Puppet Masters
Iran has gradually scaled back its commitments under the nuclear accord - signed with the United States, China, Russia, Germany, France and the United Kingdom - in retaliation for Washington's withdrawal from the pact in 2018 and its reimposition of devastating sanctions.
Earlier in the week, the UK, France and Germany challenged Tehran over breaking the limits set out in the agreement by triggering a "dispute mechanism". Some analysts suggested that could spell the end of the accord.

A still from surveillance footage shows Julian Assange resting inside of the Ecuadorian Embassy in London.
Two of the witnesses confirm what EL PAÍS revealed before the legal investigation began - that in December 2017, the owner of UC Global S. L. ordered workers to change the surveillance cameras in the embassy and replace them with others that could capture audio. From that moment on, they recorded and monitored conversations between the WikiLeaks founder and his lawyers, as well as all of his visitors.
During the meetings with the lawyers, Assange prepared his legal defense against the extradition order from the United States. The Australian cyberactivist is wanted in the US for allegedly committing 18 crimes for leaking classified information on secret military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq via the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks. He faces a total of 175 years in prison.
Under Morales's express orders, the security team photographed the passports of all of Assange's visitors
For that to be true, the Iranians would have to not only have obstinately refused to apologize for their actions, but also awarded their equivalent to the Legion of Merit decoration to the Iranian military unit responsible.
I'm not kidding. That's exactly what happened.
In the aftermath of that incident, the Americans did not remove the officer responsible from command, even despite the observations of a number of other US Naval personnel about his aggressive shortcomings which lead directly to the tragedy.
What are these new gun laws?
The so-called "assault weapon ban" is SB16 and has that perilously vague wording we all know to be incredibly dangerous. In some interpretations, this law, if it passes, could make illegal the ownership or transportation of any semi-automatic gun because extendable magazines are available for it - and you don't even have to have the extendable mags.
Comment: BPR, 14/12/2019: Comments from Virginians:
UPDATE: RT, 20/1/2020: Virginia Rally to uphold Second Amendment rights, disparaged and overblown in MSM
Talking heads in the media and Hollywood tried to paint the pro-Second Amendment supporters in Richmond, Virginia as racist or potentially violent, creating a much gloomier image than the one that transpired in reality.
CNN said ahead of the rally that the FBI was working with law enforcement to prepare for "threats of violence." They later had to report that the event ended "peacefully." One video even showed protesters cleaning up after themselves as the rally came to a close.
The OPCW's final report on the Douma incident, released last March, omitted key findings of its own inspection team which would have cast serious doubt on whether a chemical attack took place at all, a now former OPCW specialist, Ian Henderson, told members of the United Nations Security Council in a recorded video address - after his visa application to attend the meeting in person was rejected.
"The findings in the final [Fact Finding Mission] report were contradictory, were a complete turnaround with what the team had understood collectively during and after the Douma deployments," Henderson said.
Comment: Moon of Alabama comments:
We have long maintained that the alleged chemical attack in Douma, Syria, on April 7 2018 was faked by Jihadists shortly before they were evicted from that Damascus suburb.See also:
By the end of last year leaked documents and a whistle blower from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) had proven that the OPCW managers had manipulated the report their staff had written about the incident. The OPCW inspectors who had investigated the case on the ground in Douma found that there was evidence that a chemical attack had happened. The murdered people seem in videos from the alleged attack must have died of other causes. The yellow canisters found at the locations of the alleged attack were not dropped from helicopters but clearly manually placed.
Using the Arria-formula, a procedure to have witnesses testify to the UN Security Council, Russia and China invited other UN members to listen to the testimony of OPCW inspector Ian Henderson. He denounced the false final report the OPCW management had published. Henderson, a South African engineer, was a team leader at the OPCW where he had worked for more than twelve years.
Henderson's testimony can be watched here. Transcript here.
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In his closing remarks at the UNSC Russia's Permanent Representative at the UN, Vassily Nebenzia, said:Videos from Douma at the time of the incident showed some 30 bodies of dead persons. Most were children. It is up to day unknown who they were and who had murdered them. The OPCW manipulation of the original reports of its inspectors' findings is a cover up for that huge crime.Today's discussions reveal one thing clearly - that something fishy is cooking in the OPCW. When we point at it, our colleagues tell us every time that OPCW, the 2013 Nobel peace prize laureate, is the gold standard of professionalism, integrity and impartiality. We would like it to be such and we adopted a PRST in November 2019 exactly aiming at this. Unfortunately, the impartiality and integrity of the OPCW TS is seriously questioned, and not just by us and other member states, as today's presentation demonstrated. Members of the "Courage Foundation" can hardly be labeled as "Russian agents". They are reputable personalities and include such figures as Jose Bustani, first OPCW DG, respectable members of academic community, former senior officials of the US and UK intelligence community, and such names as Noam Chomsky and Oliver Stone to name a few. (You were provided with a copy of their letter and related materials).Why do some of our colleagues so vehemently defend the reports by the OPCW FFM, which some are believed were fabricated? Because any seed of doubt about chemical episodes conclusions would lead to challenging the expediency and legitimacy of already illegitimate missile attacks against a sovereign UN member state. In that light the Douma incident plays a key role. Because if it transpires that the FFM report was made up, it would lead to questioning earlier episodes like Khan-Shaykhun and others, which resulted in the termination of [Joint Investigation Mechanism].
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Our colleague from Viet Nam asked what to do next, what are the nest steps. I think that this issue must be discussed at the OPCW. Legitimate questions and issues that member states face should be addressed and discussed. The question why the first report of the OPCW FFM was shelled initially, and then disappeared and destroyed should be answered. So far we are denied - we and other member states - are denied such an opportunity.
- Newsweek gags journalist who commented on MSM silence of OPCW Douma scandal
- 'Pack of lies' on behalf of Al-Qaeda: Security experts rip into 'Douma chemical attack' probe after latest OPCW leak
- Senior OPCW official ordered deletion of 'all traces' of dissenting report on 'Douma chemical attack' - WikiLeaks' new leak
- Wikileaks provides further evidence of OPCW Douma cover up
- Newsweek trusts Bellingcat more than Reuters - journalist who quit over 'suppressed' OPCW story to RT
- Newly leaked evidence OPCW suppressed, altered findings on Douma 'chem attack'
Last Friday, US Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook told journalists about an alleged UN resolution passed in 2006 or 2007 prohibiting Tehran from uranium enrichment.
"We consider it necessary to respond to the US special representative for Iran Hook about the existence of some kind of 'UN standard' prohibiting the Islamic Republic of Iran from enriching uranium. Unfortunately, such mythmaking has long been a par of the course in the US approach toward nuclear non-proliferation ... In this case, we have, essentially, an accusation against the UN Security Council of making decisions contradicting the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)", the ministry said in a statement.
It also recalled that the aforementioned treaty allows the signatories to develop nuclear energy for non-military purposes.
"In other words, the NPT puts no limitations on the non-nuclear countries regarding uranium enrichment or developing other stages of the nuclear fuel cycle. There is only one condition: that all work must be directed toward peaceful ends and be under IAEA [International Atomic Energy Agency ] supervision", the ministry noted.
Comment: See also:
- Zarif responds to EU, asking to see 'just one' nuclear deal commitment they've upheld in last year
- Iran warns of 'repercussions' for IAEA if Europe goes ahead with 'unfair' dispute over nuclear deal
- Moscow: Iran's rollback on 2015 deal commitments poses no risk of nuclear arms proliferation
However, there's still plenty of questions which are left unanswered which, according to me, return part of the veil which most believe to have been uncovered.
The Flight's Delay
Although flight delays happen all the time and are nothing to fret about in and by themselves, given the outcome of 752 we should ask the question why the delay was there. According to Reuters' quoting of the president and CEO of the airline, Mr. Yevhenii Dykhne, the flight was delayed because "it was too heavily loaded". Aviation experts know that any which flight does not only hold the passenger's luggage but also parcels, mails, diplomatic packages and so on. Some sources I have heard suggested that 9 bags were taken out of the cargo hold (which is distinct from the passenger luggage hold).
The questions become: was the decision to stall the aircraft a decision by the captain himself? If it was not, which cargo was offloaded? Was this important material which could not be destroyed?
@bears_with
In September of 2018, BBC reporter Mark Urban (lead image, left) ended his book The Skripal Files with a report of the favour MI6 had arranged, so that he could visit Sergei Skripal's house in Salisbury, and report that a souvenir of British country life which MI6 agent Pablo Miller had presented to Skripal after his recruitment as a double agent, was still on a shelf in the living-room. For a double agent, that was a bad slip - not Skripal's, Urban's.
Urban's book is the only one published to date on the attack against Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia on March 4, 2018.
Comment: George Galloway has his say on Mr. Higgins and Bellingcat:
For more on Higgins and his Bellingcat information psyops funhouse (not an exhaustive list and in no particular order) :
- Anatomy of a NATO troll: Eliot Higgins of Bellingcat
- False-flag for war: New Syrian chemical weapons attack being reported by all the usual suspects
- Newsweek trusts Bellingcat more than Reuters - journalist who quit over 'suppressed' OPCW story to RT
- 2019 - The Year of Manufactured Hysteria
- Twitter user dismantles Bellingcat's claims on Russian suspects of Skripal poisoning
We Can Actively Assume That Skripal Was Poisoned by The British Government
As for Urban:
Newsnight correspondent Mark Urban interviewed Sergei Skripal multiple times last year - BBC won't release correspondence
Comment:
First squadron of Su-30MKI fighter jets inducted in South India, set to watch over Indian Ocean
India has supplied Thanjavur air base on its strategic southern coast with Su-30MKI air superiority fighter jets as part of an ongoing effort to boost the defenses of the Indian Ocean region.
On Monday, the jets were officially inducted at Thanjavur Air Force Station in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, which is set to be home to the No. 222 Squadron, known as 'Tiger Sharks'.
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The squadron will have five to six planes, with the number expected to rise to 18 in the future, according to local media. The new aircraft are being equipped with BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles, which were jointly developed by India and Russia and have a range of 300km (186 miles).
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The Sukhoi-30 MKI was developed on the basis of Russia's Sukhoi-30 especially for India ('MKI' means Modernised Commercial Indian by its first Russian letters). The planes are highly-maneuverable, equally capable of striking ground targets during a raid and conducting dogfights. In Thanjavur, they will be tasked with defending India's southern coasts and patrolling maritime areas.
Several days before the ceremony, Air Marshal Amit Tiwari, who leads the Southern Air Command, said that the IAF are ready to "extend the reach into the vast Indian Ocean region." The strategic region has "an important role to play in regional peace, security and prosperity," he said.
Sukhoi Su-30MKI
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The aircraft is tailor-made for Indian specifications and integrates Indian systems and avionics as well as French and Israeli sub-systems. It has abilities similar to the Sukhoi Su-35 with which it shares many features and components.
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A supporter of US President Donald Trump with a "Drain the Swamp" sign, Montana, US, July 5, 2018.
As Donald Trump's first term dwindles, it appears his new campaign slogan will be "if you can't beat the swamp, join it." That much seems evident not only from the Trump administration's courting of diehard hawks - gung-ho guys like Elliott Abrams and Mike Pompeo - but by the recent news that David Wurmser was offering counsel to John Bolton, former National Security Advisor to the White House.
It should be briefly recalled that Wurmser - who has worked for a number of think tanks, including the influential American Enterprise Institute - contributed heavily to the report that argued Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was harboring weapons of mass destruction. That claim was eventually proven to be false, but not before a whole lot of damage was done. The outcome of the disastrous 2003 Iraq War that followed in the wake of that 'bad intelligence' is well documented by now, with the Iraqi people still suffering the consequences.













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