Puppet Masters
Confirmed by the Navy Times, the stand-off has been heating up on both sides. After news in February that the Chinese deployed an advanced surface-to-air missile battery to the Paracel Islands, U.S. Pacific Command head Adm. Harry Harris told lawmakers that China was militarizing the South China Sea.
"In my opinion, China is clearly militarizing the South China Sea," Harris testified on Feb. 24. "You'd have to believe in a flat Earth to believe otherwise."
"People are only allowed outside of what you may be able to call half-houses, or half-destroyed houses, from 5:00 AM to 7:30 PM," Sarican tells Loud & Clear host Brian Becker, referring to the curfew in the town of Cizre.
"They have returned to ruins, they have returned to building being burnt and bombed."
Comment: Further reading:
There were reports of dozens of Turkish military vehicles crossing into Kurdish northern Syria, with servicemen digging trenches in the area. Turkey's "provocative" military buildup on the border and shelling of the Syrian territory could thwart the fragile truce and disrupt the peace process in the Arab Republic, the head of the Russian ceasefire monitoring center Lt. Gen. Sergey Kuralenko said this week.
'It is the people who lose': Kurds & FSA tell about the fight against Assad, Turkey's role in arming terrorists
Comment: Related updates from Syria today: Russian MOD ceasefire bulletin: Turkey continues to arm al-Nusra and Ahrar al-Sham in Syria
A special forces unit carried out the operation in which they cleared Boko Haram hideouts at the villages of Lawin Meleri, Matiri Bulaka and Aljeri, according to an army statement
Weapons and ammunition, including a long-barreled dane gun, a light machine gun bipod stand, and an IED were also recovered.
Soldiers also destroyed Boko Haram camps in the Alagarno forest in Borno State, in a separate operation, according to the military.
Recently, Riyadh designated the Lebanon-based Hezbollah militant group a terrorist organization and urged Saudi citizens to leave Lebanon.
On Wednesday, the Gulf Cooperation Council, comprising Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and Oman, labeled Hezbollah a terrorist organization.
According to the Deutsche Wirtschafts Nachrichten, it was the first time when Gulf states have collectively stood against Hezbollah which is regarded by Riyadh as an instrument of Shia leadership in Iran.
Comment: A new strategy is afoot. From here:
While Lebanon has largely been able to survive the Syrian crisis intact, despite its fragile power sharing agreement, it appears that it is always teetering on the edge of being more valuable to the NATO/GCC/Israeli bloc as a heap of rubble than a functioning country. If recent events and developments are anything to go by, it appears Lebanon is beginning to reach the end of the line when it comes to Western tolerance. Hezbollah's assistance to the Syrian government and its ever present threat to Israeli dominance in the region has thus made Lebanon as a whole the target of NATO treachery. If NATO cannot destroy Syria because of Hezbollah or if it cannot destroy Hezbollah in Syria, it may very well try to destroy Lebanon in order to do so, whether it is by "hordes of youth" in the streets or armed death squads on the war path.
Comment: Fethulah Gulen has been linked to the CIA and part of the wide web of Operation Gladio. It's safe to say Gulen is "American-backed". What does this say about Erdogan's position in the Western elite 'club'? Is the U.S. planning to hang him out to dry, like Mike Whitney recently suggested? Is U.S. support for the Syrian-Kurdish YPG partly an effort to provoke Erdogan into launching a suicidal attack on the combined forces of the Syrian Kurds, Russia, Syria, Iran, and Hezbollah?
Police of Turkey's Kayseri province detained on Friday four Boydak Holding board members over providing financial assistance to the so-called parallel state linked to prominent Turkish oppositionist Fethullah Gulen, local media reported.
Boydak Holding established in 1957 includes companies operating in energy, chemical and textile industries, as well as in agriculture.
According to the Hurriyet newspaper, police detained company CEO Memduh Boydak, board members Erol Boydak and Murat Bozdag, as well as holding chairman Haci Boydak. Company searches are in progress.
"We are not part of the negotiation process on the debt. We continue to urge Russia and Ukraine to come to the negotiating table. And the so-called integrity is what the Board of Directors will take into account when approving the second review of Ukraine," Rice said.
He added that for the completion of the second review of the programme of assistance to Ukraine and, accordingly, the allocation of the next tranche of the IMF loan, it is also necessary to obtain greater clarity from the authorities of Ukraine in fulfilling their commitments to implement reforms and combat corruption.
The amount of overdue debt of Ukraine amounts to $3.075 billion. The Ministry of Finance in December 2013 bought, at the expense of the [Russian] National Welfare Fund, two-year Ukrainian Eurobonds at a rate of 5% per annum. Ukraine regularly serviced this debt until December 2015, when Kiev imposed a moratorium on the payment of the last coupon of $75 million and the repayment of the principal amount of the debt. The Ukrainian government offered Russia to participate in debt restructuring on the same basis as other holders of commercial releases of Eurobonds of the country. Russia has repeatedly stressed the inadmissibility of the sovereign debt restructuring of Ukraine on equal terms with private debt.
The IMF, in December 2015, lifted restrictions on lending to countries with arrears on sovereign debts, which opened up the Fund's ability to continue lending to Ukraine even if Kiev cannot produce periodic repayment of the $3 billion Eurobonds.
Comment: By holding to the letter of international financial law, Russia is forcing its opponent to do the same.
Bilal Erdogan, 35, who has been in Bologna with his family since last autumn, texted his friends in Turkey, telling them he has to return with his family, according to local media.
"Our security in Bologna has become a very sensitive issue both for the Italian and the Turkish government," he allegedly texted one of his friends, Resto del Carlino reported. The text message ends with a promise to return to Italy one day when things there are more "peaceful."
Bilal said he went to Bologna with his wife and children to finish his PhD studies at Bologna's Johns Hopkins University.
However, critics say that in 2013 he was involved in a massive graft scandal linked to Turkey's ruling AKP party, where Bilal was complicit in a money laundering scheme endeavoring to bypass United States-led sanctions on Iran.
The complaint filed in February by Erdogan's detractors alleges that €1 billion from the corrupt scheme is still unaccounted for.
Comment: The apple doesn't fall too far from the tree.
California's decision came after the World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified glyphosate as a "probable carcinogen" in March 2015. Researchers discovered "limited evidence" of a link between the weedkiller and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in humans, as well as "convincing evidence" of its link to other forms of cancer in rodents. Thus, IARC decided unanimously that glyphosate is "probably carcinogenic."
California announced in September it would include glyphosate among the noxious chemicals under Prop 65, which "mandates notification and labeling of all known to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm, and prohibits their discharge into drinking waters of the state," Alternet summarized.
Comment: The Trans Pacific Partnership rears its ugly head. If a corporation disagrees with a state's actions, it can sue.















Comment: The imperial bully seems hell-bent on provoking conflict in yet another part of the world. Though this particular situation has been brewing for many months now, it remains to be seen how committed the U.S. is to picking on someone its own size, full on. Just how insane is Amerika? We're about to find out.