Welcome to Sott.net
Wed, 27 Oct 2021
The World for People who Think

Puppet Masters
Map

Broom

Maduro opens border with Colombia previously shut down over opposition's aid-smuggling attempt

Police officers take cover as shots are fired near the Simon Bolivar international bridge
© REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
Police officers take cover as shots are fired near the Simon Bolivar international bridge, on theborder between Colombia and Venezuela, in Cucuta, Colombia May 3, 2019.
Three months after violent clashes broke out at the Colombia-Venezuela border, followed by the opposition's attempt to smuggle in 'aid,' Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has ordered border crossings to be partially reopened.

Maduro announced on Friday that the border with Colombia, which has remained closed since late February, will be reopened in western Tachira State on Saturday.

"In order to fully ensure our sovereignty, I have ordered the opening of border crossings with Colombia in the state of Tachira beginning on Saturday, June 8," Maduro tweeted, adding that Venezuela is a "peaceful nation" that "firmly defends its independence."

MIB

U.A.E.-led investigation of oil tanker attacks puts blame on unnamed 'state actors'

Damage Andrea Victory tanker
© United Arab Emirates National Media Council via AP
Damage to the tanker Andrea Victory off the coast of Fujairah.
An investigation into a spate of attacks on oil tankers in the Middle East last month has concluded that a "state actor" is to blame, according to a summary of the preliminary findings of the probe by the United Arab Emirates, Norway and Saudi Arabia.

The investigation found a "high degree of sophistication" behind the May 12 attacks near the U.A.E. port of Fujairah, according to the report. The summary was distributed to diplomats attending an informal briefing at the U.A.E.'s mission to the United Nations.

"The attacks required intelligence capabilities for the deliberate selection of four oil tankers from among almost 200 vessels of all types that lay at anchor off Fujairah at the time of the attacks," according to the summary. "The attacks required the expert navigation of fast boats" which "were able to intrude into UAE territorial waters and to exfiltrate the operatives after delivering the explosive charges."

Comment: NBC adds:
Those three countries [United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Norway] gave a statement on their investigation to the United Nations Security Council on Thursday. They said the sabotage was likely carried out by several teams of operatives who deployed experienced divers armed with limpet mines, which are are magnetic explosives usually attached to a ship's hull.

Their joint document did not name any country suspected of being behind the attack, but the Saudi ambassador to the U.N. blamed Iran.

"We believe that the responsibility for this action lies on the shoulders of Iran," Abdallah Y. Al-Mouallimi said, according to Reuters. "We have no hesitation in making this statement."

This echoes previous allegations by national security adviser John Bolton, who said he believes it was the work of "naval mines almost certainly from Iran."

Iran, which lies some 60 miles from the UAE across the Gulf of Oman, has denied the allegations and has called for an independent investigation.

The backdrop to the sabotage attack last month is an atmosphere of rising tension between the U.S. and Iran. The administration of President Donald Trump has been taking a far more hawkish stance since coming into office, and U.S. officials have been warning about what they claim is the risk Iran could launch an attack.

Over the last month, the Trump administration announced that it was sending an aircraft carrier strike group and Air Force bombers to the Middle East, as well as Patriot missiles and additional troops.

Some analysts questioned why Iran would carry out such an attack, which threatened to draw the ire of the U.S. and its allies and risk a all-out conflict it would lose. Others have pointed out that the U.S. as "a long history of provoking, instigating, or launching wars based on dubious, flimsy, or manufactured threats," as the New Yorker put it last month.
Anyone with two neurons firing would wonder why Iran would do such a thing when it is already under such pressure from the US. It would serve no purpose. There are those who would love to pin the attack on Iran with an eye to punishing them for it. Who might that be?


Cowboy Hat

Keeping it real: Seven times Putin apparently trounced US at St. Petersburg Forum

Vladimir Putin
© AFP / Olga Maltseva
Vladimir Putin had a lot to say about the US at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, warning that Washington's policies may turn global economy into battle royal and suggesting that dollar's role should be revised.

Even though the Russian president didn't always identify the US or the Donald Trump administration by name, he didn't mince words about America's aggressive economic policies either.

Comment: Leave it to Putin to remind the world of the reality of the situation. Here is Putin's speech in full.


Dollars

Hasta la vista: Venezuela to use ruble in trade with Russia to bypass US sanctions

Ruble notes
© REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
The Russian currency will replace the dollar in transactions between the two countries, Tareck El Aissami, Venezuela's vice president of the economy, said at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum.

"Unilateral American sanctions are preventing us from using US dollars to settle," the official told Sputnik on Saturday, the last day of the annual business summit. "So we have developed a mechanism so that we can fulfill our obligations to Russian, and it will operate in rubles."

According to a statement from Russian President Vladimir Putin at the same event, Caracas owes Moscow US$3.5 billion, and has so far managed to service its debt.

Comment: All of these sanctions imposed by the US are spurring countries to ditch the dollar in order to carry on trades.


Star of David

Israel apologist Deborah Lipstadt says all Muslim countries are intolerant of minorities and anti-Zionist Jews are 'belated' Jews

Deborah Lipstadt
© Deborah Lipstadt/Twitter
Deborah Lipstadt
Deborah Lipstadt, the scholar of anti-Semitism, made some remarkable comments to Peter Beinart at the Forward in March (a discussion I've been belatedly mining). Anti-Zionist Jews are "belated" Jews, late to discover they are Jewish. All Muslim-majority societies are intolerant of religious minorities. Satmar Hasidim are possibly anti-Semitic because they're anti-Zionist; the jury's out.

The left has a false understanding of the Nakba: Palestinian leaders told Palestinians to leave in 1948 so they could have "free rein to wipe out the Jews" and take their houses and possessions. Though yes, in "certain cases," Jews kicked out the Palestinians.

Lipstadt says anti-Zionist Jews just discovered they're Jewish. This is the first of several cracks at Jewish Voice for Peace.
What we're getting today particularly from groups on the far left, I would say Jewish Voices for Peace, many of whose members, not all, certainly not all, but many of whose members, to quote Howard Jacobson, a line he has in his wonderful and very funny novel The Finkler Question, which won the Mann Booker Prize, You know some of the people there discovered they were Jews when it came time to criticize Israel.

Comment: Ms. Lipstadt proudly led the charge to force a chaplain from his job, for pointing out the Israeli atrocity that was Operation Protective Edge. The one-sided slaughter of Gaza Palestinians was the third attack in six years.

Manufacturing anti-Semitism: Yale University Episcopal chaplain forced out by Zionist attacks

More analysis by Mondoweiss: The Forward's Peter Beinart: AIPAC should have to register as agent of Israeli government


Hourglass

Theresa May has formally resigned as Conservative leader paving the way for an official leadership contest

theresa may
© Press Association
Mrs May's final appearance on the world stage could be at the G20 at the end of June, 2019
Theresa May has formally resigned as Conservative Party leader to allow the official start of the contest to replace her.

Officials from the Tories' 1922 Committee confirmed in a statement that the prime minister had quit as leader. However, she will stay on as acting leader until her successor has been elected.

The 1922 Committee said it was now inviting nominations from Conservative MPs who wish to take over from Mrs May. They have until 5pm on Monday to formally apply. So far, 11 candidates have publicly declared their intention to enter the contest.

Comment: Theresa May has been one of the most feckless prime ministers Britain's been saddled with in a long time, and that's saying a lot.


Eagle

Russia's head of Rosneft has pointed words on US 'energy colonialism'

Putin Rosneft
The United States is using energy as a political weapon and its 'golden era' of energy could turn out to be an 'era of energy colonialism' for all other market participants, Igor Sechin, the chief executive of Russia's largest oil producer Rosneft, said at a forum in Russia on Thursday.

There is no doubt that the U.S. is using energy as a political weapon on a mass scale, Sechin said at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum today, as posted on Rosneft's website.

Imposing sanctions or even the threat of sanctions have a destructive effect on the global energy ecosystem, Sechin said, criticizing America's approach to energy dominance.

"The golden era of American energy is now underway," U.S. President Donald Trump said last month, while U.S. officials have started to refer to the U.S. exports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) as "freedom gas."


Comment: Not to be confused with "freedom fries".


Comment: See also:


Chess

Trump says he doesn't want Iran to fail as a nation, is willing to help 'turn them around'

Donald Trump
© AP Photo / Alex Brandon
The US has been pressuring Iran with economic sanctions since 2018 after President Trump withdrew his country from the Iran nuclear deal. The president claims that the "harshest ever" sanctions will inevitably force Tehran to start negotiating a new deal with the US.

US President Donald Trump has stated during his talks with French President Emmanuel Macron that Iran was "a true state of terror" and claimed that the Islamic Republic was failing as a country, but at the same time assured that it might change.

"They are failing as a nation, but I don't want them to fail as a nation. We can turn that around very quickly but the sanctions have been extraordinary how powerful they have been", he said.

Bad Guys

US Treasury sanctions Iran's largest petrochemical holding group

petrochemical plant Iran
© Reuters / Raheb Homavandi
A worker at a petrochemical plant in Mahsahr, Iran
The US Treasury Department has slapped sanctions on Iran's largest and, according to Washington, "most profitable" petrochemical holding group, for allegedly supporting terrorism.

Announced by the Treasury Department on Friday, the sanctions punish Persian Gulf Petrochemical Industries Company (PGPIC) for allegedly providing financial support to Iran's elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), formally designated as a "foreign terrorist organization" by Washington in April.

In addition, the sanctions target PGPIC's "vast network" of 39 subsidiary companies and foreign sales agents. Altogether, these companies hold 40 percent of Iran's total petrochemical production, and are responsible for 50 percent of the country's petrochemical exports.

Eye 1

Europe has no freedom but to choose "freedom gas"

gas rig
The US Department of Energy (DOE) recently renamed US liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports "freedom gas." But freedom for who? For Europe who already has a cheap and reliable source of natural gas, but is being forced to switch over to more expensive US gas under the threat of sanctions? Certainly not.

Or freedom for Russia who supplies Europe with much of its natural gas to compete openly and fairly with the United States? Most definitely not.

Or is it freedom from competition for the US? Yes, indeed.

It is often contradictory branding that heralds various chapters of US injustice at home (under the draconian "Patriot Act" for example) and abroad, such as during the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq carried out under the dubious name of "Operation Iraqi Freedom."

Not the Onion

Comment: See also: