Puppet MastersS


Pistol

FBI say Mandalay Bay shooting report should be released by one-year anniversary date

Mandalay Bay hotel Vegas
© Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty ImagesThe FBI addresses the motive of Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock, and says the report probably won't be ready until October.
FBI special agent Aaron Rouse, the chief of the FBI's Las Vegas office, revealed Wednesday that the agency might not be able to reveal Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock's motive until October.

What did agent Rouse say?

Rouse, who spoke to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, said that the report should be finalized by the massacre's anniversary date.

"Now that's a long time for some people, but speaking for the FBI, that's light speed, all right?" Rouse said. "And again, it will be thorough."

"[The FBI's report] is focusing a large part on the why, OK? Which is what everybody wants to know," Rouse reported.

Comment: With the amount of time it's taken to get a concrete narrative slapped together, as well as conflicting narratives throughout the investigation, it seems pretty obvious by now that the investigators are making it up as they go along. It also seems that the officials in this whole fiasco were caught with their pants down, leaving them scrambling to try and explain things away. See:


Cell Phone

Gowdy says Strzok texts show 'a level of bias you rarely see' (VIDEO)

Trey Gowdy
© Getty ImagesTrey Gowdy
South Carolina Rep. Trey Gowdy said Tuesday that FBI agent Peter Strzok's anti-Trump text messages show an "unprecedented" level of bias "you rarely see" from FBI officials.

Gowdy, a Republican member of the House Intelligence Committee, discussed Strzok's text messages during an interview on Fox News.

In particular, he was asked about a cryptic message that Strzok sent in Aug. 2016 to FBI lawyer Lisa Page referring to an "insurance policy" that appears to refer to the FBI's investigation of the Trump campaign.

Comment: See also:


Arrow Up

A gift to America's small businesses: GOP tax reform simplifies IRS returns

US IRS, internal revenue service
The annual tax dance is an onerous process often taking hours of a small business owner's valuable time. Every year, small business owners across the country complain that the tax system is overly complex. It takes them away from running their mom-and-pop bakery or family-run landscaping business and requires them to spend time instead collecting financial documents, organizing them, determining and calculating potential deductions, and generally winding their way through a burdensome tax code.

What if there were a simpler way to do taxes that could save time? The tax reform bill recently passed by Congress and signed into law by President Trump could do just that. It will have a significant impact on millions of small businesses desperately seeking relief from America's oppressive tax code.

Small business owners long have advocated for a more simplified system that inspires growth. That's because, more than any other commodity, the one true asset they have is their time - time to operate, save, grow and create jobs. The time they could save in completing and filing tax returns could be invested in their business.

Although not perfect, the tax plan offers a major benefit for small businesses: a step toward simplification.

Comment: See also:


Pirates

Russian Foreign Ministry: Afghanistan has over 10,000 ISIS fighters - U.S. downplaying threat

isis raqqa
© ReutersIslamist fighters drive along the streets of northern Raqqa province, Syria
The terrorist group Islamic State has over 10,000 loyal fighters in Afghanistan, and Moscow believes the US may be underestimating their threat, Russia's special envoy says.

Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) was pushed out of their home base in Syria and Iraq this year by separate military operations of a US-led coalition, and the Syrian Army backed by Russia. Many of the IS fighters who fled those countries ended up in Afghanistan, where the terrorist group has as many as 10,000 troops at the moment, Zamir Kabulov, the head of the Middle East department in the Russian Foreign Ministry, said.

"Russia was among the first nations to ring alarm about the expansion of IS into Afghanistan," he told RIA Novosti. "Lately IS has boosted its presence in the country. Our estimate is that their force there is stronger than 10,000 troops and is continuing to grow. That includes new fighters with combat experience received in Syria and Iraq."

IS forces are strongest in the north of Afghanistan on the border with Tajikistan and Turkmenistan - a point of concern for Russia, which has close historic ties with both nations, Kabulov added.

Comment: The target of Western-backed jihadism has always been Russia via Central Asia and the Caucasus. So despite setbacks, it appears as if things are still going according to plan.


Snakes in Suits

Kissinger's come-back as mentor to the Trump's foreign policy

Hillary Clinton and Henry Kissinger
"Henry Kissinger has made a come-back and may well be this president's mentor on international affairs"

Those who believe that Donald Trump is witless, a "moron" to quote Rex Tillerson, were proven wrong on December 18 when the President released his National Security Strategy (NSS). Those who believe that the Deep State operates entirely on its own, without taking any cues from incoming presidents were also proven wrong.

Going through this 68 page document issued in keeping with tradition by each administration at regular intervals, I find very important changes in language from where official America has been operating these past 25 years suggesting that, after all, Henry Kissinger has made a come-back and may well be this president's mentor on international affairs, as seemed to be the case during the electoral campaign and into the first months following his inauguration, before the removal of Flynn and the running aground of Trump's foreign policy initiative in March.

In saying that, I am speaking not about the Henry Kissinger who was the implementer of Nixon's détente with Russia or of Nixon's great rapprochement with China that led to an informal partnership in managing world affairs of mutual interest. Nor am I speaking about Kissinger Unbound: the strident exponent of Realism and critic of Idealism who authored the master work Diplomacy in 1994, when there was still no road map to post-Cold War American foreign policy and he hoped pragmatism would finally prevail over ideology, when he hoped that he would return to a position of influence from the decades in the wilderness that began with the Reagan presidency and Neocon ascendancy.

Clock

Collusion? FBI's James Baker was linked to reporter who broke Trump dossier story

james baker
House Republicans are investigating contact between the FBI's top lawyer and a Mother Jones reporter in the weeks before the left-leaning outlet broke the first news story about the existence of a disputed dossier alleging ties between President Donald Trump and the Kremlin, according to two congressional GOP sources who described documents linking the two men.

The GOP sources said the documents - made available recently to lawmakers by the Department of Justice - revealed that James Baker, the FBI's general counsel, communicated with Mother Jones reporter David Corn in the weeks leading up to the November 2016 election. Corn was the first to report the existence of the dossier on Oct. 31 and that it was compiled by a former high-level western spy.

The Washington Post reported Thursday that Baker had been reassigned within the FBI, though the reason for the move was unclear.


Comment: If you want to get a glimpse of what is going on behind the scenes, just watch and see which officials are fired or demoted. So far: Bruce Ohr, Peter Strzok, James Baker. They probably won't be the last!


Corn denied that Baker was a source for his story on the dossier.

"I'm not going to discuss my sources. But in order to prevent the dissemination of inaccurate information, I will say that James Baker was not my source for this story," he said in a statement to POLITICO.

Stop

Report: U.S. finally ends all support for Free Syrian Army, shuts down ops rooms in Turkey and Jordan

Free Syrian Army fighters in Saqba, a suburb of Damascus
© Freedom House / CC-BY-2.0Free Syrian Army fighters in Saqba, a suburb of Damascus.
On December 18, a Free Syrian Army (FSA) commander revealed to the Syrian opposition news outlet Enab Baladi that the US had fully suspended its support for all FSA groups in northern and southern Syria. FSA groups were allegedly informed of the US decision during a joint meeting.

According to the Enab Baladi report, the US even closed its infamous Military Operation Center (MOC) in Jordan. The MOC is known for its major role in providing financial, military and intelligence support for the FSA and radical Islamist groups in southern Syria. The MOC even planned and commanded some of the biggest attacks on the SAA in the southern province of Daraa, according to Syrian pro-government activist. The June offensive in the city of Daraa was described as one of such advances.

The US also shut down another Military Operation Center in Turkey, named by Turks "MOM", according to the FSA commander. The MOM played a similar role in the MOC. However, it supported FSA groups and al-Qaeda-affiliated Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (former al-Nusra Front) in northern Syria for years.

The FSA commander also revealed that the US continued to support the FSA groups financially even after an announcement by US President Donald Trump that US suspended its support for the FSA on July 19. However, now all forms of the support including financial support are suspended, according to Enab Baladi.

Comment: This never would have happened under a Clinton regime. That's not to say that the SDF will prove any "better", but now that the FSA will receive no more support, the Syrians, Hezbollah, and Russians can take care of the rest of Syria's jihadists in the same way they took care of ISIS. For Syrians, that's as good a Christmas present as any.


UFO 2

Congress comes out of the closet, bombards Harry Reid with calls about recently disclosed DOD investigation into UFOs

harry reid
Former Nevada Senator Harry Reid thinks it might be time to hold congressional hearings into the mystery surrounding UFOs.

In his only television interview, Reid told the I-Team about the pivotal role he played authorizing a secret Pentagon study of UFOs that ended five years ago.

The project was based in Nevada, carried out by Las Vegas businessman who is no stranger to paranormal investigations. In fact, Robert Bigelow's mysterious Skinwalker ranch played a role in the Pentagon investigation.

A picturesque ranch in northeastern Utah, shunned by its Native American neighbors and long considered a hotbed of UFO sightings and other unexplained phenomena, played a pivotal role in the creation of the once-secret Pentagon study of unknown aerial objects.

In the mid 90s, Las Vegas billionaire Robert Bigelow bought the property and sent in his research team, the National Institute for Discovery Science, or NIDS, to study the ranch and the larger Uintah Basin.

Comment: You can read more about the DOD program here: Reid and Elizondo seem to have a sane approach to the phenomena. But they were probably just duplicating efforts of the Air Force and various intel agencies back in the '40s, '50s and '60s - and they're most likely in the dark in regards to any data secreted away in special access programs. Any interest or research regarding UFOs went "dark" decades ago. The fact that there was such a program recently, and it has been officially acknowledged, is news. The admission that they studied genuine "unknowns" is news. But it's nothing that any reasonably well-informed person didn't know already.

Conspiracy theorists believe "the government" knows everything there is to know about UFOs, and is hiding "the truth". A more disturbing conclusion is that they're just as in the dark as anyone else as to the true nature of the phenomena. Compartmentalized groups may have more data than the general public, but they're as limited as anyone when it comes to dealing with a subject as mystifying and seemingly intentionally misleading - and therefore in forming objective conclusions. With that in mind, perhaps the secrecy and public denials make sense: what else would you expect from a national security establishment dealing with what by all appearances represents a severe national security threat?


Treasure Chest

Trump says $7 trillion 'foolishly spent' in the Middle East, would rather spend on infrastructure

Displaced Afghans
© ReutersDisplaced Afghans load aid near the site of a landslide at the Argo district in Badakhshan province.
Donald Trump tweeted that the US "foolishly spent" $7 trillion in the Middle East, urging for money to be invested in rebuilding his own country.

Trump's Twitter statement published on Friday initially focused on economic issues, but eventually took aim at the US policy in the Middle East. "At some point, and for the good of the country, I predict we will start working with the Democrats in a Bipartisan fashion."

"Infrastructure would be a perfect place to start," the tycoon-turned-president tweeted, adding: "After having foolishly spent $7 trillion in the Middle East, it is time to start rebuilding our country!"

Snakes in Suits

How Washington's bureaucrats sabotage Trump's plans

Trump walking in shadows
© Brendan Smialowski/AFP
Across the government, career staffers are finding ways to continue old policies, sometimes just by renaming a project.

In report after report following Donald Trump's election, career staffers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration kept saying the same thing: climate change is real, serious and man-made.

That's surprising because Trump has called global warming a hoax. His political appointees at the Commerce Department, which oversees NOAA, have complained to its staff, but stopped short of demanding changes or altering the findings. So the reports, blog posts and public updates kept flowing. The bureaucrats won.

"Everything coming out of NOAA does not reflect this administration," said David Schnare, a retired lawyer for an industry-backed think tank who served on Trump's transition team and is skeptical about climate change. "It reflects the last one."