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Despite West's failed attempts at isolation, Russia is becoming an "indispensable nation"

Kremlin Moscow
© Sputnik/ Evgeniya Novozhenova
Kremlin, Moscow
While the Western press is trying to ignore the fact that Moscow is playing an increasingly important role in international affairs, Russia is fast becoming "the indispensable nation," however incredible it may sound, American journalist Deena Stryker notes.

When Moscow stepped in in Syria, a chorus of Western pundits predicted that the Russian intervention would definitely become a "quagmire" for the Kremlin.

However, since nothing of that has happened and Russia brought most of its aircraft home from Syria, Washington's Cassandras have reluctantly changed their rhetoric and pretended to be "surprised," international expert, author and journalist Deena Stryker writes in her article for New Eastern Outlook online magazine.

"'Putin is bad' was replaced by 'You never know what this guy is going to do next'," Stryker notes.

Then Palmyra was liberated from Daesh by Bashar al-Assad's Syrian Arab Army with the Russian Aerospace Forces' assistance.

Bad Guys

Cameron's hypocrisy exposed after letter emerges showing PM pushed for offshore trusts to be shielded from EU regulations

David Cameron
© Jonathan Ernst / Reuters
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron
Besieged Prime Minister David Cameron is under fire yet again after a 2013 letter was unearthed showing he shielded offshore trusts from an EU crackdown.

The letter has come to light as the Tory PM faces mounting pressure over his late father Ian Cameron's offshore trust Blairmore Holdings, details of which were exposed in the Panama Papers leak.

In the 2013 letter to then-European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, Cameron argued that trusts should not be subject to the same transparency rules as companies.

The EU had planned to publish a centralized register of offshore trusts' main owners as part of a broad crackdown on secretive financial practices. Cameron's letter, unearthed by the Financial Times on Thursday, said an important distinction must be drawn between different financial entities.

Comment: Cameron is another in a long line of politicians who act completely opposite to the rhetoric they spout to the media and public. People should know not to trust a single word that comes out of his mouth.


Yoda

Putin: Panama Papers another attempt by West to destabilize Russia

putin
© Sergey Guneev / Sputnik
The Russian part of the so-called Panama Papers leak that claims to reveal offshore financial activities of a number of public figures is not about corruption, but aims to destabilize Russia, says President Vladimir Putin.

"So here we've got some friend of the Russian president, he has done something, probably there is an aspect of corruption to it... But what aspect [exactly]? Well, there is none," Putin said on Thursday, addressing a media forum in St. Petersburg. He also pointed out that he himself had not been mentioned in the leaked documents.

"You are all journalists here and you know what an informational product is... They've plowed through offshore [funds]. [Putin] is not there, there is nothing to talk about. But the task has been assigned! So what have they done? They've created an informational product by having found some acquaintances and friends," the president told the media forum.

Yoda

Putin: No one can hide the role Russia played in combating terrorism in Syria

putin
© Sergey Guneev / Sputnik
No matter how hard you try, it's impossible to cover up the role and importance of Russia's actions to combat terrorism in Syria, Russian President Vladimir Putin told "Truth and Justice," a media forum of regional and local media in St. Petersburg.

"No matter how much one tries to belittle the role, the importance of our actions to combat terrorism, to silence these events is simply not possible," Putin said on Thursday, adding that the desire to hush up Russian successes is "still there,"RIA Novosti quoted the Russian president as saying.

It's too early to talk about radical change in Syria, but one thing is certain - Russia helped strengthen the state system in the country, Putin said.

"To say that a fundamental change has taken place there is still too early at the moment. But [to say] that we have fulfilled our task - that's quite obvious. Our task was first and foremost to strengthen Syria's statehood and legitimate state institutions," Putin told the forum, according to TASS.

Rocket

Turkey shells Kurdish journalists in Syria

turkey shelling
© Ruptly
A group of journalists in Syria are claiming they have been fired on by the Turkish army while filming a military operation in a Turkish border town from the Syrian side.

Freelance reporters were in the Syrian town of Qamishli, filming an army operation in Nusaybin - a Turkish town several hundred meters away from their position.

The footage they gathered on Tuesday allegedly shows the Turkish army shelling Nusaybin, the population of which is predominately Kurdish. In the video, plumes of black smoke can be seen rising high above the town's buildings, with sounds of explosions being heard in the distance. Army vehicles and tanks reportedly belonging to Turkey can be seen roaming the streets of Nusaybin.

The journalists, who are said to be part of the Kurdish "Free Communication Units," claim they then came under fire in what they believe to be a deliberate attack from the Turkish side.


Comment: Imagine if this happened on the U.S. border.


Yoda

Why did Putin create a new paramilitary National Guard?

russian troops training
© Sputnik/ Sergey Pivovarov
In a sweeping reorganization of Russia's internal security apparatus, President Vladimir Putin has announced the creation of the National Guard - a powerful new paramilitary unit charged with combating terrorism and organized crime and maintaining social order. Why did the president decide to create the new unit now? Sputnik investigates.

On Tuesday, in a meeting with the heads of Russia's major internal defense and law enforcement agencies, President Putin announced the creation of a new federal executive body - the National Guard, which will be charged with fighting terrorism and organized crime, and with helping to maintain peace and order inside the country.

Formed out of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the National Guard, according to the president, will continue to work "in close cooperation" with the ministry.

For reference, the Ministry of Internal Affairs includes Russia's police and traffic police; the Internal Troops, meanwhile, constitute a gendarmerie-like paramilitary force.

Red Flag

Indonesia to install missile defense system in South China Sea

Su-30 fighters
© Sputnik/ Mikhail Tsiganov
In the latest sign of ongoing hostilities in the South China Sea, Indonesia has announced plans to install its own air defense system in the region.

Nearly $5 trillion in trade passes annually through the highly contested region of the the South China Sea. China lays claim to most of the area, but there are conflicting claims by Vietnam, Brunei, Taiwan, Malaysia, and Indonesia.

According to meeting transcripts provided to IHS Jane, the Indonesian military is set to take steps to assert its own territorial claims.

The Indonesian Air Force (Tentara Nasional Indonesia - Angkatan Udara, or TNI-AU) will station four special forces units, known as the Korps Pasukan Khas (PASKHAS), on Pulau Natuna Besar island in the South China Sea.

These units will be equipped with an air defense system known as the Oerlikon Skyshield. It features a 35mm multirole cannon that can fire 1,000 rounds per minute, as well as precision-guided projectiles that can take down aircraft.

Comment: The US is again operating under double standards. They criticize China for protecting a local strategic area, but also pressure their imperial puppet states like Indonesia and the Philippines to build active military structures there. China has no choice but to protect itself:


Footprints

Puerto Rico thumbs its nose at Wall Street -- suspends all payments on public debt

wall street
In a devastating blow to its megabank creditors, Puerto Rico's Legislature approved a bill on Wednesday that suspended the US territory's debt payments until at least January 2017.

Since 2000, Wall Street has conned the Puerto Rican government into a massive black hole of debt. After Puerto Rico handed them control of their federal bond sales, Wall Street executives tacked on hundreds of millions in fees for their "services," greasing the skids for the island's financial dismay.

Along with suspending debt payments, the legislation suspended payment on all general obligation bonds which happen to be guaranteed by the island's constitution. As Bloomberg previously reported:

Document

Panama Papers: Putin smear backfires on Britain

Putin
© Sputnik/Michael Kilmentyev
The deluge of leaked files on tax dodging by the global elite appeared to be aimed at smearing Russian President Vladimir Putin. But it is the British authorities who have ended up being "dangerously exposed".

When news headlines on the s0-called Panama Papers were circulated in Western mainstream media earlier this week, the main focus was on speculation that Putin was somehow implicated in scamming millions from tax avoidance.

For more discerning viewers, the sensationalist speculations had the hallmark features of another wild-eyed smear-job. All hype and no substance, just as in many other previous attempts by the Western media to blacken the Russian leader's reputation — based on nothing else but prejudice and innuendo. Recall the downing of Malaysian airliner MH17 and Putin's "gunslinger walk" as but two such tawdry episodes.
Despite the convoluted hype, the Russian leader was not even named in the latest files leaked from the Panama-based law firm, Mossack-Fonseca. The firm specializes in setting up shell companies for rich clients in overseas jurisdictions, thus helping these clients evade tax in their home countries.
Western media outlets predictably leapt to racy implications about Putin because, among the thousands of clients named, some apparently had a personal friendship with the Russian president. The Kremlin dismissed the speculation of financial impropriety as "more fibs" that the Western media periodically indulges in in order to smear Putin.

Turns out, however, that the seeming attempt at smear has gone awry, and instead has backfired badly, with gooey egg running off the face of British Prime Minister David Cameron.

Comment: Britain, along with the U.S., would certainly love to have Russia a powerless state, unable to challenge their efforts at global hegemony. It appears the smear campaign has backfired.

See also:


Chess

Putin the Middle East dealmaker: How his ambition reshaped the world order

Putin
© Mikhail Klimentyev / Reuters
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Despite lacking the economic and military resources available to the US, Vladimir Putin has become a Middle East dealmaker and has returned Russia to the top geopolitical table through the Syrian campaign, according to an article published in the Financial Times. In his article published in FT on Wednesday, Eugene Rumer, the director of Carnegie's Russia and Eurasia Program, claims that the notion that Russia is "withdrawn from the international arena" is proving to be wrong.

Russia's ruling elite is no longer pursuing economic stability as the sole means of political survival, Rumer acknowledged. "Syria shows that Russia, written off in the 1990s as a mere regional power, has a capable military and, given the opportunity, the will to use it," Rumer said, recalling others' statements about Russia being "a hollow superpower" with "no real strategy behind its overseas adventures."

Comment: Putin: 'Not important how I'm called, only what I do for my country'.See also: