Puppet Masters
It is a development that once again reminds us of the plight of a man who, in acting as a metaphorical canary down the coal mine of Western democracy, is living proof that a marked difference exists between believing that you live in a free society and behaving as if you do.
For in daring to remove the mask of civility and moral rectitude behind which Western governments have carried out their malign deeds at home and around the world in the cause of hegemony, Assange has since 2012 sat pride of place in the crosshairs of their considerable wrath.
"There is a terrible humanitarian crisis occurring in Yemen, and it deserves our attention in Washington," Representative Adam Smith (D-WA), said in a statement. "That's why I successfully fought to include the following provisions while negotiating the final version of the NDAA."
The group negotiated the terms into the final version of the NDAA, which passed the US House of Representatives on Thursday. The bill then goes to the Senate, and should it pass, to President Donald Trump for approval.
The bill is unlikely to face much opposition in the Senate, however, as a House-Senate conference committee already gave it the green light, Sputnik News reported Thursday.
The provision follows remarks made by Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), who negotiated the Yemen reforms, in a late 2017 interview. "Today, I believe that we are aiding Saudi Arabia in Saudi Arabia's committing war crimes," he said.
Comment: It 'reflects' a deep concern but whether will it actually be implemented remains to be seen. See also:
- Reps and Dems join forces to stop US support of genocide and mass starvation in Yemen
- Pulling a fast one for al-Qaeda: House leadership delays Yemen war resolution vote
- Rep. Ro Khanna: Stop weapons sales to Saudi Arabia now
Ron Reagan, the son of the 40th US president has suggested during an interview with MSNBC that if Vladimir Putin ran for the US presidency, he would win over any democrat in the eyes of Donald Trump's supporters.
Comment: Or is Ron Reagan attempting to further push the anti-Russian narrative?
- Putin accuses outgoing US administration of attempting to undermine Trump's legitimacy
- Putin: 'Collusion accusations 'undermine' the US and President Trump
- The FBI and their conspiracy to stop Trump
- Furious Putin slams "anti Trump plotters"
- Putin says Americans should stop disrespecting Trump and his supporters - he doesn't need any advice
- Ronald Reagan's son: 'My father got Saudis to flood market with cheap oil, bankrupting USSR'
Remember when the "deep state" was written off as a conspiracy theory? How times have changed.
Robinson writes:
With a supine Congress unwilling to play the role it is assigned by the Constitution, the deep state stands between us and the abyss.Throughout his article, Robinson defends the integrity and reputation of U.S. intelligence agencies - the same organizations that concluded Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and launched us into a decade-long quagmire in the Middle East.
One needn't love, like, or even vaguely tolerate US President Donald Trump to admit that the latest broadside against his ship of state has been by far the cruelest and - to borrow a word that has been tossed around lately with great abandon - treasonous, at least as far as a lawyer betraying the trust of his long-term legal client is concerned.
Amid much hype and bombast, CNN this week aired a 'secret' audio recording of Trump discussing with his personal attorney Michael Cohen how they would purchase the rights to a Playboy model's story - bought by American Media in August 2016 - of an affair she had with Trump over a decade ago (no, not Stormy Daniels, of adult-film fame, but rather one Karen McDougal).
It's important to note that the taped conversation between Trump and Cohen - that Cohen recorded - took place in September 2016, months after it was already known Trump would be representing the Republican ticket in the presidential elections. Needless to say, this is very curious timing on the part of Cohen to decide to start taping his private conversations with a future presidential candidate.
Martyanov is uniquely equipped for the task. Born in Baku in the early 1960s, he was a naval officer in the USSR era up to 1990. He moved to the US in the mid-1990s and is now a lab director in an aerospace firm. He belongs to an extremely rarefied group: top military/naval analysts specializing in US-Russia.
From quoting Alexis de Tocqueville and Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace to revisiting the balance of power during the Soviet era and beyond, Martyanov carefully tracks how the only nation on the planet "which can militarily defeat the United States conventionally" has reacted to a situation where any "meaningful dialogue between Russia and America's politicians is virtually impossible."
Sifting through the cacophony of commentary from the Trump-Putin meeting in Helsinki, here are four key points missed, ignored or glossed over by the Washington establishment and mainstream news coverage-and they require a good airing.
They are:
1) It's clear now that Europeans will increase their contributions to NATO. But Big Media totally ignored the trillion dollar gorilla in room: Why does anyone have to spend so much on NATO in the first place?
Are we planning a ground attack on Russia because we really think the former Soviet Empire will invade Poland or the Baltic nations? Are we planning for a land war in Europe to intervene in the Ukraine? What for is the money? The Trump administration and Big Media, for all their noise, mainly argue that more spending is good. There is no debate about the reasons why. Meanwhile Russia is cutting its military spending.
Comment: Given that criticism is often based on assumptions and perspective (true or biased), how close do the above points come to a real and fair assessment of the state of the US-Russia relationship and factors of contention?
US President Donald Trump's forays into promoting himself on the international diplomacy circuit haven't amounted to much. In Brussels, he claimed to have nailed down a commitment from NATO members for increased spending, when in reality, this was entirely untrue. In the UK, he told a journalist that there was no UK-US trade deal possible, then said only hours later that his own (recorded) interview was "fake news." And at the Helsinki meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the US president looked bewildered, lost, confused like a man fazed by his surroundings.
And now Trump has a new headache in the Middle East.
In recent weeks, a number of respected journalists and commentators in Iraq are talking about how ISIS is anything but destroyed - but in fact, regrouping and on the rise.
Comment: The US-created deviant child is reportedly coming back to haunt. All suggested solutions have their intrinsic problems for any decision the president might make. And, his support for choosing a course of action will not come from within his administration nor the Congress...it will come from the US citizens who have no power and from other controversial countries such as Russia. Yes, a migraine.
The ruling was issued by a US district judge in Florida on Tuesday, in a defamation lawsuit filed by a Russian tech executive against BuzzFeed News, which published the full, unverified dossier in January 2017. Multiple other outlets, including CNN and the New York Times, declined to publish the dossier, as they could not verify its claims.
Now, Fusion GPS will have to answer a wide-ranging series of questions: about the Democrat-connected law firm that requested the dossier, about the efforts the company made to fact-check its allegations, and about the man who actually compiled it; former British spy Christopher Steele.
Comment: The beginning of the grand unraveling or another can of worms?
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) reported on Friday that the US is preparing to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities "perhaps as early as next month," citing "senior figures" in the government.
"I have no idea where the Australian news people got that," Mattis told reporters at the Pentagon on Friday. "I'm confident it is not something that's being considered right now, and I think it's a complete - frankly, it's - it's fiction."Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull also pushed back on the ABC report, calling it "speculation" based on anonymous sources.
Asked if the Trump administration has a policy of regime change in Iran, Mattis replied,
"There's none that's been instituted. We need them to change their behavior on a number of threats that they can pose with their military, with their secret services, with their surrogates and with their proxies," Mattis said, according to Reuters.
Comment: Second-guessing is now the nature of reporting, supported by a splatter of messages, opinions and fiction. Has news and announcements become uncoordinated chaos amongst administration personnel, or a mechanism of purposeful-opinion confusion?















Comment: The author's final comment is particularly apt.