Puppet Masters
Omar (D-MN) made the remarks after being asked by a reporter if she agreed with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's (D-NY) assertion that the White House is operating "concentration camps" on the border with Mexico.
"There are camps and people are being concentrated," Omar replied. "This is very simple. I don't even know why this is a controversial thing for her to say."
Shavit gave his remarks to Israeli daily Maariv, reiterating that if Israel wanted peace it would have discussed it in economic and infrastructure terms that serve the interests of both parties, Arab 48 reported yesterday.
Ultra-right extremists are on equal footing with Islamist radicals and other violent groups, Horst Seehofer told German media. The far-right "have become a real threat for our society," which means that the government should hit back and "do everything to ramp up security."
Seehofer, a longtime ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel, was speaking roughly three weeks after Walter Luebcke, a mid-level government official, died of a gunshot wound at his home in the eastern city of Kassel.
Shortly afterwards, police had arrested a 45-year-old suspect who had committed numerous offences in past decades, including an assault on a hostel for asylum seekers back in 1993.
Comment: Looks like the 'War on Terror' is well into its second stage where the focus is on splitting apart Western countries through the stoking of the extremes of both the left and right.
US President Donald Trump tweeted that reports regarding his decision not to conduct a military strike against Iran were misleading, claiming that he never said he had "called the strike against Iran BACK," but rather "just stopped it from going forward at this time."
The statement comes following the president's announcement of new "major additional Sanctions on Iran," slated to take effect on Monday.
On Thursday, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) downed a US RQ-4 spy drone that Tehran claimed was operating in Iran airspace, a statement dismissed by the US.
Following Thursday's downing of the surveillance drone, a US military strike against a series of Iranian targets, including radar and missile batteries, was reportedly ordered.
Comment: That sure clarifies things! Maybe we should start calling him President Rorschach. Is he saying he didn't give an initial authorization and only stopped the plan from proceeding when he was told about it (i.e., he didn't "change his mind")? Or is he trying to keep up the Bolton-esque pressure by implying that the U.S. can still launch such an attack at any time in the future? Both? Neither?
On Friday, Trump told NBC's Chuck Todd that he doesn't want war, but if it comes, there will be obliteration:
President Donald Trump said Friday that he doesn't want war with Iran, but if it comes there will be "obliteration like you've never seen before."He also did a slightly better job of clarifying the White House version of events for the aborted strike:
"But I'm not looking to do that," the president added in an exclusive interview with NBC's Chuck Todd for "Meet the Press."
Trump said there were no pre-conditions for U.S. talks with Tehran.
"You can't have nuclear weapons," Trump said. "And if you want to talk about it, good. Otherwise, you can live in a shattered economy for a long time to come."
Asked if planes were in the air, the president responded, "No, but they would have been pretty soon, and things would have happened to a point where you would not turn back, you could not turn back."That would seem to imply that he did NOT initially approve the plan, and it was only when it was brought to him that he decided against it. Whether any of that is true or not is of course another story. For example, see: Elijah Magnier: Trump and Iran on edge of the abyss
"Nothing was green lighted until the very end because things change," Trump said during the interview with Todd.
...
He told NBC on Friday that a plan was "ready to go, subject my approval."
Apparently Trump "agonized" over the decision:
In an interview with CNN's The Situation Room, Senate Foreign Relations Chairman James Risch has disclosed that Donald Trump is a president who "doesn't want to go to war" and revealed the commander-in-chief's hesitations on strikes against Iran.Here's Bernie Sanders's take on the whole situation:
"I really watched him agonise over this. It comes down to one man", Risch told reporters.
Risch was not the only person to have observed how hard it was for Trump to make a decision; House Armed Services Chairman Adam Smith also said that the president was "really wrestling with it".
While the head of state struggled with his own dilemma, this uncertainty was fuelled by his own national security team, who unanimously believed that Washington should retaliate for the downed US drone by hitting Iranian targets, CNN reported.
"There was complete unanimity amongst the President's advisers and DOD leadership on an appropriate response to Iran's activities. The President made the final decision", an unnamed senior administration official was quoted as saying.
Sanders argued that it was Trump's fault that the situation has flared up to the point that he had to hit the brakes.On this, he is not wrong!
"It's like somebody setting fire to a basket full of paper and then putting it out. He helped create the crisis, and then he stopped the attacks."
As for obliteration, Iranian armed forces general staff spokesman Brigadier General Abolfazl Shekarchi told Tasnim News Agency yesterday that "Firing one bullet towards Iran will set fire to the interests of America and its allies" in the Middle East:
"The Islamic Republic has never and will never start any wars," Shekarchi added, stressing that "if the enemy commits the smallest of mistakes, it will face the biggest revolutionary reaction from Iran in Central and West Asia, and it will certainly not survive the battle. If the enemy fires one shot in our direction, we will fire ten back."And regarding the downing of the drone that started this latest news cycle, there's this to consider:
Brigadier General Amirali Hajizadeh, who heads the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' Aerospace Force, added: "If such aggression is repeated, we will add other US [military] products to complete this collection."
See also:
- Trump wants to 'make Iran great again' with more sanctions
- Exercising common sense: Trump makes a completely different US policy move - NOT to attack
- Iran shoots down US Global Hawk, reportedly over Iranian territory - UPDATES
- Who really has Trump's ear - John Bolton or Tucker Carlson?

This Oct. 28, 2016, photo shows the Israeli settlement of Bait Hagay through a barbed wire fence that secures the perimeter, south of the West Bank city of Hebron.
A state of de facto annexation already exists on the ground in most of the occupied West Bank.
Almost two-thirds of the Palestinian territory, including most of its most fertile and resource-rich land, is under full Israeli control. About 400,000 Jewish settlers living there enjoy the full rights and privileges of Israeli citizens.
At least 60 pieces of legislation were drafted by right-wing members of the Knesset during the last parliament to move Israel from a state of de facto to de jure annexation, according to a database by Yesh Din, an Israeli human rights group.
Yesh Din points out that the very fact that some of these bills have passed as laws constitutes a form of annexation: "The Israel Knesset [now] regards itself as the legislative authority in the West Bank and the sovereign there."
"We're putting additional sanctions on, they're going on slowly and, in some cases, pretty rapidly, but additional sanctions are being put on Iran," the President told reporters on the South Lawn Saturday before departing to Camp David.
"Some of them are already in place," he added, though he didn't elaborate further on the details of the sanctions.
In a tweet later Saturday, Trump specified, "We are putting major additional Sanctions on Iran on Monday."

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez pitches her Road to the Green New Deal Tour in the final event at Howard University in Washington, Monday, May 13, 2019.
During a May 14 speech, President Trump won even more animosity from the left for having attacked the Green New Deal by comparing it to the fraud of Russia-Gate. Speaking to a crowd of energy workers in Hackberry Louisiana, the President said: "The green New Deal is a hoax like the one I just went through. I'm not sure, it might be an even bigger one, and mine was pretty big". If the green New Deal were made law, Trump warned that every blue collar worker in attendance would be destroyed: "everybody in this room gets fired if the plan is ever implemented."
Was Trump embodying the "pollution-loving capitalist who hates nature" which the left has painted him or is there something more insidious which underlies the Green New Deal which the President hit upon? To answer that we will have to first quickly review what the Green New Deal IS, then where it came from and then finally what its architects have stated they wish to accomplish with its implementation. From there, we can assess if the president's words were hyperbole or truth.

A TV reporter interviews self-employed logger Bridger Hasbrouck, of Dallas, Ore., outside the Oregon State House in Salem, Ore., on Thursday, June 20, 2019, the day the Senate was scheduled to take up a bill that would create the nation’s second cap-and-trade program to curb carbon emissions.
Minority Republicans want the cap-and-trade proposal, which is aimed at dramatically lowering the state's greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, to be sent to voters instead of being instituted by lawmakers - but negotiations with Democrats collapsed, leading to the walkout, Kate Gillem, a spokeswoman for Senate Republicans said Thursday.
Brown had warned a day earlier that she was in "close communication with Oregon State Police" and "prepared to use all resources and tools available."

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY); Immigrant detention center in Tornillo, Texas
The freshman Democrat from the Bronx has always had a penchant for hyperbole - remember the world "ending in 12 years"? - but she chose to take it to the next level this week, arguing that the US has established "concentration camps" for immigrants where they are "being brutalized with dehumanizing conditions and dying."
"This is not hyperbole. It is the conclusion of expert analysis," she said.
The US president has repeatedly insisted that he will speak face-to-face with Putin at the G20 summit in Osaka next week, and US National Security Advisor John Bolton confirmed on Sunday that Trump was "looking forward to it."
However, the Kremlin says that the White House has not finalized its diplomatic request, and Putin was asked on TV whether Trump is using the uncertainty as an opportunity to "steamroll" Russia into softening its positions on Iran and Venezuela.
"I don't think anyone is trying to steamroll us on anything - they must understand that is a far-fetched possibility. But we do need the dialogue," Putin told Russian channel NTV.
Comment: More on Putin's epic marathon Q&A session: Putin's Direct Line appearance: After four hours, 81 questions, here are the top answers from his epic Q&A











Comment: Israel is not even bothering with its mask any more.