Puppet MastersS


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Norway's Progress Party proposes ban on young boys' circumcision

Young boy looking out window
© Natasha Sioss / Getty Images
Norway's Progress Party (FrP), the country's third largest party and known for its anti-immigration policies, has supported a bill outlawing ritual circumcision of boys aged under 16, a common practice among Jewish and Muslim communities.

The draft law was passed at the party's weekend national convention after the rejection of a compromise proposal to prevent state funding of the procedure rather than ban it altogether.

Its proponents claim the religious rite causes mental and physical harm to children and constitutes a serious violation of children's rights.

Comment: Circumcision is a genuine health concern but as seen in Norway is it highly politicized.


Bizarro Earth

Critics fear industry takeover - EPA to replace half of science advisors

EPA men
© Nick Oxford / Reuters
Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt has dismissed half of the EPA's key scientific review board members. Some fear the Trump administration is "inserting politics into science" and will favor industries the agency is meant to regulate.

Pruitt is facing a backlash over his decision to not reappoint nine members of the 18-member Board of Scientific Counselors (BOSC) - a panel which reviews research done by EPA scientists within the Office of Research and Development (ORD).

According to JP Freire, a spokesman for the EPA, Pruitt is considering replacing the academic scientists with representatives from the very industries the EPA regulates.

Snakes in Suits

'Centrist' Macron is a dead-center insider for global capitalism

Emmanuel Macron
© Christian Hartmann / Reuters
Everything about France's newly elected president Emmanuel Macron suggests a theatrical production of hype and illusion. He is being "sold" to the masses as an "outsider" and "centrist", a benign liberal.

In reality, enter the economic hitman who will blow French society apart in the service of the oligarchy.

At age 39, Macron has been described as a "political wonderboy" and France's "youngest leader since Napoleon Bonaparte." The former Rothschild banker who reportedly once had the nickname "the Mozart of Finance" is now promising to renew France and bring the nation together, where people will no longer "vote for extremes."

Fittingly for the Mozart of Finance, the new president used the "grandest of backdrops for entrance on the world stage," when he made his victory speech on Sunday night in the courtyard of the Louvre, noted the Financial Times. His dramatic walk to the stage through the world-famous museum courtyard took a full four minutes. The night lights and shadows played with Macron's unsmiling, stoney face as he strode purposely forward amid the strains of Beethoven's Ode to Joy. The choice of the European Union's national anthem, rather than France's, is a harbinger of Macron's political project and the globalist interests he serves.

Георгиевская ленточка

Putin: Disunity of world's leading countries allowed Nazis to start WWII; entire world should unite to combat terrorism

Putin
© Alexei Nikolsky / Sputnik
The Nazis were able to start World War II because of the disunity of the world's leading countries, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated during a Victory Day parade at Moscow's Red Square, adding that the lessons of the past should not be ignored.

"This horrific tragedy could not be prevented, first and foremost, because of the connivance of the criminal ideology of racial superiority, because of the disunity of the world's leading countries. This allowed the Nazis to appropriate themselves the right to decide the fate of other peoples, to unleash the most brutal, bloody war, to enslave almost all European countries, putting them at the service of their deadly targets," the Russian leader said, speaking during the military parade in Moscow marking the 72nd anniversary of the surrender of Nazi Germany in 1945.

According to Putin, the greatness of Victory Day is "defined by the people, by their unprecedented heroic act of saving the Fatherland, and a decisive contribution to the defeat of Nazism."

Handcuffs

Turkey launches massive counter-narcotics operation targeting 913 suspects

Turkish police
© REUTERS/ Osman Orsal
Turkey's police started on Monday a large operation aimed at countering drug trafficking which targeted 913 suspects.

According to the Daily Sabah, the operation involved over 1,600 police teams and over 7,100 staff members who simultaneously carried out crackdowns on suspects in drug probe in 79 Turkish cities.

Turkish government previously intensified the fight against drug trafficking in 2014 by introducing "The Rapid Action Plan Against Drugs," which embraces all aspects of the struggle, from raising people's awareness of the threat to tightening law enforcement measures.

Rocket

Strait of Hormuz: Iran tests superfast Hoot torpedo

Iran missile launch
© Ruhollah Vahdati / Reuters
Iran has allegedly carried out a test launch of the supercavitating Hoot torpedo in the Strait of Hormuz, multiple Pentagon officials have told NBC and Fox. This is the first test of the experimental underwater technology since February 2015.TrendsIran tension

There has been no confirmation of the test from Tehran, and US officials did not specify if the launch of the weapon, which has been tested at regular intervals since 2006, was a success.


Info

Need more boots: NATO asks UK to 'send more troops to Afghanistan'

UK soldier
© Mohammad Ismail / Reuters
NATO has asked Britain to consider sending more troops to Afghanistan amid rising fears over security in the troubled country, it has been reported.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg is due to meet Prime Minister Theresa May at Downing Street on Wednesday and is expected to discuss the subject, according to the BBC. It comes as the US is considering increasing its military presence.

There are currently about 500 British troops in the country, providing security, assistance and advice in Kabul and training at the Afghan Officer Academy. The last UK combat troops left in October 2014.

A request for more troops is said to have been made over the past few weeks.

Attention

'No evidence Russia influencing voter tallies in...50 states': Clapper, Yates testify before Senate Judiciary Subcommittee

James Clapper and Sally Yates
© AP Photo/ Pablo Martinez Monsivais
Sally Yates, the former acting Attorney General of the Trump administration, and Deputy Attorney General under former President Barack Obama, testified on Wednesday at a hearing on alleged Russian meddling in the US presidential election -- accusations for which no US official has come up with concrete proof.

Also appearing before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism was Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.

Clapper once again confirmed that there has not been any proof presented that Moscow somehow colluded with the Trump campaign.

Jet2

Turkey launches airstrikes in Northern Iraq, destroying PKK camps

Turkish F-16 fighter jet
© AFP 2017/ Jorge Guerrero
The Turkish Air Force destroyed camps of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militant group in Iraq in the early hours of Tuesday, local media reported.

According to the Anadolu news agency citing the Turkish General Staff, three caves and four bunkers were destroyed in air raids in Metina, Zap, Avasin-Basyan and Gara in northern Iraq. Three camp areas were also destroyed.

Tensions between Ankara and the Kurdish pro-independence PKK escalated in 2015, after a three-year ceasefire between the two sides collapsed over a series of terror attacks allegedly committed by PKK members.

Ankara began launching regular airstrikes against PKK in both northern Iraq and Turkey in July 2015.

Attention

North Korea's favored candidate, liberal Moon Jae-in wins South Korea presidential election

Moon Jae-in and his wife Kim Jung-sook
Moon Jae-in and his wife Kim Jung-sook.
Having lost to Park Geun-hye in the 2012 presidential election, liberal Moon Jae-in is poised to become the new South Korea president according to an exit poll from today's South Korean election, according to which Moon was estimated to have collected 41.4% of all votes. The front-runner was followed by Hong Joon-pyo of the conservative Liberty Korea Party with 23.3% . Ahn Cheol-soo of the center-left People's Party came in third with 21.8%.

North Korea has indicated that Moon is its favored candidate, with state media recently calling on South Korean voters to "punish the puppet group of conservatives" associated with Park.

The son of North Korean refugees, Moon criticized the early installation of a U.S. missile shield on South Korean soil and has said he'd meet with Kim Jong Un under the right circumstances.

Comment: What to Expect From South Korea's Likely Next President
Moon Jae-in, a former human rights lawyer and chief of staff to President Roh Moo-hyun, is expected to become the next leader of South Korea, but his policies are unlikely to differ greatly from that of his predecessor Park Geun-hye, who was impeached following a large-scale corruption scandal, political analyst Konstantin Asmolov told Sputnik.

Asmolov, a senior expert at the Moscow-based Center for Korean Studies at the Institute of Far Eastern Studies, warned that not much should be expected from Moon Jae-in who has positioned himself as a candidate of change.

"Groundless illusions"

"When it comes to Moon Jae-in, I have seen absolutely groundless illusions which remind me of what some said when Trump was elected: 'He is clearly better than Hillary, all of our issues will now be resolved.' One hundred days later it has become clear that something is amiss. The same with Moon," the analyst told Sputnik Korea.

Asmolov maintained that contrary to what many think Moon Jae-in is actually a conservative, saying that his tough management style was one of the reasons behind the split in the New Politics Alliance for Democracy.

Relations with North Korea, the US and China

Moon Jae-in has ostensibly pledged to create a government "most feared by North Korea, most trusted by the United States and most reliable for China," the analyst said, but Seoul's relations with Pyongyang, Washington and Beijing will not undergo drastic changes if he becomes president.

Asmolov pointed out that Moon Jae-in's stance on North Korea is more conservative than that of Park Geun-hye in the early years of her presidency. He said that Moon Jae-in wants Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear program as a prerequisite to further rapprochement, which could later lead to the reopening of the Kaesong industrial park, a cooperative effort between the two nations. South Korea closed the area after DPRK's latest weapons tests.

The deployment of the US-made Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system has been the main point of contention between South Korea and China. Beijing has been concerned that the weapons complex will present a threat to the region instead of making it safer.

"Moon Jae-in has said that the THAAD issue should be decided by the next administration. However, when he was asked to provide details during the debates, his stance boiled down to the following: 'We will somehow persuade the Chinese so that they would not complain about it.' In other words, it is extremely unlikely that Moon Jae-in will torpedo the THAAD deployment," the analyst said.

South Korea's ties with the United States will remain close since anti-American sentiments in the country are "artificial," Asmolov added.

Relations with Russia

Moon Jae-in has largely refrained from mentioning Russia during the election campaign, the analyst said.

"This means that there will be no priorities in this respect. Old projects are likely to be abandoned due to domestic political infighting. How can we support Park Geun-hye's initiatives? Clearly, at some point in time much will be said. There will be many statements, memorandums of understanding and talk that we are opening a new chapter and everything would be different. This happens every five years," the analyst said.