Puppet MastersS


Star of David

State Dept shields Israel from criticism: Updates antisemitism definition to include comparisons to Nazi Germany

protest gaza war 2014 new york city
Protest in New York city against Israeli attacks on Gaza in July 2014
The State Department has updated the working definition of anti-Semitism detailed on its website to include comparisons between current Israeli policies and those of the Nazis. The move comes just two weeks after the House passed a resolution denouncing the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement and amidst consistent attacks on Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) for introducing a bill that affirms the right to boycott foreign countries in the name of human rights.

The revised definition was first spotted by Israeli-American Council chairman Adam Milstein. On August 6 he tweeted, "The State [Department] just updated the definition of #Antisemitism to include "Drawing Comparison of Contemporary #Israeli policy to the of #Nazis". Kudos to [Secretary of State Mike Pompeo] and Special Envoy Elan Carr. It's more clear now, the BDS Movement is disgustingly Antisemitic."

Comment: Step by step.

They're almost there!

Any day now, criticism of Israel... will mean criticism of Jews... will mean the dreaded anti-semitism.

Everywhere.


Star of David

SOTT Focus: Mega Group, Maxwells And Mossad: The Spy Story at The Heart of The Jeffrey Epstein Pedo Scandal

epstein wexler mossad
© Claudio Cabrera

Comment: Part Three of Whitney Webb's deep expose of the decades-long history behind the rise of Jeffrey Epstein.

Read Part One: How 1920s prohibition gave rise to the likes of Jeffrey Epstein

and Part Two: Jeffrey Epstein, Trump's mentor and the dark secrets of the Reagan era: Governing by blackmail


As billionaire pedophile and alleged sex-trafficker Jeffrey Epstein sits in prison, reports have continued to surface about his reported links to intelligence, his financial ties to several companies and "charitable" foundations, and his friendships with the rich and powerful, as well as top politicians.

While Part I and Part II of this series, "The Jeffrey Epstein Scandal: Too Big to Fail," have focused on the widespread nature of sexual blackmail operations in recent American history and their ties to the heights of American political power and the U.S. intelligence community, one key aspect of Epstein's own sex-trafficking and blackmail operation that warrants examination is Epstein's ties to Israeli intelligence and his ties to the "informal" pro-Israel philanthropist faction known as "the Mega Group."

The Mega Group's role in the Epstein case has garnered some attention, as Epstein's main financial patron for decades, billionaire Leslie Wexner, was a co-founder of the group that unites several well-known businessmen with a penchant for pro-Israel and ethno-philanthropy (i.e., philanthropy benefiting a single ethnic or ethno-religious group). However, as this report will show, another uniting factor among Mega Group members is deep ties to organized crime, specifically the organized crime network discussed in Part I of this series, which was largely led by notorious American mobster Meyer Lansky.

Bad Guys

US continues throwing fuel on the Farmageddon fire

agriculture farming
President Trump on Tuesday morning hinted at what appears to be yet another farm bailout (the third one must be the charm), as farm bankruptcies soar and agricultural debt loads become unbearable.


A farm crisis on par to what was observed in the early 1980s could be coming, especially since the US Senate passed a bill late last week that makes it more accessible for farmers with larger debt loads to file for bankruptcy protection, reported Reuters.

The bipartisan bill, designated as the Family Farmer Relief Act of 2019, increases the total debt load of how much a farmer can have to meet the qualifications to file Chapter 12 bankruptcy, to $10 million from the prior $4 million ceiling.

Comment: Trump has already approved $28 billion in aid over the past two years (separate from existing $20 billion already spent annually for agricultural subsidies), and now he's hinting at a continued bail out. Not only that, farmers struggling under staggering debt can saddle themselves with even more debt! There are some valid criticisms about China's trade practices, however, the US trade war isn't fixing things. China has plenty of options and it is moving toward a world where US pressures are not only irrelevant, but also end up only causing harm to the US economy and its citizens.

See also:




Attention

Best of the Web: John Pilger: Assange being 'treated worse than a murderer' in prison

assange arrest
© Reuters/Henry NichollsWikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is seen in a police van, after he was arrested by British police, in London, Britain April 11, 2019.
Julian Assange is suffering from poor health as a result of mistreatment in prison, according to journalist John Pilger, who recently visited the WikiLeaks founder. Pilger said that he now fears for Assange.

Describing Assange's "deteriorating" condition, Pilger tweeted that he was being treated "worse than a murderer" at London's Belmarsh prison.

"[H]e is isolated, medicated and denied the tools to fight the bogus charges of a US extradition. I now fear for him. Do not forget him," Pilger wrote.

Comment:


Binoculars

Infighting Between Saudi And UAE Militias Amid UAE-Iran Agreement

UAE tank soldier Yemen
This file photo shows an Emirati soldier waving while riding on a tank in an undisclosed location in Yemen.
Yemen's port city of Aden — which bases the ex-government — has been rocked by deadly clashes between Emirati-backed separatists and Saudi-backed militants, amid a widening rift in the Riyadh-led military coalition waging war on the Arabian Peninsula state.

According to reports, the infighting broke out Wednesday after the southern separatists attended a funeral for dozens of fellows, including a senior militant commander, who all were killed in last week's retaliatory missile attack by Yemen's Houthi Ansarullah movement on a military parade, PressTV reported.

Both the UAE-backed separatists and the militants loyal to the former Saudi-allied Yemeni government serve the Riyadh-led coalition, which has been engaged, since 2015, in a bloody military campaign against Yemen aimed at reinstating ex-president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, who resigned in 2014 and later fled to the Saudi capital.

During the funeral, the mourners chanted slogans against the self-proclaimed Hadi administration and exchanged gunfire with the guards at the presidential palace in Aden — where Hadi was supposed to be based but which remains largely empty as the ex-president lives in Riyadh.

The two sides pursue different agendas for Yemen's future; the separatists want independence from Yemen, while the other militants seek to bring Hadi back to power, but the two camps have joined forces in the Saudi-led battle against Yemen's Houthi movement, which has been both running state affairs and defending the country against the aggression.

Comment: From Elijah Magnier's latest:
The new war is essentially economic; it is a war of sanctions and limiting free movement of ship movements around the globe. It is a war of tankers and oil platforms. It is a starvation war where no one can threaten the enemy with a return to the "stone age" because the firepower is now universally available. Yemen is the best example: the threat of bombing Dubai forced the Emirates to seek Iranian mediation to prevent a missile attack against them. The Houthis, despite years of Saudi bombing of Yemen, have also managed to bomb Saudi airports, military bases and oil stations in the heart of Saudi Arabia, using cruise missiles and armed drones.
Alliances are shifting, and not in Saudi Arabia's favor.


Star of David

Best of the Web: On feeding the Israel Lobby in America

Israel lobby in Washington graphic
If you have been wondering when the twenty Democratic aspirants for the presidency will begin a serious discussion of American foreign policy in the Middle East, where Washington has been bogged down in both current and impending wars, you are not alone. With the honorable exception of Tulsi Gabbard, no one seems keen to touch that particular live wire.

Part of the problem is the journalists who are asking the questions in the debates. To be sure, the publication of The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy by professors John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt back in 2007 opened the door to a frank discussion of why the United States is involved in unresolvable conflicts on behalf of a tiny client state. But unfortunately, while it is now possible to find in the mainstream media some honest analysis of Israel's ability to corrupt policy formulation in Washington, in general the Jewish state continues to get a pass from both the press and politicians on all issues that matter.

Bad Guys

Pakistan downgrades diplomatic relations with India, expels envoy, but doesn't want war

pakistan kashmir
© Global Look Press/ZUMAPRESS/Rana Sajid Hussain
Pakistan says it's going to downgrade diplomatic relations with India and suspend trade with the neighbor state, dubbing New Delhi's decision to revoke the autonomous status of Kashmir as "unilateral and illegal".

Pakistan vowed to take the Kashmir issue to the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), while Prime Minister, Imran Khan, told the Pakistani military to "continue vigilance."

He was chairing a National Security Committee meeting, where it was also decided to review all 'bilateral arrangements'. Islamabad also announced that India's envoy to Pakistan, Ajay Bisaria, will be expelled from the country as part of the response measures.

Bilateral trade between India and Pakistan that has now been suspended amounted to around $2.5 billion last year. That's roughly 3 percent of Islamabad's total annual trade.


Comment: Pakistan also plans to suspend rail service and ban Bollywood films (again). But they are not considering a military response:
At a news conference on Thursday, Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said Islamabad still reserved the right to respond. "We're not looking at a military option," Qureshi said, but added: "Don't we reserve a right to respond in case of any aggression?"
See also:


Boat

Pompeo lauds 'maritime expert' UK for joining US anti-Iran flotilla

royal navy patrol grace 1
© REUTERS/Jon NazcaA Royal Navy patrol vessel guards the oil tanker Grace 1, after it was seized off Gibraltar, July 20, 2019
Numerous countries may have declined the US invitation to patrol the Strait of Hormuz to 'protect' western ships from Iran, but the UK has once again come through for the 'special relationship,' delighting the top US diplomat.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo looked particularly pleased after meeting his newly minted UK counterpart Dominic Raab in Washington on Wednesday, due to London's decision to "assist in the protection of freedom of navigation in the Straits of Hormuz."

"You've got centuries of maritime expertise under your belt, so you understand the importance of protecting international shipping from unprovoked attacks," Pompeo told Raab during their brief press conference at the State Department, calling the UK move a "victory for meaningful, effective multilateralism."


Comment: Translation: "Thanks for being the only sucker to agree with our dumb idea."


Washington has been pushing for an international naval armada that would patrol the crucial shipping lane for months, first attempting to blame Iran for suspicious attacks on four tanker ships in June. The attempt fizzled after the tankers' owners expressed skepticism about the US version of events, however.

And then London got involved. On July 4, UK authorities in Gibraltar impounded a tanker they said was illegally transporting Iranian oil to Syria. Iran retaliated by seizing a British-flagged tanker in the Persian Gulf two weeks later.

Comment: Great idea, right? Especially considering Israel has voiced their support. Well, here's what the IRGC's Commander-in-Chief Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami has to say about that:
"The enemy knows that any new war endangers the survival of the Zionist regime, and will be followed by its irreversible fall," the commander said, referring to Israel while speaking at a military meeting in Kermanshah province, western Iran on Thursday, his remarks quoted by IRNA.

"The Zionists and some of their allies do not show a desire for war today because they know that if it occurred, it would move into their lands," Salami added. According to the commander, the "enemy knows" that a resisting force had been created "in Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and elsewhere" which could threaten them in the event of a conflict.

Referring to the US-UK coalition 'maritime security coalition forming in the Middle East as a "coalition of demons," Salami suggested that Iran was already involved in a war with the great powers of the West, facing "maximum political and economic pressures, psychological operations, cultural assaults, economic seizures, and even security threats and military intimidation."
He's right: And here's Iranian Defence Minister Brig. Gen. Amir Hatami:
"The region should not be an area for foreigners," Hatami said, speaking in a conference call with his counterparts from Qatar, Kuwait and Oman on Thursday.

"There is no doubt that the countries of the Persian Gulf region should ensure security in the region. The Islamic Republic of Iran is also an important country for maintaining stability in the Gulf," the minister said.

Commenting on Operation Sentinel, the US-proposed effort to deploy a military coalition to ensure freedom of navigation through the Persian Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf of Oman, Hatami stressed that such a coalition would only have the opposite effect.

"The military coalition that America is seeking to form with the excuse of 'securing maritime transport' will only increase insecurity in the region," the defence minister stressed, adding that Washington itself, not Tehran, was the primary source of tensions in the region.

As far as media reports of the potential involvement of Israel in the US-led coalition are concerned, Hatami warned that Israeli participation in the coalition would be "highly provocative, and could have disastrous consequences for the region." The senior officer did not clarify what these 'consequences' might be.



Eye 1

Meat tax proposed to combat climate change by two political parties in Germany

meat
Meat is relatively cheap for consumers in Germany. But that could all be about to change as lawmakers from across the political spectrum back proposals aimed at climate protection and animal welfare.

German politicians from the Social Democrats (SPD) and the Greens on Wednesday proposed raising the value added tax (VAT) on meat to the standard rate of 19%. Currently, meat is taxed at a reduced rate of 7% like most foodstuffs.

"I am in favor of abolishing the VAT reduction for meat and earmarking it for more animal welfare," said Friedrich Ostendorf, agricultural policy spokesperson for the Greens.

Comment: Real meat, even that raised through factory farming, is an expense many already struggle to afford and this tax will only serve to force more people into unhealthy, processed food choices. But, just as there was little resistance to the anti-smoking coercion, we can expect to see similar tactics applied to everything deranged politicians consider, regardless of the facts, to be 'bad for us' - although you can be sure their salaries will be sufficient to cover the extra taxes and most will continue eating meat: For insight into what's really causing the shift in climate, check out: Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?


Arrow Down

Trump temporarily suspends US foreign aid pending review

Donald Trump
© Palácio do Planalto, FlickrUS president Donald Trump, pictured in June 2019.
U.S. President Donald Trump has frozen foreign-aid funding until the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) reviews any money that hasn't been spent, officials say.

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

The OMB made the request to USAID and the State Department on August 3 and has yet to receive information about how much is currently in those accounts and how they plan to use the money.

The fiscal year ends on September 30.

The funding amounts in question are between $2 billion and $4 billion, a USAID official told CNN.

The OMB will then make a decision about how to move forward with the funds after it studies the accounts.

Comment: 'Foreign aid' includes 'democracy promotion' - i.e. fomenting color revolutions - among other shady foreign meddling practices. It's also a means of keeping foreign nations on welfare and preventing their own sovereign development. That's not to say all foreign aid is necessarily a bad thing, but just look at the billions in aid given to Israel, for example. It's pure extortion.