Puppet Masters
Dominic Raab, who quit the government last week in protest over the terms of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement, told the Today programme on Friday morning that May's deal would leave Britain tied to EU customs and trade rules without any democratic oversight over them.
"If you just presented me terms, this deal or EU membership, because we would effectively be bound by the same rules without control or a voice over them, then yes this would be even worse than that," Raab said.
Raab joins a growing list of leading Conservative Brexiteers who have suggested in recent weeks and months that it would be better to remain in the EU rather than accept what the prime minister has agreed with Brussels.
Speaking at the 'MED Dialogues' conference in Rome on Thursday, Mohammad Javad Zarif said Tehran will not simply sit back at the table with the US, because he already spent 2.5 years negotiating with former US Secretary of State John Kerry and other political figures and experts.
"We negotiated a very good deal," he said, noting that Tehran came to an agreement with the US, not simply the administration of the moment. "Why should we resume another talk just because somebody doesn't like it? Just because somebody hates his predecessor? That's not the reason you engage in diplomacy." That comment was in response to US President Donald Trump pulling out of the deal agreed by his predecessor Barack Obama.
In all of this, Zarif said, the Iranian people will "see less and less possibility of relying on the promises that are made to them, and I think that will be very difficult for the international community."
Comment: Trump is pretty much 'out on his own limb' for the withdrawal decision. Europe did not rally to his position. Israel and Saudi Arabia agreed but neither were part of the P5+1 deciders (the US, Britain, France, Russia, China, and Germany). See also:
- Spitting in Trump's face: EU and Iran agree to keep nuclear deal in place
- Don't dump the Iran deal! Germany, France & UK issue joint statement to US
- Iran claims 'Trump failed', 'Iran wins' in diplomatic battle over JCPOA accord
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi has dismissed Washington's claims about a secret Iranian chemical weapons program, promising that Tehran would thoroughly debunk the allegations in the coming days.
"Once again America has leveled groundless accusations against Iran...which we strongly reject," Ghasemi said in a statement published on the Foreign Ministry's website on Friday.
"Based on [OPCW] Conference procedure, the Iranian mission to the OPCW will give an appropriate response to these baseless accusations at the end of the general debates," he promised, without specifying the precise date. The current OPCW session will wrap up next Friday.
Turning the US allegations around on them, Ghasemi pointed to the US' own acknowledged chemical weapons program, and to suspicions that Israel, which signed but never ratified the Chemical Weapons Convention, may also have access to such weapons.
Comment: The US-Israel make accusations they cannot prove, coupled with committing the same violations themselves. These ploys serve no one, not even on a distraction level.
"The murder of Mr Khashoggi is a crime of extreme gravity, which moreover goes against freedom of the press and the most fundamental rights," the French foreign ministry said in a statement. "France asks that all light be shed on the manner in which such an act may have been committed. It expects from the Saudi authorities a transparent, detailed and exhaustive response."
Comment: Economics: the moral modifier
US President Donald Trump's plan to ditch the decades-old Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) has been creating a stir for over a month. Some US allies have lashed out at Washington for the potentially dangerous move which could also hurt Europe's security.
Russia hopes the US can take a "sober" look at global security and refrain from making any "ill-advised" moves, director of the Department for Non-Proliferation and Arms Control at the Russian Foreign Ministry, Vladimir Ermakov, told media. However, Russia is prepared for any decision the US makes.
Comment: Sell war and you sell war equipment. An absence of treaties increases risk and threat believability. See also:
- Russian senators propose change of doctrine for Russia to respond with nukes to any 'strategic strike'
- Bolton: We're sticking to it, US to file INF Treaty withdrawal
- Beijing slams Trump's plan to ditch 'crucial' INF treaty, bodes 'multilateral negative effect'
Qwant, a French and German owned web service, promises not to track its users like Google and others.
MP Florian Bachelier said: "We have to set the example. Security and digital sovereignty are at stake here, which is anything but an issue only for geeks." He chairs the National Assembly's cybersecurity and digital sovereignty task force, which was set up in April to protect firms from hackers and end France's reliance on foreign tech giants.
Officials and politicians are said to be very concerned with the dominance of US and Chinese firms and the concept of "digital sovereignty", including a country's control over its citizens data, reports Wired.
Comment: 'Promises' and 'claims'...more or less nails it down, oui?
"Solid steps have been made towards strengthening of trade and economic cooperation between Russia and Austria over the past two years. Among EU countries that are the main trade and economic partners of Russia with trade turnover exceeding $4 billion, Austria is the first in terms of growth."Potemkin noted that this year Russian-Austrian trade may exceed the highest level of the "post-crisis period" of $5.1 billion recorded in 2013. It could probably even reach the record level seen in 2008 of $5.4 billion, he said. That growth was achieved mostly thanks to Russia's exports, the trade envoy said, noting that: "In first three quarters of 2018 it doubled, while import was up almost 18 percent."
Trade between Russia and the European Union started to improve in early 2017 despite trade barriers from mutual sanctions introduced almost five years ago.
Comment: Russia and Austria are increasing their good relationship. See also:
- Wind of change: Putin visits Austria in first foreign trip after re-election
- Journalist: Majority of Austrians would remove anti-Russia sanctions, hostility comes from political groups
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's spokesperson said that Ankara would "seriously evaluate"the possibility of purchasing Patriot missiles should the White House make "a good offer."
Turkey held lengthy talks to acquire Patriot missiles for several years. Negotiations with Washington stalled two times - first in 2013 when Ankara announced that will buy a Chinese air defense system, and then in 2017 when it eventually chose to buy cutting-edge Russian S-400 air defense systems instead.
US lawmakers claimed that Erdogan's deal with the Russians would undermine NATO's security. The defiant Turkish leader signed the contract anyway. In response, Congress passed a law delaying the shipment of 100 F-35 fighter jets to Turkey. This followed a series of high-profile spats, with Erdogan even calling on Turkish citizens and other nations to dump the US dollar.
Saudi Arabia stated Friday that the reports about torture, issued by the human rights watchdogs Amnesty International, were 'baseless', the Ministry of Media said in a statement.
"The government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia categorically and strongly denies the allegations made by them. The wild claims made, quoting anonymous 'testimonies' or 'informed sources', are simply wrong," the ministry said.
The ministry's statement comes after Amnesty International released a report on Tuesday in which it claimed that "the activists were repeatedly tortured by electrocution and flogging, leaving some unable to walk or stand properly."
The torture allegations come with Saudi Arabia and Crown Prince Mohammad facing international condemnation over the killing of columnist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2.

Attorney General Loretta Lynch (R) speaks as FBI Director James Comey (L) listens during a news conference for announcing a law enforcement action March 24, 2016 in Washington, DC.
Committee chair, Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., wants Comey to testify Dec. 3 and Lynch to testify Dec. 4. The testimony would be taken in private before committee members, reported POLITICO and CNN. It would take place only weeks before Democrats take power over the influential committee.














Comment: See also: