Puppet Masters
The country's Independent Election Commission (IEC) said on February 18 that final official results from the September 28 presidential election show incumbent President Ashraf Ghani has been elected to a second five-year term with 50.64 percent of the vote.
By winning more than 50 percent of the vote, he has avoided a second-round runoff ballot.
The results come nearly five months after the election due to a lengthy recount of the ballots that was launched after Ghani's main rival, Abdullah Abdullah, raised allegations of fraud in the vote-counting process.
Abdullah, who has been serving as Afghanistan's chief executive officer as part of a national unity government, took second place with 39.52 percent of the vote, according to the IEC.

It is understood Michel Barnier has privately fumed that the UK is backsliding on its promises.
Speaking in response to a landmark speech by David Frost, Britain's Brexit negotiator, Barnier said such an offer was not on the table and noted that the prime minister had agreed only six months ago to stick to the EU's state aid rules and current social and environmental regulations after the transition period.
Asked if Frost was right in his speech on Monday night to say that agreeing to such alignment in a trade deal would be undemocratic, Barnier told reporters: "Truly not. It is a sovereign decision of the EU, it is a sovereign decision of the UK to cooperate ... That is what Boris Johnson wrote in the political declaration."

The infamous app developed by former Clinton operatives for the Iowa Democratic caucus
Early voters in Nevada have already faced long lines, technical difficulties, and monumental uncertainty about the voting process with voting underway since Saturday due to close Tuesday before the general caucus this coming Saturday.
We've seen this movie before
The slow-motion car-crash caucus volunteers have sketched out in their heads bears a strong resemblance to the events of Iowa. They're willing to discuss it in interviews with the media, but always anonymously, for fear of angering what is apparently a vengeful party. But the Democratic National Committee chair Tom Perez and his state-level minions insist all is well.
Comment: Adding to the chaos is Michael Bloomberg's muscling in on the Democrat ballot by dropping large wads of cash in the appropriate pockets:
Michael Bloomberg will be allowed to participate in the upcoming Democratic primary debate in Nevada, thanks in part to a helpful rule change - and hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign spending.Indeed, Bloomberg is already crippling other downballot Democrat candidates' organizations, poaching their best campaign talent with lavish salaries and perks. The Intercept reports:
As of Tuesday, the former New York City mayor has polled over 10 percent in four surveys, meeting the threshold set by the Democratic National Committee (DNC). (Alternatively, Bloomberg could have qualified by receiving at least one delegate from either the Iowa caucuses or the New Hampshire primary - but the billionaire has yet to rack up a single delegate.)
His qualification for Wednesday's debate in Las Vegas was made possible by a rather accommodating rule change enacted by the DNC, which decided to drop the requirement that candidates have a strong network of donors.
In fact, requiring grassroots support would have been a major hurdle for Bloomberg. He is not soliciting donations, choosing instead to self-finance his campaign. With a seemingly bottomless war chest, the billionaire has shelled out a staggering $344 million of his own money since declaring his candidacy in late November.
Current polls suggest that Bloomberg has no clear path to winning the primaries. Some have expressed concern that the billionaire's plan is to poach delegates from other candidates during the Democratic Convention, in order snatch the nomination from Bernie Sanders. American comedian Lee Camp has argued that a match-up between Bloomberg and Donald Trump would be a lose-lose for the American people, describing both candidates as oligarchs who serve Wall Street.
Beyond pushing out his competitors, though, Bloomberg's spending is having a shockingly disruptive effect on Democratic politics throughout the country: He is hiring armies of staffers and canvassers in nearly every state in the country at eye-popping salaries, poaching talent from other campaigns and progressive organizations that are now struggling to fill jobs. In just three months, the Bloomberg campaign has hired thousands of people to staff more than 125 offices around the country, the New York Times reported Thursday.And finally, WHY? Mike Bloomberg: Trojan Horse for Clintonista revival
[...]
The salaries being paid to Bloomberg staffers are well above market rates, and often come with housing included, as well as a laptop and an iPhone. One operative lured to Bloomberg's office in New York said she observed a seemingly endless wall of iPhones stacked like bricks as far as she could see. Another said that Bloomberg offered a job to one operative who didn't take it, but still received a laptop and iPhone from the campaign in the mail anyway, presumably by sheer dint of onboarding momentum. One progressive consultant in Arizona has lost multiple hires to Bloomberg and is having a hard time finding workers. "I have heard of new organizers being hired by Bloomberg and then saying they are secretly still knocking for Bernie," the consultant said.
[..]
Regardless of whether Bloomberg wins the nomination or not, the Bloomberg effect will continue through the end of the election cycle. His operation in support of whomever becomes the Democratic nominee will be well staffed. Everybody else is on their own.

A smoke rises from a port of Tripoli after being attacked in Tripoli, Libya February 18, 2020
"The Turkish ship loaded with weapons and ammunition that docked this morning at the port of Tripoli was destroyed," reads a short statement published by an LNA Facebook account. It didn't elaborate on the attack, which appears to have taken place on Tuesday afternoon.
However, Brigadier Khaled Al Mahjoub of the LNA told Al-Arabiya that the vessel had arrived in violation of an arms embargo and was carrying weapons for armed militias.
Ghassan Salame, UN envoy for Libya, also confirmed that the Tripoli port was attacked, lamenting that "the truce is very fragile."
He was optimistic, however, that "nobody has so far reneged on the principle of accepting the truce and the political process is trying to find a way to move forward."
Comment: See also: Green Resistance Using Haftar's Army as a Vehicle for Sovereign Libya as well as:
- Libya's LNA-backed interim government slams Turkey's 'aggression' and accuses it of 'seeking to conquer the country'
- Joanne Moriarty: Turkey proceeds with invasion of Libya, tribes respond
- Turkey starting troop deployment to Libya, will start granting drilling licenses in region - Erdogan
Oh, and until just a couple of years ago, he was a Republican. Billionaires like Bloomberg change parties to where ever they see their money will go the farthest.
Right now, that is the quickly fracturing Democrats, who are staring at a revolt to Bernie Sanders that doesn't sit with Wall St. at all.
It's also obvious that Bloomberg is animated by personal animus towards Donald Trump that I suspect is as much about Mike's ego as it is his desire to protect Wall St. from having any of its dirty laundry aired during a Trump 2nd term.
Because with the failure to convict Trump in the Senate those that were behind that coup attempt are now uniquely exposed to his retribution. And that trail of tears for all involved leads right back up to Hillary Clinton's poisoned garden of a 2016 presidential bid.
There, Scott Stripling, an evangelical pastor from Texas, heads a dig in search of remnants of the biblical tabernacle - a portable dwelling containing a chest holding the two stone tablets of the Ten Commandments.
In a recent interview with the Times of Israel, Stripling says his latest find - three horns that may have adorned an altar - supports his claim that Tel Shiloh is the site of the dwelling.
The site and surrounding area already advance this perspective: The nearby settlement has a synagogue designed as a replica of the tabernacle, and while the site's artifacts show a variety of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim groups residing in the area over a 3,700-year period, its attractions scarcely acknowledge anything outside the tabernacle story.
Comment: A fine example of how ingrained belief systems are destroying humanity one shovel at a time. There is nothing we can't accept - given a persuasive justification and a promise it is real. It is Israel's house of cards.
Those flaws would allow a malicious outside attacker or a partisan insider to change the numbers at the county tabulation level. The trick to changing numbers is to do so in a way that does not put the result too far outside of the margin of error of the exit polls. Prior polling can be somewhat ignored as they are often biased and unless the answer is the difference between leprechauns and unicorns the results will not arouse too much suspicion. That is what someone hoped to do on behalf of Pete Buttigieg. A closer look reveals their failure to conceal their graft.
According to the AP reporting of the published numbers at the time of this writing (9am EST Wednesday February 12th) Sanders got 71759 votes or 25.7% of the total with 87% of the precincts reporting. Buttigieg got 68141 votes or 24.7%. Both were awarded 9 delegates, which is a number we will return to later.
Breaking this result down by county leaves a much different set of results. New Hampshire has 10 counties. 7 of those counties tabulate votes the old fashioned way with human beings counting paper ballots in public. 3 of those counties (Carroll, Rockingham and Merrimack) use the previously highlighted AccuVote OS scanner -tabulator machines. Both rural and more urban counties are represented in both groups. The percentages between the two candidates should hold within one to two points. They differ wildly.
Comment: See also:
- Bernie Sanders wins NH primary while Joe Biden tucks tail after finishing 5th
- Buttigieg skirts anti-corruption laws by campaigning with 'dark money' group
- DNC completely lost public trust in its primary process the very first day
- The Buttigieg campaign: A tissue of myths
- Mayor Buttigieg worked with the CIA in Afghanistan as an intelligence analyst for USEUCOM, ATFC Kabul HQ, NSA, DIA
- Inside track: National security mandarins groomed Pete Buttigieg, managed his future
An increase in the daily allowance for members like Glasgow's Michelle Mone, would see peers getting a tax-free payment of £323 a day for attendance in the chamber.
Comment: They are not obliged to do or prove they have done anything else except attend.
This 3.1% increase, which is above the rate of inflation, would mean the daily sum would exceed the monthly standard allowance for a single person on Universal Credit of £317.82.
This is, however, set to rise to £323.22 in April.
The issue was raised in the House of Commons during Prime Ministers' Questions by SNP's East Renfrewshire MP, Kirsten Oswald.
She said: "Is that the 'levelling up' the Prime Minister keeps talking about?"
Comment: And it should come as no surprise that, for the poorest in the UK, poverty is soaring, life expectancy is declining and infant mortality is rising to unprecedented levels:
- UK economy faces weakest growth since second world war
- UK MPs award themselves above inflation pay rise
- The Malign Incompetence of The British Ruling Class
"In order to agree on specific solutions, we need multilateral talks and multilateral consultations involving, of course, the United States, who destroyed the treaty," Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Monday, referring to the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty.
This pact saw Washington and Moscow eliminate entire classes of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and missile launchers capable of carrying nukes back in the 1980s.
Trump called for Russia to end its support for the Syrian regime's "atrocities" and conveyed the United States' "desire to see an end to Russia's support" for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
He urged "a political resolution to the Syrian conflict," which has lasted for nearly nine years.
Their conversation came a day before a new round of talks are scheduled between Ankara and Moscow who back opposing sides in the conflict.
Comment: RT provides more detail on the situation:
Both the Russian Armed Forces and the country's advisers will "support the Syrian Arab Republic armed forces in their fight against terrorism," Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said in a briefing on February 17.Meanwhile the US recently sent over 50 military vehicles from Iraq to Syria.
Referring to escalating terrorist attacks in the northwestern Syrian province of Idlib, he said that the Russian government "still regrets that these terrorists have revitalized in Idlib."
The statement follows US President Donald Trump's recent call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, during which Trump "expressed concern over the violence in Idlib." He also praised "Turkey's efforts to prevent a humanitarian crisis" in the province, and hoped that Russia would stop supporting the Assad government, according to Deputy White House Press Secretary Judd Deere.
Tensions in the Idlib de-escalation zone have been steadily rising in recent weeks. On February 3, a Turkish armed convoy came under artillery fire, leaving five dead as a result. The tragedy occurred when the Syrian Army was conducting an operation against terrorists in the area, and was not notified of the convoy's movements, according to the Russian Defense Ministry.
Ankara retaliated, firing on known Syrian Army positions, and sending additional troops into the de-escalation zone 10 days later. In response to the troop surge, Damascus officially recognized the Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Empire.
Erdogan and Russia's President Vladimir Putin also discussed the situation on the ground in a phonecall last week. The two leaders agreed that the Sochi agreement on the Idlib de-escalation zone must be fully implemented.












Comment: More Brexit posturing?