Puppet MastersS


Dollar

Kremlin says it considers Lukashenko the legitimate president of Belarus as Putin agrees to a $1.5B loan for Minsk

LukashenkoPutin
© Reuters/Russian Presidential Executive OfficeRussia's President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with his Belarusian counterpart Alexander Lukashenko in Sochi, Russia on September 14, 2020.
The Kremlin considers Alexander Lukashenko to be the legitimate president of Belarus, Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman told reporters, after the two leaders emerged from a one-on-one meeting in Sochi on Monday.

Dmitry Peskov's comments came after threats from Western-backed opposition figurehead Svetlana Tikhanovskaya that any agreements made between Moscow and Minsk would not be recognized by her movement, should it ever come to power. Describing Lukashenko as an "illegitimate" president, she said that, in her opinion, any deals he makes have no legal force. Peskov emphasized:
"Mr. Lukashenko is the legitimate president of Belarus and is the counterpart of President Putin in interstate relations. As for those who do not agree with the election results, they are all citizens of brotherly Belarus and we appreciate and love them. But we want everything that happens in Belarus to take place not in the form of unconstitutional maneuvers, but legally."

Pistol

Officials: Iran weighing plot to kill US ambassador to South Africa

Lana Marks
© Leon Kgoedi, United States Embassy South Africa via AP static.politicoU.S. Ambassador to South Africa Lana Marks posing with ventilators donated by the U.S. Government.
The Iranian government is weighing an assassination attempt against the American ambassador to South Africa, U.S. intelligence reports say, according to a U.S. government official familiar with the issue and another official who has seen the intelligence.

News of the plot comes as Iran continues to seek ways to retaliate for President Donald Trump's decision to kill a powerful Iranian general earlier this year, the officials said. If carried out, it could dramatically ratchet up already serious tensions between the U.S. and Iran and create enormous pressure on Trump to strike back — possibly in the middle of a tense election season.

U.S. officials have been aware of a general threat against the ambassador, Lana Marks, since the spring, the officials said. But the intelligence about the threat to the ambassador has become more specific in recent weeks. The Iranian Embassy in Pretoria is involved in the plot, the U.S. government official said.

Still, attacking Marks is one of several options U.S. officials believe Iran's regime is considering for retaliation since the general, Qassem Soleimani, was assassinated by a U.S. drone strike in January. At the time, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the U.S. killed Soleimani to reestablish deterrence against Iran.

Comment: Iran blasted US for propaganda and Politico's insinuations on this strange revenge plot:
Tehran has accused the US of using "worn-out" methods to defame it on the world stage. It comes after a US media report claimed that Iran was mulling a plan to avenge the death of its top commander by killing an American diplomat.

"We advise the American officials to stop resorting to hackneyed and worn-out methods for anti-Iran propaganda in the international arena," Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Saeed Khatibzadeh said.

The diplomat's remarks were apparently meant to rebuff a story published by Politico on September 13 alleging Tehran was "considering" an option to assassinate Lana Marks. Katibzadeh said the allegations in the Politico story were baseless and agenda-driven.
"It was predictable that the United States... would resort to anti-Iran accusations and falsification ahead of the US presidential election."
The Iranian diplomat further accused the Trump administration of acting like a "rogue regime," masterminding and carrying out "tens of plots for assassination," as well as meddling in other countries' affairs. As for the Islamic Republic, Katibzadeh argued that Tehran has always behaved as a "responsible member of the international community."

In his statement on Monday, Katibzadeh reiterated that Iran will seek legal redress for Soleimani's murder, and "will neither forgive nor forget the act of terrorism."



Handcuffs

Venezuela says captured American has been charged in alleged terrorist plot

Tarek William Saab
© AP/Matias DelacroixVenezuela's Attorney General Tarek William Saab gives a press conference in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, May 8, 2020.
Venezuela's chief prosecutor on Monday said a U.S. citizen recently arrested in the country as a suspected spy has been charged in an alleged terrorist plot to sabotage oil refineries and electrical service in order to stir unrest.

The man, alleged to have CIA ties, had help from three Venezuelan conspirators, who were arrested with him last week near a pair of oil refineries on the country's north Caribbean coast, Venezuela's Chief Prosecutor Tarek William Saab said on state television.

The office gave the U.S. suspect's name as Matthew John Heath.

Authorities said cellphones taken from the men when they were arrested last week include images of suspected targets, including a large bridge in Zulia state, military installations and dilapidated oil refineries in Falcon state. The prosecutor showed pictures of equipment allegedly seized from the group, including a grenade launcher, plastic explosives, a satellite phone and a bag of U.S. dollars.

"Everything here could qualify as a lethal weapon designed to cause harm and to promote assassinations, crimes against the people of Venezuela," said Saab, who also accused the man of planning to open a drug trafficking route through Venezuela.

Heart - Black

Assange Trial Week 1: The flaw at the heart of the prosecution case

JAssange graffiti
© Flickr/Duncan Cumming/CC by 2.0Free Julian Assange graffiti in London.
What became increasingly clear in the first week is that the prosecution is petrified of the accusation that they are attempting to criminalise journalists...

James Lewis QC, the US government's choice as prosecutor in the Assange extradition hearing, may well be a jolly and generous soul in private. There is certainly nothing to suggest that this former SAS officer and current Chief Justice of the Falklands Islands, whose home is adorned with a framed front page of the Penguin News, the island's local paper, from the day that Britain defeated Argentina in the 1982 war, is not kind to animals and warm to his friends and family.

It may well be that it is only in public that he is a bad tempered and a bully.

But that, on the evidence of the first three days of the reopened Assange extradition hearing, he certainly is. So far he has lost patience with every witness, especially those who do not give ground under his overbearing cross examination, with the defence QC Mark Summers for daring to interrupt him, and with the Judge for having the temerity to suggest that he might need to stick to the time limits set for cross examination.

There is however an easily available explanation for Lewis' tetchiness: he has been given a fundamentally flawed case to argue.

Comment: See also:


X

Austrian President says he sees no link between Navalny's case, Nord Stream 2 project

Van der Bellen
© EPAAustrian President Alexander Van der Bellen
Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen said Tuesday he did not see any connection between the situation with Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny and the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project.

"I, for one, do not see any connection between the situation with Navalny and the Nord Stream 2 project. I see the latter as a commercial project," the Austrian president said when asked if Vienna would back the project's closure over the situation with Navalny.

Van der Bellen remarked that there was no clarity in Navalny's case and that nothing had been proven decisively.

The statement follows US Ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison's comment about Washington's hopes that Germany will abandon the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project over allegations that Russia poisoned Navalny.

Black Cat 2

Best of the Web: Playing with fire: Democrats and their military quislings flirt with a borderline seditious military coup

James Mattis
Retired General James Mattis
As the election approaches, more and more ominous evidence is quickly piling up that the U.S. military's nearly 250-year separation from national politics is eroding. Frightening signs indicate that senior members of the military are open to an anti-Trump coup d'etat. If such a coup happens, Democrats will gleefully cheer it on.

Revolver wants make clear that this article is not based on any inside information. Nobody on the Joint Chiefs of Staff is passing on warnings about what the military is planning. Instead, this article is based on a reading of public statements and events, which are already worrisome enough.

The first red flag is buried in Bob Woodward's latest book on the Trump Administration, Rage. According to the book, former Defense Secretary James Mattis spent much of his tenure in office plotting to undermine the elected leader who appointed him.

Comment: The Deep State has been trying for almost four years now:


Attention

Virtual school dangers in the US police state

"There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment. How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. But at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever they wanted to. You had to live — did live, from habit that became instinct — in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement scrutinized." — George Orwell, 1984
Police State USA
© CS Globe
Once upon a time in America, parents breathed a sigh of relief when their kids went back to school after a summer's hiatus, content in the knowledge that for a good portion of the day, their kids would be gainfully occupied, out of harm's way, and out of trouble.

Back then, if you talked back to a teacher, or played a prank on a classmate, or just failed to do your homework, you might find yourself in detention or doing an extra writing assignment after school or suffering through a parent-teacher conference about your shortcomings.

Of course, that was before school shootings became a part of our national lexicon.

As a result, over the course of the past 30 years, the need to keep the schools "safe" from drugs and weapons has become a thinly disguised, profit-driven campaign to transform them into quasi-prisons, complete with surveillance cameras, metal detectors, police patrols, zero tolerance policies, lock downs, drug sniffing dogs, school resource officers, strip searches, and active shooter drills.

Suddenly, under school zero tolerance policies, students were being punished with suspension, expulsion, and even arrest for childish behavior and minor transgressions such as playing cops and robbers on the playground, bringing LEGOs to school, or having a food fight.

Things got even worse once schools started to rely on police (school resource officers) to "deal with minor rule breaking: sagging pants, disrespectful comments, brief physical skirmishes."

As a result, students are being subjected to police tactics such as handcuffs, leg shackles, tasers and excessive force for "acting up," in addition to being ticketed, fined and sent to court for behavior perceived as defiant, disruptive or disorderly such as spraying perfume and writing on a desk.

This is what constitutes a police state education these days: lessons in compliance meted out with aggressive, totalitarian tactics.

Russian Flag

The Pevchikh plot: Navalny's bottle, London witness flees scene of crime, and Berlin too

navalny
The Navalny poison plot spread to Paris on Monday, compelling President Emmanuel Macron to telephone President Vladimir Putin to explain what a French chemical warfare laboratory has just done with evidence sent from Berlin by German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas.

Macron told Putin he agreed "German specialists must send to Russia the biomaterials and an official statement on the test results of the samples collected from Alexei Navalny, and must start working together with Russian doctors." Macron also agreed "to contribute towards determining the parameters of possible interaction with European partners." This wording of the Kremlin communiqué meant that Macron and Putin decided to discuss with German Chancellor Angela Merkel how the Chancellor can extricate herself from the Novichok fabrications they now believe were initiated by Navalny's staff and a British agent.

The poison plot has also spread to the headquarters in The Hague of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). After days of concealing that Foreign Minister Maas had requested a technical team from OPCW to take samples in Berlin, Kai Chen, head of the OPCW's external relations department, refused late on Monday to confirm what role the OPCW is playing in the poison plot; what evidence the OPCW has collected in Berlin; and what provisions of the OPCW charter have been invoked to legalise the OPCW's involvement in the Navalny affair.

In London on Monday evening, a leading British organophosphate chemist and toxicologist said it was too late for the OPCW to have identified a nerve agent in Navalny's blood or urine. "A functioning liver should hydrolyse the parent compound and then [OPCW testing would] identify the metabolites in the urine secretion. There are no cases of finding the parent compound, so maybe it is not there to be found."

Comment: See also:


Wolf

Witness, documents emerge to undercut allegations by Schiff's latest pet whistleblower, Brian Murphy

Homeland Security Brian Murphy
Top Homeland Security official Brian Murphy speaks at a Congressional hearing, May 2019
The whistleblower alleges top Department of Homeland Security political appointees told career officials to alter intelligence assessments, but emails and witness to contradict that claim

The Trump administration is producing documents and a senior Homeland Security Department witness to undercut allegations made by the latest federal whistleblower to be championed by House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff.

The developments Tuesday involve a whistleblowing complaint filed by Brian Murphy, Homeland's former head of intelligence, who alleged Trump officials sought to censor or manipulate intelligence for political purposes.

Comment:


Bulb

What a surprise: US military reveals it can't corroborate NYT's story on Russian bounties to Taliban - months after vowing to get to bottom of it

US soldiers Afghanistan
After two months of digging for evidence that Russia's government paid bounties to Taliban forces to kill American forces in Afghanistan, as reported by the New York Times, the US military has found no corroboration.

"It just has not been proved to a level of certainty that satisfies me," General Frank McKenzie, the commander who oversees US troops in Afghanistan, reportedly told NBC News on Monday. Investigators continue to look into the matter, he said.

The investigation already has reviewed intelligence concerning every attack on US troops in Afghanistan in the past several years, and none has been tied to Russian incentive payments. "I just haven't seen anything that closes that gap yet," McKenzie said.

The New York Times reported the bounty allegation back in June, citing unidentified intelligence sources. Media outlets and Democrat politicians attacked President Donald Trump for failing to punish Russia over the alleged bounties, but Trump and named intelligence and military officials have said that the information had not been validated and was solid enough to use as a basis to take action against Moscow.

Ironically, even after NBC's report showed the military had no evidence to back up the bounty story, Democrat Senator Tammy Duckworth tweeted that Trump has gone 80 days without condemning Putin for the alleged payments. "This is unforgivable," she said.


Comment: We have highly trustworthy inside sources that tell us Duckworth punches babies. The fact that Biden has yet to condemn her for these actions is unforgivable.