Puppet Masters
"There is no effect of these sanctions. We have had them for five years and there is no change in Russian policy," he said in an interview with German news radio Deutschlandfunk.
"If you prescribe a medicine and you notice that the effect of this medicine is missing, and on the contrary, it is rather harmful, including for the German companies, then you have to think at some point that maybe it's the wrong medicine,"he explained.

Sen. Rand Paul has been among the most prominent voices warning against war with Iran
Paul proposed sitting down with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif to extend a fresh olive branch on the president's behalf, according to four U.S. officials. The aim: to reduce tensions between the two countries. Trump signed off on the idea.
With Zarif in New York City this week for U.N. meetings and private sitdowns with journalists and think-tank experts, the prospect of the dovish Kentucky senator serving as the administration's chief diplomatic emissary has rankled many administration officials, who are expressing concern that Paul's intervention threatens to scuttle the president's "maximum pressure" campaign against Tehran.
Turkey received its first deliveries of the S-400 long-range air defense system last week, which it purchased in 2017. The US, which has been promising to retaliate by denying Turkey access to its F-35 fighter jets, delivered on the threat. Washington claims doing otherwise would have exposed the advanced aircraft to surveillance by the Russian system and compromised its stealth capabilities.
The US-advocated link between the two systems is "imaginary" and arbitrary, according to RT's defense expert Mikhail Khodarenok. The reality is that Turkey, a NATO ally, is boosting its defense capabilities with the purchase and, by extension, makes the entire alliance stronger.

Waad Qado • Ahmed al-Jubouri • Rayan al-Kildani • Al-Sultan (Nawfal Hamaci)
Speaking at a high-level US State Department conference on religious freedom, Vice President Mike Pence announced the new restrictions on the two figures from the powerful Popular Mobilisation Forces, an umbrella of Iraqi Shiite militias, and said that Washington would "not stand idly by" while they "spread terror".
The US Treasury Department announced the sanctions under the Magnitsky Act that targets human rights violators. The figures in question are two militia figures, Rayan Al Kildani and Waad Qado, as well as two former Iraqi governors, Nawfal Hammadi Al Sultan and Ahmed Al Jubouri.
Al Kildani is the leader of the 50th Brigade Babylon militia and the US accused him of "serious human rights abuse," including a video that showed him cutting the ear off of a handcuffed detainee. "The 50th Brigade has systematically looted homes in Batnaya, which is struggling to recover from ISIS's brutal rule," the Treasury statement added.
Qado is the leader of the 30th Brigade militia, an entity the US says has collected money through extortion, illegal arrests and kidnappings.
In an interview with BBC Panorama, to be aired on Thursday night at 9pm BST, Barnier revealed that May and her Brexit negotiating team did not use 'no-deal' as a bargaining chip, claiming that UK officials always knew such a threat would not impress Brussels.
"I think that the UK side, which is well informed and competent and knows the way we work on the EU side, knew from the very beginning that we've never been impressed by such a threat. It's not useful to use it."
It's an admission that could anger many Brexiteers, who could see this as proof that Britain was never really serious about using it as a threat to get the best deal for the country.

Unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile, test May 1, 2019, Vandenberg AFB
It used to be the case that the idea of using nuclear weapons in a real-world conflict was such a taboo idea that no one was ever openly to contemplate it. We need only look back to the end of World War II to realize how catastrophic and harmful nuclear weapons can be on civilian populations; yet we shouldn't have had the blueprint of Nagasaki and Hiroshima to know that the use of nuclear weapons would be a frightening and criminal act. They are deadly and unnecessary, end of story. You can all save me the cliched response "But they ended a war."
Firstly, the use of nuclear weapons didn't end a war - it started one (the Cold War). Secondly, anyone who knows even a little bit of history knows that Japan was on the verge of defeat. But don't take my word for it - I wasn't there. But those who were typically made statements to the effect that "[t]he use of [the atomic bombs] at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender." But I digress.
Comment: See also:
- Pentagon's nuclear weapons 'war-fighting' doctrine has experts sounding alarm
- Russian senators propose change of doctrine for Russia to respond with nukes to any 'strategic strike'
- Trump's new nuclear doctrine reportedly allows nuclear response to conventional attack and new warheads
- United States of Psychopaths: Declassified 1960s docs reveal Pentagon plans to nuke USSR and China into oblivion

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi • Blanca Ocasio-Cortez (AOC's mother) • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY)
Seeing Trump unfazed - and even boosted - by the 'racist tweet' scandal, representatives from the party's progressive and establishment wings officially embraced their "shared mission" with a joint statement on Thursday affirming their "dedication to making life better for everyday Americans." The leaders of the Democratic Caucus, Congressional Progressive Caucus, New Democrat Coalition, and Blue Dog Coalition signed the truce on Thursday.
House Democrats are a diverse, robust, and passionate family," the statement declares, acknowledging that while "at times there may be different perspectives on the way forward, that is a hallmark of the legislative process." Their "unity of purpose," however, remains paramount, they said.
Comment: Obviously, Trump's plan is working!!!
"We call on all of Venezuela to mobilize. Together, with the citizen power and the work of the National Assembly, we will advance to a next stage in our struggle. Everyone to Caracas!" Guaido tweeted on Wednesday, calling on his supporters to turn up for a "Great Street Session" on July 23. The rally apparently aims to galvanize the opposition movement in Venezuela, which is treading water domestically, despite enjoying broad support from the US and its allies - over 50 other nations in total.
Guaido is flaunting the outside support he enjoys in his quest for power. "Venezuelans are not alone; Presidents, leaders and agencies of the world are with us and have committed to Freedom and Democracy in Venezuela," he tweeted shortly before announcing his new push for Caracas.
Coincidentally, the announcement comes just a day after it was reported that the US is considering redirecting some $41.9 million, previously earmarked for humanitarian aid for Guatemala and Honduras, to Guaido and his team.
Data showed the country's total corporate, household and government debt rose from 297 percent in the same period a year earlier. The report stated:
"While authorities' efforts to curb shadow bank lending (particularly to smaller companies) have prompted a cutback in non-financial corporate debt, net borrowing in other sectors has brought China's total debt to over $40 trillion - some 15 percent of all global debt."
"It's not about photo ops," he told reporters Thursday at the Iranian mission to the United Nations in New York. "We are interested in substance. There are other substantial moves that can be made."
The offer comes amid heightened tensions between the two countries and on the day the United States said it shot down a Tehran drone in the Strait of Hormuz.











Comment: From RT: Brexit's no-deal a no go? MPs bid to block Parliament shutdown