Puppet Masters
British-born Nimmo's latest media appearance is in the recent Sunday Times article that names and shames Sputnik radio journalists working at its Edinburgh bureau, and discusses their role in "amplifying" last month's leaks from the Institute of Statecraft. The latter is the body that oversaw Integrity Initiative, the covert Foreign Office-funded psyops outfit engaged in anti-Kremlin activities worldwide.
Wheeled out to comment was a non-specific "defence analyst" by the name of Ben Nimmo, who duly declared that Sputnik is "an instrument of Russian state power, not an independent journalism outlet."
One fact that wasn't mentioned - Nimmo is himself a senior fellow at the Institute of Statecraft. This isn't some secret information obtained from a hack, but is proudly written in Nimmo's bio on the site of the NATO-affiliated Atlantic Council, his chief place of employment. So, not only does Nimmo have an undeclared agenda, but the (partial) subject of the story is allowed to comment on it as an outside authority.
The report on Saif al-Islam's contacts with the Kremlin is part of a larger story about Russia's role in the war-torn country, which was disintegrated after the NATO-backed uprising toppled Gaddafi in 2011. The long-time leader was summarily executed while his son Saif al-Islam spent years as a prisoner of militias in the western Libyan city of Zintan. The younger Gaddafi has long declared his intention to run for Libyan presidency.
"Our position is that no one should be isolated and excluded from a constructive political role," Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov told RIA Novosti on Monday, in response to the report. "Saif al-Islam has the backing of specific tribes in Libya and all this should be part of the overall political process."
Comment: See also:
- Gaddafi's son, Saif Al-Islam, can unite Libyans in the national interest - Saif's lawyer tells RT
- Saif al-Islam Gaddafi to run for President of Libya in 2018
- Egyptian referendum for Libyan exiles shows 92% support for Dr. Saif Al Islam Ghadafi's presidential bid
- Saif al-Islam Gaddafi reveals future plans for Libya in preparation for election later this year
- Dr. Saif al-Islam Gaddafi: Memorandum on fabrications against the Libyan state, leadership and army
- Libya: Voter registration soars as Saif al Islam Ghaddafi enters presidential race
Sergey Lavrov is used to defending his homeland against international lines of inquiry. But last week he was ambushed by different, supposedly friendlier interlocutors - two correspondents from the country's tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda, led by the former 'bad girl' of Russian journalism, war reporter and columnist Darya Aslamova.
Their lengthy sit-down chat produced likely the most colorful (and oddest) interview Lavrov has given ever since he was appointed Russia's envoy to the UN back in 1994.
Aslamova suggests that Russia should recognize Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics in eastern Ukraine.
Lavrov: And then what?
Aslamova: Then we defend our territory that we recognized, help our fraternal nation.
Lavrov: And you want to lose the rest of Ukraine, leaving it to the neo-Nazis?
Comment: North Star: Acting in the present and serving true to a calling rooted in a noble purpose, aligning with a compelling vision and ensuring all action stems from this focus. Mr. Lavrov has this wisdom.
The losses add to last week's low performance, in what seems like the index's worst week since the 2008 financial crisis.
"The presence of this warship is insignificant to us," Iran's deputy army chief for coordination affairs, Habibollah Sayyari said. He promised that the military won't allow the Nimitz-class warship to come near Iranian territorial waters in the Persian Gulf.
The high-ranking official explained that the US navy was allowed to sail in international waters near the Islamic Republic, just as the Iranian navy could sail in the Atlantic Ocean near the US.
Yet, Iran is ready to repel any action the US Navy might be planning. "They do not have the courage or ability to take any measures against us. We have enough capabilities to stand against their actions and we have fully rehearsed for that," he added.
US district judge Beryl Howell in Washington ruled that North Korea should pay damages to Fred and Cindy Warmbier, the parents of the University of Virginia student.
Warmbier's parents sued North Korea in April over their son's death. The 22-year-old student died after being imprisoned in North Korea from January 2016 until he was returned to the United States in a coma in June 2017. He died a few days later and an Ohio coroner said the cause was lack of oxygen and blood to the brain.
Warmbier was a University of Virginia student who was visiting North Korea with a tour group when he was arrested and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor in March 2016 on suspicion of stealing a propaganda poster.
The judgment is largely a symbolic victory for now, since there is no mechanism to force North Korea to pay.
Comment: Controversy surrounds the imprisonment and death of Otto Warmbier, see also:
- N. Korea releases American student Otto Warmbier, now in coma
- U.S. coroner: No evidence North Korea tortured U.S. prisoner Otto Warmbier
- Summit spoiler: Parents of Otto Warmbier sue Pyongyang for torturing son to death despite lack of evidence
- US House passes the 'Otto Warmbier' sanctions against North Korea, harshest ever
- Otto Warmbier's death is being exploited for propaganda purposes by western media

French President Emmanuel Macron and Elysee senior security officer Alexandre Benalla arrive at an elematary school in Berd'huis, France, April 12, 2018
Benalla, who lost his job after his beating of a protester prompted the French president's 'Watergate' scandal, went to Chad in style. He traveled on a private jet with half a dozen people and stayed in a luxury Hilton hotel in the capital N'Djamena. But it was his reported meeting with the brother of the Chadian president Oumar Déby, who is also in charge of country's Directorate-General of Strategic Reserves, that raised the questions.
Comment:
- Alexandre Benalla, the Rambo of Macron's 'Watergate'
- Elysee Palace cover-up as Macron bodyguard caught on camera beating up protesters
- 'Let them come and get me': Macron protects bodyguard over violent May Day scandal
French intellectuals livid after watchdog blacklists everyone criticizing Macron-Benalla scandal as 'Russophiles'
The story published on Sunday by one of the most respectable British newspapers is your usual attack on Russia and its foreign outreach efforts, described, of course, as propaganda. Technically it reports on the controversy over Integrity Initiative, the UK-funded psyop pushing London-favored narratives under the guise of fighting 'Russian disinformation'. But it also focuses on the British-based branch of Sputnik, a news website and internet radio station funded by Moscow.
Comment: Honorable members of the press have come to RT's defense:
On Sunday, British newspaper the Times published the names and photographs of eight people working for the local branch of Russian news agency, Sputnik.Sputnik employees hit back:
"I would call it harassment," British journalist Neil Clark said.
Considering the steady stream of Russia-bashing in the UK media, revealing employees' identities like that is "tantamount to incitement" as it "might put those people in danger," he argued.Speaking to RT, the journalist noted that the Times along with its sister publication, the Sunday Times had "waged a war against Russian media for a number of years," with its goal being to "get Sputnik closed down." He explained that the outlet's actions fall in line with the general attitude the mainstream media harbors against Russian media operating in the UK. Both Sputnik and RT often are accused of being 'propaganda' vehicles and depicted by the British press as engaging in 'information warfare' against the UK.McCarthyism on steroids is what we've got at the moment against Russian media.
The story in the Times came a month after hackers, claiming to be part of the Anonymous group, began dumping documents, reportedly belonging to shadowy Scottish-based think tank Institute for Statecraft (IFS). The leaked documents revealed how the IFS' state-funded Integrity Initiative managed a covert 'network' of officials, journalists and public figures involved in combating so-called 'Russian propaganda' in the UK and overseas.
- UK-funded 'Integrity Initiative' Exposed Infiltrating European Media Through Fake News Factories
- Documents Expose British Government Covert Anti-Russian Propaganda and Truth Behind Skripal Case
- MP demands public inquiry into Tory funding of Integrity Initiative, the 'so-called-think-tank dealing in disinformation'
The revelations caused uproar within the Labour Party whose MPs accused the IFS of waging a slander campaign against their party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, under the guise of fighting so-called disinformation from Moscow and demanded an official probe.
Neil Clark said that it was an important story which didn't get much coverage in the UK outside of the Russian news agencies.All proper media outlets should be reporting on these leaks. But they're not. The Times and the Sunday [Times] are going after those media outlets which have reported on them.
Journalistically this is appalling.
Employees of Sputnik news agency were appalled when a British paper revealed their names and photos under the headline 'Kremlin stooge' but say it falls in line with the fervent Russia-bashing trend in the UK media.
The employees mentioned varied from reporters to management to a person in charge of the IT department. The outlet was referred to as a "Kremlin stooge" in the story's headline and the piece cited a politician who claimed that Sputnik actively seeks to "destabilize" the country.
Johanna Ross, a producer at Sputnik, experienced "a bit of a shock" having seen her face printed on the pages of one of Britain's leading papers. It was especially saddening that her profile was featured under the 'Kremlin stooge' headline.
"But it's hardly surprising given the anti-Russian sentiment prevalent in all UK newspapers," Ross told RT.Johanna's colleague, Daniel Powell was also "annoyed" to learn that the Times included him in the 'stooge list.' The paper was "being foolish and disrespectful to the staff," Powell, said. He believes it is the controversies plaguing British domestic politics that make Russian-owned outlets easy targets.It's certainly isn't nice to see yourselves being put up there as some kind of identity parade of a fearsome kind of criminals as if you've done something wrong.The Times piece targeting Sputnik followed a number of leaks by a group - supposedly associated with Anonymous - about a controversial Scottish-based think tank, the Institute for Statecraft (IFS).It forms part of the anti-Russian agenda perpetuated by the government as a deflection tactic from Brexit and other issues.
The leaked files revealed how the IFS' Integrity Initiative used taxpayers' money to manage a covert 'network' of public figures and engaged in Europe-wide meddling under the guise of fighting so-called 'Russian propaganda.'
A report in the Times emphasized the "mounting suspicion" that a cyber-attack on the Institute for Statecraft was ordered by none other than the Kremlin. That assumption was largely based on the fact that RT and Sputnik were among the first to cover the issue.
Those working for Russian-owned news agencies have "done nothing wrong" by reporting on the IFS leaks, journalist Luc Rivet told RT, because the story is important and something the citizens should know about.
Sputnik producer Johanna Ross doesn't feel discouraged from covering such topics either.This very much indicates that we're doing something right here. It's certainly not going to dissuade us from investigating the Integrity Initiative more.
The danger of conflict stems from NATO ally Turkey viewing the US pullout as an opportunity to launch an offensive on Syrian Kurdish separatists. Also, American ally Israel has warned that it will fill the "void" left by US forces in order to attack Iranian-backed militia in Syria.
It almost goes without saying that neither Syrian government forces nor the Iranian military will hardly tolerate the above putative offensives without taking counter-measures. It's not hard to imagine therefore how Syria could become a new battleground - just when the eight-year war against jihadist anti-government militants was coming to an end.
The irony about this precarious situation is that the possible flare-up in violence is coming from US allies, Turkey and Israel, not from remnant terror groups affiliated with Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) and Nusra Front.
Paul, who, like other lawmakers, headed home for the holidays amid an ongoing partial government shutdown, has been using his spare time to make jabs at a few "people in Washington," sparing neither fellow senator, Trump advisor, nor the president himself.













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