Puppet Masters
The Israeli president, as well as the official memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, have pounced on Bolsonaro, taking offense at the Brazilian leader's comments.
Addressing evangelical leaders on Thursday night in Rio de Janeiro, Bolsonaro made reference to the Holocaust as an example of a tragedy that must not be forgotten so it would never be repeated. "We can forgive, but we cannot forget. That quote is mine. Those that forget their past are sentenced not to have a future," he said.
The remark struck a raw nerve in Israel, with critics zooming in on the first part of the quote.
Israeli President Reuven Rivlin accused Bolsonaro of an attempt to "erase" the extermination of Jews in Nazi camps from the public memory.
Compounding the impact of sanctions, OPEC members have mainly cut sour crude output as part of their deal with allied producers to boost oil prices while a large, new refinery, designed to run on sour oil, has just started up in Turkey.
U.S. output is soaring and exports are set to jump later this year as new infrastructure comes online but it is not an alternative, being mainly light and sweet.
As a result, European refiners have been left competing to secure as much medium, sour Russian Urals as they can, pushing the differential of that oil to levels not seen since 2013. "Urals is anchored in a positive zone versus dated Brent and there is no indication it will fall to a discount any time soon," a trading source at a European oil major said.
In the Mediterranean, the differential for Urals typically trades at a discount of at least a dollar to benchmark dated Brent but since early November, the level has spiked and now stands at a premium of 70 cents a barrel. For a 600,000-barrel cargo of Urals, that rise translates to an extra $1.35 million cost.
"Our countries are now working on the resumption of the project that connects the railways of Syria, Iran and Iraq and are determining the date of the meeting between the representatives of the countries to develop the plans," a source told al-Watan newspaper on Saturday.
The goal of the project, launched before the start of the crisis in Syria in 2011, is to secure access to Syrian ports for Baghdad and Tehran, the source told the newspaper.
Before the start of the crisis, Syria reached 97% of the project, however, during the war most of the railroads were destroyed.
Comment: Iran Daily had more to say on this project:
Iraq announced that negotiations are underway with Iran and Syria to develop a transnational railway line linking the three countries. Iraqi Republic Railways Company chief, Salib al-Hussaini, said a summit will be held between the countries to further discuss the matter, the Arabic-language Al-Sumeria news website reported.
The comments made on the sidelines of the joint Syrian-Iraqi committee held in Damascus came a week after Iranian First Vice President Es'haq Jahangiri spoke of an initiative to link the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean.
"We will connect the Persian Gulf from Iraq to Syria and the Mediterranean via railway and road," said Jahangiri, making reference to the construction of a railway linking the Iranian Shalamcheh border region to the Iraqi city of Basra.
Speaking last December, the Director General of the Railway and Technical Structures Department at the Islamic Republic of Iran Railways (RAI) Mohammad Mousavi said Iran was planning to build a movable railway bridge over the Arvand River as part of the Shalamcheh-Basra project. Mousavi said the project would effectively link the Iranian cities of Khorramshahr and Abadan along with the Imam Khomeini Port to the Iraqi city.
The railway project was agreed to last month when Iran and Iraq signed five memoranda of understanding for the expansion of bilateral cooperation in various economic and healthcare sectors.
Observers have described the new agreements as a sign of Baghdad's serious intention of not being "party to the system of sanctions against Iran" as Prime Minister Abdul-Mahdi said earlier in February.
Syrian Prime Minister Imad Khamis said the "historic" agreements covered cooperation in fields of industry, trade and agriculture. He called the agreement "a message to the world on the reality of Syrian-Iranian cooperation."

Before and after photos of a possible Iranian missile factory in Syria
Israeli satellite intelligence company ImageSat International has released satellite images of what it says may be 'Iran-related missile manufacturing hangers' in Masyaf, Syria.
The images, posted on the company's Twitter account, show unidentified structures 'before' and 'after' the attack, with several large buildings turned into what appear to be piles of rubble.
"This system will not be integrated neither with NATO's systems nor with any other somehow connected to NATO's national [military] systems," the minister said during an annual US-Turkey conference in Washington.
He vowed that the decision would not change any of Turkey's commitments to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The Turkish minister also expressed hope that other NATO countries would also keep their commitments to Turkey.
"The procurement of the S-400 is not an issue," Akar said. "We believe that all disagreements can and should be resolved."
Commenting on the tecnhical discussions with the United States, the minister noted that Turkey was ready for them and it would address concerns over Ankara's procurement of Russian S-400 air defence systems.

Julian Assange gestures to the media from a police vehicle on his arrival at Westminster Magistrates' Court on April 11, 2019 in London.
Apparently more interested in (allegedly) salacious details of Assange's almost seven-year exile inside the west-London embassy, members of the UK and US press have been breathlessly repeating flaky Quito-leaked claims about his living habits and personal hygiene.
While Assange awaits the very likely possibility of extradition to the US and prosecution for reporting on the sins of the world's most powerful, mainstream media "journalists" are doing humanity another great service - by posting irrelevant videos and pictures taken inside the embassy in an effort to assist Quito in its smearing efforts.
Comment:
- Assange lawyer says Ecuador accused Assange of 'misbehavior' to justify his arrest
- Ecuador president implicated in financial scandal, blames Wikileaks, threatens Assange with expulsion from embassy
- Wikileaks founder Julian Assange's health rapidly degrading while confined in Ecuadorian Embassy
- Julian Assange's living conditions are akin to a Stasi-era dissident
- Alone among the media, Tucker Carlson lays out the true facts about Assange and Wikileaks
Journalists claim to have uncovered the "massive use" of French-made weapons in war-torn Yemen through a leak of secret military documents.
Radio France and investigative reporters from the NGO Disclose say they have obtained a classified 2018 report about French arms sold to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, both of which form part of the Saudi-led coalition fighting Houthi militiamen in Yemen since 2015.
The paper was allegedly compiled last September by France's military agency DRM and handed over to President Emmanuel Macron and other cabinet-level officials. It apparently contains a list of all French weapons deployed in Yemen by the two Arab monarchies.
"These include Leclerc battle tanks, long-rod penetrator ammunition, Mirage 2000-9 fighter jets, COBRA counter-battery radar systems, Aravis armoured troop-carrying vehicles, Cougar and Dauphin helicopters, CAESAR truck-mounted howitzers," reads a statement on Disclose's website.
Comment: More from RT:
The report also revealed that despite hand holding by the most powerful militaries in the world, the Saudi Kingdom has dropped the ball in putting it all to good use. One example refers to the Saudi armed forces failure to make use of intelligence provided by US drones, which have been employed to gather intelligence on Houthi controlled territory:If the RSAF benefits from American support, in the form of advice in the field of targeting [by American drones], the practice of Close Air Support (CAS) is recent and appears poorly understood by these crews.This seems to be in direct contradiction to a statement made to the Intercept by a CENTCOM spokesperson, who reportedly said that the US does not provide targeting support to Saudi Arabia. CENTCOM's email statement supposedly underlines that the US' role is "advisory only."

FILE PHOTO: Matteo Salvini of Italy (R), Marine Le Pen (C) of France and Heinz-Christian Strache of Austria give a thumbs up.
The 750 MEP seats will be up for grabs in May, and various anti-establishment forces on either side of the political spectrum are forging alliances to gobble up the shares currently held by centrists. Adding to the confusion is Britain, which will take part in the election despite supposedly working hard to leave the EU.
But for some European and international officials, the problem seems to be Russia secretly supporting Eurosceptics - not the disconnect between political elites and the people they are meant to represent. Blaming the looming electoral failure on Kremlin trolls (without offering a shred of evidence, of course) is as tempting in 2019 Europe as it was in 2016 America.
Comment: Just look at any of the thwarted neo-liberal, neocon, globalizing, nation-destroying policies coming out of the West these days - and watch the media and elite political class blame Russia for it's failures.
See also:
- Pro-EU think tank blames Russia for future EP election meddling in report on Euroskeptic movement
- Euroskeptic Zeman leads in Czech polls amid anti-Russian hysteria about 'Russian meddling'
- 'Italy is not a colony, we are neither German nor French slaves': Italian Euroskeptic coalition lashes out at pro-EU interim PM
The US and Colombia turned the beleaguered Colombian border town of Cucuta into a "regular stage for their most decadent and cheap spectacles," Arreaza tweeted on Sunday in response to Pompeo's visit in the area.
The consequences of the criminal blockade imposed by his [Pompeo] government on Venezuela are too grave to count. It has created death, suffering and need.Earlier, Venezuelan migrants living in camps on the Colombian side of the border rioted over food rations and clashed with local police. Towns on the Venezuelan side also saw clashes between law enforcement and protesters.
The unrest was exacerbated by the opposition's attempts to drive trucks filled with US-sponsored aid into Venezuela. The authorities refused to let them pass, denouncing the move as a "PR stunt," and citing suspicions that Washington might use the trucks to smuggle in weapons.
As tensions mounted, US officials and some in the Western media accused the Venezuelan government of setting one of the trucks on fire during a dramatic confrontation at a border bridge with Colombia, but footage from the scene and additional reporting revealed that the truck was in fact set on fire by opposition activists.
Nevertheless, during his stay in Cucuta, Mike Pompeo met with a group of Venezuelan migrants and once again urged Caracas to accept the US-sent "humanitarian aid."
Comment: If the U.S. were really concerned about the humanitarian aspect of aid, it would simply use accepted channels like the Red Cross. Instead, it offers 'aid' which it knows the Venezuelan government will reject in order to get headlines that make the Venezuelans look bad. The U.S. actually prefers that their aid get rejected, in order to reinforce their image of the Venezuelan government as a mad dictatorship. And at the same time, they sanction Venezuelan leaders and major companies, which only makes the situation worse. Does that sound humanitarian to you? See also:
- Still on the table: Top Trump advisors and Latin American officials discuss US military attack in Venezuela at private DC meeting
- US regime change plan hatched 8 years ago proposed Venezuelan power blackout as 'watershed event' to 'galvanize public unrest'
Donald Trump's long-awaited peace plan for the Middle East is coming out of hibernation after Benjamin Netanyahu's election victory, and it is said to be likely to sweep the Palestinian statehood issue under the carpet.
In drafting the plan, the US president's administration has relied heavily on his point man for the Middle East, Jared Kushner.
The Washington Post reports, citing US and Arab officials familiar with the matter, that Trump's son-in-law is looking to preserve Israeli control over the Palestinian territories and includes Palestinian "autonomy" but not a sovereign Palestinian state.
An unnamed senior White House official said that the plan is "fair, realistic and implementable" and that it reflects reality. "We looked at past efforts and solicited ideas from both sides and partners in the region with the recognition that what has been tried in the past has not worked. Thus, we have taken an unconventional approach founded on not hiding from reality, but instead speaking truth."
Comment: "Unconventional" does not mean that the idea is necessarily workable either!












Comment: More from RT: