Puppet Masters
"We would like to once again point to the flights of unidentified helicopters in northern Afghanistan, which deliver weapons and ammunition to local ISIL [the former name of the Islamic State group - TASS] units and Taliban members cooperating with the group. In particular, the Afghan media and local residents say that such helicopters were seen in the Sar-e Pol Province," the Russian diplomat said.
"This is happening in close proximity to the borders of Central Asian states, while many of the IS militants active in Afghanistan come from those countries," Zakharova pointed out.
Cohen reportedly bought a $6.7 million apartment in New York back in April, even as his office was being raided by the FBI and federal authorities were going after him over hush money payments allegedly made to two women who claimed to have had affairs with Trump. Today, however, he is "out of resources" and needs America's help to pay his lawyer.
Davis made that case on the TV circuit on Wednesday, hitting up every network from MSNBC and CNN to Fox News for his proverbial fifteen minutes of fame. Cohen pleaded guilty on Tuesday to eight federal charges, including tax evasion and making illegal campaign contributions. It is unclear what he received in return.
From Pop Star To Politician And Now Prisoner
The arrest and reported beating of popular opposition politician Robert Kyagulanyi, a former pop star mostly known by his stage name as Bobi Wine, has rocked Uganda and caused many observers to wonder exactly what's going on in the fast-developing landlocked state. Wine was apprehended by the authorities after an angry mob attacked the presidential convoy last week and triggered a violent reaction from the police that resulted in the death of his driver, who the politician alleged on Twitter at the time was killed because the state mistakenly thought he was him. Wine was initially charged with the illegal possession of firearms and ammunition, and his arrest prompted protests throughout the capital that saw onlookers document the police beating a Reuters journalist, an act which the government later apologized for.
Comment:
- False Inauguration: Uganda's U.S.-backed Tyrant Swims Against The Tide
- Baloney 2012: Imperialist Propaganda Film Making Waves on YouTube
- Uganda rebellion gathers pace despite bloody government crackdown
- US-backed Kenyan forces invade Somalia
- Russia not isolated: Pan-African Parliament supports Russia's stance on Crimea
"We have completely stopped US metallurgical coal (imports), which is popular among steel mills, in late July. There is too much uncertainty in trade," a senior manager at a major Chinese coal trading house told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
Starting Thursday, the US is enforcing a new round of tariffs on $16 billion of Chinese imports. Beijing is responding with a similar amount, including levies on US metals and coal. Coal is an especially important industry for US President Donald Trump, who wants to revive the industry in the country.
The trading house, Shanghai Runhei, will boost purchase of domestic coal to meet demand from clients, the manager said.
"Traders have anticipated yuan depreciation and shored up imports in advance, including cargoes from the United States," Wang Fei, coal analyst at Huaan Futures told Reuters.
Comment: See also:
- Russia offers China 2.5 million acres of farmland amid worsening trade war
- Sanctions and tariffs have become Trump's big guns in the money wars
- Need for speed: Neither US tariffs nor sanctions are gonna stop China's bullet trains
- China threatens 25% import tariff on US liquefied natural gas as trade war escalates
Ever since Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s, every American president has held one or more summit meetings with the Kremlin leader, first and foremost in order to prevent miscalculations that could result in war between the two nuclear superpowers. Generally, they received bipartisan support for doing so. In July, President Trump continued that tradition by meeting with Russian President Putin in Helsinki, for which, unlike previous presidents, he was scathingly criticized by much of the US political media establishment.
John Brennan, CIA director under President Obama, however, went much further, characterizing Trump's press conference with Putin as "nothing short of treasonous." Presumably in reaction, Trump revoked Brennan's security clearance, the continuing access to classified information usually accorded to former security officials. In the political media furor that followed, Brennan was mostly heroized as an avatar of civil liberties and free speech, and Trump traduced as their enemy.
Leaving aside the missed occasion to discuss the "revolving door" involving former US security officials using their permanent clearances to enhance their lucrative positions outside government, Cohen thinks the subsequent political media furor obscures what is truly important and perhaps ominous.
Comment:
- Stephen Cohen: 'Putin could be America's most essential, valuable security partner'
- Professor Stephen F. Cohen: Putin has almost nothing in common with the Western media's presentation of him (VIDEO)
- Russian expert Stephen Cohen: Trump wants to stop Cold War with Russia, but media just parrots Killary narrative
- America's No.1 threat? Russia not even close, argues Professor Emeritus of Russia Studies Stephen Cohen
- Ex-CIA chief and Deep State puppet Brennan compares Trump to Bernie Madoff
- CIA Director John Brennan may face investigation for leaking 'Russian hacker' story to the Washington Post
- John Brennan's plot: Infiltrate the Trump Campaign
- Trump has taken hard aim at Russiagate 'ringleader' Brennan - will the Deep State protect him?
Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman Sibghatullah Ahmadi told RFE/RL on August 22 that the decision not to participate in the planned Moscow conference was made after consultations between President Ashraf Ghani and other officials -- a move that could lead Moscow to call off its planned gathering of a dozen countries.
Without being specific, an unidentified official working with the Afghan Foreign Ministry was quoted as saying that the government in Kabul would "hold direct talks" with the Taliban without the direct involvement of foreign powers.
Meanwhile, a State Department spokesman confirmed earlier reports that the United States would not take part in the meeting scheduled for September 4, saying the talks were "unlikely to yield any progress toward" a peace settlement.
Alleged audio of ISIS leader Baghdadi emerges, telling followers to not worry about losing territory
The speaker in the recording, who couldn't be verified as Baghdadi, tried to explain to the Islamic State (IS/formerly ISIS/ISIL) supporters that victory or defeat for them shouldn't be about controlling territories and cities or achieving military superiority, the SITE intelligence group reported.
The formerly powerful IS, which controlled vast areas in Iraq and Syria a few years ago, has now been crushed in both countries and holds only small pieces of land in the desert.
In the 55-minute-long audio, published by the group's al-Furqan media outlet, the person claiming to be Baghdadi also called on his followers to persevere and lashed out at foreign media for waging an information campaign against Islamic State.
Comment: Baghdadi is either the cat with nine lives, secretly hiding out in some safe country, or a media creation at this point. It's hard to say which. But it's always strange to see the Israeli-intel-linked outfit SITE breaking exclusive news on jihadist statements. It's almost as if they're provided the inside scoop...
Why? Per a tweet by Charlie Robertson, chief economist of Renaissance Capital, "Turkey is less than 0.1% of world equity markets. But #Turkey represents over 10% of NATO personnel - more than the UK and France combined - so US establishment (ie excluding Trump) will not want to lose Turkey." So even if Ankara's banking crisis does not trigger a global financial meltdown in the same manner in which, say, the Thai baht devaluation kicked off the 1997 Asian financial crisis, it may well fracture NATO's foundations.
Nowhere was this more evident than at the state funeral on Saturday for 19 of the 43 people killed in Genoa's Morandi bridge collapse last Tuesday. Cheers and hugs greeted Salvini, also deputy prime minister and leader of the far-right League, and his coalition partner, Luigi Di Maio, the leader of the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S), as they arrived at the ceremony.
In contrast, deep disdain for Italy's previous government was reflected in the insults hurled at members of the centre-left Democratic party.
In what some describe as a watershed moment, many Italians are not only counting on a robust and swift response to the tragedy from their new leaders but are also depending on them to resolve chronic problems, from high unemployment to corruption, that have weighed the country down for decades.
More pertinently, some are looking to Salvini, a man admired among supporters for his consistency as much as he is despised by critics for his anti-immigration rhetoric, as their saviour.
Why was Michael Cohen investigated? Because the "Steele dossier" had him making secret trips to meet with Russians that never happened, so his business dealings got a thorough scrubbing and, in the process, he fell into the Paul Manafort bin reserved by the special counsel for squeezing until the juice comes out. We are back to 1998 all over again, with presidents and candidates covering up their alleged marital misdeeds and prosecutors trying to turn legal acts into illegal ones by inventing new crimes.
The plot to get President Trump out of office thickens, as Cohen obviously was his own mini crime syndicate and decided that his betrayals meant he would be better served turning on his old boss to cut the best deal with prosecutors he could rather than holding out and getting the full Manafort treatment. That was clear the minute he hired attorney Lanny Davis, who does not try cases and did past work for Hillary Clinton. Cohen had recorded his client, trying to entrap him, sold information about Trump to corporations for millions of dollars while acting as his lawyer, and did not pay taxes on millions.
Comment:
- Michael Cohen, former Trump personal lawyer, makes plea deal with prosecutors
- Mueller grossly overstepped in seizing Michael Cohen's files
- Rosenstein allowed Mueller request to authorize FBI raid on office of Trump's lawyer Michael Cohen
- Cohen bombshell renews calls for Trump impeachment - what happened to Russia collusion?















Comment: See also: Afghan military commanders: 'Our fight against Taliban is nonsense - Every time we surround terrorists, support helicopters rescue and relocate them'