Puppet Masters
Speaking at the Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) on Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the Far East has received more than 600 billion rubles (over $9 billion) in investments since 2015.
Putin highlighted improving infrastructure conditions, saying that the modernization of 40 airports will be completed by 2024.
The president also said that Chinese partners are the largest investors in the region's economy and called on foreign investors to examine the vast opportunities.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif speaks during a press conference in Tehran, Iran on 5 August 2019
In a tweet, Zarif compared the US and its Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to a jail warden: "Ask for reprieve (waiver), get thrown in solitary for the audacity. Ask again and you might end up in the gallows." The only way to relieve the effects of the US sanctions which he called economic terrorism "is to decide to finally free yourself from the hangman's noose."
Yesterday, the US blacklisted a network of firms, ships and individuals which it said deal in "oil for terror" and are directed by or linked to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). The blacklisting was in retaliation to the alleged continued supply of oil worth hundreds of millions of dollars to Syria, which is a direct breach of sanctions by the US and European Union (EU).
Comment: It's an interesting comparison considering how the corruption and barbarity in the US 'justice' system is similarly reflected its foreign policy.
See also:
- 'We Are The Vaccine Against The Cancer of Unilateralism' - Delegates From 120 Nations Meet in Venezuela to Plot Escape From U$ Hegemony
- Starvation sanctions are worse than overt warfare
- US sanctions Iranian tanker released by Gibraltar & blacklists captain, threatens "anyone providing support"

A cashier displays the new 2000 Indian rupee banknotes inside a bank in Jammu.
The announcement marks the first time New Delhi has offered a line of credit to any specific region of any country.
"In order to continue and help develop the Far East, India will provide a $1 billion credit line. This is a completely unprecedented measure when we provide such a special credit line to another country," Modi said during his speech at the Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) in Vladivostok.
Thousands implicated in secret Jeffrey Epstein files, Ghislaine Maxwell fighting to keep them sealed
The documents, some 10,000 of them, were part of a 2015 lawsuit by Virginia Giuffre Roberts, Epstein's 'sex slave', who sued him and Ghislaine Maxwell, a British socialite who many of Epstein's victims say was his madam.
They settled their lawsuit in 2017 and the case docket was made private, keeping all the allegations secret.
In August, in light of the pedophile's arrest on human trafficking charges, an appeals court ordered that any pages of the case files which represented public interest should no longer be kept secret.
The presidential candidate made the comments on Wednesday at a climate town hall on CNN after he was asked by an attendee about rising populations and how the planet "can not sustain this growth."
The questioner, identified by CNN as a teacher named Martha Readyoff, said that she realized linking population control to climate was a topic "poisonous for politicians, but it's crucial to face."

December 1950: Security guards on duty outside the Pentagon in Washington.
From Bloomberg over Labor Day weekend:
Fake news and social media posts are such a threat to U.S. security that the Defense Department is launching a project to repel "large-scale, automated disinformation attacks," as the top Republican in Congress blocks efforts to protect the integrity of elections.One of the Pentagon's most secretive agencies, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), is developing "custom software that can unearth fakes hidden among more than 500,000 stories, photos, video and audio clips."
Once upon a time, when progressives still reflexively distrusted the military, DARPA was a liberal punchline, known for helping invent the Internet but also for developing lunatic privacy-invading projects like LifeLog, a program to "gather in a single place just about everything an individual says, sees, or does."
DARPA now is developing a semantic analysis program called "SemaFor" and an image analysis program called "MediFor," ostensibly designed to prevent the use of fake images or text. The idea would be to develop these technologies to help private Internet providers sift through content.
It's the latest in a string of stories about new methods of control over information flow that should, but for some reason do not, horrify every working journalist.
Comment: See also:
- US unleashes military to fight fake news and disinformation
- 'Fake news' a bigger threat than terrorism, poll finds - but what exactly is it?
- Microsoft's Newsguard marks fake news stories as credible if they spread mainstream narrative
- Atlantic Council - the four person NATO-funded team who advises Facebook on "propaganda"
- We have the power to create our own (more objective) narratives using critical thinking and communicating with one another
First a confession: I despise the British State. As an anti-imperialist, I consider it to be a stain on this world, whose malign history and role predates the EU by around 400 years.
It means that on a certain level the crisis to bedevil the UK over Brexit has been a joy to behold, witnessing it spend the past three years twisting and turning as it's exposed to the stark reality of its status as a second-rate power underpinned by anti-democratic semi-feudal institutions - i.e. the monarchy, Privy Council, House of Lords, and a judiciary which with its wigs, stockings, cloaks and arcane rituals is the perfect embodiment of a 19th-century theme park masquerading as a 21st-century state.
The country's newly-installed Prime Minister Boris Johnson breezed into Downing Street in the wake of the ignominious departure of his predecessor Theresa May, unleashing the fabricated buffoonery, synthetic bonhomie, and studied dynamism of a man who's spent far too many night bingeing on the writings and speeches of Winston Churchill, inspiring him to pledge to the nation the delivery of a hard no-deal (no future) Brexit, no matter what.
Comment: See also:
- Give up, get used to it, Brexiteers: There will be no leaving the EU
- No-deal Brexit block eliminates all excuses for an election delay, given no 'dramatic turn of events'
- Bojo loses control of Commons, plans to call a general election, Brexit may be delayed till 2020
- Britain must settle EU bill even after no-deal Brexit, EU prepared to facilitate 'alternative'

An Ultra-Orthodox Jewish man walks past an electoral billboard with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem
The outcome may prove a moment of truth for the shrinking secular right as it comes up once again against an ever-more powerful camp that fuses religion with ultra-nationalism.
Will the secular right emerge with enough political weight to act as a power-broker in the post-election negotiations, or can the religious right form a government without any support from the secular parties? That is what the election will determine.
An earlier election in April, which failed to produce a decisive result between these two camps, nonetheless confirmed the right's absolute dominance. The Zionist centre-left parties, including the founding Labor party, were routed, securing between them just 10 seats in the 120-member parliament.
Comment: Whether secular - or religious - it's clear that the thrust of Israel's major political forces are aimed at pepetuating the status quo of Palestinian subjugation, territorial expansion and wars of aggression in the Middle East. Just pick your flavor of genocidal and suicidal madness.
To gain greater insight into the virulent and toxic mindset that plagues so many Israelis and Jews around the world, listen to this interview with Israel Shahak, the author of Jewish History, Jewish Religion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years.
Israel Shahak (Hebrew: ישראל שחק; born Himmelstaub, April 28, 1933 -- July 2, 2001) was a Polish-born Israeli professor of chemistry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, known especially as a radical political thinker, author, and civil rights activist. Between 1970-1990, he was president of the Israeli League for Human and Civil Rights and was an outspoken critic of the Israeli government. Shahak's writings on Judaism have been a source of widespread controversy.
Born in Warsaw, Poland,[1] Shahak was the youngest child of a cultured, religious, pro-Zionist, Ashkenazi Jewish family.[2] During German occupation of Poland, his family was forced into the Warsaw Ghetto. His brother escaped and joined the Royal Air Force. His mother paid a poor Catholic family to hide him, but when her money ran out he was returned. In 1943 he and his family were sent to the Poniatowa concentration camp, near Lublin, where his father died. Israel and his mother managed to escape and returned to Warsaw, but within the year, they were both sent to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Shahak was liberated from the camp in 1945, and shortly thereafter emigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine, where he wanted to join a kibbutz, but was turned down as "too weedy".[3]
From age 12, Shahak cared for and provided economic support for his mother who survived the Nazi camp in a very poor physical condition. After a period of learning in a religious boarding school in Kfar Hassidim, he moved with his mother to Tel Aviv. After graduating from high school, Shahak served in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in an elite regiment.[4] After completing service with the IDF, he attended Hebrew University where he received his doctorate in chemistry. He became an assistant to Ernst David Bergmann.[5]
In 1961, Shahak left Israel for the United States to study as a postdoctoral student at Stanford University. He returned two years later to become a teacher and researcher in chemistry at Hebrew University, where he remained until his retirement in 1990. He published many scientific papers, mostly on organic fluorine compounds.[6] After the 1967 Six-Day War and the ensuing occupation, Shahak became critical of Israel's treatment of Palestinians,[4] a supporter of a Palestinian state, and wrote many articles and several books outlining his views of Israeli society and Judaism. In his later years, Shahak lived in the Rehavia neighborhood of Jerusalem. He died in Jerusalem at age 68 due to complications from diabetes and was buried in the Givat Shaul cemetery.[4] In an obituary published in The Nation, Christopher Hitchens wrote that Shahak's home was "a library of information about the human rights.....He became a well-known activist in international circles, co-authoring papers and giving joint speaking engagements with American political dissident Noam Chomsky, and winning plaudits from Jean Paul Sartre, Gore Vidal, Christopher Hitchens and Edward Said.
A US State Department spokesperson has in an interview with the Washington Free Beacon media outlet confirmed reports claiming that Washington has been offering the captains of Iranian transport vessels to surrender their ships in exchange for hard cash. The offers were made under a 1984 programme called "Rewards for Justice", aimed at disrupting Tehran's crude exports, the department said.
"The Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps' Quds Force is directing near monthly shipments of Iranian petroleum products, each worth tens of millions of dollars, to Syria and elsewhere to fund terrorist and militant activity across the Middle East", the State Department spokesperson claimed.
Comment: Apparently the US was serious, and not just about oil deliveries.
Not all sweetness and light from Brian Hook though :
Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif was quick to condemn the move:
More from the Financial Times article:
The US effort to warn mariners about working with Iran comes as it looks for novel ways to pressure Tehran after imposing a raft of harsh sanctions during the past year.Yahoo! News reports:
The US official said Washington intended to start focusing even more on enforcement and would offer inducements to urge captains and crew to co-operate, while also threatening to revoke their US visas, which would prevent them from entering US waters, if they did not co-operate. "We are trying to dry up their labour pool to move illicit oil," said the official.
US authorities said that Kumar, 43, took over as captain in Gibraltar. After he apparently did not respond to the US offer, the Treasury Department on Friday imposed sanctions both on the ship and on Kumar himself, freezing any assets he may have in the United States and criminalizing any US financial transactions with him.
American public opinion was the key, and the ability to shape it in some ways cut to the very heart of Netanyahu's political persona. He said:
"In the last 30 years, I appeared innumerable times in the American media and met thousands of American leaders. I developed a certain ability to influence public opinion, and that is the most important thing: the ability to sway public opinion in the United States against the regime in Iran."












Comment: See also: