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Flashback No surprise: Obama's conflict tanked the Clinton e-mail investigation

HillaryObama
© CNN.com
Hillary couldn't be proven guilty without proving the president guilty as well.

"How's this not classified?" So exclaimed Hillary Clinton's close aide and confidante, Huma Abedin. The FBI had just shown her an old e-mail exchange, over Clinton's private account, between the then-secretary of state and a second person, whose name Abedin did not recognize.

The FBI then did what the FBI is never supposed to do: The agents informed their interviewee (Abedin) of the identity of the second person. It was the president of the United States, Barack Obama, using a pseudonym to conduct communications over a non-secure e-mail system - something anyone with a high-level security clearance, such as Huma Abedin, would instantly realize was a major breach.

Abedin was sufficiently stunned that, for just a moment, the bottomless capacity of Clinton insiders to keep cool in a scandal was overcome. "How is this not classified?"

She recovered quickly enough, though. The FBI records that the next thing Abedin did, after "express[ing] her amazement at the president's use of a pseudonym," was to "ask if she could have a copy of the email." Abedin knew an insurance policy when she saw one. If Obama himself had been e-mailing over a non-government, non-secure system, then everyone else who had been doing it had a get-out-of-jail-free card.

Thanks to Friday's FBI document dump - 189 more pages of reports from the Bureau's year-long foray ("investigation" would not be the right word) into the Clinton e-mail scandal - we now know for certain what I predicted some eight months ago here at NRO: Any possibility of prosecuting Hillary Clinton was tanked by President Obama's conflict of interest.

Comment: A year later, the scheme - so far - has worked.


Boat

Houthis threaten to sink Saudi battleships, oil tankers, if blockade isn't lifted

saudi ships
© unknownSaudi war ships
Yemen's Houthi rebel government has threatened to sink Saudi coalition warships and oil tankers unless Riyadh lifts its blockade which threatens the lives of millions in the war-torn country.

"Battleships and oil tankers of the aggressor and its movements will not be immune from the fire of Yemeni naval forces if directed by the senior leadership," Al Masirah news cited the country's navy and coast guard as saying Sunday.

Earlier, Brig. Gen. Sharaf Ghalib Luqman, a military spokesman for the Houthi rebels, said that "systematic crimes of aggression" and the "closure of ports" compels the Houthi forces "to target all sources of funding" of the aggressor. He added the country is ready to "respond to the escalation of the Saudi-US aggression promptly."

The threat of a military response to the ongoing blockade was made after Houthi leader Maj. Gen. Yousef al-Madani met leaders of the naval, coastal defense and coast guard forces Saturday. That same day, Houthi leader Abdel-Malek al-Houthi posted a message on Facebook assuring that "international navigation will remain safe as it was before, "making clear that "only those who attack our country" will be targeted.

The Saudi-led military coalition announced last week that it was temporarily shutting all of Yemen's land border crossings as well as its air and sea ports in response to a ballistic missile that targeted Riyadh on November 4. The kingdom accused Houthis of firing an Iran-supplied rocket at the Saudi capital, and responded with bombing raids on the Yemeni capital, Sana'a. Iran has denied allegations that it supplies weapons to the Houthis, but concedes it backs the rebels' cause.

Comment: Humanitarian aid is beyond critical for the Yemeni people. Saudi lockdown of all aid access amounts to forced genocide and millions of innocent victims.

See also:


Chess

The Saudi purge was more 'palace coup' than anti-corruption 'jihad'

Mohammed bin Salman
© Newsweek
The arrest of Saudi royal figures, ministers, and businessmen last week could lead to the confiscation of cash and other assets worth at least $800 billion. However, is this about modernizing Saudi Arabia or is the House of Saud broke?

RT talked to an analyst at Lombardi Letter, Alessandro Bruno, to figure out what lies behind the purge, whether the arrests were part of an anti-corruption drive or the kingdom is trying to plug the budget holes after struggling to cope with the recession within its oil-dependent economy.

According to Bruno, there's no doubt, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) is consolidating his power. "He's ambitious, but appears to be sincere about modernizing Saudi Arabia - if for no other reason, because the Saud Royal family will collapse without major changes," he said.

The heart of the problem is that Saudi Arabia doesn't have an income tax and the country's oil profits have been lower in the past few years, he explained. However, Prince Salman has big plans to reform the country, so he "has targeted the richest princes and is essentially extorting them out of a few billion dollars to make up some of the shortfall in oil revenue."

The expert assumed the crown prince may also be reaching a new kind of deal with the kingdom's tycoons, claiming "they won't be able to get away with amassing their fortunes as easily now. I see it as a kind of 'palace coup,' like what happened in Qatar in 1995. It's more of a blow to the old system than an anti-corruption 'jihad,'" Bruno said.

Comment: See also:


Pills

Trump names big pharma boss as secretary of Health and Human Services

US President Donald Trump (L) and Alex Michael Azar
© WikipediaUS President Donald Trump (L) and Alex Michael Azar
US President Donald Trump has nominated Alex M. Azar II to be secretary of Health and Human Services. Azar served as deputy secretary at HHS from 2005 to 2007, during the George W. Bush administration.

"He will be a star for better healthcare and lower drug prices!" Trump said in a tweet announcing the nomination on Monday morning.

If confirmed by the Senate, Azar would fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Dr. Tom Price in late September, amid criticism over spending $1 million of taxpayer money on air travel. Acting secretary Eric Hargan currently runs the department.


Clipboard

'Foreign, European Jews' caused 'great problems' in Middle East - Prince Charles in 1986 letter

‘Foreign, European Jews’ caused ‘great problems’ in Middle East – Prince Charles in 1986 letter
© Abir Sultan / AFP
In a newly revealed letter dating back to 1986, Prince Charles blamed the "influx of foreign, European Jews" for aggravating the Arab-Israeli conflict, voicing hope some American president would have the "courage to stand up to the Jewish lobby" one day.


Comment: That day has not yet come. In fact, it recently emerged that the British govt now effectively has a permanent 'minister for Israeli affairs' in its cabinet:

What the Priti Patel scandal tells us about the dark operations of UK's powerful Israel lobby


The note, written on November 24, 1986, was found in a public archive and published by the Daily Mail. The Prince penned the letter after official visits to Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar with Princess Diana.

"I now appreciate that Arabs and Jews were all a Semitic people originally," the then 38-year-old Prince of Wales wrote in his letter, adding, that "it is the influx of foreign, European Jews (especially from Poland, they say) which has helped to cause great problems" in the Middle East. "I know there are so many complex issues, but how can there ever be an end to terrorism unless the causes are eliminated?" he questioned.


Gear

Russia's strategic mercy allows US to save face in Syria

Putin Trump
© Associated Press/ Jorge Silva/Pool
The new US-Russian joint statement on Syria may allow Washington to "save face" and exit the country without sustaining a "crushing defeat", according to a Syrian legislator.

Syrian MP Muhannad al Haj Ali told Sputnik Arabic that the joint statement on Syria issued by Russia and the US essentially means that Moscow is allowing Washington "to exit Syria without a crushing defeat and to save face."

"Syria needs to continue conducting military operations and to deal with the Kurdish issue. It should be noted that not all Kurds seek to secede, so it is important to distinguish between separatists and those loyal to the government," the MP explained.

Bad Guys

Brit MSM in predictable hysterics over former first minister Alex Salmond's new RT show

Alex Salmond RT
© RTAlex Salmond has launched a new show on RT - for which he has received heavy criticism
Hysterical headlines have become a part of daily British life. So, it was little surprise the mainstream media went into meltdown over the launch of Alex Salmond's new show on RT. It has all the right ingredients for the type of scaremongering that gets clicks for UK news websites - Russia, alternative media and the man who led the charge for Scottish independence.

Journalists are painting a picture of RT's London headquarters being patrolled by Kremlin-paid secret agents, pushing out propaganda and, well, hacking into everything. It is really, very amusing.

Journalists from the Times, including Magnus Linklater, were quick to slate [ed. Brit. slang - to insult] Salmond. Yes, that's right, the Times - the paper owned by media mogul Rupert Murdoch.

Clipboard

Scott Adams: President Trump's 2017 report card (first draft)

trump vietnam
© REUTERS/ Carlos Barria
As we approach the holiday season there will be much debate on how President Trump has performed for his first calendar year. As a populist president, I think the best way to judge his performance is by focusing on the issues voters say are their top priorities. Pew Research polled voters to determine their political priorities for 2017. Let's see how President Trump is doing so far on the top ten priorities according to the public.

Terrorism (76% rated top priority)

ISIS is on the run, thanks in part to President Trump's loosening of the rules of military engagement, as well as pivoting from a Whack-a-Mole strategy to a total annihilation strategy with no withdrawal date. Both moves are good persuasion. And while President Trump's "extreme vetting" is unpopular with many citizens, it has probably reduced risk to the homeland. And General Mattis is widely considered to be a strong hire.

Grade: A

Comment: Adams' analyses may sometimes seem off-base, but his track record so far has been better than most pundits.


No Entry

Court of Appeals allows Trump's travel ban to go into partial effect, exempts those with 'bona fide relationships' to US

Trump Travel ban
© Shannon Stapleton / Reuters
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has allowed President Donald Trump's travel ban to go partially into effect, exempting persons with 'bona fide relationships' to the US as defined by the US Supreme Court.

The San Francisco, California-based court overrode US District Judge Derrick Watson of Hawaii, who sought to block the ban by declaring it violates immigration law by discriminating on the basis of nationality.

Trump's executive order, issued on September 24, indefinitely restricted travel to the US for citizens from eight countries: Somalia, Syria, Libya, Iran, Yemen, North Korea, Venezuela and Chad.

Watson ordered a block of the order on October 17. He was joined by US District Judge Theodore Chuang in Maryland, who sought to block the policy on grounds of Constitutional prohibitions against religious discrimination. The ban affects six Muslim-majority countries.

Network

Putin to Erdogan: 'Consider relations between our two countries completely restored'

Putin erdogan
Erdogan and Putin in a previous meeting
Russian President Vladimir Putin greeted his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Sochi on Monday hailing that relations between the two countries "can be considered completely restored".

Putin said "If over the past year, we had losses in turnover by 43%, then this year, the growth [of the turnover] has increased by 38% only in the first eight-nine months of this year."