Puppet Masters
In recent decades, the first crisis in this series was the Latin American debt crisis of 1982-85. The combination of inflation and a commodity price boom in the late 1970s had given a huge boost to economies such as Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico and many others, including countries in Africa.
This commodity boom enabled these emerging-market (EM) economies to earn dollar reserves for their exports. (By the way, we didn't call them "emerging markets" in the 1980s; they were the "Third World" after the Western world and the communist world.)
These dollar reserves were soon supplemented with dollar loans from U.S. banks looking to "recycle" petrodollars that the OPEC countries were putting on deposit after the oil price explosion of the 1970s.
I worked at Citibank from 1976-1985 during the height of petrodollar recycling and even discussed the process personally with Walter Wriston, Citibank's legendary CEO. In the 1960s, Wriston invented the negotiable eurodollar CD, which was later critical to funding those EM loans.
Wriston is considered the father of petrodollar recycling once the petrodollar was created by Henry Kissinger and William Simon under President Nixon in 1974. I remember those days extremely well. The bank made billions and our stock price soared. It was a euphoric phase and a great time to be an international banker.
Then it all crashed and burned.
The hostility toward Donald Trump on the part of both corporate media (except for Fox News) and the Democratic Party establishment is obviously a factor in the negative response to the summit. Trump's dysfunctional persona, extremist domestic strategy and attacks on the press had already created a hyper-adversarial political atmosphere that surrounds everything Trump says or does.
But media coverage of the Singapore summit shows that something much bigger and more sinister is now in play: a consensus among foreign policy and national security elites and their media allies that Trump's pursuit of an agreement with Kim on denuclearization threatens to undo seventy years of U.S. military dominance in Northeast Asia.
Those elites are determined to resist the political-diplomatic thrust of the Trump administration in negotiating with Kim and have already begun to sound the alarm about the danger Trump poses to the U.S. power position. Not surprisingly Democrats in Congress are already aligning themselves with the national security elite on the issue.
The real concern of the opposition to Trump's diplomacy, therefore, is no longer that he cannot succeed in getting an agreement with Kim on denuclearization but that he will succeed.
Paul Sperry (NY Post) has the explosive story. Or, rather, he had it on January 31, 2016. That's when it was published. What happened to it?
Comment: If true, the FBI and the State Department (really?) didn't know this? That would be hard to believe. Ignorance or cover-up or fake news or unauthorized special privilege? It could be all four and, in the sense of security and disclosure, a more far-reaching crime in scope and agency than currently being shushed and dismissed...and that doesn't even address any non-cleared staff handling classified docs, nor Obama communications in the 30K deleted 'personal' emails, nor alleged State Department negligence.
The US, Russia and United Nations all designate al-Nusra Front, also known as al-Qaeda in Syria, a terrorist organization. But for some reason, the terror group's fighters appear "to be deeply entrenched alongside these US-backed militias in key, strategic towns and villages scattered throughout" the southern part of Syria, The American Conservative reported Sunday.
US media and think tanks obfuscate this fact by referring to all opposition fighters as 'rebels' or 'moderates,'" the report notes. The terror group has operated under other names, including Tahrir al-Sham, yet has not changed its pro-al-Qaeda orientation.
According to the report, the Nusra Front is "openly fighting" with the so-called "Southern Front." The Southern Front is "a group of 54 opposition militias funded and commanded by a US-led war room based in Amman, Jordan, called the Military Operations Center (MOC)" the article revealed.
Recently, Hossein Kazempour Ardebili, Iran's OPEC governor, said Venezuela and Iraq will join Iran in blocking a proposal to increase oil production that's backed by Saudi Arabia and Russia when OPEC and its allies meet in Vienna this week.
"Three OPEC founders are going to stop it," Kazempour Ardebili said in comments to Bloomberg on Sunday. "If the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Russia want to increase production, this requires unanimity. If the two want to act alone, that's a breach of the cooperation agreement."OPEC and its allies could consider a production increase of as much as 1.5 million barrels a day, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said on Thursday. That would be enough to offset the supply losses from Venezuela and Iran foreseen by the International Energy Agency. Saudi Arabia has been discussing different scenarios that would raise production by between 500,000 and 1 million barrels a day, according to people familiar with the matter.
Biggs told The Hill that Waters' comments do "not become somebody who's in Congress" and warrant disciplinary action.
"So we just introduced it, we have some cosponsors, but what she did was to basically incite people to come after and attack members of the president's cabinet," the Arizona Republican told The Hill. "And also spread that out to more people."
Former British Army chief admits Russia is justified in seeing NATO aggression as 'strategic threat'
The comments were made by General Lord Nick Houghton on the Tuesday morning edition of BBC Radio 4's Today program, where the former army chief of staff was discussing the ongoing row over more funding for the Ministry of Defence.
When asked if comments made earlier this year by Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson - that Russia "should shut up and go away" - were appropriate, Houghton said they wouldn't be his "chosen words" and that the issue required a greater understanding of "Russia's predicament."
Following the beginning of the 'March of Return' on 30th March this year - an annual Palestinian protest which marks the commemoration of Land Day when Israeli forces killed 6 Palestinian children in 1976 for protesting the confiscation of their land - Israeli forces began firing live ammunition at protestors, ultimately resulting in the deaths of 123 Palestinians, including numerous children.
Comment: The BBC has long been Israel's faithful mouthpiece in the UK.
- Censored by the lobby: BBC panel finds broadcaster breached guidelines on Israel
- Hail also to Ken Loach who slams BBC's pro-Israel coverage of Gaza war
- Israel's lies go unchallenged on BBC's flagship current affairs show
- BBC journalist deletes tweet about UK's 'corrupt' relationship with Israel
- How the BBC whitewashed Israel's war crimes from the ceasefire in Gaza
- BBC to censor violinist Nigel Kennedy's statement about Israeli apartheid from TV broadcast
- Zionist cat got the BBC's tongue?

The Italian interior minister Matteo Salvini, left, gave a joint press conference with the Libyan deputy prime minister Ahmed Maiteeq
The populist Italian interior minister Matteo Salvini has called for migrant reception centres to be set up on the external borders of southern Libya after a meeting with the African nation's leaders in Tripoli.
He said the proposal, one of many in a Italian package designed to crack down on migration, will be put to EU heads of governments at a meeting on Thursday.
It was the first visit to Libya by a member of the new Italian government, which was elected on a wave of public unrest about the arrival of more than 500,000 mainly African migrants trafficked across the Mediterranean by Libyan smuggling gangs over the past four years.
Comment: Also check out SOTT radio: Behind the Headlines: Mass immigration: Wall 'em out of Fortress Europe and the Trump State?
At first glance, all appears calm in this southern Syrian city where protests first broke out seven years ago. Residents mill around shops in preparation for the evening Iftar meal when they break their daily fast during the holy month of Ramadan.
But the tension is nonetheless palpable in this now government-controlled city. A few weeks ago, Russian-brokered reconciliation talks in southern Syria fell apart when Western-backed militants rejected a negotiated peace.
Whether there will now be a full-on battle for the south or not, visits last week to Syria's three southern governorates, Daraa, Quneitra, and Suweida, reveal a startling possibility: al-Qaeda's Syrian franchise-the Nusra Front-appears to be deeply entrenched alongside these U.S.-backed militants in key, strategic towns and villages scattered throughout the south.
U.S. media and think tanks obfuscate this fact by referring to all opposition fighters as "rebels" or "moderates." Take a look at their maps and you only see three colors: red for the Syrian Arab Army (SAA) and its allies, green for opposition forces, black for ISIS.
So then, where is the Nusra Front, long considered by Western pundits to be one of the most potent fighting forces against the SAA? Have they simply-and conveniently-been erased from the Syrian battle map?














Comment: Internal US politics have gone beyond what is good for the country - it is whatever revenge can be sought or bought to punish the other side of the aisle for success. Congress: Government by default.
For a look at US-NK negotiation defaults, see also: Looking back: Fault lies on both sides after 25 years of NK negotiations