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Bullseye

Best of the Web: Russian Foreign Ministry summons all ambassadors for public meeting on Skripal poisoning case - Lays out the facts

Russian foreign ministry
Ladies and gentlemen, colleagues, friends,

Good afternoon.

We are glad to see you at the Foreign Ministry on this cold wintry day that nevertheless carries a promise of spring.

We are grateful to you for responding so quickly to our invitation, which we issued only yesterday.

The situation is indeed unusual. There is an urgent need for a non-politicised and highly professional discussion of the Skripals' poisoning case. We have distributed a position paper. We ask you to bring it to the notice of your governments.

The language of this position paper, just as any other such paper, is dry legalese with technical details.

It would be wrong to invite you here just to say this. I propose that we hold an open discussion in this closed diplomatic group.

Let us look at hard facts, beginning with the humanitarian aspects of the case at hand.

On March 4, 2018, two people, one of them Russian citizen Yulia Skripal, were attacked in Salisbury, a flourishing city in the south of England.

Various versions of the circumstances of this tragedy have been voiced in the UK. They highlight the use of chemical agents, which the British call Novichok, for some reason. All of these versions do not stand up to any criticism.


Comment: Clear and to the point. Yermakov pulls no punches when addressing their belligerence. Nothing gets by those Ruskies!


Attention

Russia's warning deterred another US attack on Syria - current threat from Israeli war planes

Russia's Warnings Have Deterred a US Attack Against the Syrian Army - Reports
© Sputnik/ Valeriy Melnikov
Earlier this week, reports from military sources in Syria suggested that a US attack against the Syrian Army near the Syria-Iraq border was to be launched "very soon," though it was unclear what such an attack would entail exactly.

A military monitor told Sputnik reporter and columnist Suliman Mulhem on Friday that the prospect of a US attack against Syria is looking "unlikely for now," citing his informed military sources as saying they believe the threat level has been downgraded due to recent warnings by Russian officials to the US.

The monitor also reported that many of his sources in the Syrian Air Defense Force (SyADF) are still on high alert, but suggested that the current threat is primarily from Israeli warplanes.

Comment: It's looking like the war-mongering US is about to get a whole lot worse: John Bolton isn't "hawkish" - he's a crazed war criminal with terrorist ties


Propaganda

Anti-Russia prejudice running amok in Canada's 'Presstitute' mainstream media

Sochi March 18, 2018 Vote
Canada's toxic, corporate media is on an absolute tear against Russia and its president these days. The occasion is the confluence of the Russian presidential election of March 18, the increasingly bizarre performance of Canada's closest ally - the Donald Trump presidential administration, and the need to shore up, somehow, the ongoing erosion of moral and political authority of the entire Western imperialist order. The latter is visibly in panic in Britain where the government is manufacturing bizarre tales of the Russian government ordering assassinations on British soil using highly dangerous chemicals.

The Globe and Mail national daily published a feature article in its edition of Saturday, March 17 by its lead anti-Russia writer, Mark MacKinnon. The article continues the worst of the anti-Slavic and Cold War imagery that now dominates the reporting of Russia by the Globe and Mail in particular and Western media in general.

Comment: John Pilger once said of the media back in 2005:
"I have spoken to a number of principled journalists working in the pro-war media, including the BBC, who say that they and many others "lie awake at night" and want to speak out and resume being real journalists. I suggest now is the time."
Is it already too late?


Beaker

The Skripal case goes to British High Court for the first time - new uncertainties for the British and Russian governments

The High Court
British High Court Justice David Williams has issued the first court adjudication of evidence presented by the British Government of what happened to Sergei Skripal and Yulia Skripal when they succumbed to poisoning in Salisbury on March 4. Following three days of closed-door hearings this week in London, the judge issued a ruling for publication yesterday.

This allows the commencement of a process of evidence-gathering and testing by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) under international treaty procedures and rules for the admissibility of evidence. The new court-ordered safeguards respond to the criticism issued in an official aide-memoire from the Russian Foreign Ministry on March 21. In that document, the Russian Government criticized the British Government for failing to secure "the chain of custody [of blood sample and poison evidence] up to all the OPCW requirements when evidence was collected".

Comment: Craig Murray - Why Boris Johnson is Lying in Skripal Case


Arrow Up

Congress gives itself a raise in Omnibus

Schumer and McConnell
© Getty ImagesCongressmen Schumer and McConnell 'fighting excessive alcohol use'.
The House and Senate increased their own budgets in the $1.3 trillion omnibus spending package.

The Senate increased its total salaries of officers and employees by $12.6 million in the 2,232-page bill that lawmakers had fewer than 48 hours to read and vote on. The bill avoids a government shutdown that would take place at midnight on Friday.

Aside from giving their own institutions a bonus, the omnibus also gives away millions to prevent "elderly falls," promote breastfeeding, and fight "excessive alcohol use."

The legislation increases the Senate budget to $919.9 million, up $48.8 million from fiscal year 2017, according to the congressional summary of the bill.

"The increase provides funding necessary for critical modernization and upgrades of the Senate financial management system and investments in IT security," the summary states.

Meanwhile, the House of Representatives increased its budget to $1.2 billion, which is $10.9 million above 2017 levels.

Comment: US Congresspersons: Less worth the expenditure than the one to improve wine label accuracy! Bills are jokes. Who reads and comprehends a 2,232-page bill in 48 hours and is confident of every aspect in order to vote yes? This Omnibus(t) was a scam of items that appealed to the greed of Congress and, by-the-way, just happened to be 'under the gun' of shutdown. What an outright manipulation of the public and its tax dollars to get the results they want!

More from The Free Thought Project:
The Senate passed the proposal by a bipartisan 65-32 vote. The House approved the bill Thursday afternoon by a 256-167 vote with bipartisan backing. ... It wasn't just the Senate though. Every single government agency (except for the Government Publishing Office, which remains the same), has increased their department's budget in this bill-to the tune of hundreds of millions.

When you allow people to vote themselves raises twice a year, what else would you expect? These are the same people who just increased the national debt by a trillion dollars-in only six months. Last week, the national debt exceeded $21 trillion for the first time ever, a little more than six months after it hit first $20 trillion on Sept. 8, 2017.

These people are addicted to your tax revenue and their addiction is ensuring the future debt slavery of our great-great-grandchildren, and their children.

During a Tweetstorm Thursday night, as he tried to read as much of the bill as he could before he was forced to vote on it, Sen. Rand Paul pointed out some of the most ridiculous points he found in it so far.

According to Paul, the US government has become so disgustingly gluttonous that they spend $1.7 billion a year to maintain 770,000 EMPTY buildings - all the while, purchasing more property.

As America college students dig themselves a never-ending pit of debt as they progress through higher education, the US is doling out tens of billions of dollars to pay for college in other countries as well as support their militaries.

Also contained in this bill is the legislation that has the potential to strip millions of law-abiding Americans, including veterans, of their 2nd Amendment rights.

Although versions of the bill have been proposed in both the Senate and the House, and have received support from Republicans, Democrats and even the National Rifle Association, Rep. Thomas Massie warned that Congress will try to pass the Fix NICS Act by rolling it into another bill that looks harmless.

He was right, and both the House and the Senate have now passed it, hidden away in a massive raise for all of Washington.
See what they also funded:
Congress slips CLOUD Act into spending bill, grants authorities more surveillance power


Info

Doomed to fail? Germany's long-awaited coalition government already showing signs of internal disagreement

merkel seehofer scholz
© M. Popow / Global Look PressThe German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer (CSU) (L), the Federal Chancellor Angela Merkel (CDU) (C) and the Finance Minister Olaf Scholz (SPD) (R) hold a discussion in the German parliament on March 22, 2018.
No sooner has Germany finally got its new government than its head engages in a bitter dispute with a key minister and a crucial ally. Such conflicts may prove fatal to the futures both of the ruling coalition and its members.

Just days after German Chancellor Angela Merkel's fourth cabinet was sworn in, the perceived tranquillity in Europe's powerhouse following the months of uncertainty was again disturbed - this time by the newly appointed interior minister. Horst Seehofer, who is also the leader of Merkel's longstanding Bavarian allies the Christian Social Union (CSU), provoked yet another bout of controversy by saying that "Islam does not belong to Germany."

The minister's statement immediately drew a rebuke from Merkel, who said that "Islam has now become a part of Germany," and provoked a barrage of criticism from other German parties. What is more important, however, is that it seems to have rekindled an old dispute that has plagued the relations between the two German "sister-parties" and their leaders for quite some time.

Eye 2

John Bolton isn't "hawkish" - he's a crazed war criminal with terrorist ties

John Bolton
© Gage Skidmore/FlikrJohn Bolton
John Bolton helped lie our country into an illegal war of aggression that killed several hundred thousand Iraqis, wounded over a million, and displaced 4 million from their homes, helped deliver Baghdad into the hands of Iran, and helped create ISIL, which blew up Paris. In a just world, Bolton would be on trial at the Hague for war crimes. Instead, he has been promoted into a position to do to Iran what he did to Iraq.

He is also in the back pocket of the MEK Iranian terrorist organization, which despite its violent and smelly past has proved so useful to those plotting the apocalyptic destruction of Iran that the Washington elite decided to take it off the list of terrorist organizations in 2012.

The acceptable political spectrum inside the Beltway in Washington DC is a marvel to behold. Bernie Sanders, a long-serving senator and public servant won 13.2 million popular votes to 16.8 million votes for Hillary Clinton (i.e. he was backed by 43% of one of the two major parties in the country). But Sanders was virtually blacked out from corporate television coverage during his impressive presidential bid, while Jeff Zucker turned CNN over to Trump every night at 7:30 pm throughout the summer and fall of 2016 and just let him talk, or whatever he does, for an hour without even a semblance of journalistic analysis. Supposedly left-leaning MSNBC did the same thing.

Comment:


Eye 2

Skeletons in the closet: Mueller, Weissmann, the FBI and the Mob

Andrew Weissman
© Paul S. Howell / Getty ImagesAndrew Weissman
Special Counsel Robert Mueller III and lead attorney in the Special Counsel's Office Andrew Weissmann have been connected to one another throughout most of their careers, and both men moved quickly to the top tackling major crime syndicates and white-collar crime.

Ironically, both men were also connected in two of the biggest corruption investigations in FBI history. But rarely are Weissmann and Mueller's past cases discussed in the media. Their past is relevant because it gives a roadmap to the future - now that these two longtime colleagues are charged with one of the most controversial investigations into a president in recent history.

"The integrity of the "investigation" and of the "investigators" must be a paramount priority in our criminal justice system at all times," said David Schoen, a civil rights and defense attorney, who has been outspoken on the special counsel investigation. "Certainly this fundamental guiding principle must be followed when it comes to an investigation of the duly elected President of the United States. The outcome potentially affects every one of us in very real terms...There were many alternatives to Mr. Mueller and his team and all of their very troubling baggage."

Comment: Old habits apparently die hard. Mueller was even wrapped up in the Iraqi WMD farce back in 2002.


Snakes in Suits

Congress is forcing Trump to sanction Russia

trump
© Unknown
Trump began his presidency trying to improve U.S.-Russia relations. Congress wants to make that impossible - but Trump doesn't have to play by their rules.

On Thursday, the Trump administration imposed sanctions on several Russian organizations and individuals in response to alleged interference in the 2016 presidential election. A congressional mandate passed this summer forced Trump to take action, which he only did two months after the January deadline. Trump has avoided falling into the Russia hysteria for the most part, and delayed any sanctions as long as possible, but his hand was finally forced by the nearly unanimous vote from Congress.

However, Trump's execution leaves much to be desired. Among others, the sanctions targeted the three Russian organizations and 13 Russian citizens indicted by special counsel Robert Mueller. By doing this, Trump has lent credence to the Mueller investigation which is specifically designed to take down Trump and his closest allies. After he praised Mueller when the indictments were first announced, it was clear that Trump was fine with any outcome from the Russia investigation, as long as it stopped short of collusion between his campaign and the Russian government. But he also has repeatedly called the investigation a "witch hunt." How can he credibly do that now? By giving this ground, Trump has only emboldened his enemies and given them traction to push for a collusion indictment and, eventually, impeachment.

Comment: Traps have been set. Ignorance of the cunningness and mind-twists -- of the Democrats and particular agencies -- will not save the president nor honor his course preferences for the country. The innocent are guilty; the guilty are innocent. It is upside down and backwards by design.


Cloud Grey

Congress slips CLOUD Act into spending bill, grants authorities more surveillance power

CloudAct
© R Street InstituteCLOUD ACT lets police access our data without having to comply with the Fourth Amendment.
House Republicans voted 256 to 167 to pass a $1.3 trillion, 2,232-page spending bill Thursday, which includes deep within the abyss of the bureaucratic legalese, a law that eases law enforcement's ability to collect people's information that is stored abroad.

Known as the Clarifying Lawful Overseas Use of Data (CLOUD) Act, the bill (page 2,201) is supported by big players in the larger tech industry, as well as certain lawmakers and the larger intelligence community.
"The CLOUD Act paves the way for the United States to enter modern bilateral agreements for effective investigations of cross-border crime and terrorism -without international legal conflicts - and ensures that customers and data holders are protected by their own nation's privacy laws,"
Democratic Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York said in an early February press release that accompanied support from fellow cosponsors like Republican Doug Collins of Georgia.) and Darrell Issa, a Republican from California.

But it's also opposed by multiple privacy rights groups that argue granting agencies with an already formidable surveillance apparatus increased powers could further erode the trust between people within, as well as outside of, America, and the U.S. government.

Comment: Totalitarian tactics? How convenient and expedient to bury yet another rights violation into a couple thousand pages of bureaucratic law descriptions. Do we think Congress reads it and is quizzed on content and implications? No. Here it is; we vote tomorrow.