Puppet Masters
The article, authored by James Risen, did not even mention the fact that the Trump administration, with the full support of the Democrats, is seeking to extradite Assange from Britain, so that he can be prosecuted in the US for his role in WikiLeaks' exposures of war crimes, diplomatic intrigues and mass surveillance.
Instead, it sought to present the WikiLeaks founder as the crucial link in a conspiracy between Trump and the Russian administration of President Vladimir Putin, to deprive Democratic Party candidate Hillary Clinton of the presidency in the 2016 US election.
There are calls from former members of the Royal Family, details about and conic designer's weekend visit to his Palm Beach mansion, and multiple messages from his close friend Jean-Luc Brunel.
There is one that appears to reference underage girls, another noting how much an 18-year-old woman 'loves Jeffrey' and another in which Brunel relays one doctor's professional opinion on how best to treat a sexually transmitted disease.

In this Jan. 4, 2019 file photo, Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-Ill., walks to a group photo with the women of the 116th Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Communications director Jared Smith, political director Molly Ritner, deputy executive director Nick Pancrazio, top communications aide Melissa Miller and the committee's diversity director Van Ornelas all resigned by Monday evening.
The exits come on the heels of the resignation of the committee's executive director, Allison Jaslow, which she announced at an all-staff meeting earlier on Monday.
Comment: But it is all about diversity and, and feelz, for the Dems, don't you know?
The Washington Examiner adds:
A mass departure of top aides shook House Democrats' campaign arm Tuesday, an exodus prompted by complaints from Hispanic and black lawmakers that the organization's staff lacked diversity.
The tumult comes in a period when race has become a partisan battlefield, following a series of Twitter attacks by President Donald Trump on House Democrats of color. In his latest blasts, he has disparaged Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings and his city of Baltimore, which is majority black.
Some Examiner disingenousness here. Trump did not attack Cummings for his race, but for his dismal performance representing Boston, a black hole (no pun intended) that HUD has sunk millions into with no discerntable results.
The shake-up also occurred as both parties are already fundraising and recruiting candidates for the 2020 elections, in which Democrats will be defending their House majority. The DCCC outspent its counterpart, the National Republican Congressional Committee, in the 2018 elections that saw Democrats regain House control after eight years in the minority.
Lawmakers complaining about the DCCC's staff have included Texas Democratic Reps. Filemon Vela and Vicente Gonzalez and Ohio Rep. Marcia Fudge, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus.
Bustos, 57, became chairwoman of the campaign committee following the 2018 elections, arguing she would be effective because she has represented a swing district that swung to support Trump in 2016.
Hispanic lawmakers became disenchanted after she replaced top staffers, including many minorities, with aides who were largely white, said an aide to Gonzalez who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to discuss the matter publicly. New committee leaders often name long-time aides to their staffs.
Maybe those aides were largely competent?
In a statement last weekend, Gonzalez and Vela said the DCCC was "in complete chaos." They said Bustos should appoint a person of color to be executive director "to restore confidence in the organization and to promote diversity."
Fudge also told Politico, which first reported about the DCCC's disarray, about her unhappiness about the committee's lack of diversity.
"It is shocking, and something needs to be done about it," she said.
Gabrielle Brown, spokeswoman for the Congressional Black Caucus, said black House lawmakers have been holding meetings with DCCC officials for months at which they expressed similar concerns. None of the lawmakers complained about the DCCC's performance this year in raising money and finding candidates to challenge Republicans, the committee's main job.
Confused? The sordid saga began Friday, when the Post published an op-ed titled "Mitch McConnell is a Russian asset," in which columnist Dana Milbank accused the Senate Majority Leader of selling out to the Kremlin by refusing to bring a trio of anti-election-meddling bills to the Senate floor. That the bills came bundled with untenable (to the GOP at least) Democratic demands was immaterial; McConnell was quickly dubbed "Moscow Mitch" on Twitter.
Asked by reporters on Tuesday to respond, President Trump said, "The Washington Post called Mitch McConnell what? I think the Washington Post is a Russian asset by comparison."
Though Trump has called the Post "garbage,""fiction," and "more like a poorly written novel than good reporting," "Russian asset" is a new one for the president.
The Post wasted no time fact-checking Trump's quip, proudly tweeting out: "Trump makes unfounded claim The Washington Post is a 'Russian Asset."
The irony wasn't lost on McConnell, however. "OMG I'm so sorry this is happening to you" tweeted his campaign team, with the patronizing just dripping from the emojis.
Comment: Sweet memetic justice. The sad thing is that the idiots at WaPo probably don't even see how they are being treated exactly the same as they have treated all the people they have labeled Russian agents. They're that delusional.
Khalilzad said on July 31 that he is heading to neighboring Pakistan and then on to Qatar, where he is set to hold a ninth round of talks with the Taliban to end the nearly 18-year war in Afghanistan.
"The U.S. and Afghanistan have agreed on next steps. And a negotiating team and technical support group are being finalized," Khalilzad tweeted as he ended his visit.
"I'm off to Doha, with a stop in Islamabad. In Doha, if the Taliban do their part, we will do ours, and conclude the agreement we have been working on," he wrote in a separate tweet.

An anti-brexit protestor holds a flag naming the six counties of Northrn Ireland
On his first day as British prime minister last week, Johnson was candid in his disdain for attempts to minimize disruption in Ireland over Brexit. He slammed the proposed "backstop" arrangement of maintaining an open border between Northern Ireland and the Republic as "anti-democratic" and vowed to scrap it.
A hard-Brexit scenario which Johnson and his cabinet are pushing for will mean Britain leaving the EU's single market and customs union without any transition deal. That will inevitably see the return of a hard border for trade and customs control between the Republic of Ireland (an EU member) and Northern Ireland under British jurisdiction.
Given the preponderance of daily trade and traffic between the north and south of Ireland, any such border control will cause immense damage to both economies.
Generous Giles has published a list of 10 "ground rules" for befuddled Westerners seeking to unravel the enigma that is Russia - but before we delve into the finer details, let's add some important context. This Russia whisperer is a "senior consulting fellow" at Chatham House - a British think tank receiving funding from the Foreign Commonwealth Office (FCO), the UK Ministry of Defence, the British Army and the US embassy, as well as an impressive array of arms manufacturers.
Very often, those posing as 'experts' on Russia pepper their analysis with outright xenophobia. Yet, this problematic and bigoted language is rarely noticed by their admiring peers because, as I have written before, "the Russians" are an exception to current cultural rules around political correctness. Xenophobia, when it is about Russians, is never condemned in Western media and 'think tank' circles. Rather, it has become an essential component of any celebrated 'analysis' of the country and its actions.

Viktor Yuschenko in 2001 (left) and after the alleged poisoning in 2004 (right)
At the time, Yushchenko led a Western-backed coalition against the incumbent Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, whom they accused of being "pro-Russian." His disfigurement from what he called dioxin poisoning led to an outpouring of popular support and street protests, later dubbed the 'Orange Revolution.' Under that pressure, the Ukrainian supreme court annulled the run-off election Yanukovich had won, delivering Yushchenko the presidency after a revote.
This week, however, the deputy Prosecutor-General and chief military prosecutor of Ukraine since 2014, Anatoly Matios, revealed in an interview that his investigators found no evidence of a poisoning.
Comment: It's notable that most of the ruling factions in Ukraine are, like Yuschenko, subservient to the West, and so it's not immediately apparent how deliberately discrediting the story benefits them, leading one to believe that their findings are true.
See also:
- US Staged a Coup in Ukraine - Here's Why and How
- Who is Ukraine torturing in its secret prisons?
- From joker to peacemaker? Zelensky needs to follow his words with actions to end Ukraine's conflict
- 'Ukraine on Fire': How US, Not Russia, Destroyed Ukraine - Oliver Stone Documentary Finally Available (VIDEO)
"Twitter suspends accounts that violate Twitter rules," said the default notice on the grayed-out page of @RusEmbSyria on Tuesday. The social media platform notoriously refuses to comment on individual suspensions.
While the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Moscow has yet to offer an official statement on the suspension, the Russian embassy in South Africa has chimed in, calling Twitter "thought police" for banning their colleagues.
Comment: Moscow has responded to the banning by calling it "an act of censorship and a flagrant violation of the freedom of speech."

Democratic 2020 U.S presidential candidate Andrew Yang holds a rally in the Manhattan.
The tech entrepreneur, who is running on a platform that mixes ideas from the left and the right with some skepticism about robots, told his followers that the DNC had rejected his second poll after he submitted the fourth one, showing that he had more than the two percent of support needed to qualify for the debates.
The committee said that the two polls provided by the candidate - a July 11 poll from NBC and The Wall Street Journal and a July 19 poll by NBC and SurveyMonkey - would only be counted as one.











Comment: Though it bills itself as righteous alt-media, given the founder of The Intercept's sketchy background, there's no surprise it's an outlet for the Empire's talking points.