Puppet Masters
Sources told RealClearInvestigations the staffer with whom Ciaramella was speaking was Sean Misko. Both were Obama administration holdovers working in the Trump White House on foreign policy and national security issues. And both expressed anger over Trump's new "America First" foreign policy, a sea change from President Obama's approach to international affairs.
"Just days after he was sworn in they were already talking about trying to get rid of him," said a White House colleague who overheard their conversation. "They weren't just bent on subverting his agenda," the former official added. "They were plotting to actually have him removed from office."
Misko left the White House last summer to join House impeachment manager Adam Schiff's committee, where sources say he offered "guidance" to the whistleblower, who has been officially identified only as an intelligence officer in a complaint against Trump filed under whistleblower laws. Misko then helped run the impeachment inquiry based on that complaint as a top investigator for congressional Democrats.
"Wouldn't life be easier if you could view your full medical history with a few taps on your smartphone?" an upbeat piece touting Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) - a new data standard for healthcare patient data - asked, somewhat rhetorically, on Tuesday in Kaiser Health News. This oversimplified, no-downside spin on a truly ominous technology neglects to warn anyone who's ever used a health clinic that the medical details of their private life are about to get a lot more public, data-privacy laws be damned, and there will be no putting this particular genie back in the bottle.
The US government has officially thrown its weight behind the rollout of FHIR, mandating in 2020 that all medical providers who receive government funding make patient data available through FHIR-compatible apps. This move cements an unspoken alliance between Big Tech and Big Brother that has repeatedly seen the former deployed to circumvent troublesome constitutional restrictions imposed on the latter.
Mr. Trump met with Ursula von der Leyen, the new president of the European Commission, on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Mr. Trump told CNBC:
"I said, 'Look, we don't get something, I'm going to have to take action,' and the action will be a very high tariff on their cars and other things that come into our country. They're going to make a deal because they have to. They have to. They have no choice."He said there is no reason for Americans to "get nervous" because he's confident of a deal. "I would be very surprised if I had to implement the tariffs," he said.
Comment: Sputnik, 22/1/2020: Zarif's 'told you so' moment:
The three European signatories to the Iran nuclear deal triggered a dispute resolution mechanism last week, a move tantamount to an accusation that Iran is violating its terms, which could eventually lead to the return of UN sanctions.RT, 22/1/2020: Trade war ignited? UK risks US wrath with digital tax on tech giants
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has quipped that the EU's efforts to force Iran back into the nuclear deal have backfired as Donald Trump floated the idea of imposing new tariffs on the bloc.
Speaking on a panel - alongside US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin - at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Wednesday, British Chancellor Sajid Javid doubled down on government plans to implement a two-percent levy on revenues made by global tech giants like Facebook and Twitter in the UK.
"We plan to go ahead with our digital services tax in April. It is a proportionate tax, and a tax that is deliberately designed as a temporary tax." Javid's comments drew the ire of Mnuchin, who hit out at the proposals, branding them "discriminatory" against US companies.
In what was ostensibly a veiled threat aimed at his UK counterpart, the US treasury secretary warned that if his country's digital companies face "arbitrary taxes," then in response they would "consider putting arbitrary taxes on their car companies."
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has signaled Iran's readiness for dialogue with its neighbours, following a grueling month for regional stability. Zarif wrote in an Arabic-language tweet on Thursday:
"Iran remains open to dialogue with its neighbours, and we declare our readiness to participate in any complementary work that is in the interest of the region, and we welcome any step that restores hope to its people and brings them stability and prosperity."The message did not mention any names but appeared to refer specifically to Saudi Arabia. Speaking on the fringes of the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday, Saudi Prince Faisal said Saudi Arabia was open to talks "but it is really up to Iran".
"We've had a very good relationship. And we're down to a very low number. We're down to 5,000. So we're down to a very low number, historically low, and we'll see what happens," Trump told journalists following a meeting on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in the Swiss Alpine resort of Davos on Wednesday with the Iraqi leader.
Salih and Trump also discussed the importance of respecting the demands of the Iraqi people to preserve the country's sovereignty. "We have a lot of common interests, the fight against extremism, stability in the neighborhood, and [a] sovereign Iraq that is stable, friends of the neighbors and friends of the United States," the Iraqi president commented.
On January 5, Iraqi lawmakers unanimously approved a bill, demanding the withdrawal of all foreign military forces led by the United States from the country.
Comment: 'Occupational' hazard: The US military in your country. Permanently. The demands of an occupied sovereign country to leave somehow never equal the US' excuses to stay.
See also:
- Iraqi parliament gives US forces one year to leave, Trump threatens sanctions unless they compensate them for "expensive" bases
- Iraqi president hits back at arrogant Trump, says he never asked permission to stay in Iraq to 'watch Iran'
What is important right now is not only what did happen, but also what did NOT happen. I will begin with two extremely important things which did NOT happen:
First, the Russian government has NOT remained unchanged. The naysayers had predicted that nothing at all would change, that the same folks who be sitting in maybe different seats, but that the changes would be primarily cosmetic. That did not happen. In reality 12 people kept their seats and another 9 were replaced.
Comment: It is comforting to know that at least one world leader is possessed of intelligence and foresight.
- Medvedev government resigns after Putin's state-of-the-nation speech, new PM appointed
- Defense, Foreign and Finance ministers retain their positions in new Russian government
- What if Vladimir Putin knows a 'third way' for society?
The test was a part of field training exercises on both day and night combat readiness. Pakistani state media said the launch was witnessed by top military officials, and that its success demonstrated "a very high standard of proficiency in handling and operating the weapon system". President Arif Alvi and Prime Minister Imran Khan hailed the launch as a "landmark achievement".
The Ghaznavi ballistic missile, also known as Hatf-3, is a Pakistani-made nuclear-capable missile that can be launched from road-based vehicles and can hit targets up to 290 km away. It was previously tested in August 2019 in a night-time launch.
The exercises follow the escalation in tensions between India and Pakistan over Kashmir's autonomy being revoked by New Delhi.
Pakistan claims that India's move is a violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions. India, on the other hand, insists that changes to the Indian Constitution are an internal matter, and that its move will improve stability and end militancy in Kashmir.
The Filipino leader told RT's Murad Gazdiev that he's never been to the United State, even though he once received an offer from Obama to come to Washington. He said he turned down the invitation after being criticized by the Democratic president during a press conference.
"He should have realized that I'm also the head of a sovereign state," Duterte explained, arguing that there were diplomatic channels that Obama could have used to make his concerns heard. "He should have brought the case to the United Nations rather than castigate a president of another country in a press conference."
Comment: Here's the full interview, in which Duterte excoriates the United States for its "total lack of respect for our sovereignty" and its representatives "coming to the Philippines like they own the place..."
District Judge Vanessa Baraitser agreed on Thursday to add a three-week session in May in addition to the five-day hearing already set for Feb. 24.
The judge said she was "unlikely to look favorably" on any further requests for delays in the long-awaited confrontation between Assange and U.S. officials.
Assange is being held at Belmarsh Prison in east London while he waits for the hearing. The U.S. has charged him with espionage related to WikiLeaks' hacking of hundreds of thousands of confidential government documents.
Comment: See also: Three protected state witnesses accuse Spanish ex-marine of illegally spying on Julian Assange
- Julian Assange's lawyers were placed under surveillance. But that's not the whole story
- Assange's lawyer: WikiLeaks co-founder was subjected to espionage & extortion
- El Pais publishes tape transcripts of Spaniards' attempt to extort Julian Assange: "This material is worth €3m"
- Outrageous: UK court blocks Spanish judge from questioning Julian Assange as a witness over spying allegations
- 'Absolutely unaware': Assange testifies in trial of Spanish company that spied on WikiLeaks founder inside embassy
- Assange was sold for $4.2 BILLION - Former Ecuadorian President confirms IMF loan in exchange for Assange
President Andrzej Duda has refused the invitation to the World Holocaust Forum at Yad Vashem on Thursday, in protest over Russian President Vladimir Putin being invited to speak at the event while he was not. Instead, Duda will preside over the memorial ceremony in Auschwitz on Monday - to which his government deliberately did not invite Putin.
International Holocaust Memorial Day is marked on January 27 because on that date in 1945 the Red Army troops liberated the notorious Nazi death camp at what is now called Oswiecim. Yet the current Polish government has refused to give the Soviet Union any credit for liberating Auschwitz - or Poland, for that matter - insisting instead that their country was a purely innocent victim of Nazis and Soviets in equal measure.
















Comment: See also: