Puppet MastersS

Bad Guys

Propaganda fail: Ukrainian forces caught shelling their own citizens

Ukrainian grad missile launcher
The war in Donbass can no longer be called a civil war.

The Donbass republics have not merely declared symbolic independence of the fascist junta in Kiev. The Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics functionally operate as independent states. They are rapidly ending all remaining economic ties with Ukraine and a recent Presidential decree by President Putin affords citizens of the Donbass republics with virtually all the rights of citizens of CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) members.

But there is an actual civil war going on in Ukraine. It is not over territory but over political influence. The fascist regime in Kiev is currently engaged in a wide array of battles with non-governmental ultra-fascist organizations, Right Sector being a notable one.

Newspaper

'Absurd and frankly offensive': Pence protests Assange's claim that Deep State is seeking to impeach Trump so VP can take over

Assange, Pence and Clinton
© ReutersThe VP commented on Assange to radio host Laura Ingraham.
Mike Pence has branded as "absurd" Julian Assange's claims that Hillary Clinton is pushing for a Pence takeover. The comments came after Assange tweeted that sources in the intelligence community said Clinton was pushing for a Pence presidency.

Assange tweeted on Tuesday that Clinton had described Pence as "predictable hence defeatable" and was "pushing for a Pence takeover."

Pence told radio host Laura Ingraham, however, that he "would find all of that dialogue to be absurd and frankly offensive. It is the greatest honor of my life to serve shoulder-to-shoulder with the 45th President of the United States."

Assange claimed the comments came from two members of the intelligence community and that Pence was aware of the plan. The WikiLeaks founder said it was unclear if Pence agreed with the proposal, which he claimed was described as an "impeachment."

Attention

Lavrov: 'More have already fled Mosul than E. Aleppo during liberation'

Civilians fled Mosul
© Ari Jalal / ReutersCivilians fled Mosul
More civilians have already fled Mosul than left eastern Aleppo during its liberation, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said, commenting on the humanitarian situation in Iraq's second largest city.

"Those who have seen pictures from Mosul cannot help feeling anxiety... More civilians have definitely fled from there than left Aleppo during its liberation,"he said. The Syrian military liberated the Syrian city from terrorists late last year with the backing of the Russian Air Force.

Lavrov called on "journalists working in conflict zones and UN partners responsible for humanitarian issues to be more objective and more assertive in presenting what they see in the crisis areas."

"When covering the situation in Mosul and other parts of the region where the operations are carried out by members of the anti-terrorism coalition... the journalists should feel responsible for their professional duties," Lavrov stressed.

Allegations that the Western media is down playing the situation in Mosul were leveled earlier this week by the London-based monitoring group, Airwars.

Comment: See also: US-led coalition bombing Mosul randomly: Civilians cast doubt on claims of precision strikes, careful targeting


Wall Street

London trading driven by advance inside knowledge of official data - report

London skyline
© Neil Hall / Reuters
An analysis of official trading data suggests some London-based investors may be trading with advanced knowledge of sensitive economic reports before they are released to public.

A report prepared for the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) by Alexander Kurov, an associate professor of finance at West Virginia University, suggests City investors trade using the confidential economic data in breach of regulations.

From April 2011 to December 2016, UK government-bond futures correctly predicted market fluctuations that later occurred when economic data was made available to the public.

The report found futures frequently move sharply in the 24 hours before confidential information is released to the public.

Info

Duterte orders military to tell China that Philippine Sea area 'is ours' in a friendly way

Rodrigo Duterte
© Erik De Castro / Reuters
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered his military to visibly declare ownership of a large area in the Philippine Sea where China's survey ships were spotted last year - but to do it in a way that would not anger or cause confrontation with Beijing.

"My order to my military, you go there and tell them straight that this is ours, but I say it in friendship," Duterte said during a press conference on Monday when asked about the Chinese vessels spotted at the Benham Rise off the Philippine north east coast.

His country has no option but to be diplomatic because "I cannot match the might of China," the Philippine president explained according to AP.

Eye 2

President who created CIA came to regret it: 'A secret government all of its own, accountable to no one'

Truman CIA gestapo
© stateofthenation.com
President Truman created the CIA.

He explained that it was solely an attempt to consolidate intelligence from many different intelligence agencies (page 285):
I needed ... the President needed at that time a central organization that would bring all the various intelligence reports we were getting in those days, and there must have been a dozen of them, maybe more, bring them all into one organization so that the President would get one report on what was going on in various parts of the world. Now that made sense, and that's why I went ahead and set up what they called the Central Intelligence Agency.
But in the 1970s, he told his biographer, Merle Miller (page 285):
I think [creation of the CIA] was a mistake. And if I'd known what was going to happen, I never would have done it.
***
Why, they've got an organization over there in Virginia now that is practically the equal of the Pentagon in many ways. And I think I've told you, one Pentagon is one too many.

Radar

Intelligence Minister: Iran installed intel devices in Syria to track terrorists movements

Iranian Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi
© AP Photo/ Ebrahim NorooziIranian Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi
Iran has planted intelligence devices on Syrian territory to collect data about terrorist groups and monitor their movements, Iranian Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi said Tuesday.

"Security goods are a type of products exported by the Islamic Republic and today the intelligence ministry's technical team has installed the most powerful devices in Syria and the terrorists' bases are precisely monitored through this vitally necessary intel," Alavi said addressing a forum in the city of Isfahan, as cited by the FARS news agency.

Earlier in March, Iranian Revolutionary Guard Commander Qassem Soleimani stated that Iran has "waged war" on the terrorists that threaten all Muslims and target "the sanctity of humanity and the Sunni world."

Comment: Iran has more tricks up its sleeve: Iran combats drones with jamming tool


Eye 1

Surveillance 'watchdog': CCTV mixed with mass data collection, internet integration increases threat to privacy

CCTV cameras
© CTK/Rostislav Kalousek/globallookpress.com
Mass data collection and the proliferation of CCTV vastly increase the risk of citizens being snooped on by advanced technology, the government's surveillance camera watchdog has warned.

Launching a new three-year strategy on Tuesday, CCTV commissioner Tony Porter warned that government regulators are failing to keep up with advances in technology or adequately protect the right to privacy.

Porter highlighted how it is increasingly easy for technology to spy on people thanks to CCTV, drone and body-camera images. But he pointed out that the real risk lies in such technology being brought forward by facial recognition and analyzed against other databases which scrutinize people's movements.

What most worries me is the impact of big data and integration of video surveillance," said Porter, according to the Guardian.


The surveillance camera commissioner said police have failed to appropriately manage people's data. One example is a database of millions of vehicle number plates that has been retained ever since the London 2012 Olympics, vastly exceeding the two-year limit for data possession. "To retain into 2017 without giving evidence and grounds is questionable. There needs to be a very close look at that," said Porter. "And my understanding is that the police are doing that. The danger of delay is that you have a state body that is prepared to play fast and loose with the retention of citizens' data when there is no requirement."

Propaganda

The Democrats anti-Russia campaign falls apart

President Donald Trump in the Oval Office on January 28th, 2017 with Michael Flynn and Steve Bannon
© Drew Angerer/Getty President Donald Trump in the Oval Office on January 28th, 2017 with Michael Flynn and Steve Bannon.
A while ago Matt Tabbi in Rolling Stone warned: Why the Russia Story Is a Minefield for Democrats and the Media:
If we engage in Times-style gilding of every lily the leakers throw our way, and in doing so build up a fever of expectations for a bombshell reveal, but there turns out to be no conspiracy - Trump will be pre-inoculated against all criticism for the foreseeable future.
Sanity is finally winning over. After raising all kinds of shambolic rumors about "Russian interference" the "western" intelligence agencies are walking back their previous outrageous claims:
  • Former DNI James Clapper admits (vid) that he has zero evidence for any Trump-Russia collusion;
  • The British Foreign Secretary now says there is "no evidence" of any Russian interference with British democracy;
  • The German secret services have no proof (in German) for any Russian disinformation campaign.
There is no evidence for any Russian interference in the U.S., or any other, election. No evidence has been show, despite many claims, that Russia or its proxies hacked John Podesta's emails or the DNC or collaborated with Wikileaks.

Snakes in Suits

Western chicken hawks are going cold on Turkey

Demonstrators wave Turkish flags
© Murad Sezer / Reuters Demonstrators wave Turkish flags during a protest in front of the Dutch Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, March 12, 2017.
Where is the increasingly vituperative spat between Turkey and The Netherlands (and other EU countries) going to lead? Why is this political fall-out between fellow NATO members happening at this precise moment?

First, a quick recap of the events.

At the weekend, two high-ranking Turkish officials were prevented from speaking at political rallies in The Netherlands. The Dutch authorities barred Turkey's Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu from landing in Rotterdam, while Family Minister Fatma Betul Sayan Kaya was prevented from entering the Turkish consulate, and was then deported.

Ankara's reaction has been furious, with Turkish President Erdogan giving a stern warning to the Dutch while likening their actions to Nazism.

Comment: For more analysis on the Netherlands and Turkey spat, read the SOTT Focus: The Bigger Picture: What's Behind the Souring Relationship Between Turkey and The Netherlands