Puppet Masters
Peter Ford accused Britain's involvement in the US-led coalition of "prolonging the agony" of Syrians, arguing the UK should have learned from its foreign policy "failures" in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya.
The former ambassador, who served in Damascus from 2003 to 2006, said it is "time to get real" that Syrian president Assad would not be overthrown, calling the West's current policy "wishful thinking."
The authors are war reporters from Russia's largest circulation daily. They've covered just about every conceivable recent hot spot - Iraq, Libya, Chechnya, Ukraine etc. This is their latest report from the ruins of Aleppo, where people survive despite being occupied by al-Nusra.
Haytham, 9 and sister Lena, 6 climb the high embankment between two half ruined high-rise buildings, their small hands maneuvering around the barbed wire. A few movements and they are at the top of this former barrier of concrete debris. Rebels built it in 2013, and when the Syrian army drove the Islamists from deep in the blocks, they left the barricades - just in case. Haytham and Lina come this way twice a day - to school and back home.
The Moscow-proposed draft calls on all states to avoid "provocative rhetoric and inflammatory statements" that could further incite foreign interference in Syria's internal affairs, instead of promoting a political settlement to the conflict.

Antonin Scalia. Pompous, pedantic and most over-rated justice in the history of the United States Supreme Court.
George Orwell once noted that when an English politician dies "his worst enemies will stand up on the floor of the House and utter pious lies in his honour." Antonin Scalia was neither English, nor technically speaking a politician, but a similar tradition can be witnessed in the form of the praise now being heaped on him.
For example prominent liberal legal academic and former Obama administration lawyer Cass Sunstein has just offered the opinion that Scalia "was not only one of the most important justices in the nation's history, he was also among the greatest." Scalia's greatness, Sunstein claims, "lies in his abiding commitment to one ideal above any other: the rule of law."
Sunstein's assessment strikes me as not merely wrong, but as the precise opposite of the truth. Scalia was not a great judge: he was a bad one. And his badness consisted precisely in his contempt for the rule of law, if by "the rule of law" one means the consistent application of legal principles, without regard to the political consequences of applying those principles in a consistent way.
She has decided to stay in Nevada through the caucus on Saturday. CBS News spoke to her at her Las Vegas campaign office.
SCOTT PELLEY: What do you think Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders have tapped into? It's a powerful thing.
HILLARY CLINTON: Look, I do think, Scott, people are angry. People feel here government's not working for them. The economy's not working. The political system is not working. But I also see in the eyes of the people I'm meeting with, "Okay, tell me something I can believe. Don't over-promise. Tell me what I can believe you will do for me and my family." And that's what I've tried to do.
The US investigative journalist Robert Parry has made an astonishing claim - and one that has gone completely unnoticed.
He is reporting that the Russian government has warned Erdogan that Russia is prepared to use tactical nuclear weapons to defend its Syrian strike force from Turkish attack.
Comment: With Russia and Syria gaining more ground and defeating Daesh, would Russia really need to use tactical nuclear weapons to defend itself against Turkey? Seems absurd but who knows.
Griffin, founder of Chicago-based hedge fund firm Citadel, bought works by Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning from David Geffen's foundation, said one of the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is confidential.
The deal, completed in the fall, is a record for both artists and exceeds the last high mark for a private sale, the $300 million that Qatar Museums paid for Paul Gauguin's painting "When Will You Marry?" Griffin's purchase preceded a slowdown in the art market in the second half of 2015. Sales of Impressionist, modern, postwar and contemporary art at Sotheby's and Christie's in London earlier this month fell from a year ago.
"In order to own the greatest art historical objects of our time one has to go above and beyond to obtain them," said Abigail Asher, a partner at art advisory firm Guggenheim Asher Associates Inc. in New York, who wasn't involved in the transaction.
Zia Ahmed, a spokesperson for Citadel, declined to comment.
Griffin bought de Kooning's 1955 oil on canvas titled "Interchanged" -- also known as "Interchange" -- for about $300 million and Pollock's 1948 "Number 17A" canvas for about $200 million, one of the people said. The de Kooning fetched $20.7 million in 1989, then an auction record for the artist and more than three times the highest pre-sale estimate of $6 million, according to Artnet, which tracks auction prices. Pollock's work was featured in a 1949 Life magazine article that helped make him a household name.
Comment: What a waste of paint and money.
While the graphic created by Charles Lister - a fellow of the Middle East Institute in Washington - is described as "simple", the zigzagging colorful lines are pretty mindboggling.
The chart is a 'who's who' of forces fighting against each other in the conflict.
This *simple* chart shows all states of hostility currently being played out on #Syria's territory#IntractableWar pic.twitter.com/1inprNB6U0
— Charles Lister (@Charles_Lister) February 13, 2016
Spokesperson Kirby for the US Department of State told a press briefing on Thursday that US military expansion into Eastern Europe and the South China Sea is at the behest of its allies, while dismissing that this could be perceived as a threat by Russia and China.
"Our allies and partners, I think, find [it] pretty comforting and reassuring [that there is a] US military presence in the region, which will continue," Kirby replied when asked about NATO's move towards the east not being perceived as a threat, or US ships sailing into the South China Sea.
Comment: Any country that is not compliant to the US' wishes is considered a threat and must leave itself defenseless to prove they are not a threat. How ridiculous is that?
The papers date back to 1983, when the UK Foreign and Cabinet offices were ecstatic at the outcome of the Madrid review conference on the implementation of the Helsinki Final Act on security and cooperation in Europe.
"... We now have a provisional mandate for a CDE (Conference on Disarmament in Europe) which establishes four basic criteria, all of which have required concession on the part of the Soviet Union and her allies," officials in Whitehall wrote at the time.














Comment: Indeed, the list of appalling rulings by Scalia is long.