Puppet Masters
The departure of White House Staff Secretary Rob Porter earlier this week has sown discord in the West Wing. Trump reportedly had no idea of the abuse allegations leveled against Porter, which is curious because it's assumed that Porter's restraining order and police record of abuse would have popped up in the background checks that are requisite in any White House position.
White House Chief of Staff John Kelly is apparently behind the coverup, as he was a big advocate of Porter in the West Wing, and tried his best to keep the Staff Secretary from leaving. This act of betrayal has put the President in a tough spot: Can he keep trusting John Kelly? Will he pick a new chief of staff?
Unprofessional rhetoric by a number of US politicians hampers practical Russian-US diplomatic work in areas of joint interest, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.
"The dialogue continues. However, the practical work that we maintain with Washington is very often <...> suppressed by rhetoric, which is absolutely horrendous, unprofessional, unprecedented in terms of emotional intensity and hatred. We hear it from across the ocean and we have to respond to it," Maria Zakarova said in an interview with the Izvestia daily, published on the Russian Diplomat's Day.
"The world would support the Armed Forces in #Venezuela if they decide to protect the people & restore democracy by removing a dictator," Florida Senator Rubio wrote.
Rubio's tweets come after Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Thursday hinted at his support for a coup d'etat in Venezuela, as well as more sanctions including an embargo on Venezuela's valuable oil exports.
Comment: People went nuts over Trump's tweet boasting about the size of his nuclear button, demanding he be banned from Twitter for inciting mass violence. Will we see the same with Rubio? We think not. 'Foreign intervention', coups, and the so called war on terror are 'perfectly justified' when the demand comes from liberals.
Gilliam, a retired Navy SEAL and former FBI special agent, spoke of left-wing political corruption across the federal government, specifically identifying the CIA and FBI.
Gilliam recalled that two FBI agents advised him to "think like a liberal" during his FBI entrance exam. "I was told by two FBI agents that did not know each other - I was told, 'Do not go in and take that test as though you are thinking like a SEAL.' In other words, 'If this happened, this is the way it should be done because this is the way a team works, and this is the way an investigation should be carried out.' They said, 'Don't do that, you'll fail. Go in and think like a liberal.' And that's what I did, and I passed."
Comment: We can the see negative results of Left-bias in all walks of society including government, politics, media, academia, activism and online publications. See also:
- Intellectuals-yet-idiots: Why is the left-leaning anti-Trump 'resistance' so in love with the FBI-CIA-NSA?
- The world is burning while the Western Left quarrells
- Shameless: No Dems, left-leaning publishers or liberal pundits denounce shocking abuses of power specified in FISA memo
- Why the American left fears and hates Dr. Jordan Peterson
- Top five biased left-wing Wikipedia edits of 2017
Rand Paul called out Republicans for becoming the definition of "intellectual dishonesty" by supporting the same spending increases with a Republican in office that they condemned when a Democrat was in office.
"When the Democrats are in power, Republicans appear to be the conservative party. But when Republicans are in power, it seems there is no conservative party," Sen. Rand PaulPresident Trump signed a massive spending bill into law on Friday morning, but it was not until after the Senate heard from one of its biggest critics on untamed government spending, Rand Paul, who accused both Democrats and Republicans in Congress of "spending us into oblivion."
One of the most glaring problems with the two-year budget deal is that it removes existing spending caps and increases the government's discretionary budget by more than $400 billion. The main purpose of Paul's speech was to call for a vote on an amendment to restore the spending caps.
Comment: Regarding Federal spending and budget deficit, see:
- Federal government still in a deficit despite collecting record income taxes
- U.S. govt takes in record taxes in October, still runs $63 bln deficit
- Undercover FBI informant William Campbell has given written testimony to Congressional investigators after an "iron clad" gag order was lifted in October
- Campbell was a highly valued CIA and FBI asset deeply embedded in the Russian nuclear industry while Robert Mueller was the Director of the FBI
- Campbell was required by the Russians, under threat, to launder large sums of money - which allowed the FBI to uncover a massive Russian "nuclear money laundering apparatus"
- He collected over 5,000 documents and briefs over a six year period, some of which detail efforts by Moscow to route money to the Clinton Foundation
- Campbell claims to have video evidence of bribe money related to the Uranium One deal being stuffed into suitcases.
- The Obama FBI knew about the bribery scheme, yet the administration still approved the Uranium One deal.
- To thank him for his service, Campbell was paid $51,000 by FBI officials at a 2016 celebration dinner in Chrystal City
- When it emerged that Campbell had evidence against the Clinton Foundation, a Yahoo News article by Michael Isikoff (of FISA warrant application fame) slammed Campbell as a "disaster" potential witness
Comment: See also:
- Clintons & their friends at FBI begin to feel heat from Uranium One scandal
- FBI undercover informant on Uranium One breaks silence
- Swamp critters all: Mueller, McCabe, Rosenstein involved in prior FBI probe of Uranium One bribes that were concealed by Obama DOJ
- DOJ unseals 11-charge indictment regarding Uranium One scandal
- DOJ begins FBI-agent inquiries into Uranium One, Killary in the crosshairs

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis speaks during the daily press briefing at the White House
Young immigrants who enlisted in the military after receiving temporary legal status will not be deported, Secretary of Defence James Mattis has said.
So-called Dreamers - immigrants who are in America illegally after coming to the country as children - are at the nexus of a political fight over immigration after Donald Trump suspended a programme offering them work permits and a reprieve from deportation.
Hundreds of thousands of Dreamers who secured status from the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) initiative are in a state of anxious limbo, waiting to see if Congress will renew the programme. But Mr Mattis said the roughly 800 serving in the military should not worry.
"We would always stand by one of our people," Mr Mattis told reporters.
Comment: More on DACA:
- Surprise poll: DACA amnesty a deal killer for Trump's strongest supporters
- Trump tweets back at Schumer: 'If there is no Wall, there is no DACA'
- DACA protesters storm Schumer's NYC home, demand 'amnesty 'now'
- Trump Admin petitions Supreme Court to end DACA
- Why the media is losing its mind over DACA
- Trump willing to make DACA deal, but 'Democrats aren't going to make a deal"
- Deal? No Deal? Trump rejects bipartisan DACA and border security agreement
Lawrence Wilkerson helped sell America on Iraq war but is now warning that war party wants Iran next
Lawrence Wilkerson, who was chief of staff to former Secretary of State Colin Powell, helped the then-secretary "paint a clear picture that war was the only choice" in his infamous 2003 speech to the U.N. This week, writing for the New York Times - an outlet that, at the time, parroted misleading narratives in support of the war - Wilkerson accused the Trump administration of manipulating evidence and fear-mongering in the same way the Bush administration did to cultivate public support for ousting Saddam Hussein.
In his Monday op-ed, titled " I Helped Sell the False Choice of War Once. It's Happening Again," he wrote:
"As his chief of staff, I helped Secretary Powell paint a clear picture that war was the only choice, that when 'we confront a regime that harbors ambitions for regional domination, hides weapons of mass destruction and provides haven and active support for terrorists, we are not confronting the past, we are confronting the present. And unless we act, we are confronting an even more frightening future.'"
Comment: It's a wonder that neocon war-mongering mouthpiece The New York Times even agreed to publish this. How rare a thing it is to see the words of common sense and conscience published in any mainstream newspaper or network nowadays.
UPDATE: Here is the full text of the article from the New York Times:
I Helped Sell the False Choice of War Once. It's Happening Again.
By Lawrence Wilkerson - Feb. 5, 2018
Fifteen years ago this week, Colin Powell, then the secretary of state, spoke at the United Nations to sell pre-emptive war with Iraq. As his chief of staff, I helped Secretary Powell paint a clear picture that war was the only choice, that when "we confront a regime that harbors ambitions for regional domination, hides weapons of mass destruction and provides haven and active support for terrorists, we are not confronting the past, we are confronting the present. And unless we act, we are confronting an even more frightening future."
Following Mr. Powell's presentation on that cold day, I considered what we had done. At the moment, I thought all our work was for naught - and despite his efforts we did not gain substantial international buy-in. But polls later that day and week demonstrated he did convince many Americans. I knew that was why he was chosen to make the presentation in the first place: his standing with the American people was more solid than that of any other member of the Bush administration.
President George W. Bush would have ordered the war even without the United Nations presentation, or if Secretary Powell had failed miserably in giving it. But the secretary's gravitas was a significant part of the two-year-long effort by the Bush administration to get Americans on the war wagon.
That effort led to a war of choice with Iraq - one that resulted in catastrophic losses for the region and the United States-led coalition, and that destabilized the entire Middle East.
This should not be forgotten, since the Trump administration is using much the same playbook to create a false impression that war is the only way to address the threats posed by Iran.
Just over a month ago, the United States ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, said that the administration had "undeniable" evidence that Iran was not complying with Security Council resolutions regarding its ballistic missile program and Yemen. Just like Mr. Powell, Ms. Haley showed satellite images and other physical evidence available only to the United States intelligence community to prove her case. But the evidence fell significantly short.
It's astonishing how similar that moment was to Mr. Powell's 2003 presentation on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction - and how the Trump administration's methods overall match those of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney. As I watched Ms. Haley at the Defense Intelligence Agency, I wanted to play the video of Mr. Powell on the wall behind her, so that Americans could recognize instantly how they were being driven down the same path as in 2003 - ultimately to war. Only this war with Iran, a country of almost 80 million people whose vast strategic depth and difficult terrain make it a far greater challenge than Iraq, would be 10 to 15 times worse than the Iraq war in terms of casualties and costs.
If we want a slightly more official statement of the Trump administration's plans for Iran, we need only look at the recently released National Security Strategy, which says, "The longer we ignore threats from countries determined to proliferate and develop weapons of mass destruction, the worse such threats become, and the fewer defensive options we have." The Bush-Cheney team could not have said it better as it contemplated invading Iraq.
The strategy positions Iran as one of the greatest threats America faces, much the same way President Bush framed Saddam Hussein's Iraq. With China, Russia and North Korea all presenting vastly more formidable challenges to America and its allies than Iran, one has to wonder where the Trump team gets its ideas.
Though Ms. Haley's presentation missed the mark, and no one other than the national security elite will even read the strategy, it won't matter. We've seen this before: a campaign built on the politicization of intelligence and shortsighted policy decisions to make the case for war. And the American people have apparently become so accustomed to executive branch warmongering - approved almost unanimously by the Congress - that such actions are not significantly contested.
So far, news organizations have largely failed to refute false narratives coming out of the Trump White House on Iran. In early November, news outlets latched onto claims by unnamed American officials that newly released documents from Osama bin Laden's compound represented "evidence of Iran's support of Al Qaeda's war with the United States."
It's a vivid reminder of Vice President Cheney's desperate attempts in 2002-03 to conjure up evidence of Saddam Hussein's relationship with Al Qaeda from detainees at Guantánamo Bay. It harks back to the C.I.A. director George Tenet's assurances to Mr. Powell that the connection between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden was ironclad in the lead-up to his United Nations presentation. Today, we know how terribly wrong Mr. Tenet was.
Today, theanalysts claiming close ties between Al Qaeda and Iran come from the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, which vehemently opposes the Iran nuclear deal and unabashedly calls for regime changein Iran.
It seems not to matter that 15 of the 19 hijackers on Sept. 11 were Saudis and none were Iranians. Or that, according to the United States intelligence community, of the groups listed as actively hostile to the United States, only one is loosely affiliated with Iran, and Hezbollah doesn't make the cut. More than ever the Foundation for Defense of Democracies seems like the Pentagon's Office of Special Plans that pushed falsehoods in support of waging war with Iraq.
The Trump administration's case for war with Iran ranges much wider than Ms. Haley's work. We should include the president's decertification ultimatum in January that Congress must "fix" the Iran nuclear deal, despite the reality of Iran's compliance; the White House's pressure on the intelligence community to cook up evidence of Iran's noncompliance; and the administration's choosing to view the recent protests in Iran as the beginning of regime change. Like the Bush administration before, these seemingly disconnected events serve to create a narrative in which war with Iran is the only viable policy.
As I look back at our lock-step march toward war with Iraq, I realize that it didn't seem to matter to us that we used shoddy or cherry-picked intelligence; that it was unrealistic to argue that the war would "pay for itself," rather than cost trillions of dollars; that we might be hopelessly naïve in thinking that the war would lead to democracy instead of pushing the region into a downward spiral.
The sole purpose of our actions was to sell the American people on the case for war with Iraq. Polls show that we did. Mr. Trump and his team are trying to do it again. If we're not careful, they'll succeed.
Correction: February 5, 2018
An earlier version of this article included outdated information about the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. Sheldon Adelson is no longer a donor to the organization.
Lawrence Wilkerson, a retired Army colonel who teaches at the College of William & Mary, was chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell from 2002 to 2005.
According to the bombshell audit, the Department of State (DoS) finally acknowledged that "U.S.-provided military equipment" made its way into the hands of "of non-authorized end-users."
The audit specified as many as nine M1 Abrams main battle tanks worth just over $80 million in inflation-adjusted dollars provided to Iraq's military for the fight against the Islamic State (IS) ended up in the hands of Iranian-backed terrorist groups. The audit details that Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) obtained the tanks, which ultimately were seized by ISIS after the fall of Mosul and the second battle of Tikrit.
This quarter, the Department of State (DoS) acknowledged that some U.S.-provided military equipment sent to support the mission, including as many as nine M1 Abrams tanks, had fallen into the hands of Iranian-backed militias that fought against ISIS in Iraq. The DoS pressed the Iraqi government to prioritize the return of defense articles provided by the United States as designated in the sale agreements.Further, the audit highlights that the DoS and Department of Defense (DoD) have many "challenges" when it comes to accountability of arms and equipment transferred to the Iraqi Army, which has ended up in the hands of terrorist organizations.
Comment: The US has been supplying their proxy armies with weapons since the start of their meddling in the middle east. Of course they can't outright say it, so the weapons just happen to go 'missing' or get 'captured' by the 'enemy'. See also:
- Would-have-been-President Hillary Clinton supplied cash, weapons, tanks, training to Al-Qaeda to kill Gaddafi & weaponize "ISIS" in Syria
- ISIS publishes trophy photos of latest batch of captured US weapons
- International watchdog: ISIS weaponry bought by United States and Saudi Arabia before being shipped to terrorists in Syria and Iraq














Comment: ABC News reports that 'sources' claim Kelly has offered to resign over his handling of Porter's domestic violence background. Fake news or political consequences? Time will tell.
Further reading: White House staff secretary resigns after both ex-wives accuse him of abuse