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Bizarro Earth

Hot Economic Warfare: Scrambling for Rare-Earth Minerals

rare earth minerals
Just like the gold rushes of California between 1848 and 1855, Canada's Klonike of 1896 to 1899, and Western Australia's of the 1890s, the world is experiencing a frenzy to obtain mining rights in pursuit of today's "gold," namely rare earth minerals. Used for components of electric vehicle batteries, mobile telephones, flat-screen televisions, flash drives, cameras, precision-guided missiles, industrial magnets, wind turbines, solar panels, and other high-tech items, rare earth minerals have become the type of sought-after commodity that uranium and plutonium were during the onset of the atomic age.

Rare earth minerals do not easily roll off one's tongue in the same manner as gold, silver, and platinum. For example, yttrium oxide and europium, while sounding unimportant, are what provide the red hue in color televisions.

Nations around the world are scrambling to secure reserves containing rare earth minerals. China, where one-third of the planet's rare earth minerals are currently found, has severely restricted the export of the minerals to friends and competitors. One of the largest known reserves of rare earths is the Bayan Obo deposit in China's Inner Mongolia.

Jet2

US reportedly to send Israel more F-35s after Moscow supplies S-300s to Syria

US F-35 fighter jet
© Andy Wolfe / Reuters
The US will reportedly provide Israel with more F-35s after Russia supplied Syria with S-300 missile systems. Moscow's move came in response to the downing of a Russian military plane, which it partly blamed on Israel.

US President Donald Trump decided to lend a hand to America's most devoted ally following consultations at the "highest administration and military levels," DEBKAfile, a military intelligence news site, said to have ties with the Israeli security services, reported.

The move to increase Israel's weapon arsenal was taken in the wake of Russia's "enhanced threat" and its decision to deliver S-300 air defense systems to the war-ravaged country, according to the report. The precise number of aircraft destined for Israel, however, has not been disclosed.


Comment: That's the way war works: New reality: Syria's S-300s force Israel to use faulty F-35s, intends to bilk US of more money and new weapons


Bad Guys

Deep State doesn't need hackers because internet is 'branch of US intelligence'

hacking computers
© Julian Stratenschulte / Global Look Press
'Russian hackers' have become the go-to bogeymen for Washington. There's little mention of American hackers though - probably because they aren't needed, since most of the internet is a branch of US intelligence.

The US, which is now raising massive alarm over Russia's supposed efforts to hack everything Americans hold dear, has been refusing to sign a treaty on cyberspace behavior with Russia for almost a decade now. The reason is simple, one Russian-American author explains: Washington doesn't need a treaty, because it dominates the digital space completely as it is.

Magic Wand

'I would do very well': Golf enthusiast Trump brags he could beat Putin in boxing match

Putin Trump
© REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst - REUTERS/Aleksey Nikolskyi
Donald Trump declared he would have a good chance against judo black belt Vladimir Putin in a hypothetical boxing match, during some off-script boasting at a Minnesota political rally.

Speaking to a throng of supporters, US President Donald Trump criticized the media for trying to undermine his controversial meeting with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, in Helsinki, Finland in July.

"With Putin of Russia they said, 'He was too nice'. That was a great meeting," the US president said. "They want me to get into a boxing match with him."

After a pause, he added: "And I think I'd do very well."

Bad Guys

What the MSM isn't telling you about China's Uyghur problem

Uyghur militants
© Uighur.nlUyghur militants
In recent months Western media and the Washington Administration have begun to raise a hue and cry over alleged mass internment camps in China's northwestern Xinjiang where supposedly up to one million ethnic Uyghur Chinese are being detained and submitted to various forms of "re-education." Several things about the charges are notable, not least that all originate from Western media or "democracy" NGOs such as Human Rights Watch, whose record for veracity leaves something to be desired.

In August Reuters published an article under the headline, "UN says it has credible reports that China holds million Uighurs in secret camps." A closer look at the article reveals no official UN policy statement, but rather a quote from one American member of an independent committee that does not speak for the UN, a member with no background in China. The source of the claim, it turns out, is a UN independent advisory NGO called Committee on Elimination of Racial Discrimination. The sole person making the charge, American committee member Gay McDougall, stated she was "deeply concerned" about "credible reports." McDougall cited no source for the dramatic charge.

Attention

Best of the Web: Iran ICJ ruling sets worrisome international precedent for the US

The opening of case between Iran and the US at the The International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the Hague, August 27, 2018
© Jerry Lampen / AFPThe opening of case between Iran and the US at the The International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the Hague, August 27, 2018.
Iran has just scored a moral and political victory over the US in the international arena, but what this victory will entail in practice remains to be seen.

"Iran's own track record of violating international law is among the worst of the world," Secretary of State Mike Pompeo recently said at the United Against Nuclear Iran Summit 2018 last week. "It has no regard for international law, borders or lives. It is therefore incumbent on every country to join our efforts to change the regime's lawless behavior."

The irony of Pompeo's speech was so thick that barely a few days after uttering those words, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivered a stern preliminary ruling to lift sanctions on Iran which are linked to humanitarian goods and civil aviation. In its statement, the ICJ made it quite clear that its power to indicate provisional measures will be exercised "only if there is urgency, in the sense that there is a real and imminent risk that irreparable prejudice will be caused to the rights at issue."

Star of David

Israel pounds Gaza in 'retaliation,' kills 3 while injuring hundreds more

Gaza protests
At least three people, including a 12-year-old, were killed by Israeli troops as some 20,000 Palestinians rallied at the Gaza border. Amid the clashes, the IAF struck 'terrorist targets' in retaliation for border breach attempts.

Thousands of Palestinian activists assembled near the Gazan-Israeli border, with some trying to breach the fence amid a heavy Israeli security presence, burning tires and throwing incendiary devices at the IDF soldiers. The crowd was, once again, met with a crackdown by the Israeli forces who used live bullets, rubber ammunition and tear gas to drive the crowd back.

Comment: To add insult to injury Israel has reduced the fishing zone, arresting those who dare fish too far offshore. The Jerusalem Post reports:
Israel's Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman order the reduction of the Gaza fishing zone to 6 nautical miles on Saturday following violent protests along the security fence with Israel.

The reducing of the fishing area from 9 nautical miles was made following a security assessment made with the IDF, Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) and the Shin Bet internal security services.

"The defense minister has instructed that preparations be made for additional measures if the violence continues," read a statement released by Liberman's office.

Earlier on Saturday the Israeli Navy detained a Palestinian boat which had exceeded the authorized fishing area authorized near the shores of northern Gaza. Two Palestinian brothers identified as Safwat and Rifaat Zayid were said to have been arrested while fishing off of the shores of al-Sudaniyya district in the northern Gaza Strip.
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Bad Guys

MBS slams Trump: Saudis can survive '2,000 years' without US

Mohammed bin Salman MBS Donald Trump
© Jonathan Ernst / Reuters
Saudi society fully supports the royals and those few fringe extremist elements who stir trouble are being dealt with, believes crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, who claimed the kingdom can survive for 2,000 years on its own.

Known in the West by his initials MBS, the crown prince may, as he said, 'love' working with the US and Trump but, when it comes to thinking of examples of successful managers of social change, he is decidedly 'America last.' Any drastic financial, political and legal reforms come with a hefty price tag, he emphasized, drawing parallels with the history of the United States.

"...if you look at the United States of America, when for example they wanted to free the slaves. What was the price? Civil war. It divided America for a few years. Thousands, tens of thousands of people died to win freedom for the slaves," Bin Salman told Bloomberg, in a wide-ranging interview published Friday.

Comment: Also see:


Binoculars

Trump signs law allowing authorities to shoot down private drones without warrants

drone
© Peter Nicholls / Reuters
US authorities are now allowed to shoot down personal drones if they deem them to be a threat, thanks to a new bill which has been signed by President Donald Trump. But critics say the law could be easily abused.

The FAA Reauthorization Act, signed by Trump on Friday, includes several points which are aimed at bringing US aviation rules up to speed with modern times - including new provisions to act against privately-owned drones.

In particular, section 1602 of the act outlines the "protection of certain facilities and assets from unmanned aircraft" and authorizes the detection, monitoring, and interception of drones "without prior consent" of the owner. Authorities have also been allowed to neutralize a potential threat using "reasonable force, if necessary, to disable, damage, or destroy" the UAV.

It specifically allows for federal authorities to shoot down a person's unmanned aerial vehicle without a warrant - but critics say that authority could be easily abused.

Eye 1

Flashback The New York Times as Iago: Undermining peace efforts by sowing suspicion

new york times building
© Shannon Stapleton / Reuters
The New York Times continues to outdo itself in the production of fake news. There is no more reliable source of fake news than the intelligence services, which regularly provide their pet outlets (NYT and WaPo) with sensational stories that are as unverifiable as their sources are anonymous. A prize example was the August 24 report that US intelligence agencies don't know anything about Russia's plans to mess up our November elections because "informants close to ... Putin and in the Kremlin" aren't saying anything. Not knowing anything about something for which there is no evidence is a rare scoop.

A story like that is not designed to "inform the public" since there is no information in it. It has other purposes: to keep the "Russia is undermining our democracy" story on front pages, with the extra twist in this case of trying to make Putin distrustful of his entourage. The Russian president is supposed to wonder, who are those informants in my entourage?

But that was nothing compared to the whopper produced by the "newpaper of record" on September 5. (By the way, the "record" is stuck in the same groove: Trump bad, Putin bad - bad bad bad.) This was the sensational oped headlined "I am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration", signed by nobody.

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