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One blowback to Brexit may be giving up the idea of regime change in Syria

brexit
Even long before the British people decided to leave the European Union on June 23, we already knew that something was terribly wrong with the bloc, and that it had something to do with the Syria blowback and the subsequent refugee crisis. We just didn't know its social, economic, and political consequences would be so immense.

What started as a gambit by the War Party in Washington and its NATO partners in Brussels to regime change Syria - to be used as a lever to bargain with Iran and Russia for a few more regional designs and venal status quo - has metastasized into an astonishing social, economic and political earthquake about the disintegration of the European Union as we know it.

Mind you, it was Iran's Leader Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei who had warned some five years ago that the US-led campaign to regime change Syria could have serious consequences not only for the Middle East but the EU and the West in its entirety ( although the Western neoliberal establishment never paid any attention).

True, Brexit proved that it's economy, but it also proved that it's regime change wars, immigration, and the Syrian refugee crisis that forced the Brits to say no to the EU.

Sherlock

Does Washington fear a Brexit could undermine its anti-Russian policy?

ukraine protests
© Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
Anti-Russia demonstrators gather outside the White House while Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko meets with U.S. President Barack Obama in Washington
Britain's stunning referendum vote to leave the European Union has thrown a cat among the pigeons, not least in Washington, where it is feared that the "Brexit" could scupper its anti-Russian policy.

That tacit policy is a foundation of the postwar international order whereby Washington - thanks to its trusty British acolyte - has been able to exert hegemony over Europe. Nearly seven decades of American transatlantic domination are at risk of crumbling.

The unscheduled, hasty visit by US Secretary of State John Kerry to Brussels followed by London on Monday is a sure sign that Washington is alarmed at the historic decision by the British electorate to quit the EU - after 43-year membership of the bloc.

"Kerry urges Britain, EU to manage their divorce responsibly," was how American news outlet ABC reported the diplomat's detour. The outlet went on to say with a pretense of chivalry that Kerry's concern was "for the sake of global markets and citizens".

More to the point, Washington's perplexity is specific and self-serving. In particular, the loss of British influence inside the EU will impact on Washington's carefully constructed policy of trying to isolate Russia. American objectives to isolate Russia go much further back than the past two years over Ukraine. Indeed, one can trace the anti-Russia policy to immediately after the Second World War, a policy that was intimately shared by the British establishment, as expressed by Winston Churchill in his famous 1946 "Iron Curtain" speech, marking the onset of the Cold War against the West's erstwhile wartime Soviet ally.

Snakes in Suits

Pass the sick bag: Albanian city erects Killary monument

clinton monument
© Ruptly
US presidential elections are still months away, but a city in Albania has already erected a monument to Hillary Clinton. Another Albanian city already has a statue of George W. Bush, while Bill Clinton was honored by a statue in Albanian-held Kosovo.

A bust of Hillary Clinton was unveiled Thursday in Sarandë, a tourist town of some 20,000 people in southern Albania. The monument is intended to represent Clinton "as a woman in politics, as a representative of the old Albania-US friendship, for her contribution to the Albanian nation in different historical moments," the city authorities said, according to AP.

The monument was a way of thanking the "American people and government for what they have done for the Albanian people and nation," said Florjana Koka, mayor of Sarandë, specifically citing Clinton's involvement with the Albanian community in the US, and her advocacy on behalf of ethnic Albanians in the Serbian province of Kosovo.

"Clinton gives us the model of women in politics, diplomacy and governing at the most democratic country in the world,"said Koka.

Comment: The Albanians are either deluded or they think that by prostrating themselves before the Empire that they will receive some sort of special treatment. The reality is that the US will use anyone to further their goals of world domination. The have used the countries in Eastern Europe as pawns in their geopolitical games against Russia. See:


Yoda

Putin: Russia will respond accordingly if Finland joins NATO

putin niinisto
© Alexei Druzhinin / Sputnik
July 1, 2016. Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and President of Finland Sauli Niinisto meet in Naantali
Russia will respond accordingly if neighboring Finland joins NATO, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said. However, he added that Moscow will try to begin a dialogue with NATO despite its expansion towards Russia's borders.

"The Finnish president came up with the proposals today on the first steps aimed at enhancing confidence and preventing conflicts [in the Baltic airspace]. I have already said that I agree with this. We will try to begin the dialogue with NATO at the summit in Brussels," Putin said on Friday.

Putin and Finnish President Sauli Niinisto agreed to develop a set of security measures to control flights over the Baltic Sea. Finland's president said military flights should avoid turning off their identification devices in the region, which is frequented by both Russian and NATO planes.

"We all know the risk with these flights and I have suggested that we should agree that transponders are used on all flights in the Baltic Sea region," Niinisto said.

Books

Strategy of subversion: U.S. is using universities as weapons to undermine Russia and China

fulbright university vietnam
The early 19th Century saw the development of an international competition between the British and Russian Empires over control and influence in Islamic Central Asia: Afghanistan, Persia, and the khanates south of Russia. This more than century-long struggle, popularized by the likes of Rudyard Kipling, among others, became a cornerstone of the foreign policy of both empires who saw in each other mortal threats to their own power. And so, with seemingly everything at stake, they engaged in various forms of political intrigue, geopolitical posturing, and strategic subversion. The Great Game, in no small part, helped to shape modern Asia.

Today we see a similar competition emerging between a truly global empire led by the United States, and the emerging global power China, with Russia playing a critical, though secondary, role. But in today's globalized political and economic landscape, the competition is not restricted solely to Central Asia. Indeed, as many political observers have noted these last two decades, increasingly the focus has turned to Southeast Asia, a region seen as one of the main drivers of the global economy.

And so, it is both Southeast and Central Asia where the US is employing soft power to counter the influence of China whose economic development initiatives have made it the single most important player on the continent. This political sea change has ushered in a new approach from Washington which seeks to use academia, and education more broadly, as a critical lever of US power: political, economic, and cultural.

The University as a Weapon in Vietnam

President Obama's recent visit to Vietnam was seen as a momentous occasion by many who interpreted the President's appearance as a signal that Vietnam was finally being allowed to fully normalize its relations with the US, and the West generally. Much ink was devoted in the New York Times and other beacons of the corporate media to the fact that the arms embargo, a relic of the bygone era of US military hostility against the people of Vietnam, will be fully lifted, allowing Vietnam to become a customer of the US and western military-industrial complex. While undoubtedly a boon to the likes of Raytheon, Lockheed, and other weapons manufacturers, the true motives for Washington were less about profit than about expanding influence in a region seen by China as within its sphere of influence.

But military weapons are only part of the true arsenal at Washington's disposal. Indeed, perhaps equally potent is the establishment of the first private, western-style university in the country: Fulbright University Vietnam.

Vader

Whitewash: Obama to announce number of civilians killed by drones, but will leave out casualties in areas where US Empire has declared war

drone
© US Air Force / Lt Col Leslie Pratt / Wikipedia
President Barack Obama is expected to announce the number of civilians killed by "illegal" US drone strikes Friday, but only in countries where the world's biggest military hasn't officially declared war.

Several news outlets reported, citing leaks from US officials, that the number is expected to be just 100, a tiny fraction of those estimated by investigative journalists and human rights groups who track the "violations of international law."


Comment: There is nothing objective about this announcement. It is strictly a cynical PR-move to make it look like the Obama administration cares about human life and is being open about its actions. The reality is, it doesn't care and isn't open. The US Empire routinely kills innocent civilians as a matter of business. Until they are held responsible and arrested for their war crimes, they will continue to mercilessly kill innocents around the globe to further their imperial agenda of global hegemonic control.


The White House will only reveal civilian casualties in countries that are technically not at a US battlefield, like Libya, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen.

Those killed by US drone strikes in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria will not be featured in the total. The US has deployed thousands of drones in these countries.

Jennifer Gibson from the human rights organization Reprieve, which has brought drone survivors to the US to testify, estimates more than 4,000 people have been killed by drones including hundreds of children and said the Obama administration's estimation of casualties "is unlikely to be worth the paper it's printed on."

Comment: See also:


Bulb

Austria joins list of European countries who favor ending anti-Russian sanctions

Christian Kern

Christian Kern during his swearing-in ceremony in May.
Brexit continues to have far-reaching consequences, among which is the potential for normalised relations with Russia. Austria is seeking a leading role in this push. EurActiv Germany reports.

The alpine republic's government met in full in Vienna on Monday (27 June) to discuss the ramifications of the Brexit vote. Austria's new chancellor, Christian Kern, and his Minister for Foreign Affairs, Sebastian Kurz, emphasised that the EU must now act quickly to reassert itself. To this end, the focus has to be on security, migration, growth, employment, investment and the environment.

Special attention also has to be paid to Russia. Members from three of the country's parties, the SPÖ, ÖVP and the Greens voted in favour of submitting an application to change the nature of the sanctions in place against Russia and in favour of a graduated model.

Comment: Italy, France, Germany: Europe's anti-Russian sanctions appear to be coming to an end


Pistol

Bahrain: Eliminate pro-democracy protesters via US arms purchases, Saudi/Takfiri/Daesh death squads

bahrain police
© www.presstv.ir
Bahraini police clash with anti-regime protesters.
The Obama administration's troubling arms trade and military relationship with the oppressive regime is being questioned by the US Senate, but a change in policy is unlikely. On Wednesday, a bipartisan group of US Senators called on the State Department to reconsider military aid to Bahrain, citing the deteriorating state of human rights in the country following an escalation in crackdowns against pro-democracy demonstrations that have been ongoing for five years.

The letter, from Senators Marco Rubio (R-FL), Chris Murphy (D-CT), Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Tim Kaine (D-VA) comes in the wake of a June 21 State Department report to Congress that blasted the Bahraini monarchy for its wanton aggression against peaceful civilians. "The lack of due process and the criminalization of the exercise of free expression continue to undermine the progress Bahrain has made since 2011," said State Department spokesman John Kirby after fielding questions about the United States' stance towards the Bahraini government.

The monarchy has moved in recent months to outlaw the leading Shiite opposition party, al-Wefaq, by freezing its assets, imprisoning and torturing its members, and doubling the prison term for the party's secretary general, Ali Slaman. He will now serve nine years in prison for "promoting forceful change of the political regime." Additionally, in recent months the Sunni-led monarchy has moved to revoke citizenship of opposition members, including the country's most prominent Shiite religious leader, Sheikh Isa Qassim, rendering individuals stateless and without proper human rights protections.

While the US State Department has rhetorically savaged Bahrain's regime for its acts against peaceful opposition members, the Obama administration continues to funnel heavy weapons into the Middle Eastern country. Many of these are used against the country's citizens.

The situation has deteriorated in Bahrain to the point that the monarchy has openly welcomed the Saudi government to intervene against the civilian protesters. It has also asked Takfiri Islamists, including members of Daesh, to kill demonstrators these radical Muslims view as apostates.

Comment: Sanity and basic humanity tell us: Blocking arms sales to a country suppressing and murdering its people should be paramount for Congress, a moral duty. It should be even more of an imperative for the President of the US, the supposed leader of the free world, the champion of rights and liberty. But we don't live in a sane and humane world and these stereotypes are fakery. Apparently what we have been told to believe about democracy and what it means is rubbish. If you don't demand it and live it; you don't have it. Obviously nothing will change until the American people hold their government responsible for its millions of human rights infractions, its lies and subterfuge perpetrated all over the world. The message from Bahrain is: profit and the monarchy outweigh the rights, will and lives of the people. In other words: the American brand of 'democracy.'

This issue with Bahrain has been several years ongoing. This video was from February 8, 2012. Same scenario, same intent, different congress members:




Heart - Black

Philippines president cruelly declares that drug addicts should be killed

Rodrigo Duterte
© Erik de Castro / Reuters
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte
New Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, who has recently declared "a bloody war" on drug cartels, has called on willing Filipinos to "go ahead and kill" drug addicts, amid concerns that "getting their parents to do it would be too painful."

Duterte, who said during his campaign that some 100,000 criminals would die in his crackdown, their bodies dumped in Manila Bay, has been conspicuously deaf to criticism that he was promoting a "culture of death" in his native country.

After taking his oath inside the Malacanang presidential palace, Duterte, 71, continued his defiance and threats against drug traffickers in front of a crowd of some 500 people gathered in a Manila slum Thursday night.

"These sons of whores are destroying our children. I warn you, don't go into that, even if you're a policeman, because I will really kill you," the outspoken Philippines leader told the crowd, AFP reported.

"If you know of any addicts, go ahead and kill them yourself as getting their parents to do it would be too painful," he added.

Comment: His lack of compassion towards drug addicts and his complete lack of class by referring to drug traffickers as "sons of whores" show that he has been going to the Western school of diplomacy. President Duterte would really benefit by looking at how Putin and his Russian diplomats go about handling themselves with professionalism and courtesy. As it stands, Duterte is certainly promoting the Westernized "culture of death" in the Philippines, even if he's widely considered an "anti-Western" leader.


Attention

Britain: In danger of becoming a zombie state?

Britzombie
© www.thenation.com
Where to go from here?
There is one path back from the abyss, but it's a narrow one.

In a normal country, the stunning rebuke the British public delivered to the country's political establishment last week by voting to leave the European Union would be an occasion for humility, soul searching, and, above all, a recognition that it wasn't only the pollsters who kept predicting a "Remain" victory that were fatally out of touch. For a few hours on Friday morning, as the implications of what had just happened sunk in—the likely unraveling not just of Britain's ties to the rest of Europe, but of the United Kingdom itself, with Scottish independence back on the agenda, Northern Ireland's Good Friday agreement seriously undermined, and the whole European Union now at risk of dissolving under a rising tide of nationalism—Britain was that country. London, a cosmopolitan capital that voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU, was a city in shock. Prime Minister David Cameron, who'd bet his own political future on a "Remain" vote, had resigned. The pound was in free fall, and as the scale of the self-inflicted damage to the economy became clear—the FTSE 100 Index lost £120 billion, its biggest drop since the 2008 financial crisis—the national mood was one of desperation rather than celebration.

By Monday, mourning and melancholia had given way to mania. In Britain, the rush to sign an online petition calling for a second referendum was so intense that it crashed Parliament.uk. The Belfast post office ran out of application forms for Irish passports. In Wales—which, despite getting more EU funds than any other part of the UK except Cornwall, voted to leave by a 2.5 percent margin—the Labour government scrambled to protect the region's already precarious economy. And Cornwall itself, which also voted to leave, issued a plaintive plea to "protect" its EU subsidy. Meanwhile, UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage admitted that his campaign's claim that leaving the EU would free up £350 million a week to spend on the National Health Service was a "mistake," and Daniel Hannan, a leader in the Tory Brexit camp, said that voters who expected the winners to deliver on their pledge to restrict EU immigration were "going to be disappointed."

Comment: See also: