Puppet Masters
The 14 people from France on the 500-member Bloomberg Billionaires Index added a combined $78 billion to their collective net worth since Dec. 31, a 35% increase. That's more than double the pace of China's richest, at 17%, and the U.S.'s 15%. The best returns outside of France came mostly from Asia as Thailand's wealthiest were a close second at 33%, followed by Singapore's 31% and 24% for Japan.
The figures exclude countries with fewer than two billionaires in the ranking. That makes Aliko Dangote, the sole Nigerian on the list, an outlier. His wealth has surged 60% to $16.8 billion this year.

Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro speaks with members of his government at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on July 2, 2019.
In a televised speech on Tuesday, Maduro said, "I am sure that in 2019, we will reach a great agreement on mutual understanding and peace, dialog, and democracy for Venezuela."
He also said his government was ready to continue talks with the opposition in Norway toward "creating a permanent mechanism for talks and [to] search for solutions."
"That process is going well," the Venezuelan president said. "There will be good news in the coming weeks about how well the contact, negotiation, and pre-agreement processes are going." He did not elaborate.

'I want to believe' Mulder (David Duchovny) and Scully (Gillian Anderson) in 'The X Files'
Look, you'd say, we have moon rock samples and pictures and we left laser reflectors on the surface and... basically you still don't believe me but that's because you're mad and no proof on earth (or the moon) would satisfy you.
It's true that there was always the big one which wasn't quite so easily dismissed. This was the Kennedy assassination - but here you could be fairly sure that the whole thing was a terrible, impenetrable murky morass. You knew that some things never would be known (or would be released, partially redacted by the CIA, 200 years in the future). And you knew that whatever the truth was it was probably a bit dull compared to your mate's flights of fantasy involving the KGB, the Mafia and the military-industrial complex. Besides, it all made for a lot of very entertaining films and books.
This nice, cozy state of affairs lasted until the early 2000s. But then something changed. These days conspiracy theories don't look so crazy and conspiracy theorists don't look like crackpots. In fact, today's conspiracy theory is tomorrow's news headlines. It's tempting, I suppose, to say we live in a golden age of conspiracy theories, although it's only really golden for the architects of the conspiracies. From the Iraq war to FIFA to the banking crisis, the truth is not only out there, but it's more outlandish than anything we could have made up.
Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz has announced that the Jewish state is bracing itself for its possible military involvement in the escalation of relations between Iran and the US.
Addressing the Herzliya Conference on Tuesday, he claimed that "mistaken calculations by the [Iranian] regime" may bring about a "military conflagration" in the Middle East region. "We must be prepared for this, and thus the State of Israel continues to devote itself to building up its military might for the event that it will have to respond to escalation scenarios," Katz pointed out.
The remarks come after he told the Israel Army Radio that after its current uranium enrichment ramp-up, Iran is sliding toward a war in which it may suffer heavy losses. The top Israeli diplomat pledged that the Jewish state would not "allow Iran to obtain nuclear weapons, even if it has to act alone on that".
Comment: More from Reuters: Israel is bracing for possible US-Iran escalation
Israel has encouraged the Trump administration to press ahead with sanctions against its arch-foe, predicting that Tehran will eventually renegotiate a more limiting nuclear deal.See also:
Foreign Minister Israel Katz told an international security forum that Iran might accidentally stumble out of what he termed the "gray zone" of contained confrontation. "It should be taken into account that mistaken calculations by the (Iranian) regime...are liable to bring about a shift from the 'gray zone' to the 'red zone' - that is, a military conflagration," he said in a speech to the Herzliya Conference.
Israel has long threatened to take preemptive military action to deny Iran the means of making nuclear weapons. Tehran says it has no such designs. One of its senior lawmakers warned on Monday that Israel would be destroyed within "only half an hour" should the United States attack Iran.
- Would war with Iran really be a walk in the park? Absolutely not
- 6 Signs the U.S. May Be Headed for War in Iran
- U.S.Congress quietly laying the groundwork for war with Iran
- Bolton: I 'absolutely' hope the US will attack Iran in the next 'six months'
HP and Dell, the world's No. 1 and No. 3 personal computer makers who together command around 40% of the global market, are planning to reallocate up to 30% of their notebook production out of China, several sources told the Nikkei Asian Review.
Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Sony and Nintendo are also looking at moving some of their game console and smart speaker manufacturing out of the country, multiple sources told the Nikkei Asian Review. Other leading PC makers such as Lenovo Group, Acer and Asustek Computer are also evaluating plans to shift, according to people familiar with the matter.
Tech companies' plans, spurred by the bitter trade battle between Washington and Beijing, have not changed despite the truce that was struck between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at last weekend's Group of 20 summit in Osaka. Multiple sources said the situation was still too uncertain, while rising costs in China were also prompting manufacturers to examine alternatives.
Rouhani said that, starting from Sunday, Iran will increase its level of uranium enrichment beyond the limit of 3.67 percent set by the 2015 nuclear deal, known as the JCPOA, local media reported. "From July 7, we will put aside our commitment in relation to the level of enrichment and we will increase to any level that we wish depending on the needs and our requirements."
The Iranian officials earlier called the move the "second phase" of scaling down the nation's commitments under the agreement. During the "first phase," which was activated by Iran last month, the county had increased its uranium stockpile beyond the 300kg allowed by the JCPOA.
In May, Iran gave the EU a 60-day deadline to negotiate the lifting of sanctions imposed on Tehran by the US, which unilaterally left the JCPOA last year.
Rouhani confirmed on Wednesday that the nation will revert back to fully following the deal if the other parties "return to their obligations and commitments" under the agreement. "Every action we take could be reversed within one hour." Rouhani also said that after July 7 Iran's heavy-water nuclear reactor in Arak will "return to its previous activities," unless Europe can provide sanctions relief.
Katz, the Israeli minister of foreign affairs - and intelligence - visited Abu Dhabi over the weekend. It was the first time the Jewish state's top diplomat set foot on UAE soil, albeit as part of a UN-led Climate Meeting.
The diplomat used the opportunity to meet an unnamed senior local official to discuss growing ties between the two countries, economic cooperation and the ever-trendy "Iranian threat." "I am excited to stand here in Abu Dhabi and to represent the interests of the State of Israel vis-à-vis the Arab Gulf states," Katz said. "This is a significant step up in the relations between Israel and the states in the region."
Even though it was not a state-level visit, it's still "quite an unprecedented step, showing that the relationship has gone quite far," believes Dmitriy Maryasis, senior fellow with the Russian Institute of Oriental Studies.
"The Iranian issue is definitely the base of their relationship, it's always easier to unite against a common enemy," Maryasis told RT. "Tactically, the Sunni countries of the Persian Gulf and Israel turned out to be on the same side regarding the relations with Iran - both of them perceive it as a threat."
Comment: See also:
- Assassinating Iranian Scientists:The Original Sin
- US Intel Chief warns Israel is provoking retaliation from Iran
- Netanyahu: Israel is 'covertly' cooperating with Arab states
- Netanyahu: Israel and Arab nations discuss a 'common interest of war with Iran'
- Netanyahu taunts Iranian FM at Munich Security Conference with drone fragment
- Iran seeks nuclear-free Middle East and insists Israel 'give up the bomb'
- Trump's budget cuts State Dept, keeps foreign aid of $3.1billion to Israel, silent on other countries
"He seems to be fantasizing in the faded glory of British colonialism and obsessed with the bad habit of criticizing and lecturing on other countries' affairs condescendingly," Foreign Ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang said at a daily press briefing. Geng said China has lodged stern representations with Britain over Hunt's comments.
According to The Times, Hunt said on Tuesday that he expected China to honor the Sino-British Joint Declaration, a treaty signed in 1984 when Margaret Thatcher was the prime minister, and that "there will be serious consequences if that internationally binding legal agreement were not to be honored."
Geng said as Hong Kong returned to the motherland, the rights and obligations of the British side under the Joint Declaration were completely fulfilled.
The bombshell revelation was made by the Russian businessman in an exclusive interview with The Hill TV. The story of the businessman's involvement with the FBI was reported before yet now it's confirmed by Deripaska himself.
The billionaire tycoon, who is the founder of the Russian aluminum giant United Co. Rusal, said he spent over $20 million between 2009 and 2011 to fund a private operation to rescue Robert Levinson from captivity in Iran after he was approached by FBI operatives that were led by Robert Mueller at the time. Ex-FBI agent Levinson disappeared back in 2007 during a 'private' mission in Iran, which was later confirmed to have been a CIA operation.
Comment:
- Conflict of interest? Mueller and the Russian oligarch
- Kremlin slams US intel agencies for "crudely" trying to recruit Russian oligarchs
- Russian billionaire accuses US Treasury of rewriting MSM reports to justify sanctions: 'Personal vendetta'
- Oleg Deripaska op-ed: The Deep State's ever-changing 'Russia narrative' is false public manipulation
There is little doubt that Trump's administration is fixated on US military power, rather than exploring all possible scenarios and the prospects for Iranian retaliation. If Trump goes to war, the Middle East will face dire circumstances that Trump seems not to be taking into account.
When President George W. Bush launched "Operation Enduring Freedom" in 2001 he believed his war in Afghanistan would be a walk in the park; still today, President Trump is negotiating with Taliban a way to end this ongoing war. Moreover, President Barack Obama and UN officials believed the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's fall would be a "matter of time". Trump is saying that he would bomb Iran rather than send troops to occupy any part of Iran, whether on the coast or inland, thus limiting his intervention to destroying a previously agreed-on bank of objectives.
Comment: See also:
- Trump should realize that Iranians unite when bullied, says Iran parliament speaker
- Tehran time travel? US accuses Iran of violating nuclear deal 'even before its existence'
- Iran-Germany trade cracks under pressure of US sanctions, down 48%
- War looms between unstable, warmongering, rogue nation and Iran
- Energy expert: Chances of US-Iran war are at least 50%














Comment: See also: Forgotten France rises up
And check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal #26: Globalization vs Nationalism - The Hidden Causes of The Yellow Vest Protests in France