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Tue, 02 Nov 2021
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If Soleimani was a 'terrorist' why was he fighting ISIS?

Soleimani
© AFP
Pakistani Shia Muslims protest against the assassination of top Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani in Iraq, outside the US consulate in Lahore on January 7, 2020.
I remember when ISIL first burst into the global consciousness - with the fall of Mosul on June 4, 2014. I happened to be visiting my parents.

My mother rushed in and told me that terrorists in Toyotas had overrun Iraq's second-largest city in a modern-day Mongol Horde.

I rolled my eyes.

I explained to her that, as usual, she was exaggerating. What she was describing was undoubtedly impossible, and I patiently explained why:

Comment: See also:


Snakes in Suits

Former Trump aide's veiled threat that UK should align with US not Brussels on foreign policy and trade

bojo
© Will Oliver/EPA
Boris Johnson risks jeopardising a free-trade deal with the US unless he pulls the UK out of the Iran nuclear deal, a leading Republican voice on Iran has said.

The warning by Richard Goldberg, until last week a member of the White House national security council (NSC), highlights the dilemmas UK foreign and defence policymakers will face as Britain tries to steer its own course between Washington and Brussels after Brexit.

Goldberg told the BBC: "The question for prime minister Johnson is: 'As you are moving towards Brexit, as your supporters of Brexit really do not like the nuclear deal, want you to get out of the nuclear deal ... what are you going to do post-31 January as you come to Washington to negotiate a free-trade agreement with the United States?'"

Comment: RT reports:
In an interview with BBC Radio 4 on Wednesday, Iran hawk Richard Goldberg - who recently stepped down from his role on the National Security Council following his part in ramping up US tensions with Tehran - ostensibly issued Johnson a veiled threat.

Goldberg suggested that Johnson think long and hard about the UK's position on the Iran nuclear deal and foreign policy more generally. He insisted that in post-Brexit Britain, it's "less important what Brussels thinks and far more important what Washington thinks."

"It's absolutely in his interest and the people of Britain's interest to join with President Trump and the United States, to realign your foreign policy away from Brussels, and to join the maximum pressure campaign to keep us all safe."

Goldberg's comments have been widely panned on social media, with many interpreting his words as an ultimatum, rather than a "choice" being presented to PM Johnson. Green MP Caroline Lucas claimed that it was "clear" that if the UK is to secure a trade deal with the US then "we'd have to follow Trump's dangerous foreign policies."


Others online insisted Trump's former aide was in reality proposing that the UK becomes "a US vassal state & to fall in line on Iran, Israel" and the Middle East. While another angrily tweeted: "So much for Take Back Control."


On Tuesday, Johnson signaled that he was falling in line behind the US president and would seek to tear up the current Iran deal and replace it with a 'Trump deal'.

"Let's work together to replace the JCPOA and get the 'Trump deal' instead," Johnson told BBC Breakfast.
Since it still seems unlikely Brexit will go ahead, in the end, will the UK be left in the EU but also beholden to detrimental trade and policy agreements with the US?


Snakes in Suits

Turkey starting troop deployment to Libya, will start granting drilling licenses in region - Erdogan

erdogan
Turkey is beginning to send troops into Libya in support of the internationally recognised government in Tripoli, President Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday, days before a summit in Berlin which will address the Libyan conflict.

Speaking in Ankara, Erdogan added that Turkey will continue to use all diplomatic and military means to ensure stability to its south, including in Libya. Erdogan is due to meet leaders of Germany, Russia, Britain and Italy on Sunday to discuss the conflict.

He also said Turkey would start granting licenses for exploration and drilling in the eastern Mediterranean in 2020, in accord with a maritime agreement with Libya. He said Turkey's Oruc Reis ship would begin seismic activities in the region.

Comment: See also:


X

What if Russia assassinated Ukrainian Nazi Yarosh like the US did to Soleimani?

Dmytro Yarosh
A hypothetical scenario - a Ukrainian far-right paramilitary leader, Dmytro Yarosh, travels to Estonia to take a part in a political forum organised by NATO. On his way to Tallinn airport, his convoy is hit by a Russian drone strike, killing him and a dozen of people who happened to be in that convoy. Later that day, Putin's press-secretary, Dmitry Peskov, openly boasts about conducting such a brilliant military operation on a foreign soil, eliminating a former leader of the Right Sector (the organisation holds an "extremist/terrorist" status and is banned in Russian Federation).

Imagine the international reaction. Imagine the US State Department press briefings, imagine the CNN and BBC headlines, imagine The Economist cover. Russia would be unequivocally condemned as a rouge, terrorist state that ruthlessly murders citizens of other countries, the countries it's not formally at war with, on a foreign soil. There would be calls for immediate action, a deadly round of economic sanctions would be applied in an instant, all regional NATO military bases would be put on high alert.

Well, there's no need to imagine things, really. Remember the Skripal case, when someone poisoned a former Russian spy and his daughter in the UK in 2018, and the British government went hysterical, pointing fingers at Russia, before the official investigation even commenced, with countries like Australia taking Theresa May's words at face value, making collective ultimatums to the Russian government? There was no concrete proof that Russia was behind the assassination attempt, of whatever the hell that was - the UK authorities initially claimed that the Skripals were poisoned with Novichok, a deadly nerve agent that is many times more potent that sarin, yet both Skripal and his daughter somehow managed to survive it; by the way, how's the investigation going? And when was the last time "free press" investigative journalists attempted to contact Skripals, or find out anything about their whereabouts, in order to get an update on the situation? It's a matter of national security, remember? What? Everyone lost their interest as there has been no command to continue the hysteria?

Syringe

The United States of Amnesia, and its incredible asbestos pants: 'Drugs for me but not for thee' in international sport

Putin wink

Uncle Volodya says, You must remember, my dear lady, the most important rule of any successful illusion: First, the people must want to believe in it”.”
Liar, liar, pants on fire... Children's rhyme
In an era of stress and anxiety, when the present seems unstable and the future unlikely, the natural response is to retreat and withdraw from reality, taking recourse either in fantasies of the future or in modified visions of a half-imagined past.

Alan Moore, from "Watchmen"
Unless you were catatonic this past couple of weeks, dead drunk from Sunday to Saturday, suffered a debilitating brain injury or were living in Bognor Regis where the internet cannot reach, you heard about the West slapping a four-year Olympic ban on Russia. Because it could, it did. And not really for any other reason, despite the indignation and manufactured outrage. It's a pity - now that I come to think on it - that you can't use outrage to power a vehicle, fill a sandwich or knit into socks: because the west has a bottomless supply, and it's just about as renewable a resource as you could envision.

As I have reiterated elsewhere and often, the United States of America is the cheatingest nation on the planet where professional sports is concerned, because winning matters to Americans like nowhere else. Successful Olympic medal-winners and iconic sports figures in the USA are feted like victorious battlefield generals, because the sports arena is just another battlefield to the United States, and there's no it's-not-whether-you-win-or-lose-it's-how-you-play-the-game in wartime. Successful American sports figures foster an appreciation of American culture and lifestyle, and promote an image of America as a purposeful and powerful nation. Successful sports figures anywhere, really; not so very long ago Olympic gold medalists were merely given an appreciative parade by a grateful nation, and featured in lucrative advertising contracts if they were photogenic. More recently, some nations have simply paid athletes by the medal for winning. This includes most nations, with the notable exceptions of the UK, Norway and Sweden. So the pressure is on to win, win, win, by whatever means are necessary.

Comment:


Wine

Russia's new PM candidate Mikhail Mishustin: IT expert, hockey fan & piano player

Mikhail Mishustin
© Sputnik / Mikhail Klimentyev
Mikhail Mishustin managed to stay out of the spotlight as Federal Tax Service boss, yet his high-profile colleagues now describe the PM candidate as not just a true professional, but a colorful personality to boot.

The parliament will decide if Mishustin is fit for the job on Thursday, after President Putin suggested him for the PM role on the heels of a surprise resignation of Dmitry Medvedev's government. The candidate already held hour-long talks with top MPs at the State Duma, after which speaker Vyacheslav Volodin said that Mishustin was well-known to lawmakers.

"He's a man who has made a reputation for himself by creating a high-tech Federal Tax Service from scratch with the use of state-of-the-art technologies, the digital economy," Volodin pointed out.

Comment: See also:


Snakes in Suits

Epstein operated database of victims, continued sex trafficking through 2018, US Virgin Islands government alleges

Epstein island
© Reuters/Marco Bello/File Photo
Little St. James Island, one of the properties of financier Jeffrey Epstein, in an aerial view near Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, on July 21, 2019.
The estate of Jeffrey Epstein, the late financier who allegedly led a child sex trafficking ring, has been sued by the government of the U.S. Virgin Islands, which claims the right to confiscate tens of millions of dollars in assets that Epstein is said to have used in committing dozens of crimes, including rape and human trafficking of minors.

Epstein maintained an electronic database of his victims and his criminal enterprise operated from 2001 through 2018, the Jan. 15 complaint alleges.

Epstein was arrested in July 2019 on charges of sex trafficking minors. He died in his jail cell in New York City on Aug. 10.

Bad Guys

'Why do you allow the United States to bully you?' - Iranian FM to Europe over nuclear deal tensions

zarif
© AFP / ATTA KENARE
Iranian FM Zarif criticized the European decision to trigger an investigation into Tehran's alleged non-compliance with the nuclear deal - asking why it allows "bullying" from the United States, who derailed the agreement.

During an international conference in New Delhi, Iranian FM Mohammad Javad Zarif was asked about the fate of the 2015 nuclear deal. The agreement went downhill in May 2018 when the US dropped out, then re-imposing sweeping sanctions and vowing to pile "maximum pressure" on Iran.

On Tuesday, the European trio triggered an investigation after Iran announced that it will move beyond uranium enrichment limitations following the killing of one of its top military leaders in a US drone strike earlier this month.

"They say 'We are not responsible for what the United States did.' OK, but you are independent countries," Zarif said, referring to Europe.
Europe, EU, is the largest global economy. So why do you allow the United States to bully you around?
When asked about the fate of the 2015 deal, the Iranian FM reassured Reuters that "it's not dead".

Cell Phone

US officials brand possible Huawei 5G rollout in UK 'act of madness' as MI5 plays down US fear-mongering

5g chinese
© Global Look Press / ZUMA Press / Yan Xiang
In a bid to pressure the UK into barring Huawei from Britain's 5G rollout, US officials reportedly went as far as to imply that allowing it on the market would be "madness." The fears were dampened by the UK spy chief, however.

The US has upped the rhetorical ante on its largely unfounded claims that Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei will severely compromise a country's cyber security if it is allowed to work on any of the world's burgeoning national 5G networks.

A team of high-ranking US officials, including those from the National Security Agency (NSA), were set to present supposedly damning evidence to the UK government on Monday, arguing the equipment supplied by the Chinese company may come with hidden 'backdoors' granting Beijing access to critical British infrastructure.


Comment: Meanwhile Western intelligence agencies are allowed hidden backdoors - to users' data.


In the wake of the meeting with the British ministers, the Guardian's Dan Sabbagh quoted US officials as saying that using Huawei technology for 5G in the UK would be "an act of madness." It's unclear exactly what proof the US officials presented to their British colleagues, as several major US allies, such as Germany and India, have so far found no compelling reason to ban Huawei from their own 5G networks.

Washington has long tried to persuade London into shunning the Chinese tech giant. In December, US National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien argued that once Huawei is given a green light in the UK, Beijing would "steal wholesale state secrets, whether they are the UK's nuclear secrets or secrets from MI6 or MI5."

Such an ominous prediction apparently did not strike a chord with the British intelligence community itself, however, with head of MI5 Andrew Parker telling the Financial Times in a recent interview that he had "no reason to think" the intelligence sharing agreement between the UK and the US would be in any danger if the British government refused to shut the door on Huawei.

Star of David

Ex-Israeli general openly admits Israel arms and aids crazed Islamist head-choppers in Syria

Gadi Eisenkot idf israel
© MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST
IDF chief of staff Lt.-Gen. Gadi Eisenkot in 2016
Israel's ex-general Gadi Eisenkot admits publicly that Israel helped Syrian 'rebel' groups in many ways, financially, militarily, logistically.


Comment: It's not often Israel outright admits its true affiliations.