Puppet MastersS


Eye 1

Japan deploys combat-authorized troops to South Sudan for a peacekeeping mission

Japanese peacekeepers
© Jok Solomun / ReutersJapanese peacekeepers arrive at the Juba airport to participate in the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) in South Sudan's capital Juba, November 21, 2016
Japan has sent troops to South Sudan for a peacekeeping mission authorized under the government's new powers that distanced the country from its post-World War Two pacifist stance.

Tokyo sent 350 soldiers to the impoverished African nation to help the UN peacekeeping operation there. Roughly half of them arrived in the capital of Juba on Monday, while the rest are expected on December 15, Reuters reported.

The Japanese troops will be allowed to respond with force to emergency calls by UN staff and aid workers as well as guard UN facilities from militant attacks.

Comment: See also: Mission fail: Inquiry finds UN peacekeepers failed to protect civilians under attack by rampaging South Sudanese troops


Eye 1

Pentagon and intelligence community chiefs urge Obama to remove Michael Rogers from head of the NSA

Rogers NSA
© Gary Cameron/ReutersAdm. Michael S. Rogers, director of the National Security Agency, speaks at the third annual Intelligence and National Security Summit in Washington in September.
The heads of the Pentagon and the nation's intelligence community have recommended to President Obama that the director of the National Security Agency, Adm. Michael S. Rogers, be removed.

The recommendation, delivered to the White House last month, was made by Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter and Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr., according to several U.S. officials familiar with the matter.


Comment: Clapper, the idiot/liar who blames Russia for 'hacking' the DNC, and Carter the idiot/liar who wants war with Russia and who treacherously sabotaged the last Syrian ceasefire. Great guys.


Action has been delayed, some administration officials said, because relieving Rogers of his duties is tied to another controversial recommendation: to create separate chains of command at the NSA and the military's cyberwarfare unit, a recommendation by Clapper and Carter that has been stalled because of other issues.

The news comes as Rogers is being considered by President-elect Donald Trump to be his nominee for director of national intelligence to replace Clapper as the official who oversees all 17 U.S. intelligence agencies. In a move apparently unprecedented for a military officer, Rogers, without notifying superiors, traveled to New York to meet with Trump on Thursday at Trump Tower. That caused consternation at senior levels of the administration, according to the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal personnel matters.

The White House, Pentagon and Office of the Director of National Intelligence declined to comment. The NSA did not respond to requests for comment. Carter has concerns with Rogers's performance, officials said. The driving force for Clapper, meanwhile, was the separation of leadership roles at the NSA and U.S. Cyber Command, and his stance that the NSA should be headed by a civilian.

Gingerbread

Please liberals, do not make me vomit onto my computer, you have nobody to blame but yourselves

Crying Clinton supporters
© Reuters
Poor liberals, for years you have toiled in vain for the betterment of humanity. Martyring yourselves for the greater good, you have attained a new level of sophistication and moral superiority, the likes of which we may never see again. It makes me weep such tears of bitterest woe, seeing your saintly queen of benevolence, fail to be anointed Queen Mass Murderer of The Planet Earth.

Every four years you come out of hibernation, and run about the country like so many chickens with their heads cut off, ranting and raving about how we all have to vote for the Democratic presidential candidate, or else the world will come to an end. We will be enslaved to a redneck, who dropped out of high school and works in a gas station, or a KKK guy - or worse!

In actuality, the real problem is that when you look in the mirror, you see an educated person, a literate person, an articulate person. You see someone who is wise, cultured, unequivocally left wing, logical, and above all rational. This person you are looking at does not exist. This person does not exist, any more than if I were to look in the mirror, and believe I was looking at a hippopotamus or a water buffalo.

This person might have existed in 1963, but this person, who had ideals, who genuinely stood against imperialism and militarism, and who truly cared about education and unions, is no more. For you have degenerated into such a mindless piece of degenerate insouciant flotsam, that I cannot help but look upon thy face with horror.

Bad Guys

Donald Trump vs the U.N.: At odds on many issues

UN security coucil chamber
© Piotr Redlinski/The New York Times Photo The Security Council chamber at the United Nations building in New York. The United States’ allies are trying to learn how Donald J. Trump will approach the pressing crises that are sure to come up before the Council.
The Security Council chamber at the United Nations building in New York. The United States' allies are trying to learn how Donald J. Trump will approach the pressing crises that are sure to come up before the Council. In the genteel, carpeted halls of the United Nations headquarters, a 20-minute walk from Trump Tower, diplomats from the world over are holding their breath about the American president-elect.

The optimists among them are expressing relief that Donald J. Trump said nothing during the campaign about dismantling the United Nations altogether — or turning its iconic tower facing the East River into condos.

Those who represent the United States' closest allies are trying to learn who Mr. Trump will appoint to crucial foreign policy jobs and how he will actually approach the pressing crises that are sure to come up before the Security Council: Syria, Ukraine, North Korea and the widening chasm between the Israelis and the Palestinians. Not least, many are trying to persuade his transition team to respect the international deals the United States has accepted under the auspices of the United Nations.

Blackbox

Saudi-led coalition announces end of Yemen ceasefire

Shiite Houthi tribesman hold their wepons
© AP Photo/ Hani Mohammed
Assiri added that the military operations by the Saudi-led coalition to support the Yemeni army and to protect the civilians would resume.

"The statement said that in the event that the Houthis commit to the truce, then it will automatically be extended for another 48 hours, however the other party did not comply. We have counted more than 500 violations within 48 hours... So it is natural that the truce comes to an end since the conditions of it were not met," Assiri said.

Yemen has been engulfed in a violent conflict between the government headed by President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi and the Houthis, who are backed by army units loyal to former Yemeni leader Ali Abdullah Saleh.

Comment: See also: Saudi-led coalition begins 48-hour truce in Yemen


Snakes in Suits

Whitehall memos reveal UK's Iraq war probe designed to 'avoid blame'

British soldiers from the 7th Armoured Brigade (Desert Rats)
© Mark Richards / ReutersBritish soldiers from the 7th Armoured Brigade (Desert Rats) take part in a raid on a food storage depot on the edge of the Iraqi city of Basra April 1, 2003.
The injury into UK's involvement in the 2003 invasion of Iraq was designed by the government to avoid allocating blame to individuals and departments, memos obtained under the Freedom of Information Act have reportedly revealed.

The papers were made public thanks to Chris Lamb, an FOI campaigner from Bristol, who had won a two-year court battle for the right to access classified memos by government officials relating to the creation of the Chilcot Inquiry. The memos were penned in the four-week period in May and June 2009, the Observer reported.

The documents revealed that high-level politicians in Britain sought to ensure that the probe would not result in branches of the government or individuals being held legally liable for the Iraq war. Some officials opposed a public inquiry due to the amount of daily publicity, cost and, ironically, long time such a procedure would take.

Info

The Age of Disintegration: Political disunity and Elites at war

Person disintegrating graphic
In this war of the rising and fading elites, there is no common ground or incentive to compromise.

Historian Michael Grant identified profound political disunity in the ruling elite as a key cause of the dissolution of the Roman Empire. Grant described this dynamic in his excellent account The Fall of the Roman Empire.

The chapter titles of the book illuminate the complex causes of profound political disunity in the ruling elite:

The Gulfs Between the Classes: a.k.a. soaring income/wealth inequality: check.
The Credibility Gap: The Mainstream Media lauds itself and a self-serving, failing elite: check.
The Partnerships That Failed: the SillyCon Valley tech titans were supposed to "save" the neoliberal elite by managing social media the way the MSM managed broadcast propaganda/"news": check.
The Groups That Opted Out: nobody "important" noticed those who opted out of the neoliberal Kool-Aid: check.
The Undermining of Effort: if I don't get my way, I'll block yours. There is no common ground left.

Jet3

Russian Senator: Trump victory allows Russian/US cooperation in Syria

Aleppo destroyed building
© Abdalrhman Ismail / ReutersMen walk past damaged shops at a site hit by airstrikes in al-Shaar neighbourhood of Aleppo, Syria November 17, 2016
The head of the Upper House committee for international relations has said that Russia and the US could form a single anti-terrorist coalition in Syria once US leadership reconsiders its priorities and stops meddling in the internal affairs of foreign nations.

"There are no impenetrable barriers in the way of this. It is very important for us to understand that the United States' strategic interests regarding Syria are about to change, because until now their priority was not in suppressing terrorism, but in displacing the country's government. Such changes are in line with Donald Trump's electoral rhetoric. He has said that the US would stop intervening in the internal affairs of foreign nations. If this really takes place, I see no problems whatsoever that could prevent Russia and the United States from being in the same coalition - one that would base its actions strictly on the norms of international law," Konstantin Kosachev said in an interview with Izvestia daily.

Comment: Let's hope so! But it bears repeating just how much Trump is up against here, if indeed he seeks to end the wasteful and useless (let alone evil) Syrian regime change operation. There are powerful interests in the US who pushed the regime change agenda worldwide for decades, and they will not quietly roll over.


Blackbox

What will Trump do about the Fed, debt ceiling, and trade: His key economic advisor explains

David Malpass
David Malpass
One of the biggest open questions troubling Wall Street traders (and everyone else) in addition to which of his close allies (and in the case of Mitt Romney, not so close) will the president-elect pick to staff the most important political posts in the new administration, is what are the details of Donald Trump's economic plan, especially as it involves the Fed, Trade, and the future of US national debt.

An answer came courtesy of one of Trump's key economic advisors, David Malpass, who has been tasked with overseeing the transition for the Treasury Department and economic policy. Last month, Malpass addressed a group of economists and reporters in Washington, laying out the core Trump vision ahead of his election.

While some of the core tenets may have changed, the focus remains the same (as confirmed by Steve Bannon's interview from Friday). Courtesy of the WSJ, here are excerpts of his remarks on a range of economic policy subjects facing the incoming Trump administration.

Propaganda

'Fake news' and 'post-truth' politics? What about those Iraqi WMDs?

Colin Powell holds up a vial
© Ray Stubblebine / ReutersU.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell presents a dummy vial of anthrax on Feb. 5, 2003, during a speech to the UN Security Council outlining the American case that Iraq possessed forbidden stockpiles of WMD.
The Oxford Dictionaries have named 'post-truth' as the word of the year. 'Fake news' and 'post-truth' politics have been blamed for both the Brexit vote in the UK and the victory of Donald Trump in America.

It seems the uneducated plebs are falling for 'fake news' they read in 'new media' and the lies of dreadful rabble-rousing populist politicians who are relying on people's emotions, instead of 'objective facts,' to get votes. It's all terribly worrying and poses a dire threat to Western civilization as we know it.

Well, forgive me for laughing out loud. For this establishment 'fake news'/'post-truth politics' concern is the funniest thing I've come across in politics since Lord Jenkins of Hillhead, the very grand Chancellor of the University of Oxford, repeatedly called distinguished Sheldonian guest Mikhail Gorbachev, "Mr. Brezhnev."