Puppet Masters
The clashes started earlier on Saturday, and law enforcement managed to restore calm by making a truce with rioters who had spent hours trying to break through barricades surrounding protest camps at Martyr's Square and Ring Bridge. Meanwhile, at the nearby street of Riad Al Solh, peaceful marchers tried to get past security forces guarding the national parliament building.
"It is a hard fact that many accomplices in terrorist attacks and killings during the bloody events in the Caucasus are still in hiding. Many of them are in European countries. They obtain residence permits or citizenship and are free to walk the streets in broad daylight among ordinary people," Peskov said, according to TASS.
"Many of them are being investigated with the aim of demanding their extradition to Russia. As a rule, such lists are not made public," he added.
Comment:
- Terrorist murdered in Berlin was among organizers of Moscow subway blast - Putin
- Germany expels two Russian diplomats over Berlin murder probe - "unjustified" says Moscow
- 'Expulsion of Russian diplomats over Berlin murder case suits trend of blaming Moscow for everything, whether it's true or not'
The deal, rumors and leaks over which have gyrated world markets for months, reduces some U.S. tariffs in exchange for what U.S. officials said would be a big jump in Chinese purchases of American farm products and other goods.
China's retaliatory tariffs, which were due to take effect on Dec. 15, were meant to target goods ranging from corn and wheat to U.S. made vehicles and auto parts.
Comment: Analysis: What's good-bad-ugly about US-China trade breakthrough
What's in the deal?See also:
The US will lower from 15 to 7.5 percent levies on approximately $120 billion of Chinese imports. However, 25-percent tariffs on roughly $250 billion worth of Chinese goods will remain in force. While China did not announce the elimination or reduction of existing tariffs targeting US imports, it agreed to boost purchases of American goods to $200 billion over the next two years, including agricultural imports critical for the US.
The deal also requires structural reforms from the Chinese side regarding intellectual property, technology transfer, agriculture, financial services, currency and foreign exchange, among other things.
- Trump: 'Very large Phase One Deal' agreed with China
- 'It's a lovefest!' Trump announces 'substantial' US-China trade deal on agriculture, intellectual property, & finance
Pyongyang's military carried out a test at a satellite launch site on Friday, its second in a week. The maneuver came after a revival of activity at the Sohae site, which the North partially dismantled in 2018 following talks between Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump.
The tests "will be applied in developing strategic weapons aimed at subduing US nuclear threats," state news network KCNA reported on Saturday quoting the country's Chief of the General Staff Pak Jong Chon. He cautioned that "hostile forces, including the US, should refrain from provocation," if they want to spend the year's end "peacefully."
The warning comes after Pyongyang warned it's up to the US to choose its "Christmas gift." Kim has set a year-end deadline for the US to soften its stance on denuclearization, lest North Korea choose a "new path."
Though Kim and Trump have met in person three times, peace talks have stagnated.
Comment: More on the launch:
A "crucial test" was carried out on Friday at the Sohae satellite launch site located in the western part of North Korea, state-run KCNA news agency reported Saturday. Pyongyang usually isn't too shy to brag about their launches, but this report was light on detail.
It only said that the test was a success, and the outcome of it will be used for "further bolstering... the reliable nuclear deterrent."
This is the second activity conducted at Sohae in just a week; the previous one took place last Saturday. South Korean Defense Minister Jeong Kyeong-doo said it was a test of a rocket engine.
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Two days ago, US monitoring group '38 North' released commercial satellite imagery apparently showing the Sohae facility and suggesting that preparations for a missile launch were underway.

Parts of the S-400 are unloaded from a Russian plane
"Whatever the consequences," Turkey will not cancel the multibillion deal it signed with Russia over the S-400 anti-aircraft systems, Cavusoglu told a conference in Doha, Qatar. Turkey is in acute need of shielding its territory against incoming threats.
"We are very desperate for an air defense system. We tried to procure it from the US and others, but it didn't work. This is a defense system that is vital for us."
Addressing the same event, Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar reiterated the rationale behind buying the weapon from Moscow. Turkey tried to acquire S-400 analogues from the US and France, but to no avail; Russia, on the other hand, was more responsive to Turkish requirements.

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife Sara with Brazilian Federal Deputy Eduardo Bolsonaro (R) in Jerusalem on December 15, 2019.
"As my father says, the Brazilian Embassy will move to Jerusalem. It's not something extraordinary. It's supposed to be a natural and normal thing," Bolsonaro, son of the Brazilian president and an MP himself, said at the opening of a Brazilian trade mission in Jerusalem on Sunday.
Israel "has no better friends than the people and government of Brazil," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said at the same ceremony.
Comment: Bolsanaro once described Netanyahu - known elsewhere for being a genocidal warmonger and a pending fraud indictment - as an "example for every good citizen"...
See also:
- Pepe Escobar: Brazilgate is turning into Russiagate 2.0
- Israel has so far occupied over 85% of Palestinian land
- Pepe Escobar interviews jailed former president of Brazil Lula

While the German legislation doesn't explicitly name Huawei, it's tailored to the Chinese company and comes after months of debate about 5G security.
Resistance against Huawei is growing among lawmakers in Chancellor Angela Merkel's governing coalition, who have challenged her China policy with a Bill that would impose a broad ban on "untrustworthy" 5G vendors.
"If Germany were to take a decision that leads to Huawei's exclusion from the German market, there will be consequences," Ambassador Wu Ken said on Saturday (Dec 14) at a Handelsblatt event.
Comment: While the elite war with each other over who reaps the economic benefits of installing a world-wide surveillance system, the health dangers are being hidden.
- The 'Wifi Alliance' will include 5G Wireless - and with it a huge increase of dangers to our health
- 5G Wireless: The 'massive health experiment' that could cause cancer and global catastrophe
- 5G wireless service is coming despite mounting health concerns
- FCC and States clear the way for next-generation wireless networks - despite heath concerns
- Lloyds and other insurers refuse to cover health claims caused by 5G wireless technologies
- The Health & Wellness Show: Wireless Technology: 5G is Just the Tip of the Iceberg

A woman pays tribute near the casket and portrait of Belarus-born journalist Pavel Sheremet, who was killed in a car bomb in central Kyiv in 2016.
On December 12, law enforcement officials named five people they said have been detained on suspicion of involvement in the killing of Sheremet, who died when an explosive device affixed to the bottom of the car he was driving went off at a Kyiv intersection as he was heading to a studio to host his radio program on July 20, 2016.
A Belarus-born Russian citizen who had made Kyiv his home, Sheremet was a muckraking reporter whose death underscored concerns of a climate of impunity for attacks on journalists and others challenging the powerful in Ukraine.
Poroshenko' s government faced persistent criticism over the perceived lack of progress in solving the case. Shortly after taking office in May, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy renewed the push for results in the investigation.
At a press conference to announce the developments, deputy national police chief Yevhen Koval said that Sheremet's killing was aimed at destabilizing the "social and political situation in Ukraine."
"This is the first step in solving this crime, because only those who planned and committed the murder have been identified," Prosecutor General Ruslan Ryaboshapka said. "The country still needs to hear...who was the initiator and organizer of this terrible murder."
Comment: It's important to recall, as Moon of Alabama reminds us, that Sheremet's death was initially blamed on Russia:
Instead, their reports on Sheremet peddled hints that Russia was behind the murder. The New York Times wrote at that time:Remember this when you recall on all the past evils blamed on Russia in a rush to judgment, and all the future ones, as this phenomenon doesn't look like it will stop anytime soon.By the afternoon, President Petro O. Poroshenko called an emergency meeting of his national security staff and strongly hinted that Russia had been behind the brazen assassination.The Guardian noted:
"It seems this was an act done with the intention of destabilizing the situation in the country," Mr. Poroshenko said. "In the conditions of war and aggression, I am not excluding the possibility of some foreign interest here."Zoryan Shkiryak, an aide to the interior minister, said investigators suspected a homemade explosive device of 400-600 grams of TNT equivalent that was possibly detonated remotely.NPR also pointed to Russia:
Shkiryak said the likely motive was Sheremet's professional activities, but added that investigators were considering personal conflicts and the "involvement of Russian special services".Hours after the killing, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said on television, "It seems to me this was done with one aim in mind: to destabilize the situation in the country," Reuters reports.Following the death of Pavel Sheremet a number of similar assassinations occurred in Kiev which were again blamed on Russia.
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Sheremet later said he no longer felt safe in Russia. Five years ago, he moved to Kiev. In an interview with Reuters in October, he said, "I'm threatened often and given hints. Every time I go to Moscow, it's like I'm in a minefield."
Some articles from the SOTT archive from the time of Sheremet's killing:
- What is behind WaPo's 'fake news report'? Neo-Nazi fascism and eugenics-based Cold War propaganda
- Zakharova: International inaction has led to violence against journalists in Ukraine
- The last published article of Ukrainian journalist assassinated today
- Poroshenko thinks journalist's murder aimed at destabilizing situation

Nancy Pelosi waves after speaking at AIPAC; A pharmacist counts pills; Facebook logo; A protest over the wildfires in the Amazon rainforest.
Project Censored, which works to unveil the rot in the US media ecosystem, has just published their top 25 list of censored stories over the past year. Redacted Tonight's host Lee Camp had a lot of astute comments to make on the state of modern media.
"Wow, wow, wow, you're telling me Israel influences US policies? I find that hard to believe," Camp emphasized the irony of the activities of the Israeli lobby in Washington which have been an 'open secret' for years. "But there's a difference between knowing something and seeing the actual internal proof, the evidence," like those provided in a leaked document by an Al Jazeera documentary, which of course didn't get any traction in the news.
Comey says he was 'wrong' about FBI's surveillance abuse, but downplays his own role in bungled case
"He is right. I was wrong," Comey said in an interview on "Fox News Sunday" in reference to the findings of Michael Horowitz, the Justice Department's inspector general.
"Fox News Sunday" host Chris Wallace pressed Comey about Horowitz's report, which found "significant inaccuracies" in the FBI's applications for Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrants against Page. Horowitz found that FBI agents and officials made 17 major errors or omissions in the FISA applications.
The report stated FBI agents withheld information in the applications that undercut the theory that Page was working for Russia. They also withheld information that undermined the credibility of Christopher Steele and his dossier, which Horowitz said was a "central and essential" component of the FISA application. FBI agents failed to reveal in their FISA applications that Steele told agents that one of his sources for the dossier was a "boaster" and "embellisher." Investigators also failed to disclose that one of Steele's primary sources disavowed significant parts of the dossier during interviews in January 2017.










Comment:
- "Panic mode" run on Lebanon's banks feared after 7-day closure amid protests
- People power! Lebanese continue protests, demand government fix economy
- Lebanon protests: Demands are justified, but reform must proceed carefully to avoid chaos
Even though the protests were initially over legitimate grievances with the current government, the CIA is right in there attempting to turn it to advantage. It eventually failed in Syria, and now people are wise to the game