Puppet Masters
"We know that the order to kill Khashoggi came from the highest levels of the Saudi government," the Turkish leader wrotein a surprise contribution to Friday's Washington Post, vowing to "reveal the identities of the puppet masters" behind the murder.
"No one should dare to commit such acts on the soil of a NATO ally again," Erdogan wrote dramatically. "Had this atrocity taken place in the United States or elsewhere, authorities in those countries would have gotten to the bottom of what happened. It would be out of the question for us to act any other way," he added, noting that Ankara has already "moved heaven and earth to shed light on all aspects of this case."

Harry Reid: Brennan gave this top Senate Democrat an irregular individual briefing, putting the collusion narrative in motion.
The retired senator surfaced Wednesday to respond to President Trump, who shared a 25-year-old video this week showing the former Nevada lawmaker saying "no sane country" would offer birthright citizenship as "a reward for being an illegal immigrant."
Reid's decades-old remarks were made in the context of championing his Immigration Stabilization Act of 1993, which promised to "curb criminal activity by aliens, to defend against acts of international terrorism, to protect American workers from unfair labor competition, and to relieve pressure on public services by strengthening border security and stabilizing immigration into the United States."

Acting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (right) with U.S. national-security adviser John Bolton in Yerevan on October 25
Addressing the Armenian parliament on November 1, Pashinian said he told Bolton when he visited Yerevan last week that Armenia is a landlocked nation that does not have diplomatic relations with either neighboring Turkey or Azerbaijan, so it must retain "special relations" with its other two neighbors -- Iran and Georgia -- which he said are Armenia's only "gateways" to the outside world.
"I reaffirm the position that we should have special relations with Iran and Georgia that would be as far outside geopolitical influences as possible. This position was very clearly formulated also during my meeting with Mr. Bolton, and I think that the position of Armenia was clear, comprehensible, and even acceptable to representatives of the U.S. delegation," the Armenian leader said.
Comment: And as way for the threat to be even close to workable, the US and OPEC flood oil market ahead of midterms and Iran sanctions
See also:
- Armenia assures its anti-corruption campaign will not impact ties with Russia
- Is Armenia's coup complete? Opposition calls for a 'velvet revolution' and sees off legitimately elected PM
- "This is blackmail": Armenian PM walks out of crisis meeting with 'velvet revolution' leader, who is detained shortly after
- Armenia's Prime Minister resigns, early parliamentary elections to follow
In October, OPEC hiked oil production to the highest level since 2016, back before the oil production cuts went into effect, according to a recent Reuters survey. The higher output, led by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, come just as Iranian oil is going offline. Also, Libya saw a sharp rebound in production, although the country is not part of the OPEC+ production cuts.
Comment: Stalling: US needs 'handful more weeks' to decide sanctioning Saudi Arabia for Khashoggi murder
The 15 countries in OPEC produced an average 33.31 million barrels per day in October, the highest since December 2016. That was also up 390,000 bpd from September. "Oil producers appear to be successfully offsetting the supply outages from Iran and Venezuela," said Carsten Fritsch of Commerzbank.
Russia, which is not part of OPEC but part of the OPEC+ coalition, continues to produce at post-Soviet record highs.
Iran lost 100,000 bpd in October, due to buyers cutting back as U.S. sanctions near, but the losses were more modest than many analysts had expected. In fact, despite the hardline rhetoric from Washington, the U.S. is poised to grant waivers to several countries that are unable to cut their imports of Iranian oil to zero.
Comment: This news should help the Donald in the short term:
- Wall Street Journal notes that the price of everything is about to go up
- "King, we're protecting you": Saudi Arabia tells Trump no more oil
- OPEC, Russia and other producers propose curbing oil inventories to five-year average
- The latest oil price plunge and what may be behind it
- Riyadh's dirty secret for bombing Yemen is targeting their vast oil reserves
Trump has authorized even stricter sanctions against Venezuela, ostensibly targeting the country's gold sector but actually going after anyone and everyone deemed "to have directly or indirectly engaged" in "deceptive practices or corruption" relating to the Venezuelan government by the Secretary of State. Without defining any of those terms, the administration has written itself a blank check to wage economic warfare against the already-suffering nation.
Comment: You'd think by now the US would have learned that its punitive and prejudicial sanctions not only do not work (as far as attempting to bend a given government to its will) - but actually strengthen the resolve and determination of those nations that seek to be a sovereign and functioning part of a multi-polar world:
- Iranian FM slams US for using sanctions to wage 'economic terrorism'
- Moody's projects increase in foreign investments flowing into Russia despite sanctions
- Rosneft CEO: US sanctions are attempt to dominate global oil markets
- The EU-Russia-China co-op plan to avert Iran oil sanctions
- Pepe Escobar - Asia and Europe sit down for talks, not sanctions
- What sanctions? US, Japan & India join new Russian LNG project
German rocket technology led to the creation of V2 ballistic missiles in WW2 and later enabled the US to launch space exploration missions in the latter half of the 20th century. The technology also helped the US develop its own ballistic missile program.
Nowadays, US scientists at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) are working on a project called Insect Allies which will use insects to infect crops with genetically modified viruses that edit the crops' genetic profile to make them more resilient against disease, as well as natural and manufactured threats to the food supply. It is not clear how the insects' flight paths would be controlled to ensure they only infect designated targets.
Comment: In fact, the research phase of biological warfare has already advanced to the testing phase. The implications are not only ominous for Russia and for China, but for the whole world. See:
- Concerned scientists sound alarm: US military plan to spread viruses using insects could create 'new class of biological weapon'
- Russian MoD: Dozens of Georgians likely killed by US biological agents in fake drug trial
- Chinese air force colonel says H7N9 bird flu virus is US biological weapon
- US global biological warfare program enters the spotlight once again
- Islamic State propaganda video warns of unleashing biological warfare on West
- Smallpox: The eradicated disease that could be brought back as a terrifying biological weapon
- Pentagon Biological Weapons Program Never Ended: US Bio-labs Around The World
- The Truth Perspective: Interview with Dilyana Gaytandzhieva: Pentagon Biological Warfare And Arms Trafficking to Terrorists
Stephen F. Cohen, professor emeritus of Russian studies and politics at NYU and Princeton, and John Batchelor continue their (usually) weekly discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War. (Previous installments, now in their fifth year, are at TheNation.com.)Ever since Russiagate allegations began to appear more than two years ago, their core narrative has revolved around purported Kremlin attempts to "interfere" in the 2016 US presidential election on behalf of then-candidate Donald Trump. In recent months, a number of leading American media outlets have taken that argument even further, suggesting that Putin's Kremlin actually put Trump in the White House and now is similarly trying to affect the November 6 midterm elections, particularly House contests, on behalf of Trump and the Republican Party. According to a page-one New York Times "report," for example, Putin's agents "are engaging in an elaborate campaign of 'information warfare' to interfere with the American midterm elections."
Summarizing one of the themes in his new book, War with Russia? From Putin and Ukraine To Trump and Russiagate, Cohen argues that Russiagate allegations of Kremlin attempts to "undermine American democracy" may themselves erode confidence in those institutions...

A medium-range ballistic target missile launched from the Pacific Missile Range Facility, October 26.
Less than a week after President Donald Trump announced his plans to withdraw the US from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF), the US Navy has conducted a successful test of its Aegis Combat System by firing and intercepting a "medium-range ballistic missile," which is technically banned by the INF treaty.
Footage of the test shows USS John Finn tracking, engaging and shooting down a medium-range ballistic missile fired from the Pacific Missile Range Facility in Hawaii using SM-3 Block IIA.
Exactly one month after the disappearance and the subsequent murder of the Washington Post columnist inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, the US has yet to issue the "severe punishment" that Donald Trump had promised if the regime's involvement in the journalist's death were confirmed. And even though Riyadh already confirmed that the journalist was indeed killed and his body 'disappeared,' the US administration is still trying to determine individual figures it could blame and punish.
The US is "reviewing putting sanctions on the individuals that we have been able to identify to date that ... were engaged in that murder," Pompeo told KMOX radio in St. Louis, according to Reuters. "It'll take us probably a handful more weeks before we have enough evidence to actually put those sanctions in place, but I think we'll be able to get there."
In Khashoggi's case there already appears to be plenty of evidence to establish the guilty party in his murder. Ankara maintains that there is strong proof that the killing of the Saudi journalist at the Saudi consulate on October 2 came as a result of a pre-planned operation by a squad of hitmen rather than a spontaneous fist-fight incident, as claimed by Riyadh.
Comment: Perhaps the sanction capital of the world forgot Khashoggi is not a US citizen. And, as for the empire, neither partnerships nor foes are easy to give up. Damn confusing when they cross over the lines of demarcation!
See also:
- Why is Khashoggi becoming the defining issue of US foreign policy?
- G7 foreign ministers: Punish everyone responsible for Khashoggi disappearance!
- The Khashoggi murder exposes Trump admin's dependency on Saudis
- Western media, investors and governments suddenly develop conscience surrounding Saudi Arabia and Khashoggi case
- The Khashoggi Files: As a case builds against Riyadh, Wikileaks tells us about history and kingdom
- Rising tensions between US and Saudi Arabia over Khashoggi case impact oil prices
- The Khashoggi murder exposes Trump admin's dependency on Saudis
- 21 Saudis to lose US visas over Khashoggi murder, Pompeo says SA still important ally

US President Trump • Iranian Oil Rig • Iran President Rouhani
Sanctions will also target payments through the special mechanism that the EU has been creating specifically to avoid Washington's penalties and to keep buying Iranian oil. Mnuchin has also threatened sanctions against the transaction service SWIFT. "SWIFT is no different than any other entity," Mnuchin told reporters. "We have advised SWIFT that it must disconnect any Iranian financial institutions that we designate as soon as technologically feasible to avoid sanctions exposure."
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has confirmed earlier reports that eight nations will receive exemptions from the reimposed penalties, but refused to name them and said the EU as a singular entity was not among them. Earlier reports suggested that the list of exemptions would include Japan, India and South Korea.
Pompeo has released a list of 12 demands for Iran to comply with if it wants the sanctions lifted. These include halting all nuclear and ballistic missile development, as well as ending what Washington calls Tehran's "support for terrorism," and withdrawing from the Syrian conflict. "Our ultimate aim is to compel Iran to permanently abandon its well-documented outlaw activities and behave as a normal country," Pompeo said. More details will become available on Monday as the sanctions take effect, he announced.
Comment: As 'we say', not as 'we do'.
Comment: From Sputnik:
"On November 5, the United States will re-impose sanctions that were lifted as part of the nuclear deal on Iran's energy, shipbuilding, shipping, and banking sectors," Pompeo said. "We expect to issue some temporary allotments to eight jurisdictions, but only because they have demonstrated significant reductions in their crude oil and cooperation on many other fronts, and have made important moves toward getting to zero crude oil importation. These negotiations are still ongoing."
In early October, Pompeo had noted Washington would grant waivers for some importers of Iranian oil, including India, in order to give them time to adjust to the new conditions, adding that eventually, they would have to reduce their oil imports from Iran to zero.
Commenting on the statement, Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Fatih Dönmez claimed that Ankara to be granted waiver on the anti-Iranian sanctions.











Comment: Also see: