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Trump orders TikTok parent company to sell US assets within 90 days

tiktok Trump
© Getty Images
President Trump on Friday issued an order calling on Chinese company ByteDance, which owns the popular video app TikTok, to divest from the social media platform's U.S. operations, citing national security.

"There is credible evidence that leads me to believe that ByteDance Ltd. ... might take action that threatens to impair the national security of the United States," Trump said in the order released Friday night.

The order cites ByteDance's 2017 acquisition of the social media app Musical.ly, which merged into TikTok, in making the case that the Chinese company poses a national security risk to the U.S.

Comment: Is China using TikTok to spy on the US? Probably. All Chinese corporations are ultimately beholden to their government. Not so different from the US!


Che Guevara

Belarus 'revolution' is imperialists running the same tired old script, day after day

protests white march belarus

"What do we want? The right to wear muzzles! When do we want it? NOW!"
The Western establishment narrative managers always follow the same patterns. Just like they fixated on Hong Kong protests, while ignoring those in US-aligned France or Israel, now they're cheering on protests in Belarus.

Imperialist pundit and Obama administration Cold Warrior Michael McFaul recently tweeted the following:

"Belarusians, inside and outside of the country, have reached out to me this week to ask why the West is so indifferent to their courageous fight for democracy. I can't explain. Can you?"

I am not highlighting this tweet because it is remarkable (except for the extremely dubious claim that anyone ever reaches out to Michael McFaul). I am highlighting it because it is completely unremarkable.

Comment: RT has apparently changed its tune on the Belarus protests. For more analysis on the situation, see:


MIB

Meet Cybereason: The Israeli intelligence cyber-security front company that has been "simulating" the cancellation of the 2020 election

protect the vote
A cybersecurity firm tied to Israeli intelligence's Unit 8200 that simulated a series of terrorist attacks occurring on the U.S. 2020 election has announced a new hire with deep ties to the U.S. intelligence and defense communities with the goal of gaining greater access to U.S. government networks.

A cybersecurity company tied to Israeli intelligence and a series of unnerving simulations regarding cyber-terrorist attacks on the upcoming U.S. elections has recently announced a new hire who plans to aid the company in further penetrating the U.S. public sector. Last Wednesday, the company Cybereason announced that it had hired Andrew Borene as its Managing Director for its recently launched U.S. public sector business. Borene, who boasts longstanding ties to the U.S. intelligence community and the Pentagon, "will accelerate Cybereason's partner and customer presence in the U.S. public sector," according to a Cybereason press release.

"My goal is to build a strong business for Cybereason within the U.S. public sector and I am planning to recruit a group of direct support executives, veterans and alumni of the elite [U.S.] military units and agencies that have defended our nation in the information age. I'll also work to establish a network of the best channel and delivery partners for federal, state and local governments," Borene said per the press release.

Comment: Israeli intelligence-related companies have been popping up out the woodwork like crazy lately: And on the subject a predicted "failed" presidential election: How Government and Media work together preparing America for a failed 2020 election


Eagle

How the US helped push Lebanon to the brink of collapse, now threatens more sanctions, and just started a color revolution

Beirut explosion aftermath
While the media blames the crisis in Lebanon solely on corruption, the US government unleashed a "maximum pressure" campaign to push regime change and crush Lebanese resistance with sanctions and aggressive hybrid warfare.

As the people of Lebanon suffer through one of the worst economic crises in their nation's conflict-ridden history, the Donald Trump administration is exploiting the disaster to force regime change and weaken Lebanese resistance groups.

A massive explosion on August 4 devastated Lebanon's capital Beirut, killing more than 150 people, wounding thousands, leaving hundreds of thousands homeless, and ravaging a sizable chunk of the city.

The massive blast also destroyed Lebanon's most important port, where 80 percent of food was imported into the country.

Even before the apocalyptic incident, Lebanon was enduring an economic calamity that had caused hyperinflation and wiped out the wealth of much of the country, fueling widespread food shortages and 20-hour blackouts.

Lebanon's economy is now in a state of total collapse. The value of its national currency has plummeted by 80 percent, and more than half of the population is languishing in poverty.

Black Magic

Still hanging on: Killary angles for spot in Biden government - would 'certainly consider' serving

Hillary Clinton

Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton is "ready to help" presidential hopeful Joe Biden, should he win the November election.

Speaking at The 19th* Represents Virtual Summit on Thursday, the former secretary of state-turned-Democratic presidential nominee was asked whether she would serve in the former vice president's potential administration, if he wins in November.

She didn't rule it out.

"I'm ready to help in any way I can because I think this will be a moment where every American — I don't care what party you are, I don't care what age, race, gender, I don't care — every American should want to fix our country," Clinton, 72, said. "So if you're asked to serve, you should certainly consider that."

Comment: So imagine an administration that held both Kamala and Hillary. Would it be a cage match for policy dominance? Or perhaps the teaming up of Killary and her Mini-me? Or then again, the Dems might be tacitly conceding this term to Trump (odds are good) and plan to regroup for 2024. They certainly couldn't have come up with a more unlikeable pair for this election.


Info

Huawei lawyers say U.S. evidence 'unreliable' in Meng extradition case

Meng Wanzhou
© Reuters
Meng Wanzhou
Evidence used by the United States to justify the extradition of Huawei Technologies Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou is "unreliable and defective" and should not be considered by a Canadian court, Meng's lawyers argued in documents released to the media on Friday.

Meng, 48, was arrested in December 2018 on a warrant from the United States which alleges that she misled the bank HSBC (HSBA.L) about Huawei's business dealings in Iran.

She has said she is innocent and is fighting extradition while on house arrest in Vancouver.

Meng's lawyers submitted testimony from expert witnesses including John Bellinger, a former White House lawyer, as well as a Huawei Technologies Co Ltd presentation outlining its relationship with businesses operating in Iran, to back Huawei's argument that the United States left out key facts about communication with HSBC about Huawei's operations in Iran when requesting Meng's extradition from Canada.

The submissions show that the evidence used by the United States as part of their case is "manifestly unreliable - so unreliable and defective - to justify refusing to commit (Meng) for extradition," lawyers for Huawei wrote.

Comment: See also:


Magnify

Belarus' Lukashenko says he is being targeted by 'color revolution', seeks to join forces with Putin

Lukashenko
© REUTERS / BelTA / Andrei Stasevich / Vasily Fedosenko
(L) A protest in Minsk ; (R) Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko
Mass anti-government protests in Belarus are actually a "color revolution" in action, and Russia may be the next target if the country fails to halt its progress, President Alexander Lukashenko has claimed.


Comment: Oh now he says it! This is him obviously pleading for protection/assistance, but boy oh boy did he leave it late, instead suggesting around 10 days ago that the protests may be due to Russian interference.


Lukashenko, whose reelection for a sixth term last Sunday sparked mass protests over an alleged rigging of the vote, believes his detractors are unwitting agents of foreign puppeteers and need to be stopped.

"Don't you lull us with [talk about] peaceful action and demonstrations. We can see what is happening deep down," the Belarus leader said on Saturday at a government meeting, as cited by local media.

Comment: MSN reports that the EU is making moves to sanction Belarus:
European foreign ministers have agreed to move toward sanctions on Alexander Lukashenko's regime, after reports of the systematic abuse and torture of Belarusians swept up in the brutal crackdown on protests.

A diplomatic source said the EU's 27 foreign ministers had agreed that individuals responsible for the falsification of Sunday's presidential elections and subsequent violence against protesters should face asset freezes and travel bans into the bloc.

Officials will now be charged with drawing up a list of names for a legal agreement, which could happen in late August or September. "It was a surprising consensus," the diplomat said, while pointing out the 27 still had to reach consensus on the names.

Belarus
© Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Tomasz Jastrzębowski/Rex/Shutterstock
The emergency video meeting on Friday was called to discuss the disputed elections in Belarus, after a string of EU countries called for action against those responsible for the violence and arbitrary detention of protesters.

Ahead of the meeting Poland, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Denmark had called for "restrictive measures against officials" responsible for the election result, which gave Lukashenko 80% of the vote following a contest the EU said was "neither free nor fair". Germany, Austria and Sweden had also voiced support for sanctions.

"We need additional sanctions against those who violated democratic values or abused human rights in Belarus," the head of the EU executive, Ursula von der Leyen, tweeted on Friday. "I am confident today's EU foreign ministers' discussion will demonstrate our strong support for the rights of the people in Belarus to fundamental freedoms & democracy."

The German foreign minister, Heiko Maas, said. "The brutality and the detention of peaceful protesters and journalists in Belarus isn't acceptable in the Europe of the 21st century. This is why we have to increase the pressure on those in power there."

EU sanctions must be agreed unanimously.

Hungary was considered the main obstacle to EU action after the country's prime minister, Viktor Orbán, visited Minsk in June and called for existing EU sanctions to be dropped.

The country did voice caution over new sanctions, as did Austria and Greece, but they did not oppose the political decision to move in that direction.

Budapest had already backed an EU statement on Tuesday that threatened sanctions against those "responsible for the observed violence, unjustified arrests and falsification of election results". Following talks with the Latvian foreign minister, Edgars Rinkēvičs, his Hungarian counterpart, Péter Szijjártó, said on Thursday that the two countries shared the same assessment of the situation.

EU sources suggested Hungary could exert influence in narrowing the number of individuals on the sanctions list.

The EU will also explore new funds to support civil society activists in Belarus, and a fact-finding mission to help mediate between the government and opposition.

The British government has not revealed if it supports sanctions against Belarus, but under the terms of the Brexit transition the UK would have to enforce any EU measures that came into force before the end of the year.

The foreign office minister Wendy Morton described the violence as "appalling" and called on the Belarusian authorities to release "all those unjustly detained" and engage in dialogue with the opposition.

An EU spokesperson for foreign affairs and security said the bloc was "regularly in touch with it likeminded partners", including the UK on shared concerns and priorities, but added: "It remains to be seen if there will be a specific contact after [Friday's foreign ministers] video conference."

EU foreign ministers are also expected to discuss how the EU could mediate between Lukashenko and protesters. Poland and the three Baltic states have called on the autocrat to "immediately initiate a dialogue with the Belarusian people".

The EU lifted most sanctions against Belarus in 2016 as it sought a rapprochement with Lukashenko, who has ruled the country with an iron fist since 1994.

The decision to ease sanctions followed the release of political prisoners and a downturn in Minsk's relations with the Kremlin, but one former presidential candidate, Andrei Sannikov, called it "a grave mistake".

The EU retains a ban on arms sales and sanctions on four individuals linked to the unsolved disappearances of opposition politicians, a journalist and businessman in 1999-2000.

Belarus is not the only crisis at the EU's border vying for attention. Ministers will discuss rising tensions in the eastern Mediterranean between Greece and Turkey and the political crisis in Lebanon following last week's catastrophic explosion.

France announced this week it was sending a naval frigate and two fighter jets to the eastern Mediterranean, amid a growing row between Athens and Ankara over offshore energy reserves.

Emmanuel Macron last month called for EU sanctions against Turkey over what he called "violations" of Greek and Cypriot sovereignty in their territorial waters. But that has met a cool response from Berlin, which has called for "de-escalation and solution-orientated dialogue". Brussels also stopped short of proposing sanctions in a recent statement on the "extremely worrying" situation.
Lukashenko has responded by moving troops to the country's western borders.

Belarus has actually been surprisingly free of foreign interference, for decades, and especially in recent years as Lukashenko played it safe like Kazakhstan by courting east and west.

So what changed recently?

Obviously, Belarus' unique stance on Covid-19, which Lukashenko explicitly ignored and called out as a 'scam'. Because the 'system managers' require nothing less than total global submission, Lukashenko must go, and the Belarussian population must instead obey and fear The Covid...

See also: Extensive foreign interference in Belarus attempts to 'destabilize' country, but it's not coming from Moscow - Russian MFA


Calculator

Putin's income grew by $15k in 2019, defamers claim he's worth $200 billion

Putin
© Sputnik/Alexei Druzhinin/Kremlin via REUTERS
Russia's President Vladimir Putin
Russian President Vladimir Putin's declared income grew by 1.1 million rubles ($15,000) in 2019, increasing his yearly net earnings to 9.7 million ($133,000).

The president also declared the ownership of two apartments (though only one is currently in use), three Russian-made vehicles (two GAZ-M21 and a Lada Niva), and a 'Skif' trailer (also made in Russia).

All of Putin's property is located inside the country. In 2015, he famously claimed that he doesn't know his salary, which is considerably lower than the official salary of $400,000 for the president of the US. "They just give it to me, and I put it away in my account," he said.

Comment: See also: More Duma, Less Prezident: Putin Announces Democratic Changes to Russian Constitution


Attention

'Worst is yet to come' - Biosecurity Theatre

Biosecurity Threat
© Corbett Report
You know about "security theatre," right? That's the kind of take-off-your-shoes-and-belt nonsense that was instituted at the airport post-9/11 to give passengers the feeling that the government was protecting them from those dastardly Al-CIA-da terrorists.

Of course, these measures do nothing to actually prevent terrorism. Even the MSM mouthpiece media was forced to admit that the TSA never caught a single terrorist with such practices.

But that's not the point. These procedures are only there to give the impression that agencies like the TSA are actually keeping the public safe.

Well, guess what? As we transition from the post-9/11 "homeland security" paradigm to the post-Covid "biosecurity" paradigm, there is now an equivalent to the security theatre phenomenon taking shape: biosecurity theatre.

I know you've noticed it already. The stickers on the floor at the supermarket telling you exactly where to stand when lining up at the cash register. The "one-way aisles" telling you which way to walk as you do your shopping. The infrared thermometer guns pointed suggestively at your head before you enter a public building, as if such a device could actually detect a fever within a fraction of a second of "scanning."

Of course these gadgets and procedures are not meant to stop the spread of any infectious pathogen. They are merely there to make the public feel better.

Hiliter

Pompeo inks deal to support more US troops in Poland

Pompeo/Blaszczak
© Janek Skarzynski/AP
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, left, and Poland's Minister of Defence Mariusz Blaszczak greet each other after signing the US-Poland Enhanced Defence Cooperation Agreement in the Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo sealed a defense cooperation deal Saturday with Polish officials that will pave the way to deploy more American troops to Poland.

Pompeo, in Warsaw at the end of a four-nation tour of central and eastern Europe, signed the deal with Polish Defense Minister Mariusz Błaszczak that sets out the legal framework for the additional troops. Poland's President Andrzej Duda said during the signing ceremony:
"This is going to be an extended guarantee: a guarantee that in case of a threat our soldiers are going to stand arm-in-arm. It will also serve to increase the security of other countries in our part of Europe."
The deal would also further other aspects of U.S.-Polish cooperation, he added, citing primarily investment and trade ties.