Puppet Masters
The US State Department told foreign firms that the already existing restrictions on the South American nation are actually wider than on paper, the agency said on Thursday, citing three sources familiar with the matter. The demands reportedly covered any direct, indirect or barter oil trade with Caracas and those who refuse to comply with the demands may face sanctions themselves.
While some companies, including ones from European states, Russia and India, continue to deal with Caracas, an official said that the firms should be aware of "the possible risks they face by conducting business" with sanctions-hit Venezuelan state-run oil major PDVSA.
The training center, built by Russia's arms exporter, was unveiled on Friday, according to press service Rosoboronexport. The center is designed to train Venezuelan pilots to use such Russia-made hardware as Mi-17 and Mi-26 transport, Mi-35 attack helicopters and others.
"Rosoboronexport and other Russian organizations partaking in the Russian-Venezuelan military-technical cooperation, remain committed to deepening partnership with the defense ministry and other government bodies of Venezuela," the press service said. The cooperation focuses on training military personnel and servicing the supplied hardware
In a series of tweets Friday, the president wrote that he would shut down "the Border, or large sections of the Border," if Mexico does not "immediately stop ALL illegal immigration coming into the United States throug (sic) our Southern Border." He claimed closing off border crossings, key avenues for trade with a major partner, "would be a good thing!"
Trump, who has made cracking down on illegal immigration a top political priority, has said he could shut down border crossings before without following through on the threat. However, his threat Friday comes at a particularly delicate time: his administration hopes Congress will ratify a replacement of the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement by this summer.
Comment: President Trump's concerns are well-founded. ZeroHedge reports:
Mexico is bracing for the "mother of all caravans," after Interior Secretary Olga Sánchez Cordero warned on Wednesday "We have information that a new caravan is forming in Honduras, that they're calling 'the mother of all caravans,' and they are thinking it could have more than 20,000 people.""Not our problem." Mexico is begs off the issue:
The figure has been disputed by activists such as Irineo Mujica of group Pueblo Sin Fronteras, who has accompanied several caravans in Mexico and said in a statement that "there has never been a caravan of the size that Sanchez Cordero mentioned."
According to AP, past caravans have hit "very serious logistical hurdles at 7,000 - strong."Sánchez Cordero made the comments alongside US Secretary of Homeland Security earlier this week in Miami, Florida.Honduran activist Bartolo Fuentes, who accompanied a large caravan last year, dismissed the new reports as "part of the U.S. government's plans, something made up to justify their actions."
Later Thursday, Honduras' deputy foreign minister, Nelly Jerez, denied that a "mother of all caravans" was forming in her country.
"There is no indication of such a caravan," Jerez said. "This type of information promotes that people leave the country." - AP
Meanwhile, around 2,500 Central Americans and Cubans are currently making their way through Mexico's southern state of Chipas right now in yet another caravan. Last year's caravans contained up to 10,000 people at some points.
Mexico's tolerance for the caravans is wearing thin it seems, as they have stopped giving migrants humanitarian visas at the border, while some previously hospitable towns along the well-traveled route are have stopped allowing caravans to spend the night.System-wide meltdownMexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said Thursday that Mexico is doing its part to fight immigrant smuggling.
"We are going to do everything we can to help. We don't in any way want a confrontation with the U.S. government," he said. "It is legitimate that they are displeased and they voice these concerns."
Sanchez Cordero has pledged to form a police line of "containment" around Mexico's narrow Tehuantepec Isthmus to stop migrants from continuing north to the U.S. border.
The containment belt would consist of federal police and immigration agents, but such highway blockades and checkpoints have not stopped large and determined groups of migrants in the past. - AP
In a Thursday letter to the House and Senate, Homeland Secretary Nielsen made an "urgent request" for assistance to stop what she described as a tide of migrants overwhelming the border, according to CBS News.
"DHS facilities are overflowing, agents and officers are stretched too thin, and the magnitude of arriving and detained aliens has increased the risk of life-threatening incidents," wrote Nielsen - citing the increasing number of migrants arriving each month in large groups.Nielsen wrote that her "greatest concern was for the children," as Customs and Border Protection currently has over 1,200 unaccompanied children in custody. The Trump administration has been widely criticized for earlier policies towards migrant children, such as separating families and keeping minors in poorly equipped detention facilities.
Nielsen also asked for more detention facilities in her letter, a point of disagreement which nearly led to a second shutdown this year. Democrats have reasoned that capping Immigration and Customs Enforcement's detention beds would force the administration to narrow its ramped-up deportation efforts.
Nielsen said that the Department of Health and Human Services would require more emergency resources such as medical and legal assistance to handle the influx of children. She also asked that Congress grant more authority to DHS to return unaccompanied migrant children from Central America to their countries, saying that putting these minors in the custody of sponsors in the U.S. becomes a "pull" factor for more migrants to make the trip north. -CBS News
"Let me be clear: the journey of any migrant -- especially at the hands of a smuggler or trafficker -- is not a safe one," reads the letter. "We must be able to come together on a bipartisan basis to take action."
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador wants US President Donald Trump to stop blaming Mexico for the US' illegal immigrant problem, pointing out that fewer Mexicans than ever are crossing the border illegally.
"Migration flows of Mexicans to the United States are very low," Lopez Obrador said during a news conference. "The Mexican is no longer seeking work in the United States. The majority are inhabitants of our fellow Central American countries."
"This is a problem of the United States, or it's a problem of the Central American countries," Lopez Obrador said, adding that he very much wanted to work with Trump to stem the northward flow of humans, and that he would focus on "addressing the root causes" of illegal immigration. But "it's not up to us Mexicans" to stop inhabitants of Central America from leaving home.

Still from video of 'jihadists' training in in full-NATO gear in Belgium in 2014, ahead of their deployment for head-chopping missions to Syria
Militants, occupying large parts of the Syrian province of Idlib are readying a false flag attack involving chemical weaponry, the head of the Russian Centre for Reconciliation in Syria, Major General Viktor Kupchishin said on Friday.
The attack is being prepared in close cooperation between operatives of Belgian and French secret services and terrorist groups, including the rebranded Syrian Al-Qaeda offshoot - Hayyat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS, previously known as Al-Nusra Front). Apart from them, the "pseudo-humanitarian," as the General put it, White Helmets group is also taking part in preparations.
Comment: This is interesting in two respects: it shows how 'the Western Order' is hydra-like and can maneuver through any number of front organizations, and it shows what close control Western security services have over 'Islamist' terrorists.
Whatever about France, even tiny Belgium has been running 'jihadist' training camps in its forests.
In a perfect world, the Leavers would be celebrating their wish come true today, shaking hands and toasting the newfound independence of Great Britain from the money-sucking, overreaching bureaucracy of Brussels. Sure, there'd be some caveats - bad divorces tend to hit one in the pocket - but nothing that this resilient nation couldn't handle.
Remainers might have shed a tear or two before moving on. After all, their opponents had won the referendum fair and square, and democracy is supposed to resolve issues at the ballot box instead of causing riots and civil wars.
Back to reality, Brexit Day has been postponed until at least April 12. Instead of saying goodbyes and see-you-agains to people on the continent, British legislators are franticly voting for a third iteration of the Brexit deal. If approved, it would postpone the departure day by 40 more days, which hopefully would be enough for parting ways with the EU with a semblance of order. Earlier, MPs rejected all alternative options that the government suggested on how to move forward.
Comment: We told you they would never leave.
So, what next?
Nigel Farage: 'Only a revolution can save British politics now'

An Ultra-Orthodox Jew prays outside the Tomb of the Patriarchs or the Ibrahimi Mosque in the divided West Bank city of al-Khalil (Hebron), on June 29, 2017.
Ola Awad, the president of the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), announced the grim news in a report carried by the Palestinian Ma'an news agency on Thursday, the eve of the 43rd anniversary of the Land Day.
In late March of 1976, Israeli troops killed six Palestinians, wounded 100 others and detained hundreds more who had held peaceful demonstrations against Israel's confiscation of 21,000 dunams (5,189 acres) of their land.
Palestinians, both at home and overseas, have been marking the event known as the Land Day with rallies and remembrance ever since.
Comment: Israel isn't just stealing Palestinian land, it's committing a slow genocide of its people:
- March of Return: Israel's Officially Sanctioned Use of Deadly Force Against Palestinians Delivers Deadly Blow to Its Credibility
- Colluding in war crimes: Britain's unreported military alliance with Israel
- Spain's third largest city endorses pro-Palestinian BDS, Podemos leader calls Israel a "criminal country"
- The Truth Perspective: Match Made in Heaven: The Surprising Similarities Between Radical Islam and Talmudic Judaism
- NewsReal: Israeli-French Deception Downs Russian Spy Plane Off Syria, US Escalates 'Regime Change' Against Iran
- Behind the Headlines: World in Chaos: Anti-Russia Hysteria, Israel Murders Palestinians, US Leaving Syria?

Russian-American lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin (R) arrives at the Capitol for a closed door meeting with the House Intelligence Committee November 13, 2017 in Washington, DC.
Comment: Newsflash: that 'mysterious' meeting has been demystified. It was a 'normal' get-dirt-on-your-opponent meeting.
"The Special Counsel investigation has taken a very heavy toll on me and my family. It hit me hard financially and has led to baseless personal attacks. As a result, my ability to earn a living has been impaired, my professional standing has been undermined, and my personal relationships have suffered," he told Fox News in a statement. "To say nothing of the emotional toll on my family."
Special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into alleged Russian interference during the 2016 presidential contest ended Friday and a summary said it concluded there was "no collusion" between Trump and Moscow, but did not determine whether or not there had been obstruction of justice.
Comment: If there was no collusion, what was there to obstruct?
Even though the report itself has not been made public, there is much speculation as to what might be exposed about the much-hyped Trump Tower meeting, which came after music manager Rob Goldstone reached out to Donald Trump Jr. to set up the closed-door gathering, reportedly pledging damaging information on Hillary Clinton, along with discussions regarding the Magnitsky Act, which imposes sanctions on individuals and businesses accused of violating human rights.
Comment: Now there's a mystery worth solving: what is the Magnitsky Act? How did it come to pass? And who is behind it?
Comment: See also:
- Add one more thing to Bill Browder's resume - Criminal mastermind
- Russian prosecutors: 'Highly likely' that Magnitsky was poisoned by toxic chemicals on Bill Browder's orders
- Bill Browder tries to shut down film about his $230 million theft from Russia and how he left Magnitsky to die in prison
Recycling is "greatly under threat," the Australian Council of Recycling has warned, pointing to the closure of Asian markets. Last December India imported 13 percent of Australia's total waste exports.
"We are back to where we started with the China crisis, but worse because we have fewer alternative markets," the council's chief executive Peter Shmigel said, as cited by the Sydney Morning Herald.
Nations across the globe have been suffering from waste build-up after China stopped importing recyclable garbage last year. The country's ban on imports of 24 types of solid waste materials has led to a severe recycling industry overload.
Statistics showed Australia's waste exports to China declined by 41 percent in the last financial year. Meanwhile, overall waste exports by Australia increased by five percent since then.
Comment: That moment when you realize the last 4 decades of 'recycling to save the planet' was actually about dumping all your waste in poor countries. Another Big Lie busted.
Well, those countries aren't so poor anymore, so now Westerners will have to 'clean their own damn room' before lecturing others about polluting the planet.
I'd never gotten involved with Reporters Without Borders (RWB), so I wanted to reply at first that I can not comment. Then I researched only a few minutes and found that this is a very exciting topic.
Whenever I want to find out about an organization, I always look first at who finances it. And if that has been your habit, over time, you know the most interesting financiers. And so, after just a minute of research, I found out that the Reporters Without Borders are funded by Soros, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the French state, and other state sponsors. It was clear to me right then how to classify the RWB. And that's what I want to show:
Who finances it?
How do they work?
How and by what criteria do they create their ranking of press freedom, in which, for example, Germany is at the top and Russia at the bottom?
They rate themselves. IN RWB's own words: "Reporters Without Borders has sent a comprehensive questionnaire to hundreds of experts on every continent, including its own network of correspondents, representatives of partner organizations and journalists, academics, lawyers and human rights activists. However, this is not a representative survey based on scientific criteria.The hardest question is the question of funding. The word "transparency" is incredibly often found on the RWG site, but the organization is completely non-transparent, especially when it comes to who finances it. The annual report of the German section of the RWB lists the income on page 28. Of a total of 1.5 million, 632,000 came from donations. But you can not see who donated how much. In addition, there are 600,000 from the German state (Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation) and 180,000 from membership fees, although it is not clear who paid how much. This means that 40% of the funding is from the German state and another 55% of the money is from you don't know who. There is an indication on page 31 of the annual report, where the supporters for projects are mentioned and that is a Who's Who list of German media companies.
With the umbrella organization of the RWB in France, the transparency does not look any better. Here it is also concealed about who paid how much.
In the annual report on page 26, there are at least the sponsors' logos. These include the EU, a fund set up by the French government, the Swedish Development Cooperation Agency, a fund owned by the Ebay founder or the Adessium fund. About Adessium there is little to learn, the fund is committed in its own words for an "open society" (i.e, Soros) and seems to receive half of its money from the Dutch state and half from other EU countries. Obviously, the Reporters Without Borders are living massively on the subject of state support from various channels and not donations.
That has always seemed like that, because the few reports of their funding that can be found always showed the same picture. Interestingly, their funding does show up at all in the mainstream media, but some alternative media have reported on it from time to time, in which the NED has been repeatedly cited as a sponsor. The NED, for those who do not know it, was founded under Ronald Reagan and since then has been doing "what the CIA used to do," as founder Weinstein once said in an interview. The NED is funded by the US Department of State and is designed to bring "democracy" into the world by promoting forces in other countries to make a US-friendly policy.
Comment: No. It's "you are free... TO DO AS WE TELL YOU."
- RSP: Reporters Without Principles?
- Western 'freedom of press' plagued by double standards
- So much for 'press freedom': Reporters Without Borders demands cancellation of press event critical of White Helmets
- Swiss Press Club gives floor to critics of White Helmets despite censorship demands from Reporters without Borders
- 'Press-freedom' lapdogs don't think it's appropriate to comment on RT's registration as foreign agent
- RT editor-in-chief asks Reporters Without Borders to clarify who 'enemies of journalism' are
- Freedom from the press? Criminals Browder and Khodorkovsky bar Ruptly video agency from conference
WikiLeaks wrote on Twitter Wednesday: "... March 28, marks one year that WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange has been illegally gagged from doing journalism - any writing that expresses a 'political opinion' - even on his own treatment, after pressure from the U.S. on Ecuador."
On this date in 2018 Moreno imposed on Assange what Human Rights Watch's legal counsel Dinah Pokempner described as looking "more and more like solitary confinement." Moreno cut off Assange's online access and restricted visitors to the Ecuador embassy in London where Assange has had legal political asylum since 2012.
Moreno cited Assange's critical social media remarks about Ecuador's allies, the U.S. and Spain. Assange's near-total isolation, with the exception of visits from legal counsel during week days, has been augmented by the Ecuadorian government's imposition of a complex "protocol," which, although eased slightly in recent months in respect of visits allowed, has not improved Assange's overall status over the last 12 months. In some respects, it seems to have worsened.














Comment: If the US has learned anything from Syria it should be clear that it's lost this one - but sanity rarely prevails in the US administration:
- Russia gives US a red line in Venezuela then pulls a Syria: S-300 missile batteries now up and active near Caracas
- More US sanctions won't make Russia reverse stance on Venezuela - Zakharova
- Russian authorities have a 'two-punch plan' to help the Venezuelan people
Also check out SOTT radio's:NewsReal: US Regime Change Operation in Venezuela - This Time It's Legit?