Puppet MastersS


Eye 2

How the US downing of Iranian Airliner went down the memory hole

Iran 1988 Airbus downing shoot down
It happened in 1988, but it is hardly ever mentioned in the west.

Having found no evidence, Western powers continue to blame Russia for the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17. Virtually erased from record are incidents like the blatant 1988 shooting down of Iran Air Flight 655, by a decorated American warship.

On 3 July, 1988, Iran Air Flight 655, flying from Tehran to Dubai, was shot down by the USS Vincennes, a huge United States missile cruiser. All 290 people aboard the Iranian airliner were killed, including 66 children, and 38 people of non-Iranian nationality. The Vincennes was rewarded shortly after for this act of mass killing, having received presidential honours upon return to American shores.

Eye 2

Has the English Translation of Udo Ulfkotte's "Journalists for Hire" Been Suppressed?

Udo Ulfkotte
Udo Ulfkotte
The English translation of German journalist Udo Ulfkotte's best-selling book, Gekaufte Journalisten (Bought Journalists) appears to have been suppressed throughout North America and Europe. On May 15, 2017 Next Revelation Press, an imprint of US-Canadian-based publisher Tayen Lane, released the English version of Bought Journalists, under the title,Journalists for Hire: How the CIA Buys the News.

Tayen Lane has since removed any reference to the title from its website. Correspondingly Amazon.com indicates the title is "currently unavailable," with opportunities to purchase from independent sellers offering used copies for no less than $1309.09. The book's subject matter and unexplained disappearance from the marketplace suggest how powerful forces are seeking to prevent its circulation.

Gekaufte Journalisten was almost completely ignored by mainstream German news media following its release in 2014. "No German mainstream journalist is allowed to report about [my] book," Ulfkotte observed. "Otherwise he or she will be sacked. So we have a bestseller now that no German journalist is allowed to write or talk about."{1]

Chess

General Kelly takes over as chief of staff in a chaotic White House

General Kelly
General Kelly forces out Anthony Scaramucci as the President's new chief of staff looks to impose order on a chaotic White House.

Just six days ago I wrote an article for The Duran in which I said that if President Trump is to avoid seeing his administration unravel he has to stop destabilising it himself, with bad decisions negating good decisions and with President Trump himself prosecuting public feuds against top people in his administration like Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

The decision to force out the newly appointed Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci - who was supposed to start his job on 15th August 2017, meaning that he been effectively sacked from his job before it technically even started - is a sign of the chaos at the heart of the administration. However potentially it could also be a sign that things are finally being brought under control.

Boat

China's 1st foreign naval base opens in Djibouti

Chinese sailors
© Global Look PressChinese sailors stand on the deck of a Navy destroyer leaving Djibouti base for the Gulf of Aden
China has formally launched its first overseas naval facility in Djibouti, an East African nation that is already hosting America's only expeditionary Marine base in Africa.

Five Chinese formations and Djibouti's Three Services Honor Guard took part in the launch ceremony on Tuesday, the People's Daily reported, referring to the base as "the logistics facility." The event marked the 90th anniversary of the Chinese military.

The base is set to enable China to better support its patrols in waters off Somalia and Yemen and carry out international humanitarian operations as well as naval exercises, according to the newspaper.

Info

Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone blames US for Venezuela's economic collapse

Demonstrators watch a barricade burn after clashes broke out while the Constituent Assembly election is being carried out in Caracas
© Carlos Garcia Rawlins / ReutersDemonstrators watch a barricade burn after clashes broke out while the Constituent Assembly election is being carried out in Caracas, Venezuela, July 30, 2017.
Meddling by the US and the "establishment elite" has contributed to Venezuela's economic demise, according to former London Mayor Ken Livingstone, who has voiced his support for President Nicolas Maduro and the nation's Bolivarian Revolution.

President Maduro has claimed victory in a vote - condemned by critics as a sham - for a constituent assembly that is expected to hand his ruling Socialist Party more power. Opposition politicians boycotted the ballot and millions of Venezuelans shunned the process.

International condemnation of the latest vote has been widespread. A wave of anti-government protests has left more than 120 people dead over four months, and Venezuela's 30 million citizens are suffering shortages of basic goods and medicines as the country's weakened economy declines even further.

Asked by The Times if he supports Maduro and the Bolivarian Revolution, the leftist political revival initiated by the late President Hugo Chavez, Livingstone said: "Oh God, yes."

Comment: Meanwhile: Maduro detains opposition leaders at gunpoint


Radar

Turkey joins with Qatar to hold joint navel drills in Persian Gulf

Turkish warship TCG Gokova
Turkish warship TCG Gokova
Qatar says it is reportedly set to hold joint naval exercises with Turkey in the Persian Gulf waters as part of joint efforts to fight terrorism in the region.

The Qatari Defense Ministry said the Turkish warship TCG Gokova had docked at Hamad Port to take part in the drills, the Doha-based al-Sharq newspaper reported on Monday, without giving a date.

The most advanced Turkish military vessel will also join the maneuvers, the report added.

The naval exercises will be held in the framework of military cooperation between Ankara and Doha to combat terrorism, according to the report.

Bullseye

Fmr British ambassador to Libya: Tony Blair is war criminal over Iraq, but so is George W. Bush

blair dubya
© Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
In a sense, it wouldn't be very satisfactory if ex-PM Tony Blair was brought before a British court, but nothing was about America over the Iraq War, says former British ambassador to Libya, Oliver Miles.

The High Court in London has rejected an attempt to prosecute former Prime Minister Tony Blair over the Iraq War.

RT: Following the High Court ruling, does this lay the matter to rest and Tony Blair will never have to face any form of prosecution?

OM: I don't think he will. I am not a lawyer, and I am not absolutely certain that this is the end of the matter legally because this is the High Court and we have Supreme Court. But whether there is to be an appeal I couldn't say. But I don't believe that it will ever be a matter for a British court to decide because apparently, the crime of aggression doesn't exist in British law. And I think that is the end of the matter until parliament decides otherwise and they won't.

Attention

Maduro detains opposition leaders at gunpoint

Leopoldo Lopez
The crackdown by Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro - now officially branded a dictator by the U.S. - on political opposition intensified Tuesday when intelligence agents detained opposition leaders Leopoldo Lopez and Antonio Ledezma at gunpoint in their homes and took them into custody.

The two politicians have been under house arrest for their involvement in anti-government protests and organizing, according to the BBC. Videos published online by family members of both men show them being led away in the middle of the night by agents from Sebin, the Venezuelan intelligence agency. Lopez's wife Lilian Tintori said in a tweet: "They've just taken Leopoldo from the house. We don't know where he is." She published grainy footage from the home's security cameras showing her handcuffed husband being placed in the back of a car.

Bell

Militarization of the Scandinavian Peninsula: Time to ring alarm bells

US Air Force
Much has been said about NATO reinforcements in the Baltic States and Poland perceived in Moscow as provocative actions undermining security in Europe, while very little has been said about the gradual but steady militarization of Scandinavia. The theme does not hit headlines and it is not in focus of public discourse but one step is taken after another to turn the region into a springboard for staging offensive actions against Russia.

Ørland in southern Norway is being expanded to become Norway's main air force base hosting US-made F-35 Lightnings - the stealth aircraft to become the backbone of Norwegian air power. Norway has purchased 56 of such aircraft. F-35 is an offensive, not defensive, weapon. The nuclear capable platforms can strike deep into Russia's territory.

Providing training to Norwegian pilots operating the planes carrying nuclear weapons, such as B61-12 glider warheads, constitutes a violation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) of 1968. Article I of the NPT prohibits the transfer of nuclear weapons from NWS (nuclear weapons states) to other states: "Each nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty undertakes not to transfer to any recipient whatsoever nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices or control over such weapons or explosive devices". Article II requires NNWS (non-nuclear weapons states) not to receive nuclear weapons: "Each non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty undertakes not to receive the transfer from any transfer or whatsoever of nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices or of control over such weapons or explosive devices". How can Russia be sure that these aircraft don't carry nuclear weapons when there is no agreement of any kind in place to verify compliance with the NPT?

Arrow Down

Poland seeks to rewrite WWII history, excludes Russia from participating in war memorial

The Monument of the Gratitude for the Soviet Army Soldiers at Skaryszewski Park in Warsaw
© Alexey Vitvitsky / SputnikThe Monument of the Gratitude for the Soviet Army Soldiers at Skaryszewski Park in Warsaw.
Russia has accused Poland of Russophobia and attempting to impose its own version of history after Moscow was not allowed to join an international effort to renovate a World War II museum in Poland.

Moscow was invited in 2013 to participate in a joint Poland-Israel-Holland-Slovakia project to create a new memorial on the site of the infamous former Nazi Sobibor death camp. Russia expressed its willingness to play an active role in building a new memorial and museum on the site. Moscow offered a "significant financial contribution" to the project, the Russian foreign ministry said Monday, pointing out that it was a revolt led by Soviet prisoners which put an end to the horrors at Sobibor.

However, further discussions on Moscow's participation in the project collapsed, the ministry said, adding, that "Warsaw dragged on the final decision under various pretences."