Puppet Masters
On July 17, 1975 the first international handshake was occurring in space between Russian Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov and American astronaut Thomas Stafford as the first official act kicking off the historic Apollo-Soyuz cooperative mission. Taking place during age of nuclear terror on Earth, the Apollo-Soyuz represented a great hope for humankind and was the first ever international space mission leading the way to the MIR-USA cooperation and later International Space Station. Starting on July 15 as both Russian and American capsules launched simultaneously and continuing until July 24th, the Apollo-Soyuz cooperation saw astronauts and cosmonauts conducting joint experiments, exchanged gifts, and tree seeds later planted in each others' nations.
As hope for a bright future of cooperation and co-discovery continued for the coming decades with mankind's slow emergence as a space faring species, affairs on earth devolved in disturbing ways. A new era of regime change operations, Islamic terrorism and oil geopolitics took on new life in the 1980s and as globalization stripped formerly productive nations of their industrial/scientific potential, the Soviet Union collapsed by 1991. During this dark time, the consolidation of a corporatocracy under NAFTA and the European Maastricht Treaty occurred and transatlantic globalists gloated over the collapse of Russia and the rise of a utopian end-of-history, unipolar order.
In some ways, today's world of 2020 is different from that of 1975 and in other ways it is disturbingly similar.

Workers wearing protective masks walk on a street in Qatar's capital, Doha, May 17.
The government launched the app, called Ehteraz — which means "precaution" — in late April, but authorities said this week the app had to be installed when "leaving the house for any reason," starting on May 22.
Qatari health officials have maintained that there is no cause for concern over privacy, saying personal data would be kept for no more than two months before being "deleted forever."

A fragment of President Lech Kaczynski's Tu-154 plane that crashed in Russia in 2010.
"Reality has firmly intertwined with fiction, turning it into an endless fantasy-making process," Maria Zakharova, Russia's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, wrote on Facebook about the freshly released preliminary results of Poland's second probe into the 2010 tragedy.
This investigation "has become the Yoknapatawpha County of modern Poland," she said, referring to a fictional territory in Mississippi where the events of most novels by American writer, William Faulkner, took place.
"As far as TikTok is concerned, we're banning them from the United States," Trump told the press pack on Friday, as reported by the BBC and others. An executive order was mentioned as one way of applying the ban.
The implications from the US side is that TikTok can be used to collect huge amounts of personal data on American users - and while this isn't much different from the practices of Facebook, Google and others, in this case it might potentially be funnelled back to the Chinese government. India has already banned TikTok for similar reasons.
TikTok itself says it is committed to user privacy and job creation in the US, telling NBC News that US user data is stored in the US, with strict controls over who can access it. ByteDance has denied handing over any data to the Chinese government.
Comment: This decision might not be popular with GenZ. TikTok's US manager says the app his here to stay. But talks between Microsoft and Bytedance are reportedly on hold after Trump's announcement. Pompeo says action will be taken in the coming days:
"President Trump has said, 'enough,' and we're going to fix it," Pompeo said on Fox News's "Sunday Morning Futures." "And so he will take action in the coming days with respect to a broad array of national security risks that are presented by software connected to the Chinese Communist Party."
Until 2015, Yemen, one of the poorest countries on earth, was a fabulous, unspoiled country of ancient cities, thousand-year-old buildings and pristine islands; some scholars believe that Yemen may have been the site of the Old Testament. Socotra island, called the Galapagos of the Gulf, was one of Yemen's four UNESCO World Heritage sites. The small, spectacular country had another ten tentative World Heritage sites.Yemen has the misfortune to inhabit strategic real estate. Lying at the southern end of the Arabian peninsula, Yemen is bordered by Saudi Arabia to the north, the Red Sea down to the Bab el-Mandeb strait to its west, the Gulf of Aden to the south and Oman to its east. Its territory also includes islands in the Red Sea and around the Bab el-Mandeb strait. The strait, an 18-mile gap between the east coast of Africa and the Arabian peninsula, is a potential chokepoint for the heavily-used shipping route from the Suez Canal and the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean.
Comment: The horrific war on Yemen is a catastrophic amalgamation of geopolitical targets, primary and secondary players and a fistful of overarching agendas - some known, some suspected, some barely apparent. A humanitarian sham: None of the participants have come to judgement nor has retribution been paid.

Sea Hawk to disengage its rotors on the flight deck of the USS Ronald Reagan as USS Mustin steams alongside in South China Sea.
Earlier in the day, an Air Force Northrop Grumman E-8C reconnaissance plane (hex code AE1492) and a Navy Lockheed Martin EP-3E (hex code AE1D8A) reconnaissance aircraft surveilled China's Fuijanese coast, the latter coming within 58 nautical miles of its boundaries before turning back. Today, the EP-3E was back, this time going west, following the coastline of China's most populous province, Guangdong. The moves are believed by Chinese experts to be information gathering operations, attempting to track the positions of Chinese submarines and to pinpoint Chinese coastal defenses as the United States increases the tension on Beijing.
Comment: The 4 D's of distraction: Deception, Disruption, Deterrence, Dominance
The announcement by Secretary of Defense Mike Esper that the US has finalized plans for the withdrawal of some 12,000 troops from Germany came as a surprise to no one. This decision, minus the details concerning implementation, was originally announced back on June 30. At that time, President Donald Trump linked it to the failure of Germany to meet its obligation regarding meeting NATO goals of defense spending matching 2% GDP (German levels for 2019 were around 1.4%). However, in announcing that, of the 36,000 forces permanently stationed in Germany, 24,000 would remain while 11,900 will deploy elsewhere or return home, Esper did not mention Germany's budgetary arrears, instead linking the decision to new US defense priorities driven by the need for better deterrence of Russia and China.
National security experts on both sides of the Atlantic will be debating the genesis of the US troop withdrawal for some time to come, trying to assign weight to the competing justifications offered by Trump and Esper. The reality, however, is that this decision was a long time in coming, with its roots not so founded in any personal animus on the part of President Trump or strategic force re-posturing by the US. The current crisis is derived from a larger US-German dysfunction that has been in place for decades, driven by inherently incompatible world visions and value systems, and the inevitable clash between American exceptionalism and German ideals based on the principle of European sovereignty.
Comment: See also:
- German defense minister says planned US withdrawal 'regrettable'
- Trump announces plan to pull 12,000 troops out of Germany - 6,400 of whom will return to US
- 'Momentary lapse of honesty?' US Defense Sec. Esper gaffes NATO must 'avoid peace in Europe'
- Trump says US won't protect Germany: It 'pays Russia billions for energy'
- German DM: We have no official word on US troop withdrawal
The House voted 217-197 to pass the bill. Democrats suffered about a dozen defections, and no Republicans voted for the measure.
Democrats touted billions of additional dollars for medical research and emergency spending in the measure to try to support recovery efforts during the coronavirus pandemic.
"Think about who we need to benefit in this institution, what our responsibilities are," said Rep. Rosa DeLauro, Connecticut Democrat. "Our responsibilities are to the working families, the essential workers today who are on the frontlines trying to just ... get by."
The bill won't make it through the GOP-controlled Senate, and the White House threatened a veto.

A main protest took place in west Jerusalem outside Netanyahu's official residence as thousands flocked to the streets
Thousands of demonstrators took to the streets outside Benjamin Netanyahu's house over the weekend in what appeared to be the largest protest to date calling for the embattled Israeli prime minister to resign.
Rallies on Saturday night and into the early hours of Sunday morning were held in Jerusalem, home to the official residence of the 70-year-old leader, as well as his beach house in central Israel, near Tel Aviv, and at dozens of road intersections across the country.
Throughout the summer, Israelis have packed roads and squares calling for Netanyahu to resign, protesting against his government's handling of the country's coronavirus crisis and charges of alleged corruption.
Comment:
- Thousands of protesters enraged over Bibi's handling of Covid-19 crisis gather in Tel Aviv: 'No more games!'
- Thousands protest outside Israeli PM Netanyahu's official residence as unrest rises over economy, handling of coronavirus
- Difficult to oust, Netanyahu utilizes COVID-19 crisis hype while Israel depends on Palestinian medical staff
- Anger over Israeli decision to demolish new Palestinian 'Covid-19 hospital' ahead of 'deadly second wave'
- Because they 'care' so much: Health official says Israel may need to 'medically annex' West Bank

Natl Institute Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dir. Dr. Anthony Fauci • President Donald Trump
"Wrong!" Trump said in a tweet that linked to a video of Fauci's Friday testimony before Congress.
In a hearing focused on the federal response to the global health crisis, Fauci said the U.S. was experiencing a much more severe resurgence in coronavirus cases than countries in Europe because many states failed to completely shut down.
"If you look at what happened in Europe when they shut down or locked down or went into shelter in place ... they really did it to the tune of about 95-plus percent of the country did that," Fauci said.










Comment: For further insight into what happened, check out SOTT's: Smolensk Crash - A Wake-Up Call For Us All?