Puppet Masters
The legislation, passed by the Ukrainian parliament on Thursday, was filed in 2016 and was widely perceived to be part of Kiev's campaign to curb the influence of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, the self-governing branch of the Russian Orthodox Church.
The controversial bill dubbed 'robbing church property' sought to amend Ukraine's law on religious freedoms by establishing a procedure, under which a religious community could formally change its allegiance. It said 'self-identified' members, or a community, could hold a gathering and vote to switch from one religious organization to another by a simple majority. This would result, among other things, in the property belonging to the community, like a church building, changing hands.
People familiar with the President's reaction said the conversation was eye-opening for a leader who days earlier claimed the terror group was defeated "badly" in the country.The warning comes into new light with the news that a suicide blast in northern Syria killed four Americans as Trump presses forward with a withdrawal of US forces from the country.
The terror group has claimed responsibility for the massacre in Manbij, a northern city that American-backed forces had worked to clear of Islamic State fighters. That did not stop Vice President Mike Pence, who was briefed on the attack earlier in the day, from declaring ISIS "defeated" during morning remarks.
Bruce Ohr, the fourth-ranking official in the Justice Department, told the House task force that he met with Christopher Steele, the former British spy who wrote the dossier, at a Washington hotel on July 30, 2016. At that point, Steele, recruited for the job by Glenn Simpson of the opposition research firm Fusion GPS, had completed a few installments of the dossier, including the salacious and never-verified sex allegation featuring Donald Trump and prostitutes in a Moscow hotel. Ohr testified that shortly after meeting with Steele, "I wanted to provide the information he had given me to the FBI."
Ohr said he got in touch with Andrew McCabe, who was at the time the number-two man at the FBI. When Ohr went to McCabe's office to talk, FBI lawyer Lisa Page was also there. "So I provided the information to them," Ohr said. Ohr said he later talked to another top FBI official, Peter Strzok.
That was the FBI. But what about the Justice Department itself? "Who at the department knew that you were talking to Chris Steele and Glenn Simpson?" asked Trey Gowdy, who last year was chairman of the House Government Oversight Committee.
Plans to weaponize space with a new layer of sensors unveiled by Trump as part of his administration's Missile Defense Review is an unnecessary and hard-to-implement project that is sure to enrich the military-industrial lobby, Paul told RT.
"The biggest issue here is someone is going to make a lot of money on it. It reminds me of Star Wars. They've never really developed it, but people got excited about it," Paul said, drawing parallels between President Donald Trump's new endeavor and former President Ronald Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative program.
Addressing the Pentagon on Thursday, Trump said that the goal of deploying ground-based interceptors to Alaska and sensors in space is to stop missile launches by hostile powers over their own territory.
Speaking to Afshin Rattansi on Going Underground, she said that, while the two week hunger strike may seem "severe," the situation in Yemen has reached a state of "dire emergency."
Due to the Saudi-led military campaign - ongoing since 2015 to reinstate ousted leader Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi - some "14 million are in a state of famine, five million at risk from cholera, and 2.2 million have malnutrition."
The councillor and anti-war activist says she felt compelled to resist as both a citizen and elected representative of the UK, which has been arming the Saudi Kingdom despite the bloody war. Within the first year of the bombardment, the UK provided £3.3 billion worth of arms to Saudi Arabia, 30 times more than they had before the conflict broke out.
The Stockholm arbitration court had previously ruled that all payments from Gazprom's subsidiaries would be transferred to Swiss bailiffs.
"On January 16, a court of the canton of Zug (Switzerland) decided to completely cancel its decision of May 29, 2018, on imposing interim measures in Switzerland against shares of Gazprom in Nord Stream AG and Nord Stream 2 AG and Gazprom's rights of claim against these companies," Gazprom said.
The latest court decision is a part of an ongoing litigation between Gazprom and Naftogaz that started back in 2014, when the two energy producers lodged mutual claims over supply and transit contracts.
Reinforcing northern flank: Russian Arctic troops to get first Pantsir-SA air defense system in 2019
The new machine is expected to head for testing "within days," Deputy Defense Minister Aleksey Krivoruchko said on Tuesday. The high-ranking official has visited a factory, where the new system is produced, personally inspecting various weaponry systems in development.
Pantsir-SA was first shown to the public back in 2017, when it was featured during the Victory Day military parade in Moscow. The system is mounted on a DT-30 twin off-road vehicle which has already been tested by the harsh arctic weather. The tracked vehicle can pass through weak and rough terrain, such as swamps and deep snow.
The arctic modification of the battle-tested system appears to be a bit different, compared to its wheeled cousin, Pantsir-S, which has seen action during anti-terrorist operations in Syria. Pantsir-SAs are equipped with 18 anti-air missiles against 12 of a Pantsir-S, yet it lacks any autocannons.

The Home Office says that revealing details of its involvement in radio dramas would jeopardise national security
Lawyers for the government are resisting an attempt to force disclosure of documents that would expose the role the Home Office's secretive Research, Information and Communications Unit (RICU) has played in the creation and production of supposedly independent radio shows.
RICU, part of the Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism (OSCT) within the Home Office, is known to have been producing and disseminating communications for around a decade as part of the British government's controversial Prevent strategy. The unit goes to great lengths to obscure the extent of its operations.
Comment: RT provides a few more details:
The radio drama at the centre of the FOI battle is 'Divided We Fall', a 20-part drama that was broadcast in 2010 by a small community radio station in Lancashire, Preston FM, which has since been rebranded as 'CityBeat'.
The drama attempted to draw like-for-like comparisons between the radicalisation of a young Muslim Asian boy and a young, white, former soldier who had returned from service in Afghanistan.
Qureshi claims that the Home Office has been trying to suppress all information about the radio drama. "The use of drama in tackling radicalisation is an area that has not been sufficiently examined and it's of interest for researchers to assess how effective a tool it has been," he told the MEE.
The outlet says that a press release issued at the time did refer to Home Office funding, but made no mention of OSCT or RICU involvement, nor was there any reference in it to the UK government's Prevent strategy.
In 2016, the Guardian reported that much of the RICU's work is outsourced to third parties. Their favoured firm being Breakthrough Media Network Ltd, a company operating from an anonymous office block close to Waterloo station in central London, according to the paper.
It follows the British Foreign Office launching an investigation in December into reports the UK government has been funding an anti-Russia charity, the Integrity Initiative. The 'charity' has been accused of promoting unfavorable views of Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn via social media.
The tribunal is expected to announce its decision on the FOI case in a few weeks' time.
"The two operations we found originated in Russia, and one was active in a variety of countries while the other was specific to Ukraine," Facebook's head of cybersecurity policy, Nathaniel Gleicher, said in in a blog post on January 17.
No links between these operations were found, Gleicher said, but they used "similar tactics by creating networks of accounts to mislead others about who they were and what they were doing."
Gleicher said one network of 364 pages and accounts was "linked" to employees of Sputnik, a Russian state-run news site.
Sputnik's Armenia branch said on Facebook that its Russian-language page had been blocked and that as a result "our news in the Russian language will temporarily be published on the Armenian page."
Comment: It's the equivalent of social media sites censoring pages that are linked to the 'BBC' just because one of the moderators is 'friends' with a journalist. And the BBC really is up to no good: "The editorial board wants blood": Leaked messages show BBC wants to 'prove' Russia linked to Yellow Vest protests
Comment: The last statement is telling. The establishment is cracking down because people sharing the truth about the insidious corruption coming out of the West is a threat to its very existence:
RT reports:See also:Sputnik news agency says it was engaged in legitimate promotion of its content, before Facebook took down hundreds of accounts it said were secretly run by its staff, following a tip-off from the NATO-backed Atlantic Council.
Sputnik said that many of its clearly signposted pages were taken down for supposedly concealing their links to Sputnik.
"The decision is clearly political in its nature and, as a matter of fact, is practically censorship - seven Facebook pages belonging to our news hubs in neighboring countries have been blocked," the Russian media company said in a statement.
It specified that official pages such as Sputnik Moldova, Sputnik Uzbekistan, and Sputnik Azerbaijan have been taken down.
"Sputnik editorial offices deal with news and they do it well. If this blocking is Facebook's only reaction to the quality of the media's work, then we have no questions, everything is clear here. But there is still hope that common sense will prevail," continued the statement from the company, which said that it left an enquiry with the social network.
On Thursday, Facebook removed 289 pages and 75 individual accounts that it said "misrepresented" themselves as "independent news Pages" before the company's investigation "found that these Pages and accounts were linked to employees of Sputnik, a news agency based in Moscow, and that some of the Pages frequently posted about topics like anti-NATO sentiment, protest movements, and anti-corruption."
According to Facebook, in total these accounts acquired 790,000 followers, spent $135,000 on advertising since 2013, and created 190 events which 1,200 users said they would attend. The pages posted "on topics like weather, travel, sports, economics, or politicians in Romania, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Russia, and Kyrgyzstan."
Facebook said that the pages violated its "coordinated inauthentic behavior" guidelines, which ban "multiple accounts working together" to "mislead people about the origin of content," though in numerous cases it appears that there was no attempt by pages to conceal that they were sharing Sputnik content.
Facebook's inauthentic content guidelines.
"We have shared information about our investigation with US law enforcement, the US Congress, other technology companies, and policymakers in impacted countries," said the California-headquartered social network.
Translation: We are working in coordination with the Western establishment to shutdown dissenting voices.
The company also thanked "work by our partners who investigate this kind of activity."
Ben Nimmo, a researcher at the Atlantic Council, and an employee of Integrity Initiative, the UK-backed undercover influence network, took to social media to claim credit for his organization, saying its Digital Forensic Research Lab first uncovered Sputnik-affiliated pages in Latvia late last year.
Facebook has previously been accused of censorship for making judgement calls on removing purported "inauthentic behavior," while in actual fact selectively punishing pages promoting certain political views for using common online practices to popularize their content. The takedown of 800 pages promoting non-mainstream views on the eve of the US mid-terms last year brought forward an objection from the campaigning group ACLU on the basis of free speech.
- Is Deep State Ruled From Britain? How British Intelligence-Linked Integrity Initiative Drafted US For New Cold War
- How Integrity Initiative subverts the media and academia by planting state-sponsored propaganda
- Tech giants waging 'totalitarian war' on free speech, banning people with no appeal & no discussion
One of those fired, Ken Gude, was a senior national security staffer. He worked at CAP since 2003 and previously served as the progressive think tank's chief of staff. The notion that he would have leaked the exchange just doesn't square with his time at CAP, said one of the sources close to the situation. "Ken loves CAP and has dedicated 15 years of his life to the organization," said the source. "He is a consummate team player who will raise whatever concerns he has through proper channels, but at the end of the day, he's on board with the team."
Comment: The Saudi's have agreed to be the West's puppets in the Middle East and in turn the West covers up heinous Saudi criminality and facilitates laundering their oil wealth:
- Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Islamic Terrorism and the Anglo-American Establishment
- The Murder of Jamal Khashoggi: Oil, Sanctions And The Anti-Trump Establishment
- "King, we're protecting you": Saudi Arabia tells Trump no more oil
- Propaganda Outlet Washington Post Shames Others But Continues to Pay And Publish Undisclosed Saudi Lobbyists, Other Regime Shills
- Past presidents kowtowed to Saudi Arabia - Trump is just honest about it















Comment: When was the last time the US had a president who spoke so directly against war? JFK? Trump surely isn't as eloquent as 35 was, but he's on point about stopping America's endless wars.