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Iranian Revolutionary Guard confirms Daesh chief al-Baghdadi is dead

Abu Bakr al-Bagdhadi
© AP Photo/ Militant video
The elite Iranian Revolutionary Guard verified the death of Daesh mastermind Abu Bakr al-Bagdhadi "through multiple channels," a representative said Thursday.

Ali Shirazi, a top Iranian cleric, told Asr-e Iran News Agency there is "no doubt" Baghdadi is deceased.

Irib, Iranian media outlet, has posted photos of Baghdadi's dead body. The man's face resembles Baghdadi extremely closely. Sputnik has learned that the photo is from 2015 and is actually a fake.

Display

London's Metropolitan Police still uses Windows XP, vulnerable to hacking and ransomware

New Scotland Yard sign
© Alberto Pezzali / Global Look Press
The UK's largest police force remains highly vulnerable to hacking and ransomware attacks, as it still relies heavily on outdated Windows XP software.

Over 15,000 computers and digital devices used by the Metropolitan Police continue to run on the dated system, decommissioned by Microsoft in 2014, leaving its users vulnerable to cyberattacks.

A spokesperson for Scotland Yard told the MailOnline the force is undergoing an extensive upgrade of its IT systems, including a revamp of its desktop computers. However, they warned the transition to modern devices is hard to achieve without disrupting services.
"The upgrade program is not as simple as it would be for many other organizations due to the amount of specialist legacy software upon which parts of the Met still rely.

"We have completed the upgrade of just over 17,000 devices to Windows 8.1, and this reduces the number of desktops running previous XP to around 15,000," the spokesperson said, MailOnline reports.

Comment: Apparently UK's navy also runs Windows XP: HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier runs on outdated Windows XP, vulnerable to cyberattack


Treasure Chest

$700bn Pentagon bill proposal funds US presence in E. Europe and weapons for Ukraine

US soldiers at the Bemowo Piskie Training Area in Poland
© US Army / Spc. Samuel BrooksUS soldiers at the Bemowo Piskie Training Area in Poland.
A Senate committee proposal for the 2018 military budget would further boost Pentagon spending on troops and equipment, make the US presence in Eastern Europe a persistent feature, and supply lethal weapons to Ukraine, among other things.

Adopted in the Senate Armed Services Committee by a vote of 27-0, the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) would add $97 billion to the total military budget proposed by President Donald Trump last month.

Citing the need to "deter Russian aggression," committee chairman John McCain (R-Arizona) shifted the funding for US deployments in Eastern Europe to the base Pentagon budget, and renamed it the European Deterrence Initiative (EDI). The NDAA also requires the Pentagon to submit future plans for the EDI, "including an assessment of permanently stationing troops in Eastern Europe."

"In an unparalleled attack on our core interests and values, Russia engaged in an active, purposeful campaign to undermine the integrity of American democracy and affect the outcome of the 2016 presidential election," said the summary version of the bill, published late on Wednesday. "The committee believes the United States must do more to deter Russian aggression, whether across its borders or in cyberspace."

Stormtrooper

NATO to send thousands of additional troops to Afghanistan

US soldiers in Afghanistan
© Ryan Hallock / Reuters
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has confirmed that the alliance will send up to "a few thousand more troops" to assist the fight against the Taliban.
"Our military authorities have requested a few thousand more troops for the mission in Afghanistan and today, I can confirm that we will increase our presence in Afghanistan," Jens Stoltenberg stated ahead of the of NATO Defense Ministers meeting in Brussels on Thursday.

The secretary general did not, however, specify the scale of additional support, saying that alliance members "will end the day with a meeting of all nations contributing to our Resolute Support Mission in Afghanistan and we will discuss the future of NATO's presence in the country."

Arrow Down

India-China tensions escalate following OBOR developments

Modi Xi China India
© AFP 2017/ Prakash Singh
Only two nations in the world can lay claim to populations of more than 1 billion people — China and India, and they share a 3,488-km. long border. The two countries can also boast of strong economic growth rates in recent years.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi stand tall as charismatic leaders who seek to lead their nations with patriotic sentiments.

Beijing and New Delhi see themselves as giants in Asia, but the nationalist self-confidence from both sides may ignite a heated rivalry in which bilateral relations could deteriorate.

Comment: In short, India is salty over the China-Pakistan Corridor and is throwing a geopolitical fit that can result in serious consequences. Instead of focusing on developing stronger US relations, India should be looking to the future and the OBOR.


Vader

J. Michael Springmann on 'manufactured migrants': Pawns on the U.S. Empire's 'grand chessboard'

migrants refugees
© Janossy Gergely/ShutterstockChaos from the mass migration is a deliberate strategy.
The refugee crisis in Europe, the largest seen since World War 2, is no accident.

Former U.S. State Department official J. Michael Springmann addresses this verboten subject in his just-released second book Goodbye Europe? Hello, Chaos?: Merkel's Migrant Bomb. He argues that these refugees and migrants were deliberately created by the American Empire to be used as political weapons.

The misery of asylees, Springmann writes, is one of the planned outcomes of horrendous and unlawful military attacks on Syria and other countries. These are carried out in proxy wars by "the West," including Israel. Springmann writes that Israel "is a terrorist entity" and "an ever helpful architect of chaos."

Bad Guys

Not even close: Russia-gate is no Watergate or Iran-Contra

watergate bugged phone
The bugged phone from the Watergate office of Democratic Party official Spencer Oliver. Placed on the phone during a May 1972 break-in, the bug was the only device that worked. A second break-in on June 17. 1972, led to the capture of Richard Nixon’s Watergate burglars.
Many comparisons have been made between Russia-gate and the earlier scandals of Watergate and Iran-Contra, but the similarities are at best superficial.

Russia-gate, the sprawling investigation into whether Russia meddled in last year's U.S. election, is often compared to the two big political scandals of the latter half of the Twentieth Century, Watergate and Iran-Contra. Sometimes you even hear that Russia-gate is "bigger than Watergate."

Yet what is perhaps most remarkable about those two Twentieth Century scandals is how little Official Washington really understands them - and how these earlier scandals significantly contrast, rather than compare, with what is unfolding now.

Although the historical record is still incomplete on Watergate and Iran-Contra, the available evidence indicates that both scandals originated in schemes by Republicans to draw foreign leaders into plots to undermine sitting Democratic presidents and thus pave the way for the elections of Richard Nixon in 1968 and Ronald Reagan in 1980.

As for Russia-gate, even if you accept that the Russian government hacked into Democratic emails and publicized them via WikiLeaks, there is still no evidence that Donald Trump or his campaign colluded with the Kremlin to do so. By contrast, in the origins of Watergate and Iran-Contra, it appears the Nixon and Reagan campaigns, respectively, were the instigators of schemes to enlist foreign governments in blocking a Vietnam peace deal in 1968 and negotiations to free 52 American hostages in Iran in 1980.

Pistol

Czech Republic declares open season on terrorists, passes legislation allowing citizens to shoot terrorists during public emergency

Gun fight
© Reuters
Deputies in the Czech Republic voted overwhelmingly in favor of a constitutional amendment allowing ordinary citizens to carry arms and use them in case of a public emergency such as terrorism.

On Wednesday, 139 of the 168-member Chamber of Deputies voted for the amendment, which was proposed by Interior Minister Milan Chovanec of the Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD), in response to an EU directive on firearms that was adopted earlier this year.

Cult

Blood money: NGOs file complaint over the role French bank Paribas had in Rwanda genocide

French Bank Paribas
© AFP 2017/ ERIC PIERMONT
Three France-based non-governmental organizations (NGOs), namely Sherpa, Ibuka and Collective of Civil Parties for Rwanda, filed a compliant against, BNP Paribas, France's largest bank, accusing it of involvement in the 1994 Rwanda genocide, local media reported on Thursday.

The organizations accuse the bank of "complicity to genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes," radio France Info reported.

According to the complaint, the bank was involved in financing the illegal purchase of arms sent to Rwanda in 1994, when the country was ripped apart by genocide. The bank's actions were done in spite of the UN Security Council's embargo on arms trade with Rwanda.

Comment: See also: BNP Paribas agrees to record $8.8bn settlement for US sanctions violations as blackmail for Paris to cancel Russia deal fails


Jet3

Iraq recaptures landmark Mosul mosque, declares fall of ISIS

Grand al-Nuri Mosque
© BBCActivists accompanied troops as they fought their way into the remains of Mosul's al-Nuri mosque
Iraqi forces have recaptured the site of Mosul's landmark Grand al-Nuri Mosque, according to the country's military. The victory comes three years to the date since Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) declared itself a Caliphate at the iconic building.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said the capture marks "the end of the Daesh state," Reuters reports.

Referencing IS, Iraqi military spokesman, Brigadier General Yahya Rasool, told state TV: "Their fictitious state has fallen," according to Reuters.