Puppet Masters
Washington announced the partial evacuation of its embassy in Baghdad as well as a consulate in Erbil in Iraqi Kurdistan on Wednesday, citing heightened tension in the region. Hours later, Germany and the Netherlands suspended their missions to train Iraqi troops. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had earlier warned that "Iranian activities" endanger American sites and soldiers stationed in the country.
Are the latest moves a sign that the US is preparing for military action against Iran, are they just a precaution, or do they signal something about a shift in the security situation on the ground in Iraq?
'Preparing for instability'

Norwegian oil tanker Andrea Victory, one of the four tankers damaged in alleged "sabotage attacks." e
Furthermore, as we predicted would happen on Sunday, this "official assessment", was the first suggestion by any nation that Iran was responsible for the attack and follows a series of U.S. warnings against "aggression" by Iran or its allies and proxies against military or commercial vessels in the region. Some more details from the WSJ:
Comment: As noted in Iran squeezed between imperial psychos and European cowards while Iran knows the US may not be capable of all out war, or even the kind of economic warfare it has in mind, it does know that there are some in the US that are seriously unhinged:
Marandi, ominously, sees "further escalation" ahead: "Iranians have been preparing for war with the Unites States ever since the Iraq invasion in 2003. After what they've seen in Libya, in Syria, Yemen, Venezuela, they know that the Americans and Europeans are utterly brutal.See also:
- Iran: In preparation of the 'battle space'
- Pepe Escobar: The Eagle, the Bear and the Dragon
- Paul Craig Roberts: Trump is being set-up for war with Iran
- Alastair Crooke: Waivers over - Bolton gets his way
- Envoy Hadi: Baghdad refuses Washington the use of its territory in war against Iran
Maduro's spy chief, Gen. Christopher Figuera, and Cesar Omaña, a 39-year-old Venezuelan businessman based in Miami, were trying to seal a deal hashed out over weeks with Maikel Moreno, the chief justice, according to one of the participants in the meeting. Figuera and Omaña were part of the plan to force Maduro out, but they needed Moreno's help.
Moreno, sitting before an ashtray laden with the stubs of Cuban cigars, appeared to be having doubts. The 53-year-old jurist voiced concerns about Juan Guaidó, the U.S.-backed opposition leader who would become the nation's interim president if the plot succeeded.
Then, according to the participant, Moreno offered another candidate to "temporarily" lead the broken country - himself.
"In the end, he was trying to safeguard his own power play," one senior opposition figure said.
Comment: See also:
- Venezuelan Supreme Court seeks to strip Juan Guaido's immunity
- Venezuelan Supreme Court targets opposition leader Guaido with travel ban, bank account freezes
- Failure of Venezuelan coup has officials and MSM desperately spinning explanations
- Pompeo in meltdown over the arrest of Venezuelan coup-backer Zambrano
- Pence: US has removed all sanctions on Venezuelan military official who joined Guaido (only one?)
- Where's the coup? EU suddenly quieter as Guaido's influence wanes with another failureI
- MF execs refuse to recognize Guaido as Venezuela's 'interim president' - a twist the US didn't see coming
- Opposition leader Juan Guaido is stripped of immunity by Venezuela's Constituent Assembly
- US puppet Juan Guaidó called for protests but nobody showed up
"As you know, just a few days ago, I had the pleasure of talking with the US president on the phone," Putin told Pompeo on Tuesday, as the two met in Sochi.
"I got the impression that the [US] president was inclined to re-establish Russian-American relations and contacts to resolve together the issues that are of mutual interest to us. For our part, we have more than once said that we would also like to fully restore relations, and we hope that now the conditions for that have been met."Pompeo agreed that there are matters of mutual interest between the US and Russia, where both countries can work together productively.
The Russian president listed security issues, preventing the spread of weapons of mass destruction, environmental issues and economic issues such as oil production as some of the areas of mutual interest.
In a series of editorials and op-ed articles published Monday, Chinese state media slammed what it labeled the Trump administration's "greed and arrogance" and called for a "people's war" against it. Beijing's state-run media effectively serves as a mouthpiece for the Communist Party.
The nationalistic Global Times tabloid wrote in a Chinese-language editorial carried by Xinhua News Agency:
"The most important thing is that in the China-US trade war, the US side fights for greed and arrogance ... and morale will break at any point. The Chinese side is fighting back to protect its legitimate interests.
"The trade war in the US is the creation of one person and one administration, but it affects that country's entire population. In China, the entire country and all its people are being threatened. For us, this is a real 'people's war.'"
Comment: See also:
- US-China trade war: Trump imposes $60bn in tariffs - China vows to retaliate - US says 'buy more American gas' to avoid more tariffs
- Trump threat to China: $100B more in tariffs in response to Beijing's 'unfair retaliation'
- US violates trade deal truce, imposes $50 bln in tariffs on China
- Trump threatens China with $267 billion in additional tariffs

(L) Austrian President Alexander van der Bellen; (R) Journalists look at the ruins of Saddam Hussein's palace in Iraq.
Speaking at a joint press conference with the Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi on Wednesday, Van der Bellen slammed the US sanctions against Iran by saying that such policies "do not help international relations" and only erode the system of global treaties.
"The fact that the US withdrew from the Iranian nuclear deal undermines trust in this agreement in general," he told journalists.
It is particularly provocative that the US reimposed its sanctions against Iran after pulling out of the deal and threatened the companies, which continued to work with Tehran, with punishment.The Austrian leader also admitted that Europe has so far failed to "come up with a mechanism that would help companies effectively circumvent" the US restrictions. He also said that creating such an instrument is a "very laborious" task.

Iranians burn the picture of President Donald Trump during a protest against Trump's decision to walk out of a 2015 nuclear deal, in Tehran.
While Moscow believes the deal - officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) - should be preserved, it can be saved only through the efforts of all its signees, Putin said during a press conference Wednesday after meeting Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen. "Russia is not a firefighting team, we cannot go around and save everything that does not fully depend on us," Russia's president stated.
He added that saying such an "undiplomatic thing might hurt the ears of our European friends." Putin squarely put the blame for the dismantling of the JCPOA on the US while blasting the EU's inability to actually do something about saving the deal.
"The Americans have withdrawn from the deal, the agreement is crumbling and European countries are unable to do anything to save it, unable to actually work with Iran and compensate for [its] economic losses."
While the move would be partly self-defeating for China, it would also have devastating consequences for global financial markets, Sourabh Gupta, a senior fellow at the Institute for China-America Studies in Washington told RT.
"In that case, there would be absolute chaos in global currency markets, and thereafter in global equity markets," he said, adding that with regards to interest rates "after significant initial volatility, the effects would be somewhat muted." The concern though is with financial market sentiment, not specifically interest rates, Gupta said.
China currently owns $1.13 trillion in US Treasuries. That's a fraction of the total $22 trillion in US debt outstanding but 17.7 percent of the various securities held by foreign governments, according to data from the Treasury and the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. Beijing has been pulling back from its role in the US bond market, having cut holdings nearly four percent over the past 12 months, but it still takes the top spot among America's foreign creditors.
'Attack Iran to get reelected': Twitter discovers Trump 'warned' of Iran conflict plot - but Obama's
Some of Trump's tweets from Obama's first term are coming back to haunt him again in light of the eerie similarities between the warnings and the current aggressive moves by his own administration.

National Security Advisor John Bolton and his wish list
"Mercifully John Bolton doesn't command the military," Carlson said bitingly - however, the question of how strong his influence on President Donald Trump's foreign policy remains.
Although President Trump was elected in part based on his turn-away from the traditional neo-con interventionist outlook, his national security advisor pick has been as hawkish as ever since assuming office last year.












Comment: And the US may have just found its excuse: "Likely": US accuses Iran of attack on Saudi tankers.
See also: