Puppet Masters
Spokesperson Brynjar Stordal of the Joint Headquarters confirmed the submarine had the so-called administrative assignment of swapping crews and carrying out a number of tasks before going out to sea, yet refused to specify the type of the submarine. No further indication was given, except for the fact that it was American and had Norfolk as its homeport.
"I will not say exactly how common this is, but from time to time US submarines do come into Norwegian territorial waters with such calls, upon which they are granted permission from the Norwegian Joint Headquarters, Stordal told Norwegian public broadcaster NRK.
The decision came in response to International Business Times' open records request for correspondence between Clinton's State Department office and the United States Trade Representative. The request, which was submitted in July 2015, specifically asked for all such correspondence that made reference to the TPP.
The State Department originally said it estimated the request would be completed by April 2016. Last week the agency said it had completed the search process for the correspondence but also said it was delaying the completion of the request until late November 2016 — weeks after the presidential election. The delay was issued in the same week the Obama administration filed a court motion to try to kill a lawsuit aimed at forcing the federal government to more quickly comply with open records requests for Clinton-era State Department documents.
A number of pro-'Remain' MPs have suggested using their 257 person majority to vote to keep the UK within the European Economic Area (EEA), which mandates the free movement of people, goods and services, even in the event of a Brexit, the BBC reports.
"We would accept the mandate of the people to leave the EU," one unnamed minister told the broadcaster.
"But everything after that is negotiable and Parliament would have its say. The terms on which we leave are entirely within my remit as a parliamentarian and that is something for me to take a view on."
The SAA and the Desert Hawks, Syria's special forces, are reported to be only 11 miles away from the al-Tabqa city, home to a major dam and a key military airbase, captured by Daesh in August 2014. The city is located some 34 miles southwest of Raqqa and the SAA is moving towards the embattled stronghold, a Syrian brigadier general told Sputnik.
It all started with Palmyra
This offensive would not be taking place if Russia had not offered its military assistance to Damascus in September 2015. In late March, Palmyra, home to the priceless ancient ruins that Daesh partially destroyed in the ten months it controlled the city, was liberated by Syrian forces.
The Anaconda-16 exercise launched Monday in Warsaw will involve some 31,000 troops from Poland, the U.S. and 17 other NATO member nations and from five partner nations.
It is held just weeks before NATO holds a crucial summit in Warsaw expected to decide that significant numbers of NATO troops and equipment will be based in Poland and in the Baltic states. Those countries are particularly concerned about the armed conflict in Ukraine, where Moscow supports separatists.
Comment: Even if Russia is supporting 'separatists' in Ukraine, since when is it a crime to support people 'separating' from a stark-raving mad, neo-Nazi regime? But when NATO supports head chopping 'separatists' in Syria they're called moderate rebels and given a free pass.
"Aristocracy, liberalism, progress, principles... Useless words! A Russian doesn't need them," reads the writing on a white rectangle, which has nothing underneath but the logo of the publisher Penguin Classics.
The unattributed line is actually said by the outspoken nihilist Yevgeny Bazarov, one of the characters in Ivan Turgenev's 19th-century novel Fathers and Sons, which is also a Penguin Classics title.
However, the choice of that particular line from a 336-page novel did not appear to be an accident to one of London's numerous Russian expats, who posted a screenshot for her domestic audience.

It’s time for the citizens of the world to fight back against the destructive existence of this agro-chemical giant.
With 21,000 employees in 66 countries and $15 billion in revenue, Monsanto is a biotech industry heavyweight. The St. Louis, Mo.-based monopolizer of seeds is the poster child for an industry that is the source of at least one-third of global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, and is largely responsible for the depletion of soil, water and biodiversity. Not to mention the company's marginalization—and sometimes terrorization—of millions of small farmers.
Comment: Read more about the Tribunal to be held in The Hague to evaluate environmental and health allegations against Monsanto
In distress I turn to my chosen field of psychology for answers. I am led to realize that in this geopolitical landscape, driven by the quest for political domination and exploitation of world resources, it is increasingly imperative that the layperson acquires a basic psychological comprehension of human evil, in order for any of this to make a modicum of sense.
Physicist and psychoanalyst Ian Hughes wrote:
A small proportion of people who suffer from psychologically abnormal personalities have, throughout history, had an immeasurable detrimental impact on our societies, our politics and our world. Enabled by their ruthlessness to readily acquire positions of power, they have long dominated the psychologically normal majority of the world's population.
Comment: An excellent in-depth discussion of the book Political Ponerology may be read here:
Political Ponerology: A Science on The Nature of Evil adjusted for Political Purposes
The New York Times editorial board is supposed to be a beacon of enlightened opinion, a sort of oracle of thought for the readers of the most influential print news media ever drafted. 16 people inhabit those hallowed halls in New York City, 16 journalists from a wide swath of expertise. And "Vladimir Putin's Dangerous Obsession" is their latest and greatest contribution to astute thinking, the best and most intellectually stimulating editorial these brilliant journalists could come up with. The latest damnable Russophobic, anti-Putin rant, from well paid political trolls is a big-fat-lie. Sorry, but 16 pairs of pants are on fire right now, and here's why.
Everyone reading this by now knows, Vladimir Putin and Russia have not been the aggressor in the current West versus East circus. If Russia were the aggressor, all of Ukraine would be under the Russian flag, and there is nothing NATO or the United States could have done about it. Let's just be real, please. But for context today, read this quote from the piece in question:
"Syria is just one arena where Mr. Putin's obsessive quest to make Russia great again has fueled instability and reawakened political suspicions and animosities that faded after the fall of the Soviet Union."As we've shown 5,000 times, after the Soviet Union fell Washington and London never let up trying to infuse hegemonic control over states surrounding Russia. These journalists at the NYT know this, but they never mention it. And this is known as being misleading, a deceiver, even a minion. You are deceivers, ladies and gentlemen. Or either I am. So let's see who is, and is not, shall we?
Dear compatriots! Dear countrymen!
Since the very beginning, we have traversed the path of goodness, lawfulness and justice. We went out to hold legal protests against the violent coup in Kiev. And then, in accordance with all international norms, we held a referendum to determine the will of the people.
Then we defended or homeland from shelling and looting carried out by illegal punitive squads sent to Donbass by an unlawful government. Then we simply let captured UAF soldiers return home. Then we elected the head of the Republic and the People's Council. Then we concluded a compromise in Minsk. And then we fulfilled these agreements despite provocations from the opposing side.














Comment: More back room manoeuvrers to protect the failing Killary campaign.