Puppet Masters
The troubling situation in Aleppo, Syria was the subject of an emergency session of the British parliament on Tuesday, during which MPs became particularly heated.
UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson used the debate in the House of Commons to accuse Russia of bombing an aid convoy in Aleppo and called for demonstrations outside the Russian embassy.
This time you can choose between an email showing that Hillary and her foundation took $25 million from Saudi Arabia even through the nation was knowingly funding ISIS:
In addition, parents are forbidden from promoting extremist beliefs in children and forcing them to dress in extremist clothing or symbols. The new law encourages ordinary citizens to look out for such activities. "Any group or person has the right to stop this kind of behavior and report it to the public security authorities," the government said in the rules.
The rules also forbid any form of religious practice in schools. If parents cannot protect their children from extremism and terrorism, and students cannot stay at existing schools, parents must apply to have them go to specialist schools for "rectification." Schools, in turn, are being made responsible for steering students away from separatism and extremism in order to create an atmosphere that "esteems science, seeks the truth, refuses ignorance [and] opposes superstition."
"It was one of the terrorist groups. And we know that, say, the Americans know it too, but prefer to take a different position, to falsely accuse Russia. This is not helping," Putin said at an economic forum in Moscow.
The aid convoy was attacked on the night of September 20. The International Committee of the Red Cross reported 20 civilians killed and 18 vehicles destroyed.
The Pentagon alleged that the convoy was destroyed from the air and that Russian warplanes were present in the area, concluding that it was a Russian strike that was responsible.
Russia denied the accusation and said a US drone was monitoring the convoy, so Washington should know the truth about the attack.
Comment: Once again Putin sheds light on the US anti-Russian propaganda. Hopefully the world is listening and watching.

Former U.S. President Bill Clinton (C) chats with staff members during a tour to Kreyol Essence, a Haitian women owned and operated company in Mirebalais February 23, 2015.
Emails released by ABC News show that the State Department assisted friends of the Clintons in facilitating government contracts and aid groups. Friends of Bill Clinton were flagged for special treatment by the State Department, while others who offered aid were redirected to a general government website.
Comment: Everywhere she goes Hillary leaves a trail of corruption, misery, and destruction.
See also:
- Hillary Clinton's role in Haiti's political chaos
"If we say those things about Russia and Aleppo we must be prepared for what they say about Saudi Arabia and Yemen," she said on Tuesday. "We cannot condemn one and continue selling arms to the other, we cannot call for investigations into one and say to the other that we are happy for them to investigate themselves. We cannot pour scorn on the assurances of one that they have not hit civilian targets while blithely accepting the assurances of the other. Most of all, Mr Speaker, We cannot cry for the people of Aleppo and the suffering they face while turning a blind eye to the million children in Yemen facing starvation."
Thornberry also challenged the government on its eagerness to intervene in the war in Syria, standing firmly against a no-fly zone and arguing for "more statesmanship and less brinkmanship." She insisted that she was "not a pacifist" but added: "Personally I believe that in a multi-playered, multi-faceted civil war such as Syria, the last thing we need is more parties bombing. What we need is a ceasefire and in fact for people to draw back."
The no-fly zone came as a suggestion from her opponent, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who said during the three-hour debate that the "House and our constituents are disgusted by the behavior of Assad and his regime. In Moscow and in Damascus I hope they will hear the message from British MPs that we are willing to consider anything, honestly and practically, that can be done to bring peace and hope back to Syria."
Comment: It's hard to turn down those multi-billion pound arms deals for the safety and wellbeing of countries 'not-British.' Bravo to Thornberry for trying, but Britain lost its conscience centuries ago.
In these latter days, US activity in the Turkey's direction increases, amid normalization of relations between Turkey and Russia. Moreover, this activity is directly proportional to the improvement of Russian-Turkish relations.
Western media and Turkish opposition sources do not stop to report about 'Russian aggression' in Syria. It is already becoming a commonplace. But one of the most popular news in the West is the news about an airstrike, allegedly carried out by Russian aircraft on the place of deployment of the Turkish Special Forces in Syria, which killed several Turkish military.
As usually, the blame for this was laid on Russia, although the Russian Aerospace Forces do not operate in this region (in the north of the Syrian province of Aleppo). According to a tacit agreement between the sides, this area is under control of aircraft of the US-led coalition.
Seven Days in May was based on a book that drew its inspiration from real life American political and military figures in the early 1960s during the Cold War. At that time Right-wing, verging on fascist-leaning generals such as Army General Lyman Lemnitzer the supremo at the Pentagon and Air Force Generals Curtis LeMay and Tommy Powers dominated the Pentagon. A Major General named Edwin Walker actually tried to indoctrinate troops under his command with the teachings of the Right-wing John Birch Society.
It was in the prevailing atmosphere of fervent anti-communism at the time that these generals sought to undermine and even plot to overthrow the government of President John F. Kennedy. This view was not limited to a few senators and journalists of the time. The Kremlin apparently believed this to the extent that it is claimed to have influenced Nikita Khruschev's decision to reach the settlement that he did with Kennedy over the Cuban Missile Crisis. The Soviets feared a US military government would make the issue of a nuclear war not merely a possibility, but one of absolute certainty.
This, experts warn, tremendously increases the risks of a global conflagration sparking off over the conflict in the Middle Eastern country.
On October 8, Russia vetoed a French-drafted Security Council resolution calling for a halt to airstrikes over the city of Aleppo, where the Syrian military is currently engaged in a campaign to liberate eastern sections of the city from a hodgepodge of militant groups.
Germany's Deutsche Bank reportedly failed to reach an agreement with the US on settling a massive fine. The bank is facing a $14 billion fine penalty from the US Justice Department for mis-selling mortgage securities in the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis.
RT: Firstly just to make it clear why has the US imposed such an enormous penalty?
Jim Rogers: The main reason is that the US government is deep in debt. They've got a gigantic deficit - they are desperate for money. They'll try to get it anywhere they can. I can't imagine that Deutsche Bank should be liable for $14 billion, but I'm not involved.
Comment: Deutsche is selling debt in order to raise the required cash:
Germany's biggest bank returned to the US high-grade bond market on Tuesday to sell an additional $1.5 billion worth of debt, offering more than double the yield it paid a year ago. Deutsche raised $3 billion in a bond sale last week.
This has given investors in the troubled bank confidence it can tackle the litigation with the US Department of Justice. ... "If they are able to take $4.5 billion out, this shows there is clearly demand for the name if there is adequate compensation," Reuters quotes one syndicate banker as saying.
According to Bloomberg's sources, this week's deal was at 290 basis points above borrowing benchmarks, while last Friday's was at 300 basis points. "It would be expensive for Deutsche Bank to go to the public market for debt issuance now because it has to pay a significant premium and that may shake confidence among investors," Ben Sy, head of fixed income, currencies and commodities at the private banking arm of JPMorgan Chase in Hong Kong told the media.
"The private debt sale shows they can still access the market for sizable term funding," he added.














Comment: Russian MoD invites UK to prove 'Russophobic' accusation that Moscow hit aid convoy in Aleppo And Putin has the goods: Putin: We know who destroyed aid convoy in Aleppo, US whips up anti-Russian hysteria