Puppet MastersS


Info

Moore win in Alabama ushers in new era of internecine Republican warfare

steve bannon
© Brynn Anderson APFormer White House strategist Steve Bannon speaks at a rally for U.S. Senate hopeful Roy Moore, Monday, Sept. 25, 2017, in Fairhope, Ala. Conservatives say this is just the beginning of the GOP primary fight.
The hard-right's fight for total control of Donald Trump's Washington is just getting started.

The victory of deeply conservative candidate Roy Moore in Tuesday's hotly contested Alabama Senate primary has emboldened activists and potential candidates alike, threatening to set off a wave of tough GOP races and ushering in a new era of internecine Republican warfare that party leaders had hoped would end when they won control of the government.

"There's no doubt in my mind that this is going to be a determining factor for a lot of Deep South states, no question," said Mississippi State Sen. Chris McDaniel, who lost a hugely controversial primary contest against Sen. Thad Cochran in 2014 but is considering another Senate primary run in 2018. "If Alabama can send a true conservative to Washington, and Texas can send a true conservative to Washington, so can Mississippi and Tennessee and Florida and other states."

Asked, at a Moore rally here the night before the election, whether a Moore victory would make him more inclined to run, McDaniel replied to a small group of reporters: "It certainly plays a role... we're here to cheer on our friend Roy Moore, and then to begin to prepare, possibly, for a run in 2018."

Comment: Bannon is playing an interesting game. Either he is doing what he said he was going to do - support Trump in any way he can - or he's hijacking the Trump brand. Trump supported Strange. Bannon supported Moore - with the reasoning that Trump's hands were tied and that a vote for Moore was a vote for the real Trump plan.


Attention

Erdogan's bodyguards pummel protesters

erdogan bodyguard brawl
Violence broke out Thursday as protesters descended upon a Midtown speech by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The Turkish leader - whose guards were recently indicted in connection with a wild brawl in Washington, DC - was attempting to address the Turkish American National Steering Committee at the Marriott Marquis in Times Square, according to BuzzFeed News.

As soon as Erdogan enters the stage, a protester can be heard on a Periscope video shouting, "You're a terrorist! Get out of my country!"

The assembly soon turned into a battle royale, with protesters causing mayhem as security guards hurried them out of the room. The demonstrators can be seen being pummeled by punches as they attempt to leave.

Cards

Assange says he will provide evidence that Russia narrative is false in exchange for pardon

Julian Assange
© Jack Taylor/Getty Images
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has offered to provide evidence that the Russian collusion narrative is false in exchange for a pardon from President Trump.

The president, apparently, has not yet gotten the message. On Saturday, President Trump told reporters that he has "never heard" of Assange's offer to make a deal.

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.) told The Daily Caller that Trump is being blocked from knowing about the potential deal with Assange. "I think the president's answer indicates that there is a wall around him that is being created by people who do not want to expose this fraud that there was collusion between our intelligence community and the leaders of the Democratic Party," Rohrabacher said.

"The congressman spoke to chief of staff John Kelly two weeks ago about the potential deal with Assange," The Daily Caller reported. "The Wall Street Journal reported that Kelly told Rohrabacher to bring the information to the intelligence community."


Dollar

Trump is not at all happy about HHS Secretary Tom Price using government-funded private jet to travel

trump
Last week, I argued that conservatives shouldn't attempt to defend HHS Secretary Tom Price's habitual and unjustifiable use of expensive private jets to attend events around the country. It was a painful piece to write, in light of my respect for Price as a member of Congress, whose inclusion in the Trump administration I praised to the hilt.

But if we'd have raised holy hell over an Obama administration official's precedent-breaking abuse of public dollars (and we would have), we must hold "our" side accountable, too -- especially because fiscal conservatives like Price purport to respect taxpayers and shun government waste. (Cough).

Attention

Catalonia calls on EU to act as mediator over independence dispute with Spain

Catalonia dispute Spain
© Albert Gea / Reuters
The European Union must play the role of a mediator in the dispute between Catalonia and Spain, Catalan officials say. Activists are also reportedly printing ballots for the Sunday's independence referendum in a secret location.

Catalan Foreign Affairs Chief Raül Romeva said that it was the EU's duty as a repository of democratic values to put pressure on Madrid to allow the plebiscite.

"We call on the EU institutions (...) to stand for the values and principles (of the EU treaty)," Romeva said at a press-conference in Brussels, as cited by Reuters.

"Civil rights are being violated ...and the quality of democracy in Spain is being eroded," he added.

Comment: Catalonia independence referendum: A Spanish Tiananmen Square in the making?


Calendar

As elections approach, string of changes in governors hits Russian regions

Russian elections
© Sergey Pyatkov/Sputnik
A number of regional governors, including some political veterans, have resigned offering little explanation all over Russia in recent weeks. Mass media associate the reshuffle with the preparations to the 2018 presidential elections.

At the beginning of the week Russian President Vladimir Putin accepted resignations from governor of the Nizhny Novgorod Region Valery Shantsev, Samara governor Nikolai Merkushkin, and Krasnoyarsk governor Viktor Tolokonskiy. The head of the Russian internal republic of Dagestan, Ramazan Abdulatipov also submitted his resignation on Wednesday and on Thursday yet another regional leader - the head of the Yamalo-Nenetsk Autonomous Region Igor Koshin - announced his resignation from the post.

The business daily Kommersant quoted an unnamed source in the presidential administration as saying that as many as 10 governors could lose their posts in the nearest days.

Radar

'Pyongyang will fear us more': Seoul wants to transfer wartime army command from US

South Korean army's K-2 tanks fire during a live-fire drill in Yangpyeong
© Jung Yeon-JeSouth Korean army's K-2 tanks fire during a live-fire drill in Yangpyeong.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in has called for the long-delayed transfer of its wartime operational control (OPCON) from the Pentagon to be sped up, and says the country must develop its own military capacity to "punish" North Korea's "provocations."

"North Korea will fear us more and the people will have more faith in our military when we have wartime operational control of our military. The transfer of the wartime operational control based on our strong defense capabilities will lead to a great development of our military's structure and capabilities,"said Moon during a speech to mark the 69th Korean Armed Forces Day at a navy base in Pyeongtaek, south of Seoul.

Between 1950, when General Douglas McArthur took charge of the South Korean army, and 1994, a US general served as its commander. Since then, Seoul has taken back peacetime control of its armed forces, but would delegate command to the US in case of a conflict, though Korean politicians do formally have a veto.

The handover of OPCON to Korean generals has been discussed, touted and negotiated for decades, but in 2014 Seoul asked Washington to postpone it indefinitely, to give the Asian country a chance to build its "core military capabilities."

Propaganda

Moscow slams Reuters for citing al-Qaeda/White Helmets as 'evidence' of Russian airstrikes killing civilians

White Helmets and Al Qaeda
The widely discredited White Helmets still have an audience at Reuters UK.

Russia has slammed Reuters UK for a breach of journalistic integrity, after the organization published outright lies which have been derived from the propaganda arm of al-Qaeda in Syria.

Western governments, including those of the US and UK, have engaged in a concerted effort to publicly rehabilitate al-Qaeda, the notorious Gulfi funded Takfiri jihadist group which the US held responsible for the 9/11 atrocities. It was the group al-Qaeda in Iraq which eventually became ISIS and in Syria al-Qaeda's Syrian branch commonly known as al-Nusra, has been responsible for countless acts of barbaric in parts of western and central Syria.

Info

Diplomacy at work: Top N. Korean diplomat on US relations arrives in Moscow for talks

members of the North Korean delegation, who arrived for talks in Moscow
© RTA still image taken from a video footage shows members of the North Korean delegation, who arrived for talks in Moscow, on September 29, 2017.
Senior Russian and North Korean diplomats have met in Moscow to discuss the crisis on the Korean Peninsula, media reports. It comes as Pyongyang's war of words with Washington threatens to escalate into all-out conflict.

Oleg Burmistrov, Russia's ambassador-at-large, met Choe Son-hui, director-general of the North American Department of North Korea's Foreign Ministry in the Russian capital on Friday, TASS reported. They met behind closed doors.

Commenting on the issue on the eve of the meeting, Heather Nauert, US State Department spokesperson, said that Washington "can't see that as a bad thing."

"Diplomacy is our preferred approach. If Russia can be successful in getting North Korea to move in a better direction, we would certainly welcome that," she told journalists on Thursday.

Vinyl

Presumed dead ISIS leader Baghdadi reemerges in new undated audio message

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
© Reuters
A new undated and yet unverified 46-minute audio recording, alleged to be that of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, has surfaced online. It has emerged following months of silence and an announcement by the Russian military of a "high probability" that the much sought after terrorist was killed in Syria.

Following 11 months of silence, the elusive Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) leader has allegedly called on his followers to continue fighting in Syria, despite the loss of territory and in the face of imminent defeat. The audio message was released by the ISIS-run al-Furqan outlet, and translated by the Site Intelligence Group.

The leader of the self-proclaimed terrorist caliphate made his first public appearance in the summer of 2014 when the group was on the advance and capturing territory in Iraq and later in Syria.