Puppet Masters
Behind Soleimani's success we find, firstly, the US establishment, and secondly, Europe and Saudi Arabia. The 2003 US invasion of Iraq offered Iran the head of its fiercest enemy, Saddam Hussein, on a platter, creating the space for Iran to re-establish its links with Mesopotamia. Moreover, the war in Syria brought the relationship between Tehran and Damascus to new heights when President Assad asked for the support of the Islamic Republic to prevent the regime-change promoted, financed and advocated by the US and Europe (with the full support of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey). Then the clash in Gaza washed away the differences between the Axis of the Resistance and Hamas, once again improving Soleimani's position. And last but not least, the Saudi war in the Yemen pushed the Houthis into the arms of the only country that supported them, and provided them with the tools to withstand almost four years of genocidal warfare: Iran. What more could Soleimani ask for? Is he, indeed, the strongest man in Iran, as believed in the west?
Contrary to what some experts seem to believe, Soleimani is not the most powerful General in Iran. Soleimani's direct superior officer is Brigadier General Mohammad Ali Jafari. Soleimani is part of the IRGC and doesn't have forces under his command in Iran. He implements policy as dictated to him and is a part of his country's security apparatus, with a team of assistants helping him deal with the allies of Iran, mainly non-state actors.
A day after the Ukrainian parliament voted to introduce martial law across 10 border regions, there was little clarity about what it would actually mean in practice.
Comment: The regions where most ethnic Russians live, in other words.
With parts of the government on different pages, and the introduction of measures that could cover most aspects of life, even family, some areas of the country bordered on panic mode.
The US military is setting up a number of observation posts in Northeast Syria in an effort to prevent the remnants of Daesh forces in the central Euphrates River valley from making their way into Turkey, CDN news portal reported on Tuesday, citing the spokesman for Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve.
'These observation posts will provide additional transparency and will better enable Turkey's protection from ISIS [Daesh] elements', Army Colonel Sean Ryan said, speaking via teleconference from Baghdad.
Comment: And yet this past Tuesday, President Erdogan said ISIS is no longer in Syria. During a parlimentary meeting he stated, "there is no Daesh in Syria, there are only a small number of gangs who are kept in reserve, trained and equipped, allowed to mix in this country and the region under the guise of Daesh." This is in line with Russian operations and statements from Moscow. It's pretty clear the US isn't increasing their presence in Syria to 'continue fighting Daesh', but they were never in Syria to combat Daesh anyway.
More than enough has been said about why NATO should have been dismantled when the reason for its existence, the Soviet Union, was dissolved, but nobody listened and NATO has kept expanding eastward and demanding more money, more members, more weapons.
NATO demands an enemy, and their chosen enemy is Russia. This has nothing to do with anything Russia has done or is doing at the moment. We can only hope that people are willing to accept that simple fact. And not passively go along with the flow of badmouthing and smear that decides what our picture of the country is.
Russia 'invaded' Crimea? Russia 'downed' MH17? Russia sent two hapless and inept blokes to kill the Skripals? Russia launched an unprovoked attack on three Ukrainian vessels in the Sea of Azov? Russia colluded with the Trump campaign against Hillary Clinton? And collaborated with Julian Assange to make that happen?
What all these allegations have in common is that there is no evidence any of them are true. Oh, and that nobody's really trying to prove them anymore. Because you've already accepted them as gospel.
Preparations for the talks "continue" and the meeting between Trump and Putin is "settled," Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday. "We have no other information from our US colleagues," he stressed.
His remarks came after Trump told the Washington Post that he might call off the talks with Putin in response to the recent maritime incident in the Kerch Strait, in which the Russia seized three Ukrainian naval vessels it said violated Russian sovereignty.
Putin's schedule also contains "contacts" with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, his spokesperson told the media. Earlier, the Kremlin said that the Russian leader and the Crown Prince will have an opportunity to talk on the sidelines of the summit.
Trump isn't planning to hold a meeting with bin Salman, the president's National Security Advisor John Bolton said earlier. He added, however, that he "wouldn't rule anything out."
The annual G20 summit will kick off in Buenos Aires, Argentina on Friday.
Comment: See also: Trump scheduled to meet Putin at G20, but not MBS
From RFE/RL:
U.S. President Donald Trump says he is considering canceling his scheduled meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Group of 20 (G20) summit in Argentina this week over Russia's detention of Ukrainian sailors.
His comments in an interview with The Washington Post published late on November 27 came as the Ukrainian president warned of a "threat of full-scale war" with Russia while European leaders said they were considering a new round of sanctions against Russia because of its capture of three Ukrainian naval ships and their crews following a confrontation at sea off Crimea on November 25.
Trump told the Post he was awaiting a "full report" from his national security team about the incident before going through with a Putin meeting that had been expected to address a range of issues from arms control to the conflicts in Syria and Ukraine.
"That will be very determinative," Trump told the Post. "Maybe I won't even have the meeting ... I don't like that aggression. I don't want that aggression at all," he said.
Trump is due to meet Putin on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Buenos Aires on November 30 and December 1.
High-ranking diplomats from France and Germany favor tackling the renewed Russian-Ukrainian tensions with more "trust-building measures," German paper Die Welt reported on Wednesday.
The paper, citing its own sources, wrote that additional sanctions weren't included in the diplomats' proposal. Instead, they reportedly offered to "continue diplomatic efforts" to solve the crisis and to consider the role of the OSCE in resolving the conflict.
According to Die Welt, this approach was voiced by Berlin and Paris on Tuesday during a "secret meeting" of the EU's Political and Security Committee in Brussels.
Comment: All is not well on the Ukrainian front. See also:
Sea of Azov provocation: Kiev declares martial law, Russia warns of 'consequences' - UPDATES

Russian President Putin • Ukraine'v vessel moored at Kerch haven
The remarks were the first made by the Russian leader since the confrontation in the Kerch Strait, a narrow passageway between the Black Sea and the Azov Sea, where a strategic bridge connecting Crimea with mainland Russia is located.
"The authorities in Kiev are selling anti-Russian sentiment with quite a success today. They have nothing else to do," Putin said during a business forum in Moscow.
Comment: Ukraine is a very useful Western puppet at this point in time. And, instead of becoming a better politician or steward for his people, Poroshenko has increased his capability to divert and refocus attention for his own political gain.
See also: Uki election antics? Poroshenko declares martial law in Ukraine after Kerch standoff
Google hoodwinks users into consenting to highly intrusive tracking measures using verbal trickery and misleading interface design, according to complaints filed by consumer agencies in the Netherlands, Greece, Poland, Slovenia, Czechia, Norway, and Sweden on Tuesday. The consumer groups are urging privacy regulators to prosecute Google for violating the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - the sweeping internet-privacy legislation that took effect in May.
Comment: So much for freedom and anonymity. See also:
- Google faces legal action over alleged secret iPhone tracking
- Belgium gives Facebook 48 hours to stop tracking non-users or pay €250K per day
- Google turns over user data in 94% of US demands
- Open Source Mozilla Firefox Now 'Tracking the Trackers'
- How Google is recording you and storing the data
Earlier on Tuesday, Lavrov's joint press-conference with French counterpart Jean-Yves Le Drian was delayed for half an hour, due to the exclusion of accredited Russian journalists from Channel One, Sputnik and RT by the French Foreign Ministry.
"The situation changed only when Lavrov warned that he won't take part in the press-conference if the Russian press isn't allowed at it," a source in the Russian delegation told RIA Novosti.
After talks with Le Drian, the Russian FM visited RT's headquarters in the French capital. He checked out the state-of-the-art studios and workspaces, and had a brief chat with the staff.
Lavrov was surprised to learn that RT France was barred not only from the Elysee Place, but from the Foreign Ministry and other French government agencies as well. The crackdown on the Russian broadcaster began after President Emmanuel Macron came to power in May 2017. He said that the persecution of RT, as well the Sputnik news agency in France was among the topics he'd discussed with the French foreign minister.
Comment: In the battle between suppression and freedom of information: Which one, exactly, is the real propaganda tool? See also:
- Tit for tat: France accuses Russia of breaking media laws and Russia rightfully retaliates
- France gives kiss of death to free speech
- France under Macron: RT reporter barred from media event for the second time this week
- The Nation editor: 'Registering RT as foreign agent is threat to press freedom'
- No more free press: French news law forces media to cooperate with state in blocking 'fake news'
- Welcome to dictatorship? What lies behind France's controversial 'fake news' law
A video exclusively obtained by RT's video agency Ruptly shows a whole column of military trucks, as well as several 'Bal' coastal defense systems, moving along a road in Crimea. The troops were being relocated to an area near the city of Kerch, following the tense standoff on Sunday with a group of Ukrainian ships that, despite repeated warnings, had breached Russia's territorial waters in the Kerch Strait.
The 'Bal' systems are equipped with eight X-35 cruise anti-ship missiles, capable of hitting vessels with displacement tonnages up to 5,000 tons at a distance of up to 20 kilometers.
Comment: See also:
- Russia blocks Kerch Strait passage after Ukrainian Navy ships violate border, calls UNSC meeting - Kiev declares martial law - UPDATES
- Uki election antics? Poroshenko declares martial law in Ukraine after Kerch standoff
- Sea of Azov provocation: Kiev declares martial law, Russia warns of 'consequences' - UPDATES













Comment: It's even money that Poroshenko engineered the whole farce (under advice from his Western handlers) to create an excuse to block the Party of the Regions opposition (which is most popular in the regions where martial law has been announced).
The Kerch Strait provocation was bad political theater, but the consequences for ordinary Ukrainians are very real.
The British press obviously has a vested interest in conducting PR on Kiev's behalf, so here's the real skinny from Russia media about the political situation in Ukraine: