Puppet MastersS


Star of David

Reality-creating US rumored to begin changing Middle East maps to show Golan Heights as part of Israel

Druze community Golan Heights
© Basel Awidat/Flash90Members of the Druze community in the Golan Heights protest the decision of President Donald Trump to recognize Israeli sovereignty in the territory, Majdal Shams, March 23, 2019.
So far, no official US map of the region published online has been altered in accordance with US President Donald Trump's recent proclamation.

The US State Department says the administration is preparing to redraw all government maps of Israel and the surrounding region to include the Golan Heights as a part of Israel, a department spokesperson told VOA Persian on Thursday.

The new maps will be "consistent" with the recent change in US policy, which recognises the occupied Syrian territory of the Golan Heights as a part of the state of Israel, the spokesperson said.

This was confirmed by Brian Hook, the US special representative for Iran, who also said the State Department would "redraw" the maps and publish them "as soon as they are ready", The Times of Israel reports.

Stop

MPs reject Theresa May's Brexit withdrawal agreement for the third time

Theresa may parliament brexit
British MPs have rejected Theresa May's Brexit withdrawal agreement despite its separation from the rest of the deal. It's the third humiliating defeat for the prime minister on what was supposed to be the day Britain left the EU.

The MPs voted down the agreement 344-286 - with a margin of 58 votes. May apparently failed to convince enough Conservative rebels, and the DUP said it would not vote for her deal, be it the full text or only the withdrawal part.

Following the vote, Labour's Jeremy Corbyn and the SNP's Ian Blackford called on May to accept the will of parliament and to resign. Both called for a general election to be held.

Comment: It appears Prime Minister May has exhausted all her political capital:
Theresa May's failure to get her EU withdrawal bill through parliament for a third time led to immediate demands for the prime minister's resignation, a snap general election, and warnings from the EU about a no-deal Brexit.

May said the consequences of the rejection for Brexit were "grave," not least for her future as prime minister. After she saw her deal rejected again, this time by 58 votes, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said that if she was unwilling to change the deal which she has continuously failed to get through parliament, then she should quit immediately and call a general election to let the country decide.

The Scottish National Party's parliamentary leader Ian Blackford also responded to May's failure with an immediate call for an election.

Members of May's own party are also calling for her head, with the deputy chair of the hardline Tory European Research Group saying she needs to leave Downing Street as soon as possible.

May had promised to quit if she was successful in getting the withdrawal agreement through parliament, which ironically means her failure could see her cling on to her job for a bit longer.



Question

Why there will be no US-Russia reset post-Mueller

Trump and Putin
© Shealah Craighead/White House
President Donald Trump and his White House team may have been cleared of collusion with the Kremlin in the 2016 presidential election. That startling conclusion by Special Counsel Robert Mueller after nearly two years of investigation, might be viewed by some as giving Trump freedom to now get on with normalizing relations with Moscow. Don't bet on it.

Mueller's report, and US attorney general William Barr's appraisal of it, only partially vindicate Trump's long-held claims that the whole so-called "Russiagate" story is a "hoax".

Yes, Mueller and Barr conclude that neither Trump nor his campaign team "conspired" with Russia to win the presidential race. But Democrat opponents are now dredging up the possibility that Trump "unwittingly" facilitated Kremlin cyber operations to damage his 2016 rival for the White House, Hillary Clinton.

No Entry

Trump reportedly wrecked summit with Kim by suggesting N. Korea give all its nukes to US

Kim Jong Un walks with U.S. President Donald Trump
© Reuters / KCNA
US President Donald Trump reportedly proposed that North Korea transfer all its nuclear weapons to the US, a denuclearization template borrowed from Libya before the NATO intervention and brutal murder of its leader.

The second summit between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in February wrapped up early, ending with a big question mark over the future of the talks and the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. In the wake of the Vietnam meeting, Pyongyang and Washington offered different accounts of what actually transpired, with the White House alleging that North Korea demanded all sanctions be lifted from it. Pyongyang insisted that it was talking only about partial relief. The essence of the talks was kept under a veil of secrecy.

Reuters reported on Friday that it got access to a secretive plan that, in Washington's view, would potentially lead to a breakthrough in the stalled talks. The agency reported that the plan was similar to the one touted by US National Security Advisor John Bolton and was modeled after Libya.

Attention

We are doing the right thing: Venezuelan defense minister responds to Bolton's calls to defect

John Bolton and Vladimir Padrino
© Reuters / Brendan McDermid / Marco Bello
US National Security Advisor John Bolton has been flooding Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino with messages asking him to "do the right thing," playing the "Good Cop" to his own "Bad Cop."

Bolton's most recent "do the right thing" tweet implores Padrino and the army to "protect the Constitutional order from Maduro's usurpation of democracy" - though US special envoy Elliott Abrams admitted earlier this month that Juan Guaido's self-appointed presidency was technically in violation of Venezuela's constitution, until he unilaterally opted to change it.

Comment: The Venezuelan military refuses to play by the US playbook: US playbook at work in Venezuela: Manufacture a crisis, produce chaos, trumpet 'need' for intervention


Bad Guys

US Naval Institute publishes scenario of military conflict with Turkey

Turkish G-Class frigate TCG Gaziantep US Turkey Navy
© CC BY 2.0 / Official U.S. Navy PageThe Turkish G-Class frigate TCG Gaziantep is underway in formation USS Donald Cook
Relations between the US and Turkey, two NATO allies, have been spiralling downward of late, especially in light of a spat over Ankara's acquisition of Russian S-400 defence systems threatening F-35s' supplies to Turkey.

The US Naval Institute, one of the biggest professional military associations in the United States, employing a lot of former top military brass has published a suggested scenario of confrontation between American and Turkish fleets in the third edition of the book titled Fleet Tactics and Naval Operations. The book, released on 15 June 2018, has captured the attention of the Turkish newspaper Yeni Safak, which released a summary of the imaginative conflict described in its 15th chapter.

The book describes an alleged scenario where the Turkish Navy sinks Greek vessels carrying ballistic missiles to southern Cyprus, initiating a military conflict between the countries. According to it, Turkey would then conduct attacks on the islands of Limni, Lesbos, Chios, Samos, and Kos in the Aegean Sea. The two states engaging in the conflict are described as "sworn enemies".

Chess

Pakistan reports finding no 'terror camps' in connection with Pulwama attack

Pakistani soldier
© Reuters / Akhtar SoomroPakistani soldier guards area hit by Indian airstrike
Pakistan has found no Jaish-e-Mohammed terror camps at any of the 22 "pin locations" shared by India - or any connections between 54 detainees and the February suicide car-bomb attack in Pulwama, attributed to the Pakistani group.

The Pakistani foreign office shared its preliminary findings with India on Thursday, offering to allow visits to the 22 alleged terror camp locations, should New Delhi wish for independent confirmation of their findings.

The sites and suspects were probed in Pakistan's investigation of a six-part dossier provided by India late last month concerning the activities of terrorist group Jaish-e-Mohammed. Only two of the file's parts directly concern the Pulwama attack, and Islamabad has stated it is focusing on those two parts.

Eye 1

Washington demands foreign firms cut oil trade with Venezuela

oil trade Venezuela
© Reuters / Jorge SilvaAn oil tanker at Jose refinery cargo terminal in Venezuela
Washington has demanded non-US oil trading houses and refiners cut operations with Venezuela beyond the already imposed sanctions or face sanctions themselves, according to a Reuters report.

The US State Department told foreign firms that the already existing restrictions on the South American nation are actually wider than on paper, the agency said on Thursday, citing three sources familiar with the matter. The demands reportedly covered any direct, indirect or barter oil trade with Caracas and those who refuse to comply with the demands may face sanctions themselves.

While some companies, including ones from European states, Russia and India, continue to deal with Caracas, an official said that the firms should be aware of "the possible risks they face by conducting business" with sanctions-hit Venezuelan state-run oil major PDVSA.

Arrow Up

Russia opens arms training center in Venezuela, pledges to continue deepening ties

Mi-26 helicopter
© AFP / Raul ArboledaFILE PHOTO: A Mi-26 helicopter flies over Caracas.
A new helicopter training center has been built in Venezuela, the Russian state arms exporter said, pledging to deepen cooperation with Caracas. The news comes amid US threats of sanctions over Russia's presence in the country.

The training center, built by Russia's arms exporter, was unveiled on Friday, according to press service Rosoboronexport. The center is designed to train Venezuelan pilots to use such Russia-made hardware as Mi-17 and Mi-26 transport, Mi-35 attack helicopters and others.

"Rosoboronexport and other Russian organizations partaking in the Russian-Venezuelan military-technical cooperation, remain committed to deepening partnership with the defense ministry and other government bodies of Venezuela," the press service said. The cooperation focuses on training military personnel and servicing the supplied hardware

Comment: If the US has learned anything from Syria it should be clear that it's lost this one - but sanity rarely prevails in the US administration: Also check out SOTT radio's:

NewsReal: US Regime Change Operation in Venezuela - This Time It's Legit?


Brick Wall

Trump threatens to close 'large sections' of US-Mexico border next week - new illegal migrant caravan forming in Honduras

migrant caravan central america
Another migrant caravan is forming in Central America
President Donald Trump threatened to close large parts of the U.S.-Mexico border next week if America's southern neighbor does not "immediately" stop illegal immigration.

In a series of tweets Friday, the president wrote that he would shut down "the Border, or large sections of the Border," if Mexico does not "immediately stop ALL illegal immigration coming into the United States throug (sic) our Southern Border." He claimed closing off border crossings, key avenues for trade with a major partner, "would be a good thing!"

Trump, who has made cracking down on illegal immigration a top political priority, has said he could shut down border crossings before without following through on the threat. However, his threat Friday comes at a particularly delicate time: his administration hopes Congress will ratify a replacement of the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement by this summer.

Comment: President Trump's concerns are well-founded. ZeroHedge reports:
Mexico is bracing for the "mother of all caravans," after Interior Secretary Olga Sánchez Cordero warned on Wednesday "We have information that a new caravan is forming in Honduras, that they're calling 'the mother of all caravans,' and they are thinking it could have more than 20,000 people."

The figure has been disputed by activists such as Irineo Mujica of group Pueblo Sin Fronteras, who has accompanied several caravans in Mexico and said in a statement that "there has never been a caravan of the size that Sanchez Cordero mentioned."

According to AP, past caravans have hit "very serious logistical hurdles at 7,000 - strong."
Honduran activist Bartolo Fuentes, who accompanied a large caravan last year, dismissed the new reports as "part of the U.S. government's plans, something made up to justify their actions."

Later Thursday, Honduras' deputy foreign minister, Nelly Jerez, denied that a "mother of all caravans" was forming in her country.

"There is no indication of such a caravan," Jerez said. "This type of information promotes that people leave the country." - AP
Sánchez Cordero made the comments alongside US Secretary of Homeland Security earlier this week in Miami, Florida.
Olga Sánchez Cordero
Mexico Interior Secretary Olga Sánchez Cordero
Meanwhile, around 2,500 Central Americans and Cubans are currently making their way through Mexico's southern state of Chipas right now in yet another caravan. Last year's caravans contained up to 10,000 people at some points.

Mexico's tolerance for the caravans is wearing thin it seems, as they have stopped giving migrants humanitarian visas at the border, while some previously hospitable towns along the well-traveled route are have stopped allowing caravans to spend the night.
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said Thursday that Mexico is doing its part to fight immigrant smuggling.

"We are going to do everything we can to help. We don't in any way want a confrontation with the U.S. government," he said. "It is legitimate that they are displeased and they voice these concerns."

Sanchez Cordero has pledged to form a police line of "containment" around Mexico's narrow Tehuantepec Isthmus to stop migrants from continuing north to the U.S. border.

The containment belt would consist of federal police and immigration agents, but such highway blockades and checkpoints have not stopped large and determined groups of migrants in the past. - AP
System-wide meltdown

In a Thursday letter to the House and Senate, Homeland Secretary Nielsen made an "urgent request" for assistance to stop what she described as a tide of migrants overwhelming the border, according to CBS News.


"DHS facilities are overflowing, agents and officers are stretched too thin, and the magnitude of arriving and detained aliens has increased the risk of life-threatening incidents," wrote Nielsen - citing the increasing number of migrants arriving each month in large groups.
Nielsen wrote that her "greatest concern was for the children," as Customs and Border Protection currently has over 1,200 unaccompanied children in custody. The Trump administration has been widely criticized for earlier policies towards migrant children, such as separating families and keeping minors in poorly equipped detention facilities.

Nielsen also asked for more detention facilities in her letter, a point of disagreement which nearly led to a second shutdown this year. Democrats have reasoned that capping Immigration and Customs Enforcement's detention beds would force the administration to narrow its ramped-up deportation efforts.

Nielsen said that the Department of Health and Human Services would require more emergency resources such as medical and legal assistance to handle the influx of children. She also asked that Congress grant more authority to DHS to return unaccompanied migrant children from Central America to their countries, saying that putting these minors in the custody of sponsors in the U.S. becomes a "pull" factor for more migrants to make the trip north. -CBS News
"Let me be clear: the journey of any migrant -- especially at the hands of a smuggler or trafficker -- is not a safe one," reads the letter. "We must be able to come together on a bipartisan basis to take action."
"Not our problem." Mexico is begs off the issue:
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador wants US President Donald Trump to stop blaming Mexico for the US' illegal immigrant problem, pointing out that fewer Mexicans than ever are crossing the border illegally.

"Migration flows of Mexicans to the United States are very low," Lopez Obrador said during a news conference. "The Mexican is no longer seeking work in the United States. The majority are inhabitants of our fellow Central American countries."

"This is a problem of the United States, or it's a problem of the Central American countries," Lopez Obrador said, adding that he very much wanted to work with Trump to stem the northward flow of humans, and that he would focus on "addressing the root causes" of illegal immigration. But "it's not up to us Mexicans" to stop inhabitants of Central America from leaving home.