Puppet MastersS

War Whore

SOTT Focus: This is What Gloating Looks Like... NY Times Distorts War-Torn Syria

syria destruction
© AFP / Delil SOULEIMAN
A supposed survey of war-torn Syria by America's so-called "newspaper of record" was not merely shoddy journalism; it was a cynical attempt to rewrite the history of the eight-year war.

The meandering report of more than 2,700 words was headlined: "What 'Victory' Looks Like: A Journey Through Shattered Syria." It would have been more accurate to have used the title, "What Gloating Looks Like."

Even the sly way the word 'victory' is put in quotation marks indicates, from the outset, the insidious purpose of the article. To pour scorn on how Syria and its people have in actual fact defeated a foreign-sponsored criminal war for regime change. The regime-change plot goes back to at least 2005 as this old CNN interview clumsily admits.

With mawkish words, the New York Times reporters effect to lament the rubble and grief among the Syrian population. But all the while, the implication conveyed is that President Bashar Assad "presided over the destruction."

Yoda

Putin orders 'exhaustive' response to US missile test, says Washington worked to breach INF

missile
© Global Look Press/U.S. Navy
The Russian Armed Forces will scrutinize a recent cruise missile test, conducted by the US after ditching the landmark INF Treaty, and examine reciprocal measures. However, Moscow says it is not aiming for an arms race.

President Vladimir Putin has ordered the Defense Ministry and other bodies to "study the level of threat posed by these US actions and take exhaustive measures to prepare a symmetrical response."

Putin was speaking just days after the US military test-fired a ground version of Tomahawk cruise missile that travelled about 500km (310 miles) before hitting a mock target.

The type of weapon, fired from a universal Mk-41 launch system in California, was banned under the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty which the US formally withdrew from on August 2.

Chess

Empire first! Trump backs off plan to slash foreign 'aid' (bribe money) as Swamp dwellers dig in heels

trump
Facing criticism from Republicans and Democrats, U.S. President Donald Trump has backed off a plan to slash some $4 billion in foreign aid already approved by lawmakers.

U.S. news agencies on August 22 quoted unnamed senior administration officials and a Democratic congressional aide as confirming the White House had decided not to go forward with the planned cuts.

U.S. officials on August 7 said Trump had frozen foreign-aid funding until the White House Office of Management and Budget could review any money that hadn't been spent for the fiscal year ending September 30.

The freeze would have impacted 10 bank accounts overseen by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the State Department, a senior administration official told RFE/RL.

Comment: Yes it would be harmful to their 'national security', but what they mean by 'national security' is maintaining global empire.

A Pakistani space initiative? LOL! That money goes towards keeping Pakistan 'on-side' and a festering sore in south Asia... in the form of bribes to local politicians and warlords.

See also: State Department cuts Pakistan's handouts by $440 million, but Islamic state still receives billion$ from US taxpayers


Handcuffs

Modi declares 'New India' tightening noose on corruption, former FM arrested for money laundering

india FM
© AFP / PAL PILLAIFILE PHOTO: Palaniappan Chidambaram
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday asserted that the resounding mandate of 2019 Lok Sabha polls was not just for a government, but for building a 'New India' that focuses on ease of doing business while ensuring ease of living.

Addressing Indian community at the UNESCO headquarters here after inaugurating a memorial in honour of the victims of two Air India crashes in France in the 1950s and 1960s, Prime Minister Modi said in 'new India' action is being taken against corruption, nepotism, loot of people's money, terrorism.

"In 'New India', the way in which action is being taken against corruption, nepotism, loot of people's money, terrorism, this has never happened before. Within 75 days of the new government coming to power, we took many strong decisions," PM Modi said.

Comment: RT reports:
Indian special forces have raided the house of former finance minister Palaniappan Chidambaram to arrest him on charges of corruption and money laundering.

Shortly after Chidambaram returned home from a press conference at Congress Party headquarters, a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) team scaled the wall of his Jor Bagh residence in New Delhi to detain the 73-year-old politician.

The dramatic scenes televised across Indian media showed CBI officers jumping over the locked gate to let the main force inside, while another team entered the house from the back door. The senior Congress leader, accused of clearing foreign investments in exchange for bribes when he was finance minister, was then driven away in a CBI vehicle amid spirited protests outside his house.

CBI and Enforcement Directorate (which investigates financial crimes) officers have been scouting Chidambaram's house since Tuesday, the day the politician went missing after the High Court rejected his plea seeking protection from arrest. Earlier, the Enforcement Directorate issued a lookout notice against him seeking his detention and effectively preventing the politician from fleeing abroad.

At the press conference, the former finance minister denied any wrongdoing and claimed that he was "not hiding from the law" but rather "seeking protection of the law."

Chidambaram is accused of facilitating Foreign Investment Promotion Board clearance to the INX Media company in 2007 when he was the Finance Minister for Manmohan Singh's government. Investigators allege that his son Karti received kickbacks after INX Media secured funds equivalent to roughly $41 million.



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Stock Down

IMF says tariffs are ineffective, China threatens retaliation on any further US moves

Shipping Containers
© Global Look Press / Jacek Sopotnicki
The fund suggests alternative ways to address concerns about trade imbalances that better support global growth, noting that trade tensions are dimming the fund's global growth outlook.

Tempting as it might be to think a stronger dollar offsets higher US tariffs by making Chinese imports cheaper, the International Monetary Fund says the greenback's global prevalence tells a different story, reported Bloomberg.

Gita Gopinath, the IMF Chief Economist, said, "US importers and consumers are bearing the burden of the tariffs, the stronger US currency has had a minimal impact thus far on the dollar prices Chinese exporters receive because of dollar invoicing."

Comment: RT reports that China is threatening retaliatory measures should the US go ahead with any further tariffs:
China's Commerce Ministry warned the US against further escalating the trade war as it urged Washington not to proceed with new tariffs against Chinese imports, some of which are set to take effect September 1.

If Washington resorts to the promised tariffs, Beijing will have to retaliate, ministry spokesman Gao Feng said on Thursday. The same was promised by the State Council Tariff Committee last week, but neither Gao nor the committee clarified what steps China will take.

"Despite the US decision to delay tariffs on some Chinese goods... if the United States rides roughshod over China's opposition and impose any new tariffs, China will be forced to adopt retaliatory actions," the spokesman told a news briefing as cited by Reuters.

Earlier this month, US President Donald Trump threatened to hit China with 10-percent levies on $300 billion worth of imports. While additional levies for certain goods were later postponed till December 15, some products worth more than $100 billion are still on the hit-list which will come into force on September 1.

Trade talks between the two sides are still in progress, but there has been no breakthrough leading to a final deal. Last month's meeting in Shanghai brought no results, and the date of next round of face-to-face talks has not been announced.

On Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said he hopes that the US and China can "get along" and resume "mutually beneficial" trade.

"We hope the United States will meet China halfway," the spokesman said referring to a trade agreement that can end the protracted trade row.

Trump has recently linked the success of a trade agreement with China to Beijing's policies towards the Hong Kong protests, which have been ongoing for weeks. The president said that a violent crackdown on the protesters would make the deal "much harder" to sign. Beijing urged Washington to stay out of its domestic affairs.
The outlook for the global economy is looking particularly bleak:


Brick Wall

Crisis-level migrant surge eases following Trump's border protection deal with Mexico

Trump Border Wall
When people think of the southern border, it may bring to mind a vast, open desert, flecked with cacti and etched by a thin trail of fencing.

Not so here in Laredo Sector, where the Rio Grande narrows and separates the bushy banks of Mexico and the U.S. by mere feet of water. Migrants, predominantly adult men from Mexico rather than the Central American families common in other sectors, take advantage of the low river surrounded by trees. They know, as do the smugglers who assist illegal immigrants, that if they scramble across the water and into the trees, they are a short sprint from disappearing in Laredo amid its many fast-food restaurants, tiny houses and money exchanges.

But lately, the crisis-level surge in crossings has eased.

Headphones

An interview with University of Tehran's Professor Seyed Marandi

Seyed Mohammad Marandi
Professor Seyed Mohammad Marandi
Introduction: first, several friends recently suggested that that I should interview Professor Seyed Mohammad Marandi; then I read this most interesting text on Moon of Alabama and I decided to ask Professor Marandi to share his views of the current situation in Iran, the Persian Gulf the rest of the Middle-East who very kindly agreed to reply to my question in spite of his most hectic and busy schedule. I am most grateful to Prof. Marandi for his time and replies. Crucially, Prof. Marandi debunks the silly notion that Russia and Israel are allies or working together. He also debunks that other canard about Russia and Iran having some major differences over Syria. Prof. Marandi, who is currently in Iran, is superbly connected and informed, and I hope that with this interview some of the more outlandish rumors which were recently circulated will finally be seen for what they are: utter, total, nonsense. Enjoy the interview!

The Saker:
It is often said that there is an "axis of resistance" which comprises Syrian, Hezbollah, Iran, Russia and China. Sometimes, Venezuela, Cuba or the DPRK are added to this list. Do you believe that there is such an "axis of resistance" and, if yes, how would you characterize the nature of this informal alliance? Do you think that this informal alliance can ever grow into a formal political or military alliance or a collective security treaty?

Stock Down

Russiagate, racism, now recession? Trump claims Dems promoting economic bust to gain 2020 win

NYStockExchange
© Reuters/Eduardo MunozThe New York Stock Exchange in this August 14, 2019
US President Donald Trump is accusing Democrats and the media of trying to bring about a recession in order to hurt his 2020 re-election. His critics reply that they're only stating the facts... just like they did with Russiagate?

"The word recession is inappropriate... We're very far from a recession," Trump said on Tuesday, adding that his critics would "love to see" an economic downturn. Earlier, he tweeted a video clip of Fox Business host Lou Dobbs blaming "radical Democrats" for the recession talk.

Comment: The Left is looking for any scenario, factual or not, that hands them control of the country - and we know, from the last election, they are not above utilizing any means to achieve a particular result. If a recession is truly on the horizon, Trump may be the best choice America has.

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Rocket

Putin: The timing of the US missile test reveals it had been developed long before Washington left INF

Putin
© APRussian President Vladimir Putin
A recent test of a US missile banned by the INF risks backfiring on global security, Vladimir Putin warned. The Russian president said it shows Washington was not interested in the now scrapped landmark accord for quite some time.
"Americans tested this missile too quickly - way too quickly after having announced [they] are leaving the agreement. Given that, we have all reasons to believe that development to make it a ground launched missile - it's a maritime based projectile - started long before [US started] to look for reasons to leave the deal."
The weapon was confirmed by the Pentagon as being a modified version of a sea-based Tomahawk cruise missile, which is normally stationed on warships and submarines. It came just about two weeks after the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) officially expired on August 1.

Comment: See also:


Snakes in Suits

German FM Heiko Maas: 'Direct and open dialogue' needed with Moscow

Heiko Maas
© AFP/DPA/Michael KappelerGerman Justice Minister Heiko Maas
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas acknowledged having "principally different positions with Russia on many issues" on August 21 before departing for Moscow to meet with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

He also urged Moscow to play a constructive role in reviving peace efforts for Ukraine, which has been fighting Kremlin-backed separatists for more than five years at a cost of more than 13,000 lives.

Mass said in Berlin, regarding a cease-fire that hasn't fully taken hold:
"We have hope for the light at the end of the tunnel when it comes to issues of cease-fire, disengagement of forces, and implementation of the Minsk agreements. Now all sides need to demonstrate readiness for dialogue and action, or people will continue to die in this conflict."
To resolve the issue, "we need direct and open dialogue," Maas said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy earlier this month urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to help halt the conflict in eastern Ukraine.

Comment: See also: