comment: See also: