Puppet MastersS

Attention

Damascus urges UN: Stop US-led coalition 'war crimes', expel illegal alliance

airstrike Raqa
© Delil Souleiman / AFPAirstrike in city of Raqa.
The UN Security Council should take "urgent measures" to stop the atrocities and human rights violations committed in Syria by the US-led coalition, the Syrian foreign ministry has said, denouncing the coalition and its unwelcome presence as "illegal."

Damascus has demanded a halt in the "systematic" US-led airstrikes which the government believes only aids the terrorists while at the same time claiming endless civilian lives and destroying homes and vital infrastructure in Syria, SANA reported.

In identical foreign ministry letters addressed to the UN Secretary-General and the President of the Security Council, Damascus highlighted two recent examples of the "illegal" and destructive power of US-led air raids.

Damascus said the international coalition's jets used white phosphorus bombs to strike the outskirts of al-Sour town, located in the northeastern countryside of Deir Ez-zor province. At least three civilians were killed in the bombardment, with five others wounded. Wednesday's strike also destroyed a number of homes and other structures.

While white phosphorus and similar incendiary weapons against residential areas are banned under Protocol III of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), its use against combatants is not specifically banned, which allows some nations, including the US, to deploy such munitions in war zones.

Comment: The US has veto power at the UN Security Council, as does China, France, Russia and the UK, amounting to immunity. This power enables them to prevent the adoption of any "substantive" resolution.


Chess

Information war: Russia ready to go "tit-for-tat", accuses CNN of "violating Russian media law"

Putin popcorn
The "Russian collusion" crusade took a bizarre turn yesterday when Twitter, apparently in the absence of any tangible evidence that Kremlin spies exploited the social media service to undermine the 2016 election, decided to publicly disclose the exact amount of advertising revenue it received from Russia Today during 2016. It's unclear what that disclosure was intended to accomplish since even Twitter says the ads were directed at "followers of mainstream media and primarily promoted RT Tweets regarding news stories" which hardly seems like an attempt to stage a coup.

Not surprisingly, it only took Russia's communications regulator a couple of hours to respond to Twitter's move by threatening to crack down CNN's operations in Russia, an outlet which the regulator says is "violating Russian media law." Per Reuters:

Cow Skull

Israeli minister revises Tel Aviv's 'Assad can sort of stay' position

Assad interview
The statement is a tacit admission of Russia's influence in the wider Middle East.

Since 1967, Israel has illegally occupied part of Syria, the Golan Heights. In 1981, the Israeli regime annexed Syria's land even though the entire world, including the United States, refuses to recognize the Golan Heights as anything other than part of Syria.

Israel has been occupying Syria dating back to a time when Iran was one of America's closest allies. Whereas in much of the 20th century, Tel Aviv's ire was directed at the Arab world, successive changes to Arab governments along with the rise of post-revolutionary Iran and now Turkey's pivot towards Eurasia, has caused a vocal shift in Israel's position, although it is one scarcely talked about.

Since 1978, Egypt has normalized relations with Israel to the point of becoming a partner against Palestine. Jordan whose Hashemite monarchy craved prestige in the Arab world but lost a great deal of it for opposing revolutionary Arab nationalist parties, made a similar peace partnership agreement with Tel Aviv in 1994.

USA

Hyper-patriotism: A two-edged sword

nfl protest
© Paul Childs / Reuters
I sometimes wonder if America's greatest threat is the population's hyper-patriotism. The bulk of the population is now at work shutting down the NFL players' First Amendment rights, and none of the incensed censors are capable of understanding that it is they, and not the NFL players, who are attacking the U.S. Constitution. We have been through all this flag business before, and federal courts have ruled for the protesters who burnt flags, wore them on their clothes, whatever. Yet, here we go again.

Hardwick Clothes CEO pulls the company's advertising from NFL games. Insofar as advertising helps Hardwick's shareholders, CEO Allan Jones is hurting his own shareholders in order to protest the NFL players' protests, a thought that probably never occurred to him.

According to this report - white people across the country are burning their NFL shirts and their expensive tickets for which they paid hundreds of dollars.

Wall Street

UK's Theresa May threatens US with trade war

Theresa May
© Stefan Wermuth / Reuters
Theresa May has threatened a trade war with the US after it slapped punitive tariffs on British-built aircraft, casting doubt on a key plank of her Brexit strategy.

The US Department of Commerce decided Bombardier aircraft, built in Northern Ireland, should be subject to 219 per cent import duty after the American aviation giant Boeing complained that Bombardier had been given unfair state aid.

The Government responded by warning that Boeing's behaviour "could jeopardise" future Ministry of Defence contracts for its aircraft such as Apache helicopters.

Snowflake

Poor snowflakes: Twitter testimony on 'Russian meddling' left Dems 'deeply disappointed'

Twitter Russia election meddling Democrats Mark Warner
© AFPSen. Mark Warner (D-VA), Senate Intelligence Committee ranking member, speaks to the media about today's committee staff members meeting with two Twitter officials on September 28, 2017 in Washington, DC.
Responding to demands to look into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 election, Twitter executives met with US lawmakers behind closed doors. Despite Twitter's efforts at transparency, the senior Democrat on the Senate panel left the meeting unhappy.

Twitter's Vice President for Public Policy Colin Crowell met with with members of the House and Senate intelligence committees on Thursday, discussing the allegations that Russia had abused the platform to somehow interfere in the US electoral process.

After being asked to look into 450 accounts that Facebook flagged as fake and "suspected" Russian bots earlier this month, Twitter found 22 corresponding accounts on their platform and suspended them for violating the company's rules against spam. Twitter also suspended another 179 "related or linked accounts" that were in violation of their terms of service. None of the 201 accounts were registered as advertisers, the company said.

Boat

Trump waives shipping protectionist Jones Act for Puerto Rico for just 10 days - much longer time needed to bring in aid

cargo shipping ship
© Ingram Publishing/Newscom
Congress needs to vote to stop protecting shipping cartel from market competition.

The White House this morning announced it is waiving part of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 (commonly referred to as the Jones Act) to make it easier and cheaper for Puerto Rico to import goods to recover from Hurricane Maria. From CNN:
Acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Elaine Duke said the waiver will be in effect for 10 days and will cover all products being shipped to Puerto Rico, according to a release from the department.

The waiver will guarantee the needed equipment to repair infrastructure damaged by the storm and restore emergency services, Duke said in a news release.
Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosello said he had formally asked for a waiver, but yesterday President Donald Trump was unwilling to do so, he said, because people in the shipping industry didn't want him to.

That's because the Jones Act shields them from competition from foreign shippers so they can make more money. It therefore drives up the cost of shipping goods to isolated and faraway places like Puerto Rico and Hawaii.

The Jones Act requires any ship traveling from port to port in the United States and its territories be built, owned, and crewed by Americans. Foreign ships can dock once in a U.S. port and cannot bounce from port to port delivering (or picking up) goods.

Alarm Clock

Trump team split over efforts to rewrite Iran nuclear deal - Haley snubbed at UN meeting after arriving uninvited

tillerson
© DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGESU.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson listens during a UN Security Council meeting about nuclear nonproliferation at UN headquarters in New York on Sept. 21, 2017.
Donald Trump has railed against the Iran nuclear deal since it was agreed to in 2015. As a candidate, he said undoing it would be a top priority as president. As president, he's called it one of the worst deals ever. The UN General Assembly session in September was a chance for him to make his case to the world and persuade allies to get behind an effort to rewrite the accord and impose stricter controls on Iran. Yet after a week of speeches, backroom negotiations, and top diplomatic meetings, the U.S. appears more isolated and its allies more united around the importance of the agreement. The week also exposed the administration's internal division over Iran - and disdain for the details of the accord.

On Sept. 20 at the UN, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson laid out to European and Iranian leaders all the things Trump hates about the nuclear deal, chiefly that its main restrictions do nothing to address such issues as Iran's development of ballistic missiles, its support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and its backing of terrorism in the region. After the meeting, it became clear the two sides were talking past each other. France and Germany insist the agreement, imperfect as it is, does what it intended to do. Iran's nuclear program is contained, so why blow up the deal? The U.S. says by focusing on the details, its allies are missing the bigger picture. While grudgingly admitting Iran is meeting the letter of its obligations, Tillerson has resorted to arguing that the nation is "clearly in default" of the accord's preamble calling for progress toward regional peace and stability.


Comment: We wonder if Tillerson feels even a slight twinge of shame when shilling for Israel. He must know that Iran, like Russia, has done more to stabilize the region in recent years than the U.S. ever has. The problem is, Israel and some U.S. officials would prefer instability to an Iran- and Russia-guaranteed stability.


Bad Guys

Alleged NSA leaker Reality Winner's interrogation transcript filed in court

reality winner NSA leaks Russian Hacking Intercept
© Sean Rayford/Getty ImagesReality Winner exits the Augusta Courthouse June 8 in Augusta, Georgia.
'I wasn't trying to be a Snowden or anything.'

A National Security Agency contractor accused of leaking a classified report on Russian hacking aimed at the 2016 election told FBI agents she smuggled the document out of a high security intelligence facility in her pantyhose.

That and other details appear in a transcript federal prosecutors filed in court Wednesday detailing the interrogation of 25-year-old linguist Reality Winner by the FBI as they carried out a search warrant at her home in June.

After insisting for some time that she printed out the report and kept it on her desk for a few days before disposing of it in a burn bag, Winner caved and acknowledged she hid the document before sending it off to a news outlet, now known to be The Intercept.

"So how did you get it out of the office?" FBI agent Justin Garrick asked.

"Folded it in half in my pantyhose," Winner replied.

The transcript - filed with a federal magistrate judge as part of the government's effort to keep Winner behind bars - also provides new details on Winner's explanation for why she allegedly took a copy of the document from the NSA facility at which she worked at Fort Gordon in Augusta, Georgia.

Winner appears to say she believed the contents of the report - which described Russian spearfishing cyberattacks aimed at U.S. voter registration databases - should be in the public debate.

Comment: More background: And from Just how serious was Russia's 'probing' of the US election system?

Washington's Blog asked Bill Binney, the NSA executive who created the agency's mass surveillance program for digital information, who served as the senior technical director within the agency, who managed six thousand NSA employees, the 36-year NSA veteran widely regarded as a "legend" within the agency and the NSA's best-ever analyst and code-breaker, who mapped out the Soviet command-and-control structure before anyone else knew how, and so predicted Soviet invasions before they happened ("in the 1970s, he decrypted the Soviet Union's command system, which provided the US and its allies with real-time surveillance of all Soviet troop movements and Russian atomic weapons").

Binney told us:
If you think about this article [the story by the Intercept], and assume it's true, then hacking a few days before the election is a little late if they really wanted to influence the voting.

To me, this sounds more like fishing for information to find out as much as they could about the democratic party much like the Chinese did hacking the OPM [U.S. Office of Personnel Management] files. I'm sure the Chinese found more use for the data they got then the Russians did on the Democratic party because Hillary did not win.
Former CIA officer Philip Giraldi agrees:
The Intercept article cites an unnamed intelligence official who "cautioned against drawing too big a conclusion from the document because a single analysis is not necessarily definitive." To that I would add, "even if it is all true as described."

And I would also make some additional observations about what the report and Intercept article are suggesting. First and foremost would be the questions of scale and timing.

There is no evidence that the Russians, or whoever carried out the probes, were able to tamper with either the actual voting process or the tabulation of votes. Indeed, the NSA report dismisses any such possibility. Second, corrupting an election in a country as large as the United States with an electoral system that is largely decentralized would require much more than a probe of 122 local officials starting a week before the balloting. So there was clearly no intention to disrupt the election or to tilt it in a certain direction based on the evidence provided by the NSA report.

I would also note that there is no proof provided in the report to support the assertion that the GRU, Russian military-intelligence service, carried out the probes. Would a highly-sophisticated intelligence service behave so transparently in an operation that would certainly be regarded as highly sensitive? I think not. Cut-outs would have been used to misdirect anyone looking to determine the hand behind the hacks.

All of which is not to say the Russian government didn't do it or order it done, but it seems to me that the revelations provided in the NSA report do not go very far beyond the kind of random probings that are part and parcel of foreign-intelligence operations as carried out by any sophisticated service. Did someone in Moscow think it might be useful to have some kind of idea of how to meddle with U.S. election technology if that type of info might prove useful down the road? Quite possibly. It should be noted that the U.S. National Security Agency illegally collects vast quantities of information on ordinary Americans but that does not necessarily imply intent to use it in a malicious way. It is a desirable capability and intelligence agencies are always working to expand their reach.

So was Russian intelligence probing U.S. electoral systems? Quite plausibly yes, and it should be a matter of concern for every American as it suggests a vulnerability in the electronics behind how we vote. But did Russia actually interfere with the election or seek to use the probing to elect a particular candidate? The answer is clearly no. The article and the document it is based on should serve as a wake-up call to those who are complacent about the security of our technologies. But on a political level, we are back to square one, with often hysterical allegations surfaced as part of the media and political storm we now refer to as Russiagate.



Rocket

IAEA anxious over North Korean nuke program's "rapid progress" - "new global threat"

north korea rocket
© KCNA / Reuters
North Korea's nuclear weapons program demonstrates "rapid progress" and poses a "new global threat" to international security, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has said following the sixth nuclear test by Pyongyang earlier this month.

On September 3 Pyongyang conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test yet, using a hydrogen bomb that was allegedly small enough to be mounted on a ballistic missile. The blast was so potent that it registered as a 5.6 magnitude earthquake.

"(The) yield is much bigger than the previous test, and it means North Korea made very rapid progress," International IAEA Director Yukiya Amano told reporters in Seoul, after a meeting with South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha.

"Combined with other elements, this is a new threat and this is a global threat," he added referring to the development of North Korean ballistic missile rockets.

Comment: See also: