Puppet Masters
"They [Pyongyang] are ready to talk, however the [North] Korean side has its own condition - it should be recognized as a nuclear power," Vitaly Pashin, a member of the Russian delegation, told news agencies upon their return. The North is now ready to negotiate with Washington "under parity terms" with the participation of Russia as a third party, he added.
North Korea is capable of hitting any target in the US with its warheads "at any moment," according to Pashin, who is also a member of the Russian State Duma. Pyongyang claims that it was forced to be aggressive and, following the launch of the ballistic missile, Pyongyang now feels safe. It would never abandon its nuclear program, North Korean officials told the Russian delegation.
Radio Sputnik: How realistic are the plans to create a unifying system for gold trade within the BRICS region?
David Gibson: I think it's very realistic. I mean, even there were no detailed plans announced, there's no reason why it can't be done, as gold has been used historically as an instrument of trade for centuries. So it's just a case of waiting to hear the details, but it's very achievable.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) and Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan (R).
Every now and then people are exposed to the thoroughly debunked fake news story that's been circulating for the past couple of years claiming that Pakistan agreed to deploy its military forces to Yemen in support of the Saudi-led war on the country. Nothing of the sort ever happened because Islamabad refused to get directly involved in the war due to its sectarian implications and the quagmire-like risk that it entails, instead settling for a "compromise" agreement to dispatch some of its forces to protect the Two Holy Mosques in Saudi Arabia in the event that they ever come under attack from Yemeni-based fighters.
Since the Houthi National Liberation Movement harbors no such sacrilegious intentions, the announcement was essentially a face-saving way for Pakistan to politely resist the joint Saudi-Emirati pressure to get tangled up in this conflict as a de-facto mercenary force while still symbolically showing that it doesn't outright reject its historic partnership with these two Gulf States.
Comment: India seems to play all sides against the middle, meaning little fealty to any particular entity at any particular time. See also:
- India nixes 'flagship' missile deal with Israel
- Whose side is Narenda Modi on?
- China and India: Dragon and Elephant tiptoe a tango, iron out critical agreements
- India deploying hundreds of main battle tanks along border with Pakistan
- India has lost the plot, says it's ready for war with China AND Pakistan
The attack comes after shells were fired from Gaza, allegedly by the group Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine. However, Israeli officials later claimed that Hamas would be blamed nevertheless as Tel Aviv holds the group responsible for virtually any activity in Gaza.
At present, Hamas and Fatah are still working to implement a power-sharing agreement which would see political and security authorities in Gaza handed from Hamas to the Palestinian Authority.
Gaza remains imperilled by one of the worst humanitarian situations on the planet with fresh foods and medicine becoming ever scarcer. Egypt had previously agreed to open the Rafah Border Crossing which would allow for new deliveries of much needed supplies, but the gates have remained shut ever since the large terrorist attack in Sinai which claimed the lives of over 300. It is still not clear who is responsible for the attack with some fingers being pointed and ISIS and others at the Muslim Brotherhood.
Tel Aviv's last war on Gaza was in 2014 and ended in a stalemate.
Comment: Israel is ramping up its aggression, this time Gaza.
A mother's 30-year missions to uncover the truth about what happened to her son's in 1987 has led a federal judge to order an urgent review of several tightly guarded government documents about the Clintons and other high-level government officials.
On August 23, 1987, two boys were found dead on a railroad tracks near Mena. The bodies were Kevin Ives, 17 years old and his friend, Don Henry, 16 years old. Their deaths at the time were ruled accidental by Clinton-appointed state medical examiner, Dr. Fahmy Malak.
In the 80's, Mena was used for one of the busiest drug smuggling in operations in the world in what eventually became known as the Iran-Contra scandal. Key operatives in Iran-Contra were George Bush, Oliver North, Dewey Clarridge, John Pointdexter and Caspar Weinberger. The entire operation however, would have to have bi-partisan efforts. This would require the cooperation of former CIA operative and then Governor, Bill Clinton.
Comment: The government elites' defiance of law, coverups and compromise of the justice system continue to protect them at the expense of innocent lives, exemplified by this tragic case of 30 years ago. It is the same today as then.
On Thursday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) called to delay the next vote on their version of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act until 11:00 am Friday, as Republicans make final changes to ensure they have the votes.
McCain, who was considered to be a key holdout, released a statement, saying that he would support the bill. McCain called the bill "far from perfect," but said that it would "enhance American competitiveness, boost the economy, and provide long overdue tax relief for middle-class families."
However, even with McCain's vote, Republicans can't afford to lose more than two votes from their caucus, or the bill fails.
The Military-Industrial Complex has loomed over America ever since President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned of its growing influence during his prescient farewell address on Jan. 17, 1961. The Vietnam War followed shortly thereafter, and its bloody consequences cemented the image of the Military-Industrial Complex (MIC) as a faceless cadre of profit-seeking warmongers who've wrested control of the foreign policy. That was certainly borne out by the war's utter senselessness ... and by tales of profiteering by well-connected contractors like Brown & Root.
Over five decades, four major wars and a dozen-odd interventions later, we often talk about the Military-Industrial Complex as if we're referring to a nefarious, flag-draped Death Star floating just beyond the reach of helpless Americans who'd generally prefer that war was not, as the great Gen. Smedley Darlington Butler aptly put it, little more than a money-making "racket."
The feeling of powerlessness that the MIC engenders in "average Americans" makes a lot of sense if you just follow the money coming out of Capitol Hill. The Project on Government Oversight (POGO) tabulated all "defense-related spending" for both 2017 and 2018, and it hit nearly $1.1 trillion for each of the two years. The "defense-related" part is important because the annual National Defense Authorization Act, a.k.a. the defense budget, doesn't fully account for all the various forms of national security spending that gets peppered around a half-dozen agencies.
The Nobel laureate economist, Joseph Stiglitz of Columbia University, appeared on Bloomberg television yesterday and had this to say about Bitcoin:
"One of the main functions of government is to create currency. And Bitcoin is successful only because of its potential for circumvention, lack of oversight. So it seems to me it ought to be outlawed. It doesn't serve any socially useful function."Consider the remarks Stiglitz made yesterday to our more detailed assessment along the same lines back in 2014. We wrote:
"The business writers at Reuters are also dead wrong on Bitcoin being like other currencies whose 'value depends on people's confidence in it.' Let's take the U.S. dollar. Backing the use of the U.S. dollar as a world currency is the following: a Congress made up of 435 Representatives in the House and 100 Senators in the Senate; 535 people elected from all over the United States who have the power to tax the income of every American receiving wage, dividend, interest or even Social Security income at whatever rate they see fit in order to pay the Nation's bills and debt obligations to other countries.
Comment: Decentralization? Instant transactions? Transparency? Time will tell if Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies don't serve "any socially useful function". See also:
- Bitcoin breaks another record, this time hitting $10,000 - UPDATE: Now $11k!
- Hackers scouring web for unsecured cryptocurrency wallets as Bitcoin predicted to reach $40,000
- Kim Dotcom shares his vision of a perfect cryptocurrency
- Max Keiser: Bitcoin crushing US dollar & governments can do nothing to stop it
"It's laughable. It's laughable," Tillerson said on Friday, when asked by reporters if Trump is planning to replace him with Pompeo. The rumor was first reported by the New York Times on Thursday, citing an anonymous sources in the White House.
Comment: Neither the NY Times nor "anonymous sources" are good sources of information for the discerning reader.
Tillerson's comment came during an appearance at the State Department with Libyan Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj. Al-Sarraj's visit to Washington includes meetings with President Trump and Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis. Mattis also denied the reports about Tillerson on Thursday, saying, "I make nothing of it, there's nothing to it."
Trump was not as direct when asked about Tillerson's position. When asked about it during a Thursday meeting with the Bahraini crown prince, the president responded, "He's here. Rex is here."

Alfred William McCoy is the J.R.W. Smail Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
"The American Empire could collapse almost overnight"
"If it comes to a military crunch," the historian tells the journalist, "we could lose."













Comment: Trump's turn.