Welcome to Sott.net
Fri, 05 Nov 2021
The World for People who Think

Puppet Masters
Map

Snakes in Suits

Predators: War profiteers are now refugee profiteers

refugee children greece
© AFP/Getty
Refugee children are frightened by riot police at the Greece-Macedonian border in 2015, before Macedonia shut its border to asylum seekers earlier this year.
Arms dealers flood war-torn Middle East with weapons and then lobby EU to militarize borders against refugees—profiting from both ends of conflict

As Europe comes to terms with a Brexit vote fueled in large part by anti-immigrant hate-mongering, a new report exposes how war profiteers are influencing EU policy to make money from unending Middle East conflicts as well as the wave of refugees created by that same instability and violence.

The report (pdf), Border Wars: The Arms Dealers Profiting from Europe's Refugee Tragedy, released jointly by the European Stop Wapenhandel and Transnational Institute (TNI) on Monday, outlines arms traders' pursuit of profit in the 21st century's endless conflicts.

"There is one group of interests that have only benefited from the refugee crisis, and in particular from the European Union's investment in 'securing' its borders,'" the report finds. "They are the military and security companies that provide the equipment to border guards, the surveillance technology to monitor frontiers, and the IT infrastructure to track population movements."

The report shows that "far from being passive beneficiaries of EU largesse, these corporations are actively encouraging a growing securitization of Europe's borders, and willing to provide ever more draconian technologies to do this."

Crusader

Russian President Putin signs law banning GMO production

No GMO graphic
Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed the law banning genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and production in Russia, excluding examinations and scientific researches. The law was passed by the State Duma (lower house of parliament) on June 24 and approved by the Federation Council (upper house) on June 29, 2016.

The law bans imports of GMOs aimed for releasing to the environment and GMO products to the territory of the Russian Federation. The document obliges importers of GMO products to a compulsory public registration.

Cow Skull

Message sent? Istanbul nearly a ghost town as tourists fearing violence stay away

tourism Turkey
© Agence France-Presse
People walk past shops at the Grand Bazaar in Instanbul
The tourists are so scarce you can hear their footsteps clattering down the empty shopping street. Nearly a week after the deadly airport bombings, it is eerily quiet in Istanbul.

The magic of Turkey's biggest city has been seducing visitors for centuries, from its array of historic mosques and palaces to its stunning views over the sparkling Bosphorus.

But for people working in the once-thriving tourist trade, Tuesday's gun and suicide bomb spree represents one more nail in the coffin for an industry already reeling from a string of attacks this year. "It's disastrous," said Orhan Sonmez as he stood hopelessly offering tours of the Hagia Sophia, the cavernous former mosque and church that is now a museum. "All my life I've been a tour guide. Most of us have come to a turning point where we don't know if we can go on. It's tragic."

Restaurants sit empty in the Sultanahmet tourist district, and five-star hotel rooms can be booked for bargain prices.

Comment: Turkey had just concluded two major diplomatic moves, apologizing to Russia for the downing of one of her jets, and cozying back up to Israel for some much coveted gas revenue. Was someone not happy about that?

Turkey 48 hours: Diplomatic victories, deadly terror attack...are they connected?


Handcuffs

Netanyahu once again suspected of receiving illegal contributions from foreign businessmen

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Israel's prime minister, who is already suspected of having accepted more than USD one million worth of "donation" from a French fraud brain, is now the subject of a new investigation.

Back in March, it was reported that Benjamin Netanyahu had had shady relations with a French individual considered by French prosecutors as the "brain" behind one of the biggest frauds in history.

The Frenchman, Arnaud Mimran, along with his partners, is accused of stealing between EUR 300 million to 1.6 billion (USD 334 million to 1.7 billion) in a fraud case commonly referred to in Europe as "the scam of the century."

On Monday, Israel's Channel 2 reported that police were now probing whether the Israeli prime minister had received illegal contributions from foreign businessmen during his current tenure.

Blackbox

What is Netanyahu up to in Africa?

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu (L) walks with Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni (R)
Benjamin Netanyahu is on a four-nation tour of sub-Saharan Africa for the first visit of Israel's prime minister to the continent in almost 30 years.

He arrived in Uganda on Monday on the first leg of a four-day trip which will also take him to Kenya, Rwanda and Ethiopia.

By visiting Africa, the Israeli premier wants to end decades of hostility and convince African countries to stop voting against Israel at the United Nations.

Netanyahu also seeks to cast off Israel's pariah status in the black continent as he faces growing criticism from Western allies over the dim prospects for a resolution to the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Bomb

Double bombings: Death toll in Baghdad so far 213, ISIS claims one

site car bomb
© Khalid al Mousily / Reuters
People gather at the site of a suicide car bomb in the Karrada shopping area in Baghdad.
In the deadliest single attack in Baghdad this year, a refrigerator truck bomb in a Shiite district has killed at least 213 people. Islamic State claimed responsibility, while survivors lambasted the Iraqi prime minister for failing to ensure security.

Late on Saturday night, the suicide bomber drove the vehicle into a busy shopping intersection in the affluent Karrada district of the Iraqi capital. The holy month of Ramadan meant the street was busy with residents breaking their fast after nightfall, with many also gathered to watch the Euro 2016 football championship on public TV screens, and shop ahead of next week's Eid festival.Then the explosion rang out.



"It was like an earthquake. I wrapped up my goods and was heading home when I saw a fireball with a thunderous bombing," eyewitness Karim Sami told AP. "I was so scared to go back and started to make phone calls to my friends, but none answered." A host of buildings - including a shopping center and a gym - were damaged, with charred cars smoking in the street.

At least 25 children were killed, and the death toll mounted throughout Sunday, as a fire took 12 hours to contain, and rescue services attempted to extract bodies from under the rubble. Almost immediately, the Islamic State terror group boasted that it was behind the attack on its sectarian rivals, calling it a "security operation."

Comment: We can take the statement from the White House and toss it. Perfected indignation. Of course ISIS will succeed. It has, it does and shall as long as it is useful, supplied, protected, and 'terror' remains the change agent. These are two more horrific tragedies that need not have happened.


Telephone

U.S. government approved 100% of wiretap applications in 2015

Telephones
© Getty Images
A ten-year study of how state and federal law enforcement wiretaps suspects shows that the government is extremely efficient at the practice, and is only getting better.

The new report, conducted by the Federal Judiciary, looked at the prevalence of the FBI and state and local police petitioning for a warrant to surveil someone. Methods range from tracking their computer activity to bugging a home telephone or a room, though it overwhelmingly—96 percent of the time 2015—meant tracking or listening to their cell phone calls.

It has become a common enough practice that in a ten-year span, a wiretap request has been denied only eight times, and never more than twice in a year. According to the report, "no wiretap applications were reported as denied in 2015."

Limitless wiretaps
© Vocativ
And while the number of wiretaps that courts approve has steadily risen over the past decade, to the point where they've more than doubled from 1,774 in 2005 to 4,148 in 2015, wiretapping has become a more cost-effective process.

Comment: Study: Knowledge of mass surveillance creates 'chilling effect' and is silencing dissent online


Che Guevara

Corbyn issues video online: Calls for UK Labour Party members to "come together" and stand against Tory leadership

Jeremy Corbyn
© Neil Hall / Reuters
Britain's opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has issued a fight-back Facebook video in a bid to convince rebel MPs to "come together" and get behind his leadership.

The video release comes after former Shadow Business Secretary Angela Eagle said she would challenge Corbyn in a leadership contest if he did not stand down.

Last week, Corbyn lost a vote of confidence in his leadership of the Labour Party by 172 votes to 40. The vote was non-binding, and he appears to be ignoring the outcome.

More than 50 of the Labour shadow cabinet and frontbench MPs have resigned, triggered by complaints about Corbyn's efforts in the EU referendum campaign.


Comment: See also:


Powertool

FBI admits supplying dummy-bomb to 'domestic terrorist' in BLM bomb plot

Manufactured terrorism
An update on our story from ten days ago. In case you haven't heard the details, the FBI admits in their own felony complaint that multiple undercover FBI agents infiltrated Bill Keebler's 'Patriot Defense Force' in Utah, encouraged Keebler to use explosives, volunteered to make them, and then supplied the inert explosive device for Keebler to plant at an abandoned Arizona Bureau of Land Management facility. [See our previous article here]

FBI Special Agent Steven Daniels swore to and signed this felony complaint on June 22, 2016. It was signed by Utah Magistrate Judge Dustin B. Pead. (Here is a bio on Judge Pead.)

Keebler is currently being held without bail, and is charged with violating 18 U.S.C. § 844(f), "Attempted Damage to Federal Property by Means of Fire or Explosive.". Also note the part in bold where agent Daniels swears, on June 22, 2016, that: "KEEBLER had conducted reconnaissance on the BLM facility in Arizona in October, 2015, with Lavoy Finicum. A PDF (Patriots Defense Force) member/UCE (Under Cover FBI Employee) who was accompanying KEEBLER at the time took pictures of the BLM facility at Mount Trumbull."

However, at the June 29, 2016 hearing, prosecutors changed their story and corrected that lie, backtracking and admitting that Lavoy Finicum was not there. This didn't stop FBI agent Steven Daniels to swearing to it as truth on June 22.

This begs the question, what else is Daniels lying about or exaggerating in the felony complaint against Bill Keebler?

Comment: FBI creates and foils terrorist plot aimed at those who question government


Boat

Global Times: Washington should pay a price for force intervention in S. China Sea dispute

US ships
© China Daily / Reuters
South China Sea in 3D: Debate. Defleet. Defeat. What'll it be?
Beijing must prepare to make the US "pay a cost it can't stand" if it intervenes in the South China Sea dispute by force, a state newspaper editorial has warned, days before a court at The Hague rules on the territorial row between China and the Philippines.

The American military build-up in the South China Sea, including the deployment of two carrier strike groups, comes in defiance of China's vital interests and represents "a direct threat to national security," the state-run Global Times said in strongly-worded editorials in its Chinese and English editions on Tuesday. Beijing should accelerate developing its strategic deterrence capabilities to contain the United States, the newspaper added. "Even though China cannot keep up with the US militarily in the short-term, it should be able to let the US pay a cost it cannot stand if it intervenes in the South China Sea dispute by force." China is a peaceful country that welcomes dialogue on the disputed region, the influential newspaper wrote, "but it must be prepared for any military confrontation."

The Global Times is believed to have close ties with the government as it operates under the auspices of the Communist Party's official newspaper, the People's Daily. The Tuesday editorial went online a week ahead of a ruling by the International Court of Arbitration in The Hague on the South China Sea dispute between China and the Philippines. In 2013, the Philippines filed a complaint with the court, asking it to rule on who owns the Spratly Islands, which lie at the heart of economically important shipping routes in the area. China sees the ruling - which is due to be announced on July 12 - as "posing more threat to the integrity of China's maritime and territorial sovereignty," the Global Times stated, claiming "the arbitration becomes nothing but a farce." Beijing has said it will not recognize the ruling.

Comment: The US has run amok or this is just another distraction, one of many to poke at. It certainly would not put up with China milling around San Diego Harbor with two carrier strike groups sent to "enforce freedom of navigation." Swim or sink.