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

Puppet Masters
Map

Newspaper

US, Japan, South Korea & Australia gather for 1st combined naval drills in Western Pacific

Phillip Sawyer.
© Reuters / Issei Kato
Phillip Sawyer.
US Navy ships conducted joint drills with warships from allies Japan, Australia and South Korea in their first combined exercise in the Western Pacific.

The Pacific Vanguard exercise near the US island of Guam takes place ahead of President Donald Trump's visit to Japan this weekend.

The drills "joins forces from four, like-minded maritime nations that provide security throughout the Indo-Pacific," Vice Admiral Phillip Sawyer, commander of the US Navy's Seventh Fleet, said on Thursday.

The six-day exercise involves two Japanese destroyers, two Australian frigates and a destroyer from South Korea, with as many as 3,000 sailors participating, Reuters reports.

Comment: See also:


Quenelle

Iran youth will witness demise of "American civilization", and Israel - Khamenei

Khamenei
Iran's youth will witness the demise of Israel and American civilization, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Wednesday in comments published on his official website.

"You young people should be assured that you will witness the demise of the enemies of humanity, meaning the degenerate American civilization, and the demise of Israel," Khamenei said in a meeting with students.

He gave no further details.

Tensions have spiked between Iran and the United States after Washington sent more military forces to the Middle East, including an aircraft carrier, B-52 bombers and Patriot missiles, in a show of force against what U.S. officials say are Iranian threats to its troops and interests in the region.

Comment: He has a point; the West as a whole has lost touch with its roots and is becoming increasingly debased; as for Israel, if it continues on its notorious trajectory, its future is bleak: Also check out SOTT radio's:


Bad Guys

Unintended consequences: US to triple import of RUSSIAN oil amid sanctions against Venezuela

russian oil tanker
© Reuters/Hani Amara
A Russian-flagged oil tanker is seen in Tripoli Naval Base after coast guard of the central region guards captured it
As of May 2019, US imports of Russian oil amounted to some five million barrels, while American refineries imported a total of 7.5 million barrels in all of 2018.

The US has rapidly increased its oil imports from Russia, with a total of 13 tankers carrying five million barrels of crude and oil products arriving in the first half of May amid dropping Venezuelan crude production due to Washington's sanctions, Bloomberg reported, citing Caracas Capital Markets managing partner Russ Dallen. The latter described Russia's crude export as being "on steroids", stating that the import of Russian oil by American refineries is set to triple.

Comment: Well and good for the US that, for now, Russia is willing to sell its oil. But what will happen when Russia has enough customers who treat it with respect and cordiality? Will the US feel arrogant enough to demand the Russians sell it however much oil it needs to make up for sanctioning Venezuela? Does Trump's administration honestly think the Kremlin will immediately capitulate?


Camcorder

William Binney: Mass surveillance state undermines and destroys democracy - exclusive Herland Report

William Binney
© IMDb
Former NSA Director William Binney
Former NSA director, William Binney, has come forward in a Herland Report exclusive, to disclose the NSA's massive violation of the constitutional rights of U.S citizens. But more, it involves the targeting of people around the world regardless of citizenship. Among the key, critical components is how the new methods of investigating and charging an alleged suspect, strip the accused of their basic constitutional rights.

Moreover, what exactly is 'parallel constructed evidence'? This is an illegal method of creating cases against a person, but using evidence achieved through a method called parallel construction.


Comment: See more information from William Binney:


Attention

Loretta Lynch: Comey's testimony misrepresented a key Clinton probe conversation, took her by surprise

James Comey
© Reuters
Former FBI Director James Comey
Former Attorney General Loretta Lynch has flatly accused former FBI Director James Comey of mischaracterizing her statements by repeatedly alleging, under oath, that Lynch privately instructed him to call the Hillary Clinton email probe a "matter" instead of an "investigation."

Lynch, who testified that Comey's claim left her "quite surprised," made the dramatic remarks at a joint closed-door session of the House Oversight and Judiciary Committees last December. A transcript of her testimony was released on Monday by House Judiciary Committee ranking member Doug Collins, R-Ga.

The episode marked the latest public dispute to break out among high-level ex-Obama administration officials, as multiple government reviews of potential FBI and Justice Department misconduct continue.


Comment: See also:
Dems. Feinstein and Schiff say Lynch directive to Comey made them queasy too


Target

Austria crisis: Will Sebastian Kurz survive foreign influence operation against his government?

Sebastian Kurz
© Getty Images
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz
A corruption scandal has Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz's grip on power slipping by the day. With a no-confidence motion likely, can Austria's right and left wings team up to boot the 32-year-old leader from office?

In a matter of days, Kurz has accepted the resignation of former coalition partner head Heinz-Christian Strache, and sacked Interior Minister Herbert Kickl. In the wake of Kickl's dismissal, members of his Freedom Party (FPO) vacated their seats in Kurz's cabinet, and Federal President Alexander Van Der Bellen filled these posts on Wednesday with a mix of Austrian People's Party (OVP) and Social Democrats (SPO) officials and neutral technocrats.

The scandal erupted on Friday when German media published a video showing Strache negotiating a quid-pro-quo deal with the supposed niece of a Russian oligarch in Ibiza in 2017.

Strache called the video a "targeted political assassination," but resigned a day later regardless. Kurz claimed Kickl's sacking was necessary because as interior minister and FPO member, Kickl was not in a position to investigate his own party leader impartially.

A snap election is expected in September, but Kurz will first have to survive a motion of no-confidence, likely in parliament on Monday. Neither the FPO nor the SPO has enough seats in parliament to carry such a motion on their own, and speculation has mounted over whether the SPO will enter into a Faustian pact with the FPO to boot Kurz from office.

Comment: What took place in Austria this week is the very definition of 'foreign meddling in our democracy' - and it didn't come from Russia...

See also:


Footprints

Pentagon may send 'up to 10K' troops to the ME in light of Iran tensions, but where's the other 110K?

troop deployment
© Flickr/DOD/Lance Cpl. Juanenrique Owings, USMC
US Central Command has asked the Pentagon to send up to 10,000 additional troops to the Middle East, citing threat from Iran even as the Trump administration boasted about having successfully 'deterred' Tehran already.

A CENTCOM request for 5,000 troops was reported by Reuters on Wednesday, citing two anonymous US officials. The reinforcements would be "defensive in nature," one of the officials reportedly said.

AP reported soon thereafter that the Pentagon will present plans to send "up to 10,000 troops" to the Middle East, also citing unnamed officials.

Washington has already sent a carrier strike group, a number of B-52 strategic bombers, and a unit of Patriot missile defense batteries to the region, citing intelligence warnings of an "imminent threat" by Iran. Many US diplomats and their families were evacuated from the neighboring Iraq as well.

On Tuesday, acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan told reporters that the deployments have had the desired effect, deterring the Iranian attack and putting Tehran's plans "on hold."

Comment: See also:


Arrow Up

IRGC commander: Persian gulf 'under complete control' of Iran

Iranian boats
© Tasnim News Agency/Hamed Malekpour
IRGC patrol boats in the Persian Gulf
A commander in Iran's elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has said that the Persian Gulf is "under the full control" of Iran's military and US ships are "not a concern," even as the US claimed victory in the Iran standoff.

"Over the years, our forces have completely surrounded the Persian Gulf, so that they (the Americans) need our permission to move in this area," Ali Fadavi, deputy commander of the IRGC, said on Wednesday, according to Iran's Fars News Agency.

Washington would likely dispute Fadavi's claim that Iran has the Lincoln - a 100,000 ton behemoth carrying 90 aircraft and multiple batteries of missiles - under control, but the United States has made similar claims itself during the recent standoff.

Fresh from threatening the "official end of Iran" on Sunday, Trump seemed to reverse course on Monday, declaring there was "no indication that anything is happening or will happen," presumably pleasing the almost two-thirds of Americans who oppose preemptive strikes on Iran, and sorely disappointing hawkish adviser John Bolton.

Comment: See also:


Eye 2

Ecuador breaks international law to seize Assange's computers, legal documents and personal records, turns them over to US prosecutors

protest assange london embassy Ecuador
© Associated Press/Alastair Grant
British police arrive and guard the Ecuadorian Embassy as protesters in support of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange demonstrate outside the embassy in London, Monday, May 20, 2019. Swedish authorities on Monday issued a request for a detention order against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who is now jailed in Britain, a Swedish prosecutor said.
With Julian Assange locked away in a London jail, a new battle has broken out over what may contain some of the WikiLeaks founder's biggest secrets: his computers.

On Monday, judicial authorities from Ecuador carried out an inventory of all the belongings and digital devices left behind at the London embassy following his expulsion last month from the diplomatic compound that had been his home the past seven years.

It came as Sweden announced it was seeking Assange's arrest on suspicion of rape, setting up a possible future tug-of-war with the United States over any extradition of Assange from Britain.

Comment: Greg Barns and Israel Shamir weigh in on Sputnik:
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's belongings, including legal papers, medical records and electronic equipment, left over from his time spent living with asylum status at the Ecuadorian embassy in London have been handed over to US prosecutors Monday, states WikiLeaks.


Earlier, WikiLeaks said UN officials and Assange's lawyers were stopped from being present to witness the " illegal seizure of property", which has been requested by the US authorities.

The material is said to include two of Assange's manuscripts.

Kristinn Hrafnsson, the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks, said:
"On Monday, Ecuador will perform a puppet show at the embassy of Ecuador in London for their masters in Washington, just in time to expand their extradition case before the UK deadline on 14 June. The Trump administration is inducing its allies to behave like it's the wild west."
Baltasar Garzón, the international legal coordinator for the defence of Assange and WikiLeaks, said:
"It is extremely worrying that Ecuador has proceeded with the search and seizure of property, documents, information and other material belonging to the defence of Julian Assange, which Ecuador arbitrarily confiscated, so that these can be handed over to the agent of political persecution against him, the United States."

"It is an unprecedented attack on the rights of the defence, freedom of expression and access to information exposing massive human rights abuses and corruption. We call on international protection institutions to intervene to put a stop to this persecution."
Assange's Ecuadorian lawyer Carlos Poveda told Sputnik the defence team for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will appeal a decision by Quito to hand over Assange's documents to Washington.

According to Poveda, this decision was taken on 1 May by a court in the Ecuadorian capital of Quito.The lawyer recalled that Assange remains an Ecuadorian citizen, and since no investigation is being conducted against him in this country, the material evidence related to him cannot be transferred to a third country.

On Sunday, the newspaper El Pais reported that Ecuador would hand over to Washington Assange's mobile phones, computers, memory cards, and other data storage devices after searching the room where he used to reside.

The WikiLeaks founder was arrested in the UK capital on 11 April on the heels of Ecuador revoking his asylum status. The whistleblower was subsequently sentenced to 50 weeks in jail for jumping bail back in 2012, when he took refuge inside the Ecuadorian embassy in London to avoid extradition to Sweden over a sexual assault investigation that has since been dropped.

The US, seeking Assange's extradition on charges of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion, has to provide London with all the necessary documents on the issue by the 12 June deadline.

Assange's lawyers and supporters fear that he could be charged under the Espionage Act in the United States and face the death penalty.

Separately, Swedish prosecutors said on Monday that they had requested a district court in the Swedish city of Uppsala to issue a warrant for arresting WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in absentia. The announcement came a week after Sweden had reopened an inquiry into 2010 rape allegations, two years after a preliminary probe into the claims was closed.

'Some Nations Prepared to Bend Their Legal Systems to US Demands'

Greg Barns, a prominent barrister and adviser to the Assange Australian campaign, has commented on the matter, saying that Assange's case is "showing that there are some nations prepared to bend their legal systems to Washington's demands, while Ecuador's and Sweden's conduct falls into this category.
"In the case of Ecuador, it is prepared to breach international law to allow the US to seize property which should be protected by Ecuador and given back to Assange. Sweden has closed its Assange file twice but reopens it because the US tells it to do that. Its selling out it's legal system," the adviser claimed.
Israel Shamir, a political analyst and expert on WikiLeaks, has also slammed Ecuador's move as "an obvious betrayal of Julian Assange's trust in the country."
"Julian trusted them and stayed for a while in their London embassy, and, to add insult to injury, they didn't just give him up to UK police, they've also now given his personal belongings to the United States. Their betrayal is awful and truly regrettable."
As for Sweden's decision to seek the extradition of Assange, he said that "this move would also be a very bad and upsetting development."
"In the very beginning of this sad story, the [general] attorney in Sweden released Assange from all accusations and allowed him to leave for England. But since then there's been strong pressure on the UK suggesting that the Swedes would renew their demand for extradition and apparently, they have done so again. In short, Sweden decided to submit to British and American demands to imprison Assange."
The analyst stated that he expects that it would be easier for the UK to hand over Assange to Sweden as in Sweden he will probably be sent to jail for at least a couple of years over alleged rape.

"And after that he will probably be deported to the United States to stand trial and, probably, remain in jail forever. That seems to be a very bad and, obviously, very sad result for the brave and courageous truth-seeker," he concluded.
Loud and Clear discusses the turnover of Assange's personal effects shows US' power
Ecuador's move to turn items and documents belonging to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange over to the US emphasizes the power that the Trump administration can exert over the famed publisher, activist and comedian Randy Credico told Sputnik.

"It's completely outrageous," Credico told Radio Sputnik's Loud & Clear on Monday of the development. "I don't see the legal basis for that. This was done without any kind of court hearing."

"How they could turn that stuff over - his personal belongings - to the US, not even to the Brits, but to the US... it just shows you the level of control that the US government, the [US] State Department [and] every other agency has over [Ecuadorian President] Lenin Moreno, who has totally sold out."

​In an early Monday press release, WikiLeaks revealed that materials forked over to US officials by Ecuador included "two of [Assange's] manuscripts, as well as his legal papers, medical records and electronic equipment."

"Neither Julian Assange nor UN officials have been permitted to be present when Ecuadorian officials arrive to Ecuador's embassy in London on Monday morning. The chain of custody has already been broken," reads the release. "The seizure of his belongings violates laws that protect medical and legal confidentiality and press protections."

It goes on to state that the seizure is formally listed as "Internat ional Assistance in Criminal matters 376-2018-WTT requested by the authorities of the United States of America," and that the reference number on the legal documents reveals that Ecuador began cooperating with the US in 2018.

"This is a very dangerous precedent," Credico told hosts Brian Becker and John Kiriakou. "Everything involved with Assange is a dangerous precedent that we should all be alarmed by."

Listen here:





War Whore

Pentagon will present plans to send 10,000 more troops to Mideast

Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan, left, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
© (Patrick Semansky/AP
Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan, left, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
The Pentagon on Thursday will present plans to the White House to send up to 10,000 more troops to the Middle East, in a move to beef up defenses against potential Iranian threats, U.S. officials said Wednesday.

The officials said no final decision has been made yet, and it's not clear if the White House would approve sending all or just some of the requested forces. Officials said the move is not in response to any new threat from Iran, but is aimed at reinforcing security in the region. They said the troops would be defensive forces, and the discussions include additional Patriot missile batteries, more ships and increased efforts to monitor Iran.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the plans have not been formally announced.

Thursday morning's meeting comes as tensions with Iran continue to simmer, and it wasn't clear if a decision would be made during the session. Any move to deploy more forces to the Middle East would signal a shift for President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly emphasized the need to reduce America's troop presence in the region.