Puppet MastersS

Bizarro Earth

How the Iraq War destabilized the Middle East through 'freedom and democracy'

US armyh
© The U.S. Army | CC BY 2.0
As we approach the fifteenth anniversary of the unwarranted invasion of Iraq, which we are still paying for in so many ways, it is important to remember the misuse of intelligence that provided a false justification for war. It is particularly important to do so at this time because President Donald Trump has talked about a military option against North Korea or Iran (or Venezuela for that matter). Since there is no cause to justify such wars, it is quite likely that politicized intelligence would once again be used to provide a justification for audiences at home and abroad.

In 2002 and 2003, the White House, the Department of Defense, and the Central Intelligence Agency collaborated in an effort to describe the false likelihood of a nuclear weapons program that had to be stopped. In the words of Bush administration officials, the United States was not going to allow the "smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud." On September 8, 2002, Vice President Cheney and national security adviser Condi Rice used that phrase on CNN and NBC's "Meet the Press," respectively, to argue that Saddam Hussein was "using his procurement system to acquire the equipment he needs to enrich uranium to build a nuclear weapon."

In October 2002, the CIA orchestrated a national intelligence estimate to argue falsely that Iraq was acquiring uranium from Niger for use in a nuclear weapon. Senior officials throughout the intelligence community knew that the so-called Niger report was a fabrication produced by members of the Italian military intelligence service, and several intelligence officials informed Congressional and White House officials that they doubted the reports of Iraqi purchases of uranium from Niger. Nevertheless, the national intelligence estimate spun a fictitious tale of a clear and present danger based on false reports of alleged stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons; nuclear weapons; unmanned aerial vehicles; and ties between Iraq and al Qaeda that were nonexistent.


Comment: Sounds familiar... oh right, Libya, and Syria also needed justification for war, even if it was made up. And let's not forget they still have their eyes set on Iran.


Blackbox

Who poisoned Sergei Skripal? Let's blame Russia!

Novichok Skripal
© Chris J Ratcliffe Getty Images
The latest example of alleged Russian perfidy - the poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia - is yet another case of faith-based attribution. In accusing Russia of some heinous crime - in this instance, the murder of a former double agent working for MI6 - one needn't present any real evidence: it's only necessary to point the finger at the Kremlin. And of course we haven't had any real evidence proffered by the British government: Prime Minister Theresa May simply declared that Russia is the culprit and gave a midnight deadline for the Kremlin to explain how "its nerve weapon" - as NBC reported it - was used to attacked Skripal on British soil. She has since announced the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats.

The absurdity of this was inadvertently underscored by the comments of Vil Mirzayanov, the Russian-born chemist who first revealed the existence of "Novichok," the nerve agent developed by the Russians. Mirzayanov came to the United States in 1995: in 2007, he published a book, State Secrets, which tells his story as a chemist working in Russia's secret chemical weapons facilities. Now 83, he gives the following explanation for the attack on Skripal:
"'Only the Russians' developed this class of nerve agents, said the chemist. 'They kept it and are still keeping it in secrecy.'

"The only other possibility, he said, would be that someone used the formulas in his book to make such a weapon."
Oh, but what kind of a person would do that? Why, that would have to mean that they were trying to frame the Russians by making it look like the work of the FSB, the Russian intelligence agency. And we all know that's just not possible - right?

Comment: So far, there is no evidence that the nerve agent came from a Russian source. See also:


Light Saber

You're fired! Sessions fires McCabe from FBI one day before retirement

mccabe_sessions
After a long day of what seemed like the swamp protecting one of their dirtiest creatures, Attorney General Jeff Sessions fired former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, just over 24 hours before he was set to retire and claim his full pension benefits.

McCabe turns 50 on Sunday - the earliest he would have been eligible for his full retirement benefits.

Sessions noted that both the Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz as well as the FBI's disciplinary office had found "that Mr. McCabe had made an unauthorized disclosure to the news media and lacked candor - including under oath - on multiple occasions."

So, McCabe was involved in leaks and he lied under oath.
Horowitz found that McCabe had authorized two FBI officials to talk to then-Wall Street Journal reporter Devlin Barrett for a story about the case and another investigation into Clinton's family foundation. Barrett now works for The Washington Post. -WaPo
"I have terminated the employment of Andrew McCabe effective immediately," said Sessions, who said he based his decision on the findings.

Comment: McCabe also suggested he was fired as part of an effort to undermine Mueller's Russiagate witch-hunt.




Bad Guys

Trump maneuvers toward war, but "the resistance" refuses to resist

pompeo
Tuesday's post, It's Impossible to Overstate How Terrible Mike Pompeo Is, laid out the view that Trump's firing of Rex Tillerson represents a major shift toward war footing for the Trump administration, with Iran the specific target. This pivot was easily predictable, and I wrote numerous articles doing just that during 2017. Nevertheless, forecasting it and then seeing the disastrous pieces being moved into place are two different things.

Trump's push to install Mike Pompeo as U.S. Secretary of State is a crystal clear indication that he's begun the process of building his war cabinet. The next steps, likely to begin over the course of 2018, is to walk away from the Iran deal. I suspect relentless war propaganda to be unleashed simultaneously as the neocon/neoliberal/mass media war-monger alliance plays its well established role in selling the American public on another pointless and destructive war.

My prior post discussed Pompeo in detail, so I don't want to be repetitive, but to revisit: Pompeo has contempt for the First Amendment, referred to torturers as patriots, wants Edward Snowden executed and is an extreme warhawk when it comes to Iran. In other words, he's your typical neocon lunatic who's just a bit more rough around the edges publicly. He represents the exact opposite sort of foreign policy to what so many Trump voters thought they were getting.

Dollars

American drug cartel: The politicians who took opioid tycoons' blood money

heroin spoon and needle
© Shutterstock/Evdokimov MaximDrug syringe and cooked heroin on spoon.
This is the seventh article in the American Cartel series about the billionaire Sackler family, Purdue Pharma and the opioid epidemic. Read the first, second, third, fourth and fifth, and sixth.
  • OxyContin's manufacturer and its billionaire owners gave millions of dollars to political candidates
  • Purdue and other pharmaceutical companies spread propaganda and lobbied in favor of opioid prescribing
  • When excluding organizations and only looking at candidates, Democrats received nearly $110,000 more than GOP politicians
OxyContin's manufacturer and its billionaire owners gave millions of dollars to political candidates - who often held powerful positions - and organizations, but the opioid profiteers' tentacles of influence reach much farther, a Daily Caller News Foundation investigation has found.

The Sackler family and Purdue Pharma, which is widely blamed for playing an essential role in starting the opioid epidemic, have given more than $1.3 million to U.S. candidates and another $1 million to political organizations since OxyContin's creation, according to Center for Responsive Politics data, but that's just the surface of how deep the pharmaceutical titans' influence runs.

Control Panel

US accuses Russia of conducting cyber attacks on its energy grid over the last two years

cyber attack
Scary Russians all up in your internets
The Trump administration on Thursday blamed the Russian government for a campaign of cyber attacks stretching back at least two years that targeted the U.S. power grid, marking the first time the United States has publicly accused Moscow of hacking into American energy infrastructure.

Beginning in March 2016, or possibly earlier, Russian government hackers sought to penetrate multiple U.S. critical infrastructure sectors, including energy, nuclear, commercial facilities, water, aviation and manufacturing, according to a U.S. security alert published Thursday.

The Department of Homeland Security and FBI said in the alert that a "multi-stage intrusion campaign by Russian government cyber actors" had targeted the networks of small commercial facilities "where they staged malware, conducted spear phishing, and gained remote access into energy sector networks." The alert did not name facilities or companies targeted.

Comment: We've speculated in the past that the reports going back about 15 years of European bureaucracies and industries finding malware - usually dormant - on their networks was probably the work of US CyberWarfareCommand. Our contention was supported by the Snowden NSA leaks in 2013, which outlined how US malware for taking out infrastructural networks in 'friendly' countries like Japan, should its leadership ever 'go astray', was tested and 'deployed'.

Something similar is likely going on here; 'the Homeland' is also 'booby-trapped', which provides the Deep state with another compelling means of blackmail forcing an 'outsider' like Trump to play ball.

Besides conducting cyber-attacks on their own systems, US spooks have occasionally conducted physical armed attacks on the power grid. The media reported these, but never followed-up, so they disappeared down the memory hole...
'Military-Style' Raid on California Power Station Spooks U.S.

Foreign Policy Magazine, Dec. 2013
Around 1:00 AM on April 16, at least one individual (possibly two) entered two different manholes at the PG&E Metcalf power substation, southeast of San Jose, and cut fiber cables in the area around the substation. That knocked out some local 911 services, landline service to the substation, and cell phone service in the area, a senior U.S. intelligence official told Foreign Policy. The intruder(s) then fired more than 100 rounds from what two officials described as a high-powered rifle at several transformers in the facility. Ten transformers were damaged in one area of the facility, and three transformer banks - or groups of transformers - were hit in another, according to a PG&E spokesman.

Cooling oil then leaked from a transformer bank, causing the transformers to overheat and shut down. State regulators urged customers in the area to conserve energy over the following days, but there was no long-term damage reported at the facility and there were no major power outages. There were no injuries reported. That was the good news. The bad news is that officials don't know who the shooter(s) were, and most importantly, whether further attacks are planned.



Hardhat

Is Hillary Clinton losing it? Slips for the second time on her trip to India, fractures wrist

Hillary Clinton fractures her wrist after slipping in a palace bathtub during trip to India
© AFP/GettyHillary Clinton concealed her fractured wrist under a navy shawl on Thursday as she left Jodhpur in India
Hillary Clinton concealed her injured wrist under a navy shawl three days after fracturing it during a fall in India.

The former Secretary of State injured her right hand on Tuesday after slipping in a bathtub at the palace where she was staying in Jodhpur.

Doctors were called to the Umaid Bhawan Palace and diagnosed the 70-year-old with a sprain, advising her to rest which forced her to cancel plans to visit the Mehrangarh Fort that evening.

Comment: Clearly evil takes its toll:


Moon

Mass immigration and the high price of Angela Merkel's denial

Merkel
© Carsten Koall/Getty ImagesGermany's Chancellor, Angela Merkel.
Is it possible that mainstream politicians and the mainstream media are finally recognising what the European public can see with their own eyes? Two recent occurrences suggest that this might be so.

The first is a concession by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who almost half a year after her party's embarrassment in national elections has finally managed to put together a coalition government. Last September saw not only Merkel's party and her erstwhile coalition partners suffer a historic dent in their vote-share, but also saw the entry to Parliament of the five-year old anti-immigration AfD (Alternative for Germany) party, which is now so large that it constitutes the country's official opposition. If German voters meant to send a message, it could hardly have been clearer.

Perhaps it was even listened to. On Monday February 26, Merkel gave an interview to the German broadcaster N-TV. In it she finally admitted that there are "no-go areas" in her country: "that is, areas where nobody dares to go." She continued: "There are such areas and one has to call them by their name and do something about them." The Chancellor claimed that she favoured a "zero tolerance" attitude towards such places but did not identify where they were. Two days later, her spokesman, Steffen Seibert stressed that "the Chancellor's words speak for themselves."

Bizarro Earth

The elite's obsession with globalism

globalism
Robert Bartley, the late editorial page editor of The Wall Street Journal, was a free trade zealot who for decades championed a five-word amendment to the Constitution: "There shall be open borders."

Bartley accepted what the erasure of America's borders and an endless influx or foreign peoples and goods would mean for his country.

Said Bartley, "I think the nation-state is finished."

His vision and ideology had a long pedigree.

This free trade, open borders cult first flowered in 18th-century Britain. The St. Paul of this post-Christian faith was Richard Cobden, who mesmerized elites with the grandeur of his vision and the power of his rhetoric.

Bad Guys

EU powers propose new Iran sanctions to keep US in nuclear deal

Iran missile deal Vienna
© Joe Klamar / ReutersIran deal members in Vienna, Austria, July 14, 2015
France, Germany and the UK have proposed new sanctions targeting Iran in an apparent attempt to keep the US within the 2015 nuclear agreement with Tehran. New restrictions would target Iran's missile program and activity in Syria.

The sanctions would be particularly imposed against Iranian nationals involved in the development of the country's ballistic missile program, Reuters reported, citing a document it obtained.

"We will therefore be circulating in the coming days a list of persons and entities that we believe should be targeted in view of their publicly demonstrated roles," the document said, referring to the people involved in the Iranian missile program and support of the Syrian government, as reported by Reuters.

The confidential document also says that the three European nations have been engaged in "intensive talks with the Trump administration to achieve a clear and lasting reaffirmation of US support for the (nuclear) agreement beyond May 12." Diplomats familiar with the issue told Reuters that the European powers held several rounds of talks with the US on the issue this week.