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Whistle

Trump-Ukraine CIA whistleblower sought by FBI for questioning

ZaidCiaramella
© zerohedge.com/KJN
Attorney Mark Zaid • Alleged whistleblower CIA analyst Eric Ciaramella
The FBI has reached out to an attorney for the Trump-Ukraine whistleblower reported to be CIA analyst Eric Ciaramella, who filed a complaint over President Trump's July 25 phone call with his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodomyr Zelensky, according to Yahoo! News. The move came after a vigorous internal debate at the agency over how to proceed with an investigation of allegations contained in the complaint, according to sources familiar with the matter.

According to the report, an FBI agent from the Washington field office reached out to whistleblower attorney Mark Zaid (The 'Coup has started' guy who loves going to Disneyland alone), who declined comment for the article. From Yahoo! News:
The request from the FBI comes at a sensitive moment when Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee are making repeated efforts to "out" the whistleblower in order to suggest he may have had political motivations hostile to the president when he filed his Aug. 12 complaint with the intelligence community's inspector general.

It also comes after multiple threats have been made against the whistleblower and his lawyers — some of which have been separately passed along by the lawyers to other officials at the FBI. But the agent who sought to question the whistleblower made no reference to the threats as the purpose of the interview, according to sources familiar with the discussions. Yahoo suggests that an FBI interview will "introduce a new wild card into the debate over whether to impeach the president over his Ukraine dealings."

Comment: Daily Caller, 20/11/2019; Nunes to subpoena whistleblower, Hunter Biden
Republican California Rep. Devin Nunes on Wednesday wrote a letter to House Intelligence Committee chairman Adam Schiff asking Hunter Biden and the whistleblower to be subpoenaed to appear before the committee. Nunes and Republican Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan said in the letter:
"The American people understand how you have affirmatively prevented Republicans from examining serious issues directly relevant to the issues. Therefore, to provide some basic level of fairness and objectivity to your 'impeachment inquiry,' we intend to subpoena the anonymous whistleblower and Hunter Biden for sworn testimony in closed-door depositions."
Nunes Plans To Subpoena Whistleblower, Hunter Biden on Scribd

Republican Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul on Thursday said he might force a vote to bring in 2020 presidential candidate Joe Biden's son in as a witness to the impeachment trial against President Donald Trump.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that the Senate cannot dismiss the articles of impeachment against Trump, meaning there will be a trial. However, most Republican senators refused to rule out voting to remove Trump from office in an impeachment trial over the Ukraine scandal when contacted by the Daily Caller at the end of October.

The Caller contacted all 53 Republican Senate offices to ask if senators would rule out voting to remove Trump from office, and received a variety of responses — seven senators explicitly rejected impeachment in their statement.

However, Senate Republicans do not appear to be concerned about House Democrats' ongoing efforts to impeach Trump, with many saying even if the House were to move forward with impeachment, that there is no way the Senate would vote to impeach the president.

The Daily Caller spoke with over ten GOP senators in mid-October, who all shared their views about House Democrats' efforts to impeach the President. Not one senator was concerned about the impeachment process, saying they are most concerned about the Democrats' ongoing attempts to impeach Trump based on no hard evidence.

House Democrats will continue to hold open impeachment hearings throughout the next weeks.
See also:


Star of David

Gantz urges opposition to unite; claims Netanyahu could 'ignite a civil war'

BGantz
© AP/Dan Balilty
Former IDF Chief of Staff Benney Gantz
On 21 November, Israeli President Reuven Rivlin instructed the Knesset to form a coalition government within 21 days following Prime Minister Netanyahu's and Benny Gantz's failure to do so. There have been repeated calls for Netanyahu to resign over his inability to form a government and a recent corruption indictment against him.

The head of Israeli political alliance Blue and White, Benny Gantz, has called upon officials from Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud to form a coalition government, arguing that the Israeli PM was risking to "ignite a civil war" with his actions, Haaretz reported. Gantz told the media:
"Likud leaders, it's time to make your voice heard. The last days and weeks leave no room for doubt - Netanyahu risks igniting a civil war between us.

"I respect you and I call for a partnership with you. Even if we do not agree on everything, you, like my friends and I, share the Zionist values of partnership and unity. It's time for you to put the fears and threats of the past aside, and to march Israeli society as a whole into a new era of healing".

Comment: See also:


Document

NYT names FBI 'resistance' lawyer now under criminal investigation for fabricating FISA documents

HorowitzClinesmith
© teaparty.org/Zerohedge.com
DOJ IG Michael Horowitz • Lawyer Kevin Clinesmith
The New York Times has revealed that the "low-level lawyer" under criminal investigation for allegedly doctoring materials used to obtain renewals of the Carter Page surveillance warrant is Kevin Clinesmith - who worked on both the Hillary Clinton email investigation and the Russia probe, was part of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's team, and interviewed Trump campaign advisor George Papadopoulos.

Clinesmith, a 37-year-old graduate of Georgetown Law, "took an email from an official at another federal agency that contained several factual assertions, then added material to the bottom that looked like another assertion from the email's author, when it was instead his own understanding," according to the report. From the New York Times:
Mr. Clinesmith included this altered email in a package that he compiled for another F.B.I. official to read in preparation for signing an affidavit that would be submitted to the court attesting to the facts and analysis in the wiretap application.

The details of the email are apparently classified and may not be made public even when the report is unveiled.
In other words, we won't get to see whatever the FBI used to trick the FISA court into granting Page's renewals.

Comment: See also: Horowitz: FBI lawyer falsified FISA doc; WaPo stealth-deletes Strzok connection




Attention

Joe Biden threatens Lindsey Graham: He will 'regret' investigating me 'his whole life'

Biden
© Sean Rayford/Getty Images
Presidential candidate and Former VP Joe Biden
Former Vice President Joe Biden threatened Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) for launching an investigation into his activities with Ukraine while in the Obama White House, stating the Republican will "regret" the move his "whole life."

On Thursday, Graham sent a letter to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo requesting documents to aid in determining whether Biden pushed for the firing of Ukrainian Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin to squash a sweeping probe into Burisma Holdings, the Ukrainian energy giant where his son, Hunter Biden, served as a board member. The younger Biden was compensated generously, making up to $83,000 a month for several years while on the Burisma's board.

"Lindsey is about to go down in a way that I think he's going to regret his whole life," Biden told CNN host Don Lemon in a Friday interview in South Carolina. "I say Lindsey, I just — I'm just embarrassed by what you're doing, for you. I mean, my Lord. They have him under their thumb right now. They know he knows that if he comes out against Trump, he's got a real tough road for reelection, number one," the former vice president continued about the South Carolina senator.

Comment: See also:


Stop

William Taylor is blocking Ukrainians' visas to come testify in Schiff's fraudulent investigation says Giuliani

RudiGiuliani
© Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images
Trump lawyer Rudi Giuliani
As Congress slogs through more monotonous testimony in the impeachment probe against President Donald Trump, the man at the center of the impeachment narrative — Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani — appeared on BlazeTV host Glenn Beck's program Wednesday night to give his side of the story.

During the exclusive interview, Giuliani told Beck that his initial job in Ukraine was to gather exculpatory evidence counter to the Mueller investigation and report about allegations of collusion between the Russian government and the Trump campaign. During that process, he says, he started turning up information about collusion between Democrats and the Ukrainians to influence the 2016 election.

Giuliani also claimed that United States diplomats — including some who have testified against President Trump in Congress' ongoing impeachment efforts — were doing the bidding of leftist billionaire George Soros in a "massive pay-for-play multimillion-dollar scheme."


Comment: See also:


Pirates

CENTCOM: US to increase fight against ISIS in Syria 'because oil'

US Convoy
© Reuters/Azad Lashkari
US military convoy withdraws from northern Syria, October 2019
The Central Command chief said the US plans to escalate operations against Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) militants in Syria, where hundreds of American troops were left to "secure the oil." General Kenneth McKenzie spoke to reporters on the sidelines of a security-themed event in Manama, Bahrain on Saturday.

The US-led anti-IS operations in Syria are "expected to pick up in coming days and weeks," he said. McKenzie also noted that about 500 US troops currently remain in eastern Syria.

US President Donald Trump announced the withdrawal of troops from northeastern Syria in October. However, he later clarified that hundreds of soldiers would stay to secure the oilfields in the country.

The president has also repeatedly declared victory over IS in the past, and Defense Secretary Mark Esper claimed to have destroyed "the physical caliphate" in Syria. Despite that, experts at the Pentagon have been warning that the militants would likely resurge and renew their activities should the Americans leave.

Comment: The US is committed to protecting what really matters.

See also:


Arrow Down

'It's sarcasm!' Giuliani downplays his remark of having an 'insurance policy' on Trump

Giuliani
© Gerardo Mora/Getty Images
Former New York City mayor, Trump personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani
Rudy Giuliani on Saturday sought to play down a remark he's repeatedly made about having an "insurance policy" on President Donald Trump to protect himself amid the ongoing impeachment investigation. The president's personal lawyer tweeted:
"TRUTH ALERT: The statement I've made several times of having an insurance policy, if thrown under bus, is sarcastic & relates to the files in my safe about the Biden Family's 4 decade monetizing of his office."
Earlier Saturday, Fox News' Ed Henry asked Giuliani whether he's communicated with Trump after recent head-snapping developments in the impeachment probe relating to Trump and Giuliani's efforts to secure an investigation of former Vice President Joe Biden from Ukraine.
"You can assume that I talk with him early and often and have a very, very good relationship with him, and all these comments — which are totally insulting — I mean, I've seen things written like he's going to throw me under the bus. When they say that, I say, 'He isn't, but I have insurance.'"

Snakes in Suits

Time running out: US Senate's last-ditch effort to ax Nord Stream 2 pipeline

Nord Stream 2 pipe
© Ilya Pitalev/Sputnik
After failing to persuade allies in Europe to scrap the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which is set to transport natural gas from Europe to Russia, US lawmakers are planning to roll a new batch of sanctions into a defense spending bill.

The sanctions against the companies involved in the project have been included in the draft 2020 National Defense Authorization Act. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jim Risch told Defense News on Saturday that the legislation essentially mimics the last anti-Nord Stream bill - the so-called Protecting Europe's Energy Security Act - which was approved by the committee in July but then got stuck in procedural hurdles.

"The reason for the push is that this window is closing. A lot of Nord Stream is done already," Risch said, hoping that the sanctioned companies working with the Russians "will shut down," should the sanctions scheme take effect.

Comment: It's a done deal. The 'masters of the universe' should just get over it!


Cult

Protecting the network? Lawyers for pedo-madam Ghislaine Maxwell seek redaction of 100s of names in Epstein docs


Comment: She's quiet; the media's quiet... the cover-up continues.


GhislaineMaxwell
© Getty Images/Laura Cavanaugh
Ghislaine Maxwell
Attorneys for former Jeffrey Epstein partner, friend, and alleged madam Ghislaine Maxwell on Monday asked a federal judge in Manhattan to grant them a one-month extension as they prepare to argue that the court should not unseal the identities of non-party persons whose names appear in documents ordered released by the court.

U.S. District Judge Loretta A. Preska in August ordered the release of more than 2,000 previously sealed documents from alleged Epstein victim Virginia Roberts Giuffre's now-settled 2015 defamation lawsuit against Maxwell. Attorneys for Giuffre have fought to have the court unseal significantly more pages, while Maxwell's lawyers have tried to stymie the release of new information, arguing that documents do not fall under the definition of "judicial documents," and therefore are not subject to the presumption of access by the public.

Comment: Documentation may be found here: See also:


Briefcase

A first glimpse into AG Horowitz's FISA-abuse report

fbi logo
© Jim Bourg/Reuters
CNN reports that an FBI attorney tampered with documents related to the Carter Page application. How much does it matter?

Is this the tip of a scandalous iceberg? Or is it a signal that Inspector General Michael Horowitz's much anticipated report on investigative irregularities in the Trump-Russia probe will be much ado about nothing much?

A low-ranking FBI lawyer altered a document that was somehow related to the Obama Justice Department's application to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) for a national-security surveillance warrant. The application, approved by the FISC in October 2016, targeted former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page — an American citizen, former naval intelligence officer, and apparent FBI cooperating witness — as a clandestine agent of Russia. Apparently, the document tampering made at least one of the application's factual assertions seem more damning than it actually was.