Puppet Masters
Early April, an unnamed diplomat from the US Embassy in Bern told representatives from Switzerland's State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) that Washington expected the Swiss government to dissuade the country's business leaders from visiting SPIEF "as usual," Le Matin Dimanche newspaper reported.
The US diplomat stressed the need to reject the idea of conducting business with Russia, the newspaper added.
We now know where most of it went: soaring imports of crude oil.
We know this because as the chart below shows, Chinese crude imports via Qingdao port in Shandong province surged to record 9.86 million metric tons last month based on data from General Administration of Customs.
According to him, this is a proposal to pass "a resolution calling on the French government not to extend the restrictive measures and economic sanctions imposed on Russia by the European Union." "The parliamentarians will for the first time speak out on the issue of the European sanctions against Russia. This draft resolution that has received the signatures of more than 80 lawmakers will be considered at an open session on Thursday, April 28," Mariani said.
According to the parliamentarian, the anti-Russian sanctions bring France nothing but harm, therefore they should be lifted. "Useless and ineffective sanctions against Russia have today become a heavy burden for the French agriculture. That's why I urge members of the parliamentary majority to show responsibility and stop shifting it to Brussels," he said.
Last December, the Russian Defense Ministry provided satellite images showing oil being smuggled from Daesh-controlled oil fields in Syria to Turkey. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan rejected the allegations, claiming Turkey wasn't involved in financing terrorist activities.
However, residents of the Syrian town of Shaddadi near the Jabisah oil field in the Hasakah province told otherwise. They said that up until February when Daesh still controlled the oil field, the jihadists continued to send oil to Raqqa and then ship it to Turkey using the Tell Abyad checkpoint on the Turkish-Syrian border.
According to al-Halqi, more than 60 percent of the power stations in Syria are shut down and need fuel to restart. "Despite all the things Syria has undergone, it has managed to maintain the infrastructure. However, the production of electricity depends on fuel, and the oil sector has been more affected by terrorism than the electricity sector," said the prime minister. Syria has offered Russia a chance to participate in exploring and developing oil and gas on land and offshore. In particular, Russia was invited to upgrade the Baniyas refinery - Baniyas is a city in Tartous Governorate, northwestern Syria, located 55 km south of Latakia - and construct a refinery with Iran and Venezuela.
Comment: Russia has a long-term plan to rebuild Syria after the terrorists there are defeated.
See also:
- Syrian refugees return home as Russian intervention brings peace to parts of the country
- Trying to save face: US changes tone, wants to cooperate with Russia on Syria crisis
Turkey's war against its Kurdish population in its current iteration is as much about Erdogan and the Turkish power structures consolidating and maintaining their power as is their crackdown against journalism. It has not been waged as a war to protect Turkish civilians from Kurdish insurgents but instead as a means to "protect" the oppressive power hierarchies that exist which seek to maintain the disparate position of the political-economic elite. Instead of listening to the legitimate grievances of the Kurdish population, Erdogan and the AKP have chosen a strategy of violence, terrorism, and xenophobia in order to degrade the growing political power of the Kurds and to consolidate their rule and the continuation of their criminal policies.
The pro-Kurdish People's Democracy Party (HDP) and the Kurdish military wing Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK) have not been demanding independence, instead they have been calling for autonomy. This in the face of Turkey's political establishment historically treating the Kurds as second class citizens and denying them the right to be educated using their native language. In response they have organized societal institutions in a radically different manner than the Turkish state, prioritizing the ideal of local, non-hierarchical forms of direct democracy. In their view, as Professor of Economics at the University of Greenwich Mehmet Ugur explains, this is because "the nation state is now considered an anachronistic institution; and local democracy (including recognition and representation of distinct identities) has been embraced as a solution not only for the Kurdish question but also for democratisation in Turkey, Iraq and Syria."
Comment: Part 1 available here: Turkey's war against the Kurds (part 1): Turkey's state sponsorship of terrorism in Syria

BOLO: presidential candidate, armed and considered extremely dangerous, known to cackle with creepy laughter at inappropriate times.
Here is one recent result of her action regarding Honduras:
Drugs, Dams, and Power: The Murder of Honduran Activist Berta Cáceres
This is how she did it — how she (with follow-through by the U.S. President) produced it:
Hillary Clinton's Six Foreign-Policy Catastrophes
And this is what she says about it, in retrospect:
Hillary Clinton is lying about the criminal U.S.-backed coup in Honduras. It should be as scandalous as Libya
In other words: She's not apologetic about what she did and what its disastrous consequences were — she ignores them.
Saakashvili explained that he would return to the country following parliamentary elections scheduled for October, saying that he expects the United National Movement, a center-right opposition party which he formally leads, to win a majority and form the government.
"It's necessary to hold the elections, to win, and to come and help the people who have won," the politician noted.

U.S. President Barack Obama is greeted upon his arrival at King Khalid International Airport for a summit meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia April 20, 2016.
President Obama came to Saudi Arabia to take part in a summit of Persian Gulf leaders and discuss Islamic State, Al Qaeda and Yemen with King Salman. This comes in stark contrast to the reception of other high-profile guests, whom the 80-year-old King Salman greeted personally on the airfield.
Obama did have a two-and-a-half hour conversation with King Salman later, a talk that reportedly "really cleared the air," the US administration officials assured the American media. Barack Obama's visit has been downplayed by the Middle Eastern newspapers, too, generally saying that as a "lame duck" Obama hardly has time to mend strained relations, the BBC reports.
The usually extremely close relations between Washington and Riyadh have been fraying recently over a number of issues Saudi Arabia regards as matters of life and death.
Comment: For more behind-the-scenes action on the Saudi/American drama, you won't want to miss: Pepe Escobar: US nixed OPEC oil deal by threatening to reveal Saudi role in 9/11













Comment: Further reading: Turkey's war against the Kurds (part 2): Power, terror, and the pretext for war