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How Libya's conflict can be resolved

Misrata forces
© Reuters/Hani AmaraMilitary vehicles of Misrata forces, Tajura neighborhood, east of Tripoli, Libya April 6, 2019
Military interference or attempts at peacekeeping in Libya will only result in a pause in the conflict, not a resolution. The current situation in Libya is in flux, and reports we get are slow in arriving and largely unreliable.

So far, we can come to very few conclusions about what's going on, and very preliminary ones at that. It seems that at this point the military struggle in Libya isn't ruled by a strategy of fighting until victorious and without retreat. This is based on relatively small losses of personnel and military hardware. It would appear that, for now, parties to the conflict are busy not so much with continuously conducting offensive or defensive military operations, but rather with demonstrating their capabilities and intentions.

There is no accurate data on Khalifa Haftar's Libyan National Army (LNA) in terms of troops or military capabilities. They are armed mainly with the leftovers from Muammar Gaddafi's army, though lately some weapons have allegedly been coming through Egypt. There is no doubt that LNA has been getting weapons through any channel available.

At the same time, there is no accurate information on the troops commanded by the Government of National Accord (GNA) operating from Libya's capital Tripoli. Led by Fayez al-Sarraj, the government that was formed with the support of the UN and EU.

Eye 2

Powers That Be relieved at Assange eviction: Arrest of Julian Assange met with cheers from UK lawmakers in parliament

Theresa May
© Press AssociationTheresa May
UK parliamentarians have reacted to the news of WikiLeaks whistleblower Julian Assange's arrest with hearty cheers, as PM Theresa May and her ministers heaped praise on the Ecuadorian govt, for bringing the case to a conclusion.

May delivered a statement on Assange's arrest to the House of Commons on Thursday, outlining the charges against the 47 year-old Australian, thanking the Metropolitan Police, and claiming the case showed that "in the United Kingdom, no one is above the law."
I'm sure that the whole House will welcome the news this morning that the Metropolitan Police have arrested Julian Assange [cheers]

Comment:

Updates: President Trump disavows Wikileaks and Assange:
US President Donald Trump, who said he loved WikiLeaks during his election campaign, tried to distance himself from the arrest of Julian Assange, which was carried out by Britain on the request of the US.

Speaking to journalists in the Oval Office on Thursday, hours after the arrest of Assange in London, Trump said:
I know nothing about WikiLeaks. It's not my thing.
Trump was far less reluctant to speak about the transparency site in 2016, when it played a major role in the US presidential election after it published a number of documents leaked from the Hillary Clinton campaign.

Then-candidate Trump called the work of the site "amazing" and said he "loved" what it was being doing.


Ironically, those statements were used against Trump by proponents of the now-debunked Russiagate conspiracy theory, which said his campaign colluded with the Russian government to steal the election. Russia was accused of hacking into DNC computer networks and releasing stolen documents via WikiLeaks - an allegation that both Moscow and the website deny.

Trump officials at one point were accused by the US media of having foreknowledge of the contents of one of the batches of documents published by WikiLeaks. The story soon flopped after it turned out that several outlets, which claimed to be reporting separately, based their reporting on a mis-read date of a tweet, which was actually sent by a random person to the Trump campaign to draw attention to a fresh release of leaked materials.
Former Ecuadorian president Correa slams Lenin Moreno as a traitor:
Former Ecuadorian president Rafael Correa explained to RT why he calls his successor Lenin Moreno the "worst traitor" in the country's history for handing over WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to British authorities.


Correa spoke to RT Spanish to explain why he publicly branded Moreno the "greatest traitor in Ecuadorian history." The former president says his successor is no better than the disciple Judas Iscariot or Ephialtes of Trachis, the man accused of betraying Greek forces defending the pass of Thermopylae from invading Persians.

Unconstitutional deal with the US

"It was not Rafael Correa, who gave asylum to Julian Assange. It was the state of Ecuador. And the state of Ecuador had to protect the person it pledged to protect according to international law and its national pride. Instead they gave him up, allowed the British police to enter our embassy," he said.

He added that the move also violated the constitution of Ecuador, since Assange is now a citizen of the Latin American country and is owed protection accordingly. "This is unheard of. These actions cannot leave one not outraged," he said.

Correa said Moreno basically sold "Assange's head" to the Americans. The US wants to prosecute Assange for allegedly conspiring with former US Army soldier Chelsea Manning in her leaking of classified US documents to WikiLeaks.

Revenge for allegedly publishing documents incriminating Moreno

Moreno's decision was partially motivated by various benefits Ecuador and the president personally got in return, Correa believes. But another motive was revenge on WikiLeaks, he told RT. Moreno believes that the site was responsible for publication of explosive documents, which implicate him and his family members in corruption.

"Paul Manafort, the head of the Trump presidential campaign, visited Ecuador on May 30, 2017, weeks after Moreno took the office of the president. And even then Moreno offered to hand out Assange in exchange for financial enrichment from the US," Correa said.

"In 2018, [US Vice President] Mike Pence visited Ecuador, and he and Moreno agreed on three things. Isolate Venezuela, which Moreno did with great enthusiasm. Drop a case against Chevron, which he gladly did as well. And hand over Assange," the ex-president said. "WikiLeaks publishing documents about [Moreno's] blatant corruption was the latest straw."

The corruption case Correa referred to is dubbed "INA Papers" after the name of an offshore company, which was allegedly used by the incumbent president for corrupt dealings. Materials exposing the link between the firm owned by the president's brother and various shady operations were leaked in February and triggered a congressional probe in Ecuador. WikiLeaks denies being behind the leak, but Moreno insists otherwise.


"Moreno knows that he and his family will go to prison for corruption and money laundering. So before he leaves, he wants to harm as many people as possible, including Julian Assange," Correa alleged. "He decided to ruin another person before going to prison. He is moved by pathological hatred and in his desire to take revenge, that's why he gave out Assange to the British police."

Moreno tried to break Assange and make him leave

Correa added that Moreno's government previously tried and failed to break Assange, hoping to get rid of him in a less explicit way.

"They tried to make him leave the embassy voluntarily with this ruthless isolation and harsh rules. They couldn't make him. They hope he would get ill and require treatment at a hospital so that he could be arrested there. And again they failed," he said.



Eye 2

Netanyahu confirms his party spied on Palestinian voters in effort at voter suppression

netanyahu israel election spying
© TwitterSecret cameras uncovered at polling stations in Palestinians towns in Israel.
A few Likud activists were caught Tuesday morning as the polls opened in Israel, carrying hidden cameras (one was disguised as a pen) into poll stations in Palestinian towns. An unofficial Likud statement later said Likud deployed 1,300 such cameras in Palestinian poll stations; this number is so far unconfirmed. Netanyahu himself acknowledged the deployment of cameras, claiming they're supposed to "keep the voting process kosher."

The Israeli public relations firm Kaizler Inbar claimed credit for dispatching 1350 volunteers with cameras in a post on Facebook today, stating they pleaded "guilty" to suppressing Arab voter turnout and alluded to coordinating with the Likud party.

"Thanks to us placing observers in every polling station we managed to lower the voter turnout to under 50 percent, the lowest in recent years!" the post said, "After a long preparation period, an amazing logistical base and deep and close partnership with the best people in Likud, we put together an operation that contributed crucially to one of the most important achievements of the right-wing bloc: Keeping the Arab vote legal!"

Comment: Sputnik reports:
Likud's PR Firm Boasts Hidden Cameras Lowered Arab Voter Turnout

[...]

"After a long preparation period, an amazing logistical base and deep and close partnership with the best people in Likud, we put together an operation that contributed crucially to one of the most important achievements of the right-wing bloc: Keeping the Arab vote legal!" the post continues.

The firm also praised "the 1,350 field operatives, activists of all ages and types, from the south to the north, who were present at polls throughout the country, from the smallest villages to the largest Arab cities."

"Now it's official - the Likud tried to lower the Arab turnout through illegal means. Hidden cameras, monitoring and voter suppression," MK Ayman Odeh, head of the far-left Hadash-Ta'al slate, told Haaretz. "This is what de-legitimization of a fifth of the citizenry looks like. What started out as unleashed racist incitement continued in the nation-state law and could end with a transfer government and revoking rights."

Haaretz reported that Kaizler Inbar is run by Sagi Kaizler, a former head of a West Bank settlement residents' council, and noted that in 2015, he said: "Arabs are sitting alone in the polling station; we don't trust them. We let them vote in our country even though it's our country. They should at least vote truthfully."

Word emerged of the plan on Tuesday, the date of Israel's Knesset elections, throwing civil rights groups and pro-Palestinian groups into a frenzy.

Central Elections Committee chair Justice Hanan Melcer filed a complaint with Israeli police, who attempted to crack down on the cameras where they found them, but it seems the damage was done: Arabs stayed away from the polls in record numbers.

Al Jazeera noted that in 2015, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was narrowly re-elected to a fifth term in Tuesday's vote, warned Likud supporters to get out and vote, as "Arab voters are heading to the polls in droves."

​Outgoing MK Jamal Zahalka, from the Arab Balad party, told the Times of Israel the cameras were an "illegal" action by the "extremist right" to try and deter Arabs from voting. The Times noted that nobody they interviewed said the cameras intimidated them, but admitted that by 9 p.m. Tuesday, turnout in Arab communities stood at only 46 percent, when it had been 63.7 percent in 2015.

Likud maintained that the purpose of the cameras was to crack down on fraud.

"The problem is with those people in the Arab sector," Likud lawyer Kobi Matza flatly stated to the Times. "The cameras were intended to preserve the integrity of the vote."

"The cameras were not hidden, they were out in the open, and were in places where there is a high suspicion of fraud," Matza said. "I get reports from all over the country that our representatives are being kicked out of polling stations in Arab areas."

Haaretz reported that a government source said Tuesday that "the move was aimed to preserve the purity of the election and to assure that Ra'am-Balad won't pass the electoral threshold through falsifications."

However, both Arab-majority slates, Hadash-Ta'al as well as Balad-Ra'am, still managed to pass the electoral threshold, retaining 10 seats of the 13 they had before.
Israel continues towards its apparent goal as a totalitarian state, with its citizen spies, open air prisons, genocide, and made complete by its newly reappointed demented dictator: And check out SOTT radio's:


2 + 2 = 4

SOTT Focus: Why Assange's Accuser, Anna Ardin, is Almost Certainly Lying

Anna Ardin
Accuser of Julian Assange and possibly CIA-connected, Anna Ardin
The mainstream media have ensured very few people know the detail of the "case" against Julian Assange in Sweden. The UN Working Group ruled that Assange ought never to have been arrested in the UK in the first place because there is no case, and no genuine investigation. Read this and you will know why.

The other thing not widely understood is there is NO JURY in a rape trial in Sweden and it is a SECRET TRIAL. All of the evidence, all of the witnesses, are heard in secret. No public, no jury, no media. The only public part is the charging and the verdict. There is a judge and two advisers directly appointed by political parties. So you never would get to understand how plainly the case is a stitch-up. Unless you read this.

Comment: As regards the reference in the 2nd last paragraph above to Ardin working with the CIA, see this article for the evidence.


Bad Guys

South African President Ramaphosa has genius 'strategy' to halt mass exodus of white workers: 'Tie them to trees'

Cyril Ramaphosa
© PresidencyZA / Twitter
Cyril Ramaphosa has established a reputation for himself as one of the great orators in South African politics (he's no Willie Madisha, mind). The president addressed the farming community of Stellenbosch on Tuesday afternoon at the Beyerskloof Wine Estate, where he got a little creative with his language.

The tightrope Ramaphosa must walk on land reform is nothing more than a thin thread. There's no single outcome that will keep everyone happy, but he's promised to do things by the book. As EWN report, Cyril told his audience that expropriation without compensation for land will only take place in a "constitutional" manner:
"Let us look at land reform in a positive way, rather than a negative way. The land reform process is something we should never fear. It is going to be done in terms of the Constitution."

Cyril Ramaphosa

X

The comic leads the conman: New Ukraine poll shows Zelenskiy ahead of Poroshenko in election runoff

proshenko zelenskiy
© president.gov.ua/UNIAN/RFE?RLPetro Poroshenko (left) and Volodymyr Zelenskiy
The first independent poll taken since the first round of Ukraine's presidential election suggests that political newcomer Volodymyr Zelenskiy enjoys a commanding lead ahead of next week's runoff against incumbent Petro Poroshenko.

The Sociological Group "Rating" said its polling early this month pointed to 51 percent popular support for sitcom star Zelenskiy, who exploded onto the political scene late last year, versus 21 percent for Poroshenko.

The race was even more lopsided for Zelenskiy among respondents who intend to vote in the second round of the election on April 21 -- 61 percent to 24 percent.

Comment: Who can blame the average Ukrainian for preferring an entertainer after all they have been put through with Poroshenko and his US handlers? Zelenskiy's handler is a fellow national. Does Kolomoisky have a strategy, beyond continuing to loot the country?


Stock Down

Corrupt central banks 'printing money every time they make a mistake' - RT's Keiser Report

dry boxers money
© Reuters / Yorgos KarahalisUnderwear printed with images of euro banknotes are seen on a washing line
The European Central Bank's corporate bond buying program has led to extreme malinvestment and misallocation of capital, allowing companies to make questionable decisions.

RT's Keiser Report discusses the issue, using as an example German pharmaceuticals company Bayer's takeover of Monsanto.

According to Max Keiser, every central bank "willing to finance dodgy deals crowds out the good companies, so you end up with a lot of bad companies."

He says central banks should not be allowed to do deals as they only print money to make those deals. "Every time they make mistake they just print more money. And that methodology is now working its way down to a corporate level," Max explains.

Comment: Italy's Salvini has the right idea: 'Prison time for fraudsters': Salvini calls for elimination of Italy's Central Bank

See also: And check out SOTT radio's:


Gold Seal

Exposing 'collateral murder' and mass surveillance: The world owes Julian Assange a debt of gratitude

Assange supporters
© Reuters / Daniel TapiaJulian Assange supporters
Julian Assange is a pioneering whistleblower in the digital-age, speaking truth to power like no one before him managed on such a significant scale. As he sits in a London jail cell, here's why we should be grateful for his work.

By setting up the international non-profit organization WikiLeaks in Iceland in 2006, Assange irrevocably shifted the balance of power in the online era.

From humble beginnings as a master coder and hacker, caught by Australian authorities in 1995 but escaping a prison term, to the foremost publisher of sensitive, embarrassing and potentially dangerous material for the world to see, Assange's storied career as a publisher and whistleblower has captured headlines, and the global public's attention for years.

Comment: The circus continues. Will the world stand by and watch the death of free speech and principled journalism die with Julian Assange?


Sherlock

Who is Lenin Moreno and why did he hand Assange over to British police? - Former President Correa denounces him as a "traitor"

Lenin Moreno Garces
© Reuters/Shannon StapletonEcuador's President Lenin Moreno Garces addresses the United Nations General Assembly.
US-backed Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno reneged on asylum agreements made with naturalized citizen Julian Assange, leading to his arrest on Thursday, but how exactly did relations with the whistleblower end up here?

Moreno won a narrow victory in 2017 to become president of Ecuador, having served as vice president under his predecessor Rafael Correa from 2007 to 2013 as part of the center-left PAIS Alliance. Much like Assange, Moreno was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2012, for championing the rights of the disabled (he is the only world leader who uses a wheelchair).

When he rose to power Moreno quickly locked horns with Assange, eventually revoking his internet access in March 2018 while also reducing the security detail at the embassy as a result of their ongoing spat. Moreno alleged that Assange had installed electronic distortion equipment in addition to blocking security cameras at the embassy. Their deteriorating relationship culminated in Moreno's withdrawal of asylum granted to the whistleblower on April 11, 2019.

Comment: RT reports on former President Correa's scathing condemnation of President Moreno on the day of Assange's eviction:
'Greatest traitor in Ecuadorian history': Ex-President Correa slams Moreno over Assange's arrest

Moreno Correa
© Reuters/Mariana BazoEcuador's President-elect Lenin Moreno (L) and President Rafael Correa sit together during Moreno's inauguration ceremony.
[...]

Tweeting shortly after the arrest, which saw a white bearded Assange being dragged out of the Ecuadorian Embassy by several men and stuffed into a police car, Correa said that things had gotten far more serious than Moreno's alleged corruption.

"Moreno is a corrupt man, but what he has done is a crime that humanity will never forget."

The harsh words didn't stop there. After Moreno announced that he had made a "sovereign decision" in giving Assange to British police, Correa responded by calling the decision a "scoundrelly," "cowardly" and "heinous" act which is the "fruit of servility, vileness and vengeance."

"From now on worldwide the scoundrel and betrayal can be summarized in two words: Lenin Moreno."

Correa initially offered Assange asylum while still president in 2012, fearing the whistleblower would face the death penalty if extradited to America, where he was wanted for espionage.
See also: Wikileaks Founder Assange Dragged Out of London Embassy in Handcuffs After Ecuador Tears up Asylum Deal


Brick Wall

Anti-illegal immigration hardliner Stephen Miller reportedly tasked with total control of border policy before Nielsen's abrupt resignation

Stephen Miller
© Chip Somodevilla/Getty ImagesStephen Miller talking to reporters about President Donald Trump's immigration system in December 2017.
US border and immigration policy is now said to be under the control of one of the most hardline anti-immigration members of the Trump administration, following the weekend's abrupt resignation of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen.

On Sunday, Politico reported that the White House adviser Stephen Miller was behind a government-wide bid to tighten migration policy. The site said he lobbied for the replacement of government officials with those who share his views and telephoned mid-ranking officials at several government departments to angrily demand that they do more the halt the illegal movement of migrants into the country.

"There's definitely a larger shake-up abreast being led by Stephen Miller and the staunch right wing within the administration," a person close to Nielsen told the publication. "They failed with the courts and with Congress and now they're eating their own."