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Turkish FM Cavusoglu: Ankara won't buy Patriot missiles with condition of dropping S-400 deal with Moscow

s 400
© Sergei Karpukhin / Reuters
Turkey won't strike a deal on purchasing American-made Patriot air defense missile systems if the US ties it with tearing up the existing arms contract with Moscow, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said.

"The S-400 deal has already been finalized. We can agree with the US on the Patriot system, but not if there will be [a condition] to abandon the S-400s," the minister stated on Thursday, as quoted by NTV.

Turkish media reported earlier that the contract presented by the Americans says the missiles will only be delivered if Ankara abandons the S-400 purchase.

Ambulance

What are they up to? Five British soldiers allegedly killed in rocket strike launched by 'ISIS' in F.UK.US-occupied eastern Syria

british soldiers

screenshot from www.alwatanonline.com
Five British soldiers were killed in a rocket strike launched by Islamic State militants in Deir ez-Zor, Syria, state media reports, citing sources on the ground. It comes days after two UK troops were injured in fighting there.

Rockets launched by IS (formerly ISIS/ISIL) hit the village of Al-Shaafah, in the Abu Kamal district of Deir ez-Zor province, the Syrian newspaper Al-Watan reported on Wednesday. The British soldiers were part of an international coalition operating in the area, which is the portion of Euphrates River valley near the Iraqi border where the militants still hold territory.

Several more soldiers were injured and airlifted to the coalition hospital in Hasakah, in northeastern Syria, according to Al-Watan.

Comment: Hmmm, they're up to something. All of it no doubt part of some scheme to ensure F.UK.US troops remain where they shouldn't be: anywhere near Syria.


Arrow Down

Turkey seeks coordination with Iran and Russia on US exit from Syria - Bolton told US not needed

Rouhani   Putin Erdogan
© Reuters
Prior summit in Ankara, Turkey April 4, 2018.
After Ankara slammed the door in John Bolton's face during his trip to Turkey in which he expected to meet with Turkish President Erdogan, only to have Erdogan skip that meeting to criticize the US national security advisor in a speech to parliament, Turkey is now calling for Iran and Russia to step up coordination with Turkey in northern Syria as US troops withdraw.

It's but the next humiliation for Bolton, who flew out of Turkey on Tuesday, and for White House policy in the Middle East, after he announced preconditions to American troop draw down that emphasized Turkey agreeing to not attack the US-backed Kurds in Syria. Erdogan slammed this as a "serious mistake" and pro-government Turkish media painted the picture of a "soft coup" underway against Trump being orchestrated by Bolton and other subverters who had "rogue".


But no doubt adding insult to injury, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu issued further provocative words on Wednesday, noting that given "certain difficulties" of confused US policy, the American draw down should be coordinated with Iran and Russia to prevent a power vacuum and the reinvigoration of terrorists.

Comment: The Kurds know their cause for an independent state is lost. Knowing the threat from Turkey to the north, they have been sending out feelers to the Damascus government for at least the last six months. Russia backs this move as one that will see Syria survives as a sovereign nation, accomplished with the least amount of bloodshed.


Russian Flag

Putin and Merkel agree to coordinate Syria peace efforts amid US withdrawal

Putin and Merkel
Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have agreed in a telephone call to coordinate efforts to work toward peace in Syria, the Kremlin says.

"The desire was expressed to advance the political processes in close coordination with the United Nations, in order to solve the Syrian crisis in the long term," the Kremlin said on January 9.

Merkel and Putin also discussed the formation of a constitutional committee for Syria, which is to work out a new constitution for the war-torn country, repeating issues they covered during a phone call at the end of December and at an October summit in Istanbul involving Russia, Germany, Turkey, and France.

The latest conversation comes amid confusion over plans by the United States for its troops in Syria, where they have been assisting a Syrian Arab and Kurdish alliance fight against Islamic State (IS) terrorists and separately against the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

U.S. President Donald Trump on December 19 said that "after historic victories" against IS, all U.S. troops "all coming back and they're all coming back now."

Comment: Watch out! Merkel must be a Russlandversteher! At least, that's what the Integrity Initiative would probably like you to believe: Inside Integrity Initiative's desperate attempt to sabotage Russian-German relations.


Network

Kim Jong Un and Xi Jinping meet - Agree on continued denuclearization of Korean peninsula - Kim commits to second summit with Trump

kim and xi
© Xinhua via Reuters
Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and Chinese president, on Tuesday held talks with Kim Jong Un, chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) and chairman of the State Affairs Commission of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), who arrived in Beijing on the same day for a visit to China.

In a cordial and friendly atmosphere, the two leaders had an in-depth exchange of views on China-DPRK relations and issues of common concern, and reached important consensus.

The two sides agreed to make joint efforts to push for continuous new development of China-DPRK relations in the new era, constantly advance the political settlement process of the Korean Peninsula issue, bring more benefits to people of the two countries, and make positive contribution to peace, stability, prosperity and development of the region and the world.

Comment: More details on Kim's visit:
Kim's trip to China - his fourth in the past 10 months - is believed to be an effort to coordinate with Beijing ahead of a possible second summit with Trump. It comes after U.S. and North Korean officials are thought to have met in Vietnam to discuss the site of the summit.
Xi was quoted as saying that China supports the U.S.-North Korea summits and hopes the two sides "will meet each other halfway." The North said in its report that Xi accepted an invitation to visit North Korea, although details of when he might come were not given.

Kim reportedly said North Korea "will continue sticking to the stance of denuclearization and resolving the Korean Peninsula issue through dialogue and consultation, and make efforts for the second summit between (North Korean) and U.S. leaders to achieve results that will be welcomed by the international community."



Arrow Down

PM May humiliated yet again as MPs demand more of say in Brexit, DUP say offer is "meaningless"

Dominic Grieve

Dominic Grieve's change passed in the Commons
THERESA May has been defeated on Brexit for the second time in 24 hours today as rebels wrestled back power from the Government.

Hopes that she can get next week's deal passed by MPs are now fading fast after she was slapped down yet again by politicians demanding more of a say on our EU exit.

The PM will now be forced to make a statement within three days if her withdrawal agreement gets thrown out by MPs on Tuesday as expected.

The amendment, which was proposed by ex-Attorney General and Remainer in chief, Dominic Grieve, passed 308 to 297.

It comes just hours after MPs voted in favour of limiting the Government's tax powers in a No Deal Brexit last night - another humiliation for Mrs May.

Comment: The Guardian provides more details on the DUP issue:
DUP dismisses May's Brexit pledge to consult Stormont as meaningless

Stormont
© Niall Carson/PA
‌The gates at Stormont in Belfast which has not been sitting for two years.
Theresa May's attempts to woo the Democratic Unionist party with a pledge over the contentious backstop have failed after the party branded the proposals as "cosmetic and meaningless".

At the same time Ireland's prime minister Leo Varadkar, reflecting the principles of the withdrawal agreement, said Stormont could not have the power of veto over the backstop.

"I don't think we can have a situation whereby the Northern Ireland executive or assembly has a veto power [over the backstop] because that would essentially give one of the two communities veto power over the other," he told Reuters in Ethiopia.

With less than a week to go to the critical parliamentary vote on the Brexit withdrawal agreement, the government appears no closer to securing the 10 votes of the DUP MPs needed to get the deal over the line.

In a 13-page document published on Wednesday, the government promised a "strong role" for the currently defunct Stormont assembly if the Brexit backstop was triggered.

It promised that if the trade talks with the EU failed to result in a deal by the end of the transition period in December 2020, Stormont would be consulted before the government decided its next move. Under the current deal the UK can ask for an extension in the transition period or enter the backstop arrangements.

Under the plan, the view of the assembly, which has not been sitting for two years, would then be presented to parliament before MPs took a final decision.

The paper promised that this "Stormont lock" on the backstop would be a legally binding commitment.

"Where appropriate we will legislate to ensure that these commitments have legal force," the government said in its paper, the UK Government Commitments to Northern Ireland and its Integral Place in the United Kingdom.

However, the DUP immediately rejected the paper, dashing hopes that the party would get behind May for the vote on her Brexit deal next Tuesday.

Tory sources who were ambivalent about the vote had said that the support of the DUP could "unlock" 20 to 30 more hard Brexiter votes for May, something now unlikely.

Nigel Dodds, the leader of the DUP in the House of Commons, said the proposal to ensure "a strong role for the Northern Ireland assembly before Northern Ireland-specific backstop provisions are given effect is cosmetic and meaningless".

He said the paper itself indicated that the proposals made it plain the Stormont assembly would never be able to "override" the backstop as it would be part of an internationally binding treaty.

Any objections that were raised in Stormont could be rejected by London, said Dodds, MP for Belfast North.

The DUP's Sammy Wilson told Sky News there was "nothing at all" to fear from a no-deal Brexit.

"We would prefer to have the relationship sorted out but it can't be sorted out on the basis of breaking up the UK," said the East Antrim MP.

"This issue is far too important," he added, "This is an issue about if Northern Ireland stays in the UK, whether Northern Ireland keeps linked to its main market in GB. Constitutionally and economically if this deal went through it would ruin us.

"We would do what the IRA failed to do over 40 years of a terrorist campaign," he said in reference to their desire for a united Ireland.

Publishing the paper, cabinet office minister David Lidington said the "commitments underline Northern Ireland's integral place in the United Kingdom and reflect that it is the only part of the United Kingdom sharing a land border with an EU member state.".
The EU referendum was merely a ploy by the ruling UK government to maintain power, but having royally backfired it continues to expose them as the utter shambles that they are. Even the DUP, who they bought off with an offer of a billion in funding, doesn't trust them: Brexit: A Political Farce Based on a Public Lie

See also: And check out SOTT radio's:


Attention

Inside Integrity Initiative's desperate attempt to sabotage Russian-German relations

germany
© AFP 2018 / CHRISTOF STACHE
On the afternoon of January 4 I was putting the finishing touches to a series of articles about the Integrity Initiative's activities in Germany, when hacking syndicate Anonymous released another tranche of files plucked from the organization's internal servers. The content was so explosive I was forced to put the multi-part project on hold.

The new trove included several highly incriminating files related to the poisoning of Sergei Skripal in March 2018, which raised a number of extremely serious questions about the shadowy British state and NATO-funded 'think tank' and its connections with the affair.

A few hours after publishing an article based on a precursory investigation of the documents, I received a curious email from political scientist Hannes Adomeit - the subject line 'Criminal Charges against Kit Klarenberg' - which made me somewhat glad I'd postponed my German series.

Comment: More on Integrity Initiative's blatant disinformation campaign:


Eye 1

Assessing James Clapper's Jan. 2017 'assessment' on Russia-gate

James clapper obama
© The White House
Clapper: Showing handpicked evidence?
On the 2nd anniversary of the "assessment" blaming Russia for "collusion" with Trump there is still no evidence other than showing the media "colluded" with the spooks, says Ray McGovern.

The banner headline atop page one of The New York Times print edition two years ago today, on January 7, 2017, set the tone for two years of Dick Cheney-like chicanery: "Putin Led Scheme to Aid Trump, Report Says."

Under a media drumbeat of anti-Russian hysteria, credulous Americans were led to believe that Donald Trump owed his election victory to the president of Russia, whose "influence campaign" according to the Times quoting the intelligence report, helped "President-elect Trump's election chances when possible by discrediting Secretary Clinton."

Bulb

Bloomberg: Macron's response to Yellow Vests makes Putin like soft

yellow vest french flag
French President Emmanuel Macron's handouts to Yellow Vest protesters have damped the demonstrators' fervor somewhat but failed to stop the regular eruptions of violence, so now Macron and his government have decided to wield a heavier stick. The new rules being proposed ought to raise some eyebrows: They're tougher than the norms Russian President Vladimir Putin's regime uses to suppress political opposition.


Comment: Yet France is considered a democracy and Russia is considered a dictatorship. Hmm... Maybe, just maybe, Russia is not a dictatorship? And maybe, just maybe, Western democracies are not as superior to Russia as most in the West believe?


The shift from a conciliatory tone toward law and order began with Macron's New Year's speech, in which he condemned extremists who had no right to speak in the name of the French people. "They are only the spokespeople of a hate-filled mob," he said. Then, on Monday, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced that the government would seek a new law to crack down on violent protest so that those who "take advantage of these manifestations to overrun, to break, to burn" don't "have the last word." The bill, he said, would likely be considered by parliament in early February; according to Philippe, it would be similar to a measure the Senate, controlled by the center-right opposition, approved in October.

MIB

Phil Giraldi: Is Paul Whelan a spy?

Paul Whelan
© Paul Whelan obiteljski arhiv
Paul Whelan
The media has a new bit of speculation that fits neatly into the flagging Russiagate narrative. It concerns Paul Whelan, a high school graduate Marine Corps dishonorable discharge, who is currently working in corporate security for a Michigan-based auto parts manufacturer. Whelan, who lives alone, is self-taught in Russian and has engaged in tourist travel to the country a number of times. He was reportedly arrested late last month in Moscow while ostensibly attending a friend's wedding and charged with espionage. Forty-eight year-old Whelan is clearly an odd duck and is notable for having four passports - Great Britain, Ireland, Canada and that of the United States.

Press coverage of the incident has nearly unanimously decided that the spying charge against Whelan is phony and that he is being held as bait to arrange for an exchange with Maria Butina, who is in jail in Virginia after being charged with acting as an unregistered agent of the Russian government and engaging in conspiracy. The media and the usual pundits base their conclusion on absolutely no evidence whatsoever apart from their conviction that Russian President Vladimir Putin is a bad man who would do almost anything to irritate the United States and overthrow its system of government. Oddly, the press watchdogs fail to note how the current federal government is doing a damned fine job destroying itself without any assistance from the Kremlin. If Putin really wanted to damage the US, he would be best advised to leave it alone and let Congress and the White House do the heavy lifting for him.

Unlike the mainstream media, I rather expect that the charges against Whelan could be more-or-less correct, though not in the way the press has framed the story, which is that Whelan is such a flawed character that he could not possibly meet the requirements to be working for any sophisticated spy organization. The New York Times in its coverage of the story interviewed several former CIA officers who had served in Russia, but asked the wrong questions. The reporter wanted to know if Whelan could possibly be an employee of US intelligence. The ex-Agency officers replied "no" because of his criminal record while a Marine and other oddities in his career, which included some marginal involvement with low-level law enforcement.

Comment: Previous coverage of Whelan's arrest: