Puppet Masters
Azerbaijan launched a full-blown attack on multiple positions on the Nagorno-Karabagh (Artsakh, NKR) contact line overnight on April 1-2. The Azerbaijani army employed tanks, military helicopters, drones, and various caliber weapons in an assault targeting the Line of Contact on the southern, southeastern, and northeastern fronts. The NKR Defense Army retaliated, and, according to the NKR Defense Ministry Twitter page, brought down two helicopters and two drones, and destroyed three tanks. There are multiple casualties on both sides. Civilians have also been targeted. According to reports, 12-year-old Vaghinag Grigoryan was killed in the Marduni region, while two other children were wounded, from a Grad BM-21 multiple rocket launcher attack.
During an emergency meeting of Armenia's National Security Council held on the evening of April 2, Armenia's President Serge Sarkisian announced that as a result of the attacks, the Armenian side suffered 18 casualties, while 35 people were injured. Azerbaijan's losses—including air force, personnel, and armored vehicles—were "significant," he added, according to PanArmenian. Azerbaijan has reported 12 combatant casualties, although the NKR Defense Ministry says the Azerbaijani side has 200 losses.

Volunteers at the collecting station in the town of Askeran in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Comment: The Armenian MOD saw this ceasefire what it was: a lie and a trap. It's just an excuse to "self-defense" the hell out of the Armenians, following the tried-and-tested Israeli model.
The fighting is ongoing on the frontline in Nagorny-Karabakh, Armenia's Defence Ministry said, as cited by TASS.
Martakert region head, Vladik Khachataryan, said shelling is continuously ongoing from the eastern side. Several shells apparently fired by Azeri forces hit Martakert town center. In the last 24 hours, the town has reportedly been hit by 25 shells.
Comment: Russian State Duma VP Sergei Zheleznyak described these recent events as provocations from a "third force" -- "the same warmongering people who fuel conflict in the Middle East, Central Asia and the Caucasus, unhappy with the success achieved by Moscow and its Syrian allies in keeping peace in the Arab country and the struggle against terrorism." Hmm, wonder whom he could be referring to here! "At night in the mountains you only need to have a small, well-trained group that, aware of the balance of power, stirs up reciprocal fire in 'response'."
Comment: Armenia had nothing to gain by capturing any more of Nagorny-Karabakh than they already had. It is in their interests to maintain the status quo. Azerbaijan, on the other hand, wants back the "occupied territories". But the Azeris don't have much to gain either -- there's no guarantee they'd be successful in any major military offensive. So is this just a bit of chest-thumping to remind the international community? Or is something like Zheleznyak's "third force" at work here?
NATO is trying to cozy up to Armenia in order to encircle Russia. Did the Armenians refuse one of their 'offers'?
H.E. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
President of the Republic of Turkey
T.C. Cumhurbaşkanlığı Genel Sekreterliği
06689 Çankaya, Ankara
Turkey
Dear President Erdogan,
Welcome to Washington. Your visit comes at a critical moment in U.S.-Turkish relations.
Within the past decade, many of Turkey's friends here were optimistic about your country's potential to become a vibrant and stable democracy as well as an increasingly strong and capable U.S. ally. The salutary role Turkey can play, regionally and globally, has been demonstrated by the hospitality your country has extended to millions of refugees. Recent developments in Turkey, however, are deeply troubling. Today we would like to air the concerns of Turkey's many friends in the United States.
Comment: Ouch. The big "but". In other words, it looks like Turkey has a shortage of democracy. Does that mean it's time for the U.S. to send a shipment of its 'best' export?
Over the past year, more than a thousand people have been charged with the crime of insulting you. Hundreds of academics have been investigated or faced disciplinary proceedings for questioning your government's anti-terror policies. Last year, the offices of Hurriyet, an independent paper, were attacked and set on fire by a mob led by a member of your former Justice and Development Party (AKP), a well-known columnist was attacked by thugs outside his home, and two editors of Cumhuriyet were arrested. More recently, your government has orchestrated the takeover of the popular daily Zaman. Why shouldn't people in the European Union and the United States be concerned about the prospects for a free media in Turkey?
Comment: The mainstream press in the West is equally suppressed, but no need to mention that... Are these folks truly outraged at the curtailment of freedom of speech? Hardly. But the overt, ham-fisted way that Erdogan has gone about it does provide a great pretext for pontificating.
The self-proclaimed Islamic caliphate, unlike other terrorist groups, generates its income locally. The militants mostly make money from taxes, extortion, kidnappings, oil smuggling and private donations. These sources have recently been affected, with Daesh losing territories, fighters, civilians, hard cash, oil fields and smuggling routes.Although many have warned against predicting Daesh's swift financial demise, more reports have emerged pointing to the group's major financial troubles. This might be indirect evidence, but it is nevertheless telling.
While senior Daesh commanders are said to have clashed over allegations of corruption, mismanagement and theft, some fighters have not been paid at all, the Washington Post reported, citing US counterterrorism officials.
Comment: One can't help but enjoy the irony.
Having one Veterans Affairs Secretary two years ago resign replaced by another - both West Point graduates - still isn't getting the job done. Current Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert McDonald, no sooner appointed and on the job out in LA with television cameras rolling talking it up with homeless veterans, he lied claiming he served in the Special Forces. Funny how cadets get through four years at the academy never lying, cheating or stealing, but once they graduate their honor code goes right out the window... like Petraeus who graduated a year behind me lying to the FBI telling them he never violated top secret clearance as CIA director when he'd given his mistress binders chock full of classified material. McDonald graduated two years behind me.
Nearly two years ago the Phoenix Veterans Medical Center came under immediate fire when it was discovered that nearly 40 veterans had died while on a phantom waiting list among 1700 other veterans yet to be electronically scheduled much less ever seen by actual medical staff. A hospital whistleblower contacted the local press to trigger the biggest veterans scandal in history resulting in mounting pressures to fix the grossly incompetent and corrupted system entrusted to care for the medical needs of men and women who served our nation honorably and earned the right to be taken care of by the country they all were willing to die for. Now two years later they are still dying still apparently waiting for medical treatment on still forgotten waiting lists. But today some are choosing to die by choice making their bold yet desperate final statement just to show America that the promises to correct the corrosive system caught not caring for them a couple years ago still doesn't care. This latest incident is the second high profile suicidal act in as many weeks dramatically taking place on VA grounds.

Panama law firm Mossack Fonseca is the world’s fourth biggest provider of offshore services, having for more than 300,000 companies.
370 reporters from 100 media organisations have spent a year analysing and verifying the documents.
The hidden wealth of some of the world's most prominent leaders, politicians and celebrities is to be revealed imminently by the leak of millions of documents showing the way the rich exploit secretive offshore tax regimes like Panama's.
The Guardian, one of several newspapers working with global partners, said journalists from more than 80 countries have been reviewing 11.5 million files leaked from the database of Mossack Fonseca, the world's fourth biggest offshore law firm.
The leak is one of the biggest ever - larger than the US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks in 2010, and the secret intelligence documents given to journalists by Edward Snowden in 2013.
A Maltese connection will surely surface with energy minister Konrad Mizzi having been outed as having used a Panamanian shell company, Hearnville, to hide his beneficial ownership; the company is owned by the trustees of his New Zealand trust.
The aircraft and troops were sent from the Barnes Air National Guard Base in Massachusetts and the Fresno Air National Guard Base in California for a six-month tour to Iceland's Keflavik and the Dutch Leeuwarden Air Base.
The American fighters "will conduct training alongside NATO allies and partners as part of OAR to strengthen interoperability, demonstrate US commitment to a Europe that is whole, free, at peace, secure, and prosperous and to deter further Russian aggression," the USAF said in a statement.
Why the silence? The answer is simple: business. More specifically, the arms and 'defense' (what an oxymoronic term this has become) business. As we reported yesterday, as Saudi Arabia continues to drop its US and UK-made bombs down on the people of Yemen, the US and UK have cashed-in on sales to the GCC worth at least $33 Billion - in just eleven months according to Defense News.
Comment:
Who is to blame for the tragedy in Yemen?Further reading:
According to official data, this useless war has killed about 5,900 Yemeni civilians, leaving more than 27,800 injured (NGOs say about 30,000 killed Yemenis). Approximately 2,500,000 people have become refugees, with almost 8,000,000 Yemenis in need of drinking water. Hunger and thirst have affected almost 300,000 children; 1,800,000 children have been forced to leave school.
One of the main reasons for such a horrific UN humanitarian catastrophe is the multi-day air strikes of the Arabian coalition. All condemn the bombing of civilian targets, including schools and hospitals, but that does not stop anyone. The coalition uses cluster bombs (which Riyadh itself was forced to admit), while the UN Secretary General warned that the use of such weapons will be considered a war crime.
The UN Group of Experts concluded that many of the Arab coalition airstrikes were systematically carried out on civilian targets in Yemen, which can be considered crimes against humanity.
- Monolithic and Ruthless Conspiracy: The West's Obliteration of Yemen by Covert Means
- US complicit in Saudi slaughter of Yemeni civilians
- Human Rights Watch calls on US, France and UK to end arms sales to Saudi Arabia due to "unlawful civilian deaths" in Yemen
- Blatant disregard for civilian life by US and Saudi Arabia is 'appalling,' says human rights group
- British collusion with brutal Saudi regime war crimes in Yemen continues unabated
This week on Behind the Headlines, we discussed these latest developments on the global stage, along with the dodgy EU-Turkey refugee deal that threatens increasing chaos in Greece, and the ongoing fallout from the Brussels Bombings.
This show aired live on the Sott Radio Network from 12pm-1.30pm EST / 5-6.30pm UTC / 6-7.30pm CET on Sunday April 4th, 2016.
Running Time: 01:30:28
Download: MP3
The article, penned by the influential US newspaper's editorial board, blamed the Ukrainian authorities, including President Petro Poroshenko for failing to deal with corruption and called on Kiev's sponsors to withhold credits until the situation changes.
"Poroshenko seems to have accepted continuing corruption as the price to pay for a modicum of maneuvering room," the Times wrote. "But the president, the prime minister and the parliament must be made to understand that the International Monetary Fund and donor nations, including the United States, cannot continue to shovel money into a corrupt swamp unless the government starts shaping the democratic rule that Ukrainians demanded in their protests."














Comment: The timing of this border skirmish is interesting. With Russian airstrikes and Syrian army advances liberating Palmyra, and thus opening the way to retake all of Syria from 'Islamic State', the worst fighting in this 'frozen' conflict since 1994 combines with the significant build-up of Kiev forces along the Donbass contact line to 'give Russia some things to think about'.
The forces ranged against Russia are nothing if not predictable.