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UK claims Huawei colludes with the Chinese state, to remove all 5G equipment by 2027

Huawei
© Reuters / Nacho Doce
The British parliament's defence committee said on Thursday that it had found clear evidence that telecoms giant Huawei had colluded with the Chinese state and said Britain may need to remove all Huawei equipment earlier than planned.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson in July ordered Huawei equipment to be purged from the nascent 5G network by the end of 2027. U.S. President Donald Trump claimed credit for the British decision.


Comment: They can't be that concerned because they're willing to wait 7 more years. Granted that they also have little choice because the corrupt UK establishment and the sorry state it has put the country in means that they have been unable to create homegrown alternatives.


"The West must urgently unite to advance a counterweight to China's tech dominance," Tobias Ellwood, chairman of the defence committee, said. "We must not surrender our national security for the sake of short-term technological development."

Comment: Any company providing such critical infrastructure will have government ties, the situation is no different in the West. Moreover, there's actual proof that the US spies on other countries, including its top politicians.

See also:


Mr. Potato

Britain to pass new finance bill that may undercut Brexit agreement

bojo mask
© Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson in London, Britain October 5, 2020.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Wednesday Britain would take back "full control of our money, our borders and our laws" on Jan. 1 when a status-quo transition arrangement with the European Union ends.

"This country has not only left the European Union but on January 1 we will take back full control of our money, our borders and our laws," he told parliament, repeating a mantra that helped him win an election last year.

Comment: RT reports:
The legislation is expected to overwrite elements of the Northern Ireland protocol, which was also at the center of recent controversy surrounding the UK's new Internal Market Bill.

He also told a parliamentary committee that the government is stepping up preparations for a no-deal scenario when the current Brexit transition deal expires. The British government wants an agreement with Brussels, but no-deal planning is being undertaken to ensure "that this country is not held hostage in a negotiation process," he said.

Nevertheless, Gove sounded optimistic about the talks on a future trade deal. "Negotiations are proceeding... in a way which gives us cause for steady optimism," he told MPs.

On Wednesday, talks resumed in London between the EU and Britain on their post-Brexit relationship as the two sides push to reach a deal by the end of October. The negotiations are due to last until Friday, when chief negotiators Michel Barnier and David Frost are expected to meet.

President of the European Council, Charles Michel, warned on Wednesday that it is "time for the UK to put its cards on the table." After a conversation with UK PM Boris Johnson, he tweeted: "The EU prefers a deal, but not at any cost."

London had earlier clashed with the EU over provisions in Britain's new Internal Market Bill which would break international law by overriding parts of the Brexit withdrawal agreement. The House of Commons passed the bill on September 29, although the EU has threatened to sue Britain over the controversial legislation.

Ireland's Foreign Affairs Minister Simon Coveney said on Wednesday that it would be a "monumental failure of policy" and act of self-harm by the UK government if it continues with the plan to override parts of the withdrawal agreement and allow the issue to end up in court.
And the farce that is Brexit continues: Still Confused About Brexit? It's Actually Pretty Simple...


Magnify

Siberian investigators dispute claims that Navalny's team transported Novichok-laced water bottle to Berlin

water bottle
© Sputnik / Svetlana Samsonova
The alleged poisoning of Russian opposition figure Alexey Navalny took a new twist on Thursday, when Russian investigators contradicted assertions that a bottle with traces of Novichok was sent to Germany.

Top Siberian cop Sergey Potapov said that security at Novosibirsk airport did not find any large bottles in the luggage of Navalny's associates when they flew to Tomsk after the activist was taken to hospital. The Moscow protest leader's team previously asserted that they took "everything that could be hypothetically useful [from his Omsk hotel room], and passed it on to doctors in Germany."

Navalny was taken to Berlin on August 22, just two days after he fell ill during a flight to Moscow. His colleague at the Aniti-Corruption Fund (FBK), Maria Pevchikh, said that, because there were no direct flights available from Tomsk to Omsk, she took his personal belongings to Novosibirsk by car, and then flew by plane to Omsk, and later onto Germany.

Pevchikh stated that the items gathered including a bottle of water, on which German experts later supposedly found evidence of a Novichok-class nerve agent. Popatov, whose full title is Interior Ministry Deputy Director of the Investigative Department of the Transport Department for the Siberian Federal District, has now dismissed Pevchikh's story.

Comment: See also:


Clipboard

Fact Check: Mike Pence responds to Charlottesville 'very fine people' hoax and other lies told by Harris at VP debate

Harris Pence debate
CLAIM: Vice President Mike Pence claimed that President Donald Trump condemned the neo-Nazis and white supremacists in Charlottesville.

VERDICT: TRUE. Pence debunked the Charlottesville "very fine people" hoax.

At long last, the Charlottesville "very fine people" hoax has been deflated on the national stage.

At the vice presidential debate at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) attempted to repeat the false claim that President Trump failed to condemn white supremacists on the debate stage, and the false claim that Trump called neo-Nazis in the 2017 Charlottesville riots "very fine people."

Harris said: "Last week, the President of the United States took a debate stage in front of 70 million Americans and refused to condemn white supremacists [sic]."

She then proceeded to twist Trump's words in which told the Proud Boys — whom Joe Biden had brought up — to "stand down and stand by," using terms similar to those moderator Chris Wallace had used in his question prompt.

Comment: And that isn't the only time Harris lied:
[...] Harris told bold fib after fib with scarcely a blink and got little pushback from Mike Pence. In the end, she walked off relatively unscathed and, of course, won praise from her adoring mainstream media, which has always loved her more than voters.

The first egregious deception came when Harris feigned outrage over last month's New York Times non-bombshell about President Donald Trump's tax returns. Harris could barely contain herself waiting for friendly moderator Susan Page to spit out the rest of the question, setting up her rehearsed attack on Trump's loans.

"Just so everyone is clear, when we say in debt, it means you owe money to somebody," Harris condescended as she accented her point by nodding her head. "And it'd be really good to know who the president of the United States, the commander in chief, owes money to because the American people have a right to know. What is influencing the president's decisions, and is he making those decisions on the best interest of the American people, of you, or self-interest?"

Turns out the government already thought of that and realized the people's right to know. As Harris, of all people, would know, such information is publicly available at our fingertips. Holders of high office, including the president, must file annual financial disclosures, including information on their borrowings. Senators, including Harris, also have to submit such filings.

In Trump's case, the loan information is all right there on page 35 of his 78-page 2020 financial disclosure. Lender names, loan types, amount ranges, interest rates and maturity dates. As a vice presidential candidate, a senator and a former prosecutor, Harris knew that. And as a person with a brain, she knew that over $400 million in debt is not a shockingly big number for an organization the size of Trump's business empire. Companies with too little debt relative to their size are sometimes scolded by stock analysts for leaving too many money-making opportunities on the table.

But Harris wasn't speaking to stock analysts. She was talking to the people she thinks might need help in understanding that having debt means owing someone money. And the media was right there to play pretend with her, with CNN saying Harris zeroed in on Trump's taxes and "mystery debt."

And so it went all night, including a favorite Democrat hoax target, Russia. Harris again relied on dubious New York Times reporting, this time referring to an anonymously sourced article saying Russia had offered bounty payments to Afghan fighters to kill US troops in Afghanistan - even though Trump, the Pentagon, and top intelligence officials have pointed out that the allegations were unverified. Despite months of speculation since the June report, the US military has been unable to find evidence confirming the story.

Harris didn't care, treating unsubstantiated rumor as fact. "Russia had bounties on the heads of American soldiers," she began, before again dumbing down her fake outrage. "And you know what a bounty is? It's somebody puts a price on your head, and they will pay it if you are killed." [...]
You didn't think the night could go by without Harris mentioning Russia could you? She just couldn't leave that tired old canard alone could she?
While discussing the military, Harris slammed the Trump administration for "not caring" about "public reporting" saying the Russian government put bounties on the heads of American soldiers serving in Afghanistan - a rumor that has been debunked by the Pentagon and numerous intelligence officials.

You know what a bounty is?" Harris said during her fiery display. "It's [when] somebody puts a price on your head and they will pay it if you are killed, and Donald Trump had talked at least six times to Vladimir Putin and never brought up the subject. Joe Biden would never do that."

She added that Biden would "hold Russia to account" if he were president.

Though Harris was passionate in her accusations, they are only based on a New York Times story that, despite being repeated by other media outlets, has been called into question on numerous occasions.

Numerous intelligence officials and military investigations have found no proof of "Russian bounties."

"Since those reports have come out regarding Russian programs, we've been looking specifically to identify corroborating information. We've not yet found it, but we continue to look for that," David Helvey, the Pentagon's deputy assistant secretary for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs, said during a congressional hearing just last month.

Numerous other military officials have also come forward to say nothing concrete has been found to back up the Times'

While Harris was praised by supporters on social media who have bought into the repeated accusation against Russia, many slammed the VP candidate by providing reports that there has, in fact, been no proof of her claims.

"How is anyone still bringing up the Russian Bounties with a straight face??? NSA-DIA questioned it, CIA acknowledged doubts about it, and the Pentagon says it has found no evidence of it," journalist Aaron Mate tweeted.
More lies:
VP Mike Pence accused Joe Biden multiple times of wanting to ban fracking at the vice presidential debate, which Senator Kamala Harris has denied - despite Biden's past comments saying he is actually in favor of a ban.

Even President Donald Trump got involved in Wednesday's debate after Harris denied a Biden administration would ban fracking.

Trump tweeted a video of Harris at a town hall event answering a voter who asked whether she would ban fracking on her first day in the White House by saying, "There's no question I'm in favor of banning fracking, so yes."

The video was retweeted by Pence's Twitter account, as well, along with footage of Biden also promising to ban fracking and saying there would be "no place" for fossil fuels in his administration.

Despite the accusations, Harris denied wanting to ban the practice multiple times on Wednesday night, even saying at one point: "Joe Biden will not ban fracking. That is a fact."

The president and vice president were far from the only critics to slam Harris and question her "fact."



Magnify

Turmoil in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, Belarus, & Ukraine shows that, three decades on, the Soviet Union's still collapsing

Armenia
© Sputnik / Asatur Yesayant
A view shows a broken car window hit by the recent shelling, in Stepanakert, the self-proclaimed Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh
The sudden collapse of the USSR in 1991 created many weak countries without a unifying national identity and a strong central state. Yet conflicts will continue until the world is willing to recognize the realities on the ground.

War between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Violent protests in Kyrgyzstan. Mass demonstrations in Belarus. This month, the countries of the former Soviet Union (FSU) have once again been making headlines. When added to the low-level war in Eastern Ukraine, and the unresolved conflicts in Moldova and Georgia, this recent unrest highlights the ongoing instability of what Russia terms its 'near abroad'.

One common explanation for this volatility is to blame it on the Russian Federation and its inability to accept its loss of empire. Russia, it is claimed, is inciting trouble in its immediate neighborhood in order to prevent the states of the FSU from transiting towards democracy and integration with Western institutions.

Comment: Taking the valid points above into account, the issue of the 'external actors' should probably be explored in more depth:


Eye 2

US indicts 2 ISIS 'Beatles' on charges linked to beheadings of American hostages

El Shafee Elsheikh Alexanda Amon Kotey Syria terrorists beatles
© AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File
In this March 30, 2019 photo, Alexanda Amon Kotey, left, and El Shafee Elsheikh, who were allegedly among four British jihadis who made up a brutal Islamic State cell dubbed "The Beatles."
Two British Islamic State terror suspects known as the "Beatles" were indicted in the torturing and beheading of American aid workers and journalists among others once held hostage in Syria, according to court documents made public Wednesday.

El Shafee Elsheikh and Alexanda Kotey are two of four men dubbed "the Beatles" by the hostages they held captive, because of their British accents.

Both men appeared separately by video in US District Court in Alexandria, Virginia Wednesday afternoon. They were advised of the eight charges against them and the potential punishment, which is up to life in prison.

Bullseye

VP Mike Pence put the Harris-Biden agenda on the spot

Pence/Harris/Page
© Justin Sullivan/Reuters
Vice Presidential Debate, VP Mike Pence, VP nominee Kamala Harris, Moderator Susan Page
Salt Lake City, Utah, October 7, 2020
The vice-presidential debate had the surreal air of normality that descends whenever we hear from Mike Pence instead of Donald Trump.

Both vice-presidential candidates left some major weapons little-used until the end: Kamala Harris focused heavily on attacking Donald Trump for standard Republican policies (the Iran Deal, tax cuts, Roe v. Wade), rather than for Trump's defects as a leader; Mike Pence laid off Harris's own awful record. On both counts, the gloves finally came off late in the game.

Harris drew some blood early in the exchanges on the coronavirus, but otherwise, it went downhill fast for her. This was a very good debate for Mike Pence and did not reflect well on Harris. Watching Pence, it was easy to wish he was the one at the top of the ticket. I very much doubt many viewers felt the same way watching Harris. Even the fly that landed on Pence's head during the debate seemed happier on his side.

Comment: During the debate, Kamala was smirky-jerky while Pence was (to Kamala) irritatingly calm. The polarity of style and substance - or lack thereof, stood out.
Asked about committing to a peaceful transfer of power if Joe Biden wins the November election, VP Pence noted:

"When you talk about accepting the outcome of the election, I must tell you, senator," Pence said, turning his attention to Harris, "your party has spent the last three-and-a-half years trying to overturn the results of the last election. It was found there was no obstruction, no collusion, case closed."


Pence also brought up Hillary Clinton stating in August that "Joe Biden should not concede under any circumstances because I think this is going to drag out, and eventually I do believe he will win if we don't give an inch and if we are as focused and relentless as the other side is."

He suggested that Democrats could therefore be the ones not committed to accepting the upcoming election result.

Despite a special counsel probe finding nothing indictable related to the Trump campaign colluding with the Russian government to influence the election, Harris stated that collusion had, in fact, happened. She even accused Russia of interfering in the current presidential election.

"I serve on the Intelligence Committee of the United States Senate. America's intelligence community told us Russia interfered in the election of the president of the United States in 2016 and is playing in 2020. Donald Trump prefers to take the word of Vladimir Putin over word of the American intelligence community."


Frankly, Putin has been the voice of reason and truth, compared to the ongoing diatribe from the Democratic Party and untrustworthiness of certain members of the intelligence community.


Health

White House physician: President Trump has Covid-19 antibodies

Trump
© AP/Alex Brandon
US President Donald Trump
"Of note today, the president's labs demonstrated detectable levels of SARS-CoV-2 IgG (COVID-19) antibodies from labs drawn Monday, October 5th," Conley wrote in a memo sent to reporters. He added that the president's blood work drawn on Thursday did not show any antibodies.

Conley said that President Trump had been "symptom-free" for over 24 hours and fever-free for more than 4 days.

Comment: Antibody drug 'Regeneron' gets a rave review from President Trump as 'key to his recovery'. He offers promises to the public:
Trump revealed he is approving emergency use authorization of the antibody cocktail to hospitals and "hundreds of thousands of doses" are almost ready to be sent out. The military, according to Trump, will be in charge of the distribution.
"If you're in the hospital, and you're feeling really bad, I think we're going to work so you get them and you're going to get them free. I caught it, I heard about this drug, I said 'let me take it.' It was my suggestion."
The Regeneron antibody cocktail is still in clinical trials and not widely available to citizens. Trump was given the treatment thanks to a "compassion use" request from his doctors, which allows patients access to experimental drugs to fight life-threatening illnesses.

He also promised the drug would be free once it's distributed, which some have already begun questioning the practicality of on social media.

The president was also treated with antiviral drug remdesivir and the steroid dexamethasone.



Stop

Backing Biden, leftist 'resistance' to Trump perpetuates illegal US invasions, wars, neocon victories

bidensupporter
© Reuters/Marco Bello
Biden supporter in Captain America costume, Perez Art Museum in Miami, Florida.
Trump calls the Iraqi invasion 'a disaster,' wants to end 'endless wars,' and bring US troops home. It's this that has fueled the deep state's attempts to remove him from office by any means possible. The hawks want Biden to win.

In a recent op-ed on RT, I outlined the puzzling and ironic configuration that is the anti-Trump 'resistance.' But I didn't explore one important 'interest group' within a 'deep state' intent on destroying Trump's presidency at all costs — namely, the neocon hawks of both major political parties and the military and intelligence establishments that defy strict party affiliation.

This contingent includes members of top military brass and intelligence officers, of course, but also military and intelligence contractors, including those employed by the permanent bureaucracy to foil Trump's first run for the presidency by attempting to tie him to "Russian collusion."

Comment: Trump has not promised the neocons their feeding frenzy. Biden will offer it gladly.


Briefcase

Senate Homeland Security Committee subpoenas Cambridge professor Stefan Halper in Russia probe

Halper
© VOA
Professor Stefan Halper - the center of a Pentagon whistleblower complaint.
Halper has been reported as the FBI's confidential source into the Russian collusion investigation.

The Senate Homeland Security Committee subpoenaed Cambridge professor and longtime FBI informant Stefan Halper for records relating to his work during the Russia investigation as part of their investigation into the origins of the Trump-Russia probe. Fox News obtained a copy of the subpoena, issued on Oct. 5.
"You are hereby commanded to appear before the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate on October 14, 2020 at 5:00 p.m. at its committee room," the subpoena read, adding that there, he is compelled to "produce all records related to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Crossfire Hurricane investigation; the Department of Justice Inspector General's review if that investigation; and the "unmasking" of U.S. persons or entities affiliated, formally or informally, with the Trump campaign, Trump transition, or Trump administration."

Comment: The cadre of Russiagaters subpoenaed to join Halper in the upcoming investigative process reads like movie credits! May we finally receive bona fide confirmations of suspect activities and forthright answers nearly four years after-the-fact.
Halper Subpoena
See also: