Puppet Masters
Many nationalities took part in the fight against the Nazis, but no single country shed anywhere near as much blood as the Soviet Union. Overall, 27 million Soviet citizens lost their lives in the war. Yes, that's right: TWENTY-SEVEN MILLION. There's no typo.
Yet today, for geopolitical reasons, the enormous contribution that the Soviet Union made to the defeat of Hitler's forces is being deliberately - and shamefully - downplayed by elites in the west.
Western leaders boycott World War Two commemorative events held in Russia.
Anti-Russian neocon propagandists, whose voices dominate the media and whose books always get enthusiastic reviews and endorsements from fellow hawks, equate Nazi Germany - the clear aggressor in World War Two - with the Soviet Union, the country that was fighting for its survival and which only wanted to be left alone.
Hollywood meanwhile relentlessly pushes the line that it was the US - and the western allies alone - who won the war. Disgustingly, and quite scandalously, the deaths of 27 million people are being airbrushed out of history.
This pernicious and morally repugnant New Cold War revisionism regarding World War Two and the role of Russia/the Soviet Union is more pervasive now than it was in the days when the Soviet Union still existed. I remember growing up in Britain in the 1970s at a time when anti-Russian neocons weren't writing the script.
The groundbreaking 26-episode 1973 Thames TV series The World at War told the story of WW2 in a very fair way and did not seek to diminish the Soviet contribution. In the final episode, the programme's historical adviser, Noble Frankland - a director of the Imperial War Museum and decorated war veteran - dismissed the ludicrous assertion that after the war eastern European countries merely swapped one tyranny for another that was just as bad.
The United Nations brokered the creation of a new national unity government in the war-torn country earlier this year, after the overthrow of Libya's leader Muammar Gaddafi had plummeted it into chaos five years ago.
"We have historically strong ties, the majority of Libya's officers have studied in Russia. That's why we always call for Russia's role in the struggle against terrorism in Libya and the creation of strong army," Maiteeq said.
He added that the council welcomed any international help in country's struggle against terrorism.
Faymann announced his resignation in an afternoon appearance broadcast live on the Austrian Federal Chancellery website.
"I am giving up my role as party chief and federal chancellor," Faymann said as he wrapped up a statement on the party's future and his 7.5-year term at the helm of the Austrian government, according to Austria's Heute daily.
"I am firmly convinced that this country will be able to cope with its future," Faymann said. "We are a country that I have been honored to serve. Goodbye."
Wherever he is right now, the lanky Saudi playboy cum jihadi has every right to feel proud of the role he was co-opted to play by the pioneers of the phony war on terror. After all, he and he alone 'did' 9/11. The scramble to 'get him' for 'doing 9/11' allowed for a US military take over of Afghanistan and, with a few blatant lies repeated ad nauseam by the Western press, Iraq was overrun too. That's a lot of return on the energy invested in turning the son of a Saudi millionaire into the bete noire of the freedom-loving peoples of the world.
Once Afghanistan and Iraq were 'done' however, Osama was retreated to his mysteriously inaccessible-to-all-but-Allah mountain cave, and 'al-Qaeda' took over for the next few years of securing freedom and democracy for the Middle East, which took the unusual form of destroying as much of it as possible.
By the time 2011 rolled around, US and NATO warmongers were getting a bit peckish again, and Syria and Libya were lined up for obliteration. But al-Qaeda had become a bit 'old' and no one had seen Osama for years, except in the form of grainy videos of some guy who looked a bit like him. So from the rubble of Iraq, "ISIS" was launched onto the geopolitical scene to replace 'al-qaeda' who the USA government was now actively funding and arming in Syria and Libya.
But to facilitate his definitive exit from the stage, bin Laden was to take one last hit for the Secret Team as the victim of the 'heroic Navy Seal raid' on his 'compound' in Abbottabad, Pakistan, a popular retirement and holiday retreat for Pakistani military and civilian intelligence. This was a bizarre choice of hiding place for the world's (then) most wanted man, especially since it was located just a few kms away from the Pakistani equivalent of West Point and the CIA had an office there. Then again, very little ever makes sense in the phony war on terror that is used as a cover for imperial wars of aggression.

May 9, 2016. Russian President and Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Armed Forces Vladimir Putin at a military parade to mark the 71st anniversary of Victory in the 1941-1945 WWII, on Moscow's Red Square.
According to the Russian leader, the lessons of the World War II showed that "double standards" and "short-sighted indulgence to those who are nurturing new criminal plans" are unacceptable. "The lessons of history show that peace on our planet doesn't establish itself, that you need to be on high alert," he said. The Great Patriotic War (the term used in Russia and former Soviet republics to describe the conflict on the Eastern Front from 1941-45) will always remain "an outstanding, sacred heroic deed of our people, a call to live according to conscience, to keep the height of the truth and justice, to transfer these values from generation to generation," the president added.

A member of forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad takes a position on a look-out point during their offensive to recapture the historic city of Palmyra in this picture provided by SANA on March 24, 2016.
While the move is not exactly surprising, Western powers have been painfully predictable in their hypocrisy and political maneuvering against President Bashar al-Assad. And Washington's latest stunt shows just how far down the rabbit hole the US will go to eliminate the competition.
I say 'competition' because America's ambitions in Syria, and beyond the Middle East, have nothing to do with counter-terrorism. What Washington is pursuing in the Mid-East is an asymmetrical war of neo-colonialization. Within this dynamic, Terror has served both as a convenient alibi and a political rationale.
Both a political and militarily roadblock, President al-Assad has been a thorn in the West's military complex's thigh in more ways than one. A tower of resistance against Western imperialism, President al-Assad has managed not only to retain his people trust, he asserted himself as a keen military strategist. How many heads of state can claim to have raised a regional resistance movement against both Terror and imperialism, and live to tell the tale?
Comment: Further reading: Pentagon plan: Convert Daesh caliphate into US-backed Syrian rebel redoubt
He explained that issues of changing a certain article of the South Ossetian constitution will be put to referendum, which will make it possible in the future to ask the Russian leadership to incorporate the republic. "Currently, proceeding from the situation in the world, we would not like to put at serious political risks our strategic partner in the person of Russia," Tibilov said. "So we reached the conclusion that we need to introduce changes to the current Constitution, its 10th article, which would enable the president to ask, with the approval of the republic's parliament, the top leadership of Russia to consider the possibility of making [South Ossetia] part of the country," he said.
Article 10 of South Ossetia's constitution says that the republic is entitled to enter into alliance with other states and hand the alliance's bodies part of its powers. "We plan to hold a referendum on supplementing that article with paragraphs stating that the Republic of South Ossetia is entitled to hand part of its powers to the Russian Federation," Tibilov said. "And then what I have already outlined - to give the president the opportunity to ask the Russian leadership to incorporate our republic...as a new constituent member of Russia."
"The board of the UNT expresses its deepest sorrow for the slaying of colleague German Mavare. We demand justice and an end to violence," was the message posted on the Twitter account of the UNT party, headed by jailed ex-presidential candidate and former governor of Zulia state, Manuel Rosales.
The mayor of Iribarren in Lara state, Alfredo Ramos, said on his Twitter account minutes after the incident occurred before dawn Friday: "German Mavare, of the popular urbanization of Carucieña, a tireless fighter for social causes, has just been hit by a bullet in the head."
Boiling Frogs Post: CIA director visits Bosnia - new state of U.S. war on Russia in Southern Europe?

'Al Mujahedeen Unit' of the 'Bosnian Army' parades in downtown Zenica, central Bosnia. Osama bin Laden and many other Saudi terrorists funded and organized them.
Mehmedagić was appointed to this position recently (November 2015) and replaced the long-time OSA director Almir Džuvo who held the position for more than 10 years. Mehmedagić's appointment was not without controversy concerning his activities during the Bosnian war in the 1990s. He was one of the closest associates of the then-Bosnian president Alija Izetbegović and had allegedly coordinated the arrival of various Islamic militants from the Middle East to fight on the Bosnian Muslim side.[3] These militants later committed some of the most heineous crimes against the Christian (Serb and Croat) civilians. Their recruitment and financing could be linked to the military-intelligence structures of Saudi Arabia and Turkey on one hand and Iran, on the other. Paradoxically, but not surprisingly, it appears that these states, though opposed in other areas of the world, developed an indirect common front in Bosnia.

Deborah Jeane Palfrey is walked to a news conference by her attorney Montgomery Blair Sibley in April 2007.
"I'm going to sleep on it and seek the counsel of people I trust," he says. "It's laundry day anyway, so I'm going to be washing all my soccer uniforms from this weekend."
Sibley says he likely will decide this week how to proceed and that he's infuriated the justices refused his request that they stay the restraining order covering the records.
"I'm just trying to figure out how to let the courts know they have lost personal jurisdiction of me as a result of their actions. I'm not asking them to tell us if Nixon and Elvis are still conspiring against the country. This is a legitimate question," he says.
"I'd like to be able to stand up and [release the records] on the Supreme Court steps, but maybe my interests are served by just having it 'appear' and make it more to trace back to me or the others that have it. Maybe it would give me more comfort that I wouldn't face criminal prosecution. We'll see."
In January, the then-chief judge of U.S. District Court in the nation's capital refused to allow a clerk to file Sibley's motion seeking consideration of the matter, writing he appeared to have no legal right to hold the records, as Palfrey fired him before her trial. Sibley disagrees, but his appeal to the D.C. Circuit federal appeals court yielded no action.












Comment: Putin most likely is a straight, reliable and exceptionally inventive man. He is obviously a long-term thinker and planner and has proven to be an excellent analyst and strategist.
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