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Trump has yet to read the Muller report, 'Though I have every right to do so'

Trump
© Getty Images
President Donald Trump
President Trump said Saturday that he has not yet read special counsel Robert Mueller's final report that was delivered to the Justice Department late last month but said he has "every right to do so" as House Democrats clamor for the document to be released publicly.

"I have not read the Mueller Report yet, even though I have every right to do so. Only know the conclusions, and on the big one, No Collusion. Likewise, recommendations made to our great A.G. who found No Obstruction," Trump wrote on Twitter on Saturday morning.

"13 Angry Trump hating Dems (later brought to 18) given two years and $30 million, and they found No Collusion, No Obstruction. But the Democrats, no matter what we give them, will NEVER be satisfied," he continued.

Trump's comments come as Democrats on Capitol Hill seek to see Mueller's report made public.


Comment: See also:


Footprints

Western 'rights advocates' rush to aid Chechen 'Activist'

Oyub Titiyev
© Unknown
Oyub Titiyev
Human Rights Watch (HRW) executive director Kenneth Roth recently decried legal proceedings against the alleged "leading human rights defender in Chechnya," Oyub Titiyev. But as with much of what HRW decries, Titiyev has less to do with actually defending human rights, and more to do with ongoing US-subversion in Russia's southern Chechen Republic.

Roth, in a social media post, would claim:
"The Russian government's "case" against the leading human rights defender in Chechnya, Oyub Titiyev, is farcical - as many holes as Swiss cheese - but authorities have still locked him up for 14 months and are threatening a four-year sentence."
The article Roth's post would include, leads to an opinion piece in The Moscow Times (written by fellow HRW regional director, Rachel Denber) who insists Titiyev is innocent of drug charges based entirely on Titiyev and his lawyer's own claims.

Whether Titiyev is guilty or not is for Russia's courts to decide. However, the entire process of mobilizing supposed human rights advocacy organizations like HRW to rush to Titiyev's aid illustrates how "rights advocacy" is transparently used to advance politically-motivated agendas, not to actually advance human rights.

Attention

What's the deal with newly appointed US ambassador to Kazakhstan, William Moser? Hint: not so good

Moser
© unknown
US Ambassador to Kazakhstan, William Moser
Over the past three decades post-Soviet territory has become Washington's new playground, where the US attempts to uproot all traditional ties that bind Russia with its immediate neighbors. In the 1980s and 1990s, Washington would place particular emphasis on advancing its relations with the Baltic republics, as it was a rush to draw them away from Russia into an alliance with the United States and NATO. Then, Ukraine and Georgia were to suffer the same sorry fate, but here the US had to infiltrate local political elites with a number of well-trained PR teams, working for Saakashvili, Yushchenko, and Poroshenko. In turn, these political figures didn't even make an attempt to hide the fact that they were completely dependent on the United States.

Now, Washington is concentrating its attention on the Central Asian republics of the former USSR. In recent years, it has been particularly active in Uzbekistan, which is becoming increasingly pro-Western. However, in a bid to promote its agenda across Central Asia, the United States has also spent a lot of time and resources on Kazakhstan, which is not just the largest of the former Soviet republics in Central Asia, but has a self-sufficient economic and military force with significant potential.

To successfully fulfill the plan of drawing Kazakhstan away from Russia, Washington has been consistently building up its bilateral trade volume with Nur-Sultan, which resulted in the Kazakh government announcing that the United States has recently become the second largest foreign trade partner of Kazakhstan, pulling far ahead of both China and Russia. The first on this list is the Netherlands, which looks particular since this Central Asian country has a long stretch of common border with Russia and traditions that bind it together with its largest neighbor. At the same time, some 8,600 companies from Russia and 1,200 companies from China are operating on a regular basis in Kazakhstan, which overshadows 497 American companies working there.

Arrow Down

Former OSCE VP: When NATO 'broke away' from international law, it lost its legitimacy

NATO flag
© Reinhard Krause/Reuters
NATO broke away from international law and risks "collapse" or a conflict that will "destroy Europe," if it does not change its modus operandi, Willy Wimmer, the former vice president of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, told RT.

As the US-led military alliance marked its 70th anniversary on Thursday, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg stated that the bloc remains essential for global security. "We stand together, fight together, and, sometimes, die together," he said in a speech in Washington.

Stoltenberg, however, is not striking a chord with the people NATO claims to be protecting, Wimmer believes. The veteran German politician explained to RT Deutsch that "it is not the message that Germans, the Europeans and even the Americans want to hear."

Over the years, NATO has increasingly evolved from a purely defensive bloc into a "threat to international peace." It now serves the interests of Washington, along with its allies in London and Paris, all while requiring that other nations sacrifice their resources and the lives of their soldiers to promote the goals of the few, the former deputy leader of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly said.

Comment: See also:


Star of David

Cavusoglu: 'Irresponsible!' Netanyahu can't change West Bank status by annexing illegal Israeli settlements

Israeli WBank settlement
© Mahfouz Abu Turk/Apaimages
An illegal Israeli settlement built on occupied Palestinian land in the West Bank.
Turkey on Sunday criticised Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as "irresponsible" for saying he would annex Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank if he wins Tuesday's election. Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said the West Bank, which Israel seized in the 1967 Middle East war, was Palestinian territory and Israel's occupation violated international law.

"Prime Minister Netanyahu's irresponsible statement to seek votes just before the Israeli general elections cannot and will not change this fact," Cavusoglu tweeted.

Netanyahu, asked why he had not declared Israeli sovereignty over large West Bank settlements as Israel has already done in the occupied Golan Heights and East Jerusalem, said he was already discussing the move. "I am going to extend (Israeli) sovereignty and I don't distinguish between settlement blocs and the isolated settlements," he told Israel's Channel 12 News on Saturday.

Palestinian leaders reacted angrily, blaming what they said was a failure by world powers to stand up for international law.

Comment: See also:


Whistle

Lee Camp reports: Pentagon was bombarded with 'whistleblower complaints every six minutes'

Pentagon
© Frontpage/Shutterstock
The Pentagon
A recent report shows that the Pentagon is pretty much buried with scores of whistleblower complaints. On his show Redacted Tonight, Lee Camp explained why the huge number of people sounding the alarm is not surprising.

Camp opened the show by citing a recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) report that found the Pentagon received a whopping 95,613 whistleblower alerts between 2013 and 2018. "That averages out to a whistleblower every six minutes of every business day for five straight years - that waiting room must be insane!" he said.

As astonishing as that number might seem, the amount of people sounding the alarm within the system is not really surprising, Camp noted - considering the previous multiple reports of the military losing track of trillions of dollars.

In fact, last year's government audit revealed that the Pentagon "lost and found" 39 Black Hawk helicopters and over 470 buildings within the Air Force that weren't properly registered as its property, he said. "The Pentagon has a standard operating procedure of simply making up numbers to fill their books, which for normal human being is termed 'fraud.'"


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NPC

German TV airs fake report that Russia invaded Estonia, allegedly to make a point

Claus Kleber
© screenshot from ZDF
Claus Kleber, host of heute-journal, delivers his dire news.
A respected German analytical TV program opened its latest edition by informing viewers that Russian forces intruded into the Baltics. Was this "fantasy" just juvenile attention-seeking, or crude pro-NATO propaganda?

"Together with European and German allies, the US army is currently moving through land, air and sea to Estonia to expel Russian forces, which have once again invaded, as in Crimea before," announced a worried Claus Kleber, host of heute journal, on the national public broadcaster ZDF Thursday night.


Comment: Except the Russians never 'invaded' Crimea.


As millions of viewers tensed up, the veteran host announced that it was a "gotcha!"

"Do not worry. It is not true. This is just a fantasy scenario - but a realistic one," said Kleber.


Comment: Maybe Kleber is living in another reality, because there's nothing realistic about Russia invading Estonia.


One of the biggest names in German journalism, Kleber explained that the fake-out was designed to make it clear that a war may be imminent, that it is likely to be a surprise, and that Germany will have to defend even its smallest allies, including Estonia.

Comment: Here's this a$$hat's report:




Bad Guys

Pakistan says intelligence suggests India plans to attack this month

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan
© Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha
Pakistan has "reliable intelligence" that India will attack again this month, its foreign minister said, drawing condemnation from New Delhi which described the claim as irresponsible.

Shah Mahmood Qureshi's comments came after tensions over a February standoff between the arch enemies had appeared to ease.

He said on Sunday that an attack could take place between April 16 and 20, adding that Pakistan had told the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council of its concerns.

"India rejects the irresponsible and preposterous statement by the foreign minister of Pakistan with a clear objective of whipping up war hysteria in the region," a spokesman for India's foreign office said in a statement.

"This public gimmick appears to be a call to Pakistan-based terrorists to undertake a terror attack in India."

The foreign office said India reserved the right to respond firmly and decisively to any cross border militant attack, accusing Pakistan of being complicit in such attacks on India.

Comment: See also:


Eye 2

What the 'Vice' movie doesn't tell you about Dick Cheney's crimes

Dick Cheney
Vice has won awards along with praise from audiences and critics alike, but how well does it inform its audience about Dick Cheney? This week I take a look at the important material that Vice overlooked, or didn't know about. From his rewriting of a key investigation into CIA black operations, to his support for President Reagan amidst the Iran-Contra scandal, to his mysterious movements during the 9/11 attacks, this is an exploration of the secret world of Dick Cheney.

Comment: Evil personified


Biohazard

'Novichok' survivor seeks info from Russian ambassador because UK govt is keeping him in the dark

rowley embassy
© Russian embassy, UK
Amesbury Novichok incident survivor Charlie Rowley has met with Russia's Ambassador in London seeking answers, after the UK authorities kept him in the dark about any official details of the poisoning saga for nearly a year.

"Most of the information they have, they had read in the newspapers. And I got the impression that both the family of Dawn Sturgess and that of Charlie Rowley have not been adequately informed as to what happened to the pair in Amesbury and what happened in Salisbury before," Ambassador Alexander Yakovenko said after the meeting with Rowley.
They never received any official reports... [Charlie Rowley and his brother] had a lot of questions for us, and I was happy to answer all of them.
Whatever small information Moscow has managed to gather about the incidents, with a total lack of cooperation from the UK side, was passed on to the brothers - and most of it was a "total revelation" for them, Yakovenko said. "They are ordinary people, reading British newspapers. What could they know - only what they are offered by the press. So it's good to have an alternative point of view and understand Russia's line of reasoning."


Comment: The Sunday Mirror has given a notably different take on the meeting:
Rowley said he went to the Russian Embassy "to ask them 'Why did your country kill my girlfriend?' but I didn't really get any answers," he told the Sunday Mirror newspaper, which arranged the meeting.

"I just got Russian propaganda," he said.
...
"I liked the ambassador, but I thought some of what he said trying to justify Russia not being responsible was ridiculous," said Rowley. "The ambassador kept saying the substance definitely wasn't the Novichok [the Russians] had made because if it was it would have killed everyone."
If that's what the ambassador said, he's right, and that's the implication of what all the experts have said too, that 'novichok' is extremely deadly. And the fact that the traces found were high in purity makes it even stranger. By all accounts, the nerve agent should have killed everyone involved.