Puppet MastersS


Arrow Down

Nine civilians killed, 21 injured after militant attack on Damascus in new breach of de-escalation agreement

Militants shell Bab Touma Damascus Jan 24 2018
Nine civilians were killed and 21 others were injured when militant groups fired shells on Bab Touma neighborhood in Damascus in a new breach of the de-escalation zone agreement in Eastern Ghouta.

A source at Damascus Police Command said that the armed groups positioned in some areas of the Eastern Ghouta in Damascus Countryside fired a number of shells on the neighborhood of Bab Touma, one of which landed on a bus station, claiming the lives of nine civilians and injuring 21 others, some of them are in critical condition, SANA reported.

Material damage was also caused to public and private properties when a number of shells fell in al-Qass'a and al-Shaghour areas, the source added.

Pirates

Turkish media exposes Kurdish propaganda attempt to smear Operation Olive Branch in Syria

Afrin
© AFP 2018/ Ahmad SHAFIA BILAL
Random images from websites have allegedly been used by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) for propaganda purposes amid Turkey's ongoing Operation Olive Branch in Afrin

The Turkish news agency Anadolu has reported that the "Afrin lies" propaganda launched by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) is allegedly "coming to a saturation point."

According to Anadolu, the PKK and the PYD, blacklisted by Turkey as terrorist organizations, are allegedly continuing to use fake photographs on social networks to illustrate events which are taking place during Turkey's Operation Olive Branch in the northern Syrian district of Afrin.

MIB

Off the hook: Temp spending bill relieves intel agencies from oversight

burr warner
© J.Scott Applewhite/APSenate Select Committee on Intelligence Chairman Richard Burr, R-N.C., right, and Vice Chairman Mark Warner, D-Va., left, oppose a provision that allows agencies to reprogram funds without telling Congress.
Against the wishes of leaders of the Senate Intelligence Committee, the newly enacted continuing resolution that funds the government until Feb. 8 contains a House-sought provision that could allow intelligence agencies to transfer funds to new operations without congressional approval.

Section 148 reads:
"Funds appropriated by the Department of Defense Missile Defeat and Defense Enhancements Appropriation Act, 2018 (division B of Public Law 115-96) may be obligated and expended notwithstanding section 504(a)(1) of the National Security Act of 1947."
The new leeway was sought by the Pentagon and the Office of Management and Budget, according to the Federation of American Scientists Secrecy News blog summarizing a story first reported by The Intercept.

"The vice chairman of the Intelligence Committee and I were notified when the House CR appeared that there was language in it that was different than in the past," said panel Chairman Richard Burr, R-N.C., on Monday, after the language was defended by Appropriations Committee Chairman Thad Cochran, R-Miss. Burr called the provision "troublesome" and "untenable."

Burr argued that "this language can erode the powers of the authorizing committee. Effectively, the intelligence community could expend funds as it sees fit without an authorization bill in place and with no statutory direction indicating that an authorization bill for 2018 is forthcoming."

An unidentified congressional staffer told the Washington Examiner that the change mainly affects missile defense funds and "does not give the intelligence community a blank check" or affect the role of the intelligence panels.

That view was rejected by Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., the intelligence panel's ranking member. "If this exemption is granted," he said during floor debate, "you could potentially have an administration - any administration - go off and take on covert activities, for example, with no ability for our committee, which spends the time and has the oversight, to say timeout or to say we actually disagree with that policy."

Comment: The intel agencies already have black budgets. Maybe we should see a little more concern for the already existing lack of oversight.

See also:


Snakes in Suits

Say what? John Kerry tells Palestinian Authority officials "Trump will not remain in office long"

Kerry Hussein Agha Palestinian Authority
John Kerry hints at 2020 US Presidential run.

Former Secretary of State John Kerry met with a top Palestinian officials in London, where the former Obama White House official told those in attendance to "stay strong" because POTUS Trump will not be in office much longer.

Kerry later hinted that he may run for the White House in 2020.

Comment: What game is Kerry playing here? He seems to be following the Obama playbook, jetting around pretending he's still in government.

Out-of-office syndrome: John Kerry blasts Israel, praises "extraordinary" restraint of Palestinians


Bomb

US claims it kills 150 ISIS fighters in Syrian airstrikes - Syria claims they killed 15 civilians

deir ezzor
© Sputnik/ Mikhail Alaeddin
The US-led coalition fighting Isis said it killed 150 militants in air strikes over the weekend which targeted a headquarters and command centre in Syria's Euphrates River Valley.

Intelligence gathering on the ground by the Syrian Democratic Forces enabled US Navy F/A-18 warplanes and one unmanned drone to, a coalition statement said.

Those in the targeted location were exclusively Isis members, it said, adding that the location had been under constant surveillance, ruling out civilian casualties.

"The precision strikes were a culmination of extensive intelligence preparation to confirm an Isis headquarters and command and control centre in an exclusively Isis-occupied location in the contested middle Euphrates River Valley," the statement said.

Major General James Jarrard, the commander of the coalition's Special Operations Joint Task Force in Syria, said: "The strikes underscore our assertion that the fight to liberate Syria is far from over."

Comment: The other side of the story:
Fifteen civilians were killed after residential areas of the settlement of al-Shaaf in the Syrian province of Deir ez-Zor became a target of the US-led coalition's air strikes on Tuesday, the Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) reported.

According to the media, 7 women are among those killed as a result of the attack, whereas some people are seriously injured.



Vader

The sorry fate of most Washington allies - Syrian Kurds latest to be betrayed and abandoned

kurdish fighter
One would be mistaken to believe the recent aggravation of the Syrian crisis triggered by the launch of Turkey's Operation Olive Branch along Syria's northern border, which has already resulted in military casualties suffered by both the Turkish and Kurdish sides, came as a surprise for those following the conflict carefully. There's also no denying the fact that the bloody Turkish-Kurdish confrontation already resulting in a considerable civilian death toll is an avid example of the two-faced policies of Washington, when former allies of the US are now being used as bargaining chips.

Back in August of 2016, Ankara would show the world that it entered Syria with a fixed goal in mind that had little to nothing in common with fighting the Islamic State (ISIS). At that time, when Turkey launched an assault on Jarabulus, numerous media experts were not afraid to openly state that Ankara was going after Kurdish armed groups by taking this step.

Comment:


Chart Pie

Trump imposes stiff tariffs on imported solar panels, washing machines to protect US manufacturers

solar panels
FILE PHOTO
President Donald Trump imposed stiff tariffs on imported solar panels and washing machines Monday, aiming to protect U.S. manufacturers.

The U.S. Trade Representative's office made the recommendation to the president for the tariffs.

It said the independent U.S. International Trade Commission found that such imports were a "substantial cause of serious injury to domestic manufacturers."

"The president's actions make clear again that the Trump administration will always defend American workers, farmers, ranchers and businesses," U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said Monday.

Trump has often promised to get tough with China and other exporters that he says compete unfairly with U.S. manufacturers.

The tariffs start out at 30 percent on solar panels and decline over time. On imported washers, they begin at 20 percent on the first 1.2 million machines and jump to 50 percent before also declining.

Comment: Beijing has responded that China is "strongly" dissatisfied with the tariffs, saying it will worsen the global trade environment and impair the development of the industries in the US.


Stock Up

Foreign investment in Russia on the rise despite Western sanctions

Russia
© Maksim Blinov / Sputnik
Russia is becoming more attractive to foreign investors, who are ready to pour more money into the economy every year, according to Economic Development Minister Maksim Oreshkin.

"We see a positive trend in foreign direct investment in the past several years. This volume exceeded $20-25 billion in 2017," he said at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday.

The biggest winners are foreign companies that invested in Russia in the last few years despite the financial crisis and sanctions, Oreshkin said.

Stop

Turkish Deputy PM: US 'needs to stop supporting terrorists' to avoid possible clash with Turkey in Syria

Turkish army troops gather near the Syrian border at Hassa
© Bulent Kilic / AFPTurkish army troops gather near the Syrian border at Hassa, in Hatay province on January 21, 2018
If Washington wants to avoid direct confrontation with Turkey in northern Syria, it "should stop supporting terrorists," the country's deputy prime minister told Turkish TV channel, A Haber.

"Those who support the terrorist organization will become a target in this battle," Bekir Bozdag said. "The United States needs to review its soldiers and elements giving support to terrorists on the ground in a way to avoid a confrontation with Turkey."

It comes as Turkish operation dubbed 'Olive Branch' in the Kurdish-dominated Afrin enters its sixth day. The campaign followed an announcement by the US-led coalition to create a thousands-strong Border Security Force with Kurdish fighters, including from the People's Protection Units (YPG) at its core.

Comment: See also: Trump warns Erdogan to 'exercise caution', and to avoid clash between US, Turkish forces in Syria


Info

Qatar plans to buy Russia's S-400 anti-aircraft system

The S-400 Triumf anti-air missile system
© Alexey MalgavkoThe S-400 Triumf anti-air missile system
Qatar is in the "advanced stage" of negotiating the purchase of Russia's advanced S-400 anti-aircraft system. The long-range SAM missile weapon seems to be the latest fad in the Middle East after its Syria showcase.

Doha's negotiations with Moscow on the purchase of the S-400 system is "in the advanced stage," Qatari Ambassador to Russia Fahad bin Mohammed Al-Attiyah told TASS news agency. He said the military cooperation agreement, which was signed in October 2017 during the visit of Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu to the Arab nation, "opened a path for Russia and Qatar to interact in defense sphere, including deliveries of hardware, training of soldiers and officers, maintenance of weapons and, of course, cooperation of special services."

The ambassador added that Doha plans to buy not only air defense systems from Russia, but also equipment for its ground troops. Qatar indicated its interest in the S-400 system, which was also purchased last year by Turkey, after Khalid bin Mohammad Al Attiyah, Qatar's counterpart to Shoigu, visited a major military expo in Russia in August of last year. The defense minister was also shown another advanced Russian air defense system - the short-range Pantsir-S1.