Puppet Masters
The Cabinet Committee on Security, chaired by PM Narendra Modi, has cleared the "game-changing acquisition" on Wednesday, according to the Times of India. The move comes ahead of Russian President Vladimir Putin's visit early next month.
The Indian Air Force (IAF), which operates the country's air defenses, is expected to receive first S-400 squadron within 24 months after the contract's signing. The rest will be delivered within the next 4-5 years.
Consequently, the threatened US-and-allied bombing campaign to overthrow Syria's Government and replace it with one that would be controlled by the royal family of Saudi Arabia (the Sauds)has been placed on hold, because such a bombing campaign would now mean the US going to war against not only Syria's Government and Russia's Government and Iran's Government, but also against Turkey's Government, which is a NATO member and (because of its location) has been an essential part of the American Empire.
Turkey is thus now balanced on a knife's edge, between the US and its allies (representing the Saud family) on the one side, versus Russia and its allies (representing the anti-Saud alliance) on the other.
I must admit I had thought that the Russians would accept the Israeli explanations, and the case would rest. This was the view of pro-Kremlin writers and bloggers, and they often know the mind of the Russian authorities. These guys and gals do not get their instructions directly from the Kremlin, nor do they have a consistent view of Russian interests nor an opinion of their own; usually they try to guess what the Kremlin will do next and build a defense line for it. If you watch them, you'll get an idea of what the expectation.
They took a rather pro-Israeli line. Whoever called for a stronger response to the Israeli provocation, was called an "anti-Semite firebrand". This is not as deadly a marker in Russia as it is in the West, but it still is not a great compliment, either. Some pro-Kremlin writers blamed the Syrians; so did the liberal opposition to Putin. Julia Latynina, the pet Russian writer of Western liberals, a Putin nemesis, a recipient of the Defender of Freedom Award, with hundreds of references in the Guardian and the New York Times, called the Syrians - "apes". (The Russian anti-Putin liberals are racist beyond belief but they love Jews).
A pro-Kremlin English-language writer said that the Iranians (sic!) were to be blamed; perhaps they pushed the button and destroyed the Il. And Syrians surely were guilty as hell. He also ferociously attacked the experts who spoke of Israeli responsibility and called them "antisemites". The chief editors of the Russian semi-official media apparently thought Putin wanted to forget about the whole business of the downed Il-20 as fast as possible. They promptly erased it from their agenda. Incredibly, on the next day the Russian media was practically free from any reference to the disaster. Only the hard old men of the opposition grumbled in their marginal online journals: "We are lost," "Putin obeys his oligarchs," "The Jewish lobby in Moscow won", "Putin cares more of his Jewish friends than of the Russian soldiers". But they were premature.

Human rights groups say they have not documented any instance of protesters posing a lethal threat to Israeli soldiers when they were killed during mass demonstrations in the Gaza Strip.
That point was stressed by the Gaza-based human rights group Al Mezan during a meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday.
Human Rights Watch meanwhile told the council that it "has not documented instances where protesters posed an imminent threat to life."
Israel has validated its unlawful conduct "after presenting a gross distortion of international law" to its high court, Nils Mollema, representing Al Mezan, stated. Its military's "investigation into some of the protest deaths is expected to find that none of the incidents involved violations of open fire orders."
Did Australian diplomat Alexander Downer - and possibly other foreign allies - share intel on Trump?
The answers to those questions would be significant because they would reveal the extent of other nation's efforts in cooperating with the FBI's counterintelligence operation on President Donald Trump's campaign, say U.S. officials that spoke to SaraACarter.com. The information - if it was used - would be part of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant's package of evidence presented to the secret court, said one former and one current U.S. official.
Comment: There are loose threads all over Russiagate, begging to be pulled. Stefan Halper is a big one.
- Internet sleuths claim to uncover Obama's "top secret spy" in the Trump campaign: Stefan Halper
- Russiagate twist: Professor Stefan Halper, who spied for the CIA in the 80s, was sent by FBI to spy on Trump campaign
- FBI spy-op exposed: Trump campaign infiltrated by longtime CIA and MI6 asset
- Obama DoD paid FBI informant Halper over $250k just before 2016 election
- SPYGATE: The biggest political scandal in US history since Watergate

Israeli soldiers at the border fence of Israel and Gaza. Several thousand Gazans gather for mass protests. April 13, 2018
Marie van der Zyl, the president of the board of deputies, insisted that UK arms sales to Israel were a crucial part of "military cooperation" between the two countries. She described Labour's position as "irresponsible" and "misguided," warning the move could "endanger British civilians and assets in both the Middle East and in the UK," the Jerusalem Post reports.
Banging his fist passionately on the rostrum, Macron warned that "nationalism always leads to defeat" in what was immediately understood to be a thinly veiled rebuke of US President Donald Trump, who had spoken shortly before him.
The speeches from the two leaders were quite literally worlds apart. Macron sounded the alarm about multilateralism and dialogue falling apart, which he said would lead "directly to isolation and conflict" to the detriment of everyone, "even in the end, those who thought they were strongest." Meanwhile, Trump rejected a globalist ideology and promised never to surrender US sovereignty to an "unelected, unaccountable global bureaucracy."
It was the battle of the globalists v the nationalists - but was the French leader's display enough to outdo one of the most notorious UN meltdowns?
The Su-57 is Russia's first 5th-generation aircraft, designed to be a formidable threat to major air powers such as the US. It is normally expected to carry weapons in its internal bays, to reduce radar cross-section and avoid compromising its stealth capabilities. But larger missiles may be carried externally at a hardpoint, and one of those will be the R-37M, a missile with a greater range than anything the US aircraft would have at their disposal.
The R-37M is an upgraded version of the missile that came into service in 1985. The older variant is among the larger air-to-air missiles, measuring 4.2 meters in length and 600kg in weight, suitable only for bigger aircraft like the Mig-31BM interceptor.

Once shown how, Trump wasn't afraid to use the gavel at the UN Security Council on Wednesday
The US, which currently holds the monthly rotating presidency at the UNSC, tried to pretend that this was a broader session about non-proliferation to avoid having to invite Tehran's representatives (Trump gave the game away last week when he tweeted that he was "chairing a meeting on Iran").
But as the day before in front of the General Assembly, the Islamic Republic was yet again the target Trump unloaded at, and the reason he lent his weight to the appearance instead of sending Nikki Haley or Mike Pompeo in his stead.
"It is planned to increase Russia's trade with China to $200 billion and Chinese investment in the Russian economy to $15 billion," said a document for the government's activities for the period up to 2024.
The document, released on Thursday, also envisages boosting trade with other countries. Russia's trade with India may reach $30 billion by 2024. Trade with the Middle East and North African nations is expected to amount to $50 billion, while trade with sub-Saharan countries could hit $7 billion, and Latin America, $20 billion.












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