"In total, our military aircraft have flown about 4,000 sorties, destroying over 8,000 objects of military infrastructure belonging to the terrorists. As a result, Daesh militants have been significantly weakened," Shoigu said, speaking at a Defense Ministry Board meeting on Friday.Russia launched its military mission in Syria on September 30, 2015, at the request of Syrian President Bashar Assad, carrying out airstrikes against Daesh (ISIL/ISIS) and Al-Nusra Front targets. Since then, the Russian Aerospace Defense Forces, in coordination with ships of the Caspian Flotilla and the Black Sea Fleet Submarine 'Rostov-on-Don', have destroyed hundreds of militants and thousands of pieces of terrorist infrastructure.
Puppet Masters
We added that the deployment of additional officers will begin next week, and noted that as our friends at Keep Talking Greece wrote:
"the masks have fallen. Hand in hand, the European Union and the Frontex want to cancel national sovereignty and take over border controls in the pretext of "safeguarding the Schengen borders". With controversial claims, they use the case of Greece to create an example that could soon happen "in the border area near you." And the plan is all German."Finally, we asked whether this was merely Paranoia...
"or just another confirmation that the Eurozone is using every incremental, and produced, crisis to cement its power over discrete European state sovereignty and wipe out the cultural and religious borders the prevent the amalgamation of Europe into a Brussels, Berlin and Frankfurt-controlled superstate? "
The Washington-based website and newspaper Politico quoted Simone Tagliapietra, an energy fellow at the Brussels-based think tank Bruegel, as saying that a possible disruption in gas supplies from Russia to Turkey may be catastrophic.
Politico recalled that Turkey is the Russian energy giant Gazprom's second-largest gas export market after Germany, while Russia remains Turkey's largest gas supplier, accounting for approximately 60% of the country's foreign gas.
The following is a rough transcription of the interview.
Press TV: What do you think about the ceasefire agreement? We've had talks about the whole situation in Yemen before. And you were talking about the Yemenis taking the whole situation into their own hands. What do you make of this new truce that is supposedly going to take place between Yemen's Ansarullah movement and the United Nations?
Ahmed: There appears to be Saudi fatigue, the Saudi government right now, I think, more than ever is convinced that it has reached its end. There is nothing that they can do that can change the realities in Yemen. They have spent over 100 billion dollars in eight months on this war. They have bombed Yemen. They have destroyed Yemen's infrastructure. They have killed more than 10,000 people, mostly civilians, yet although they have many countries behind them, the US, the UK and the mercenaries from different parts of the world from Colombia to Senegal to Jordan, it didn't work. So, there is a realization that is setting in that Saudi Arabia has been defeated. It has not been able to reach its stated goals. So they are trying to find a way out of this conflict.
Comment: The Saudis have been instrumental in turning the Middle East into a terrorist battleground in order to maximize their influence, and this genocidal war in Yemen has been no different. Perhaps now, with so much money spent, and the possibility of wider war opening, the Saudis, in true psychopathic fashion, will simply 'wash their hands' of Yemen. See also:
- Iraq: the presence of troops is a violation of its national sovereignty
- Iraq: UNSC asked to order immediate troops removal, a formal complaint
- Iraq: denies any deal with Turkey to allow Turkish troops to remain
In a statement on Friday, the office of Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said after holding talks with Iraqi officials, Ankara has decided to change the way it has been deploying soldiers at the Bashiqa camp near the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. It said the two sides have reached an agreement to start work on creating mechanisms aimed at deepening cooperation on security issues.
The statement did not specify the details of the proposed mechanisms and how the troops would be reorganized. However, other officials in Turkey said Baghdad and Ankara have decided to work together on the issue. "We'll decide together if we'll increase or decrease the number of Turkish troops," Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said, adding, "It is our duty to address the Baghdad government's concerns."
Turkey's apparent change of tone over the last Friday deployment of hundreds of troops comes two days after it missed an ultimatum to pull out the fight from Bashiqa, prompting Baghdad to threaten to follow up the case in the United Nations Security Council.
Comment: A 'modification' only after push came to shove, but wait, there's more...
Comment: It is obvious the Iraqi government and people do not want Turkey's military within its borders. It is equally obvious that Turkey is ramrodding its occupation and ignoring Iraqi demands by fantasizing and expounding a different reality, hoping it sticks.
The Saudi warship was targeted with Yemeni missiles in the Al-Mukha coastal waters in the province of Ta'iz today.
The sunken ship had repeatedly fired rockets at residential areas in Ta'iz province, inflicting casualties and destruction there.
This is the eighth time that a Saudi warship is sent deep into the waters of Bab al-Mandab Strait by the Yemeni forces.
Other Saudi battleships that were approaching Yemen's coasts retreated fast following the attack.
This might be what is occurring unrecognized before our eyes.
In his September 28 speech at the 70th Anniversary of the United Nations, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that Russia can no longer tolerate the state of affairs in the world. Two days later at the invitation of the Syrian government Russia began war against ISIS.
Brent slipped below $39 per barrel for the first time since December 2008 as the IEA, which advises developed nations on energy, warned that demand growth was starting to slow.
"The technicals and the fundamentals are singing from the same hymn sheet," said Tamas Varga, oil analyst with PVM Associates. "We will not see support until we hit the lows of 2008."
Comment: More signs we are headed for a recession.
His remarks came after Swiss officials launched a manhunt in Geneva for four people believed to have links with Daesh, who have threatened to attack a number of cities. According to local reports, the listed cities are Geneva, Chicago and Toronto. Other European reports include Ottawa and Vancouver among the possible targets.
Goodale told reporters outside the parliament that the security officials "are examining all information to determine any new fact." "Canadian security officials have been alert to the threat of terrorism for a very long time and particularly since the situation in Paris. They have been working with their counterparts in other countries to make sure that we are putting together the best effort that could possibly be done," Goodale said.
Comment: Fear fosters paranoia and sends rational folk into overdrive. An afraid constituency is the most malleable. Mr. Goodale can thank its neighbor to the south for this perceived threat to his cities.
During the annual expanded meeting of the country's Defense Ministry Board on Friday Sergei Shoigu warned that Daesh has gained control over 70% of Syrian territory:
"Daesh is spreading: the militants control about 70% of Syrian territory and the majority of Iraq. The number [of terrorists] is close to 60,000. They might transfer to Central Asia and the Caucasus," Shoigu added.
The minister added that about 60,000 terrorists in Syria, Iraq are a threat to Central Asia.
Comment: It truly is a sad state of affairs Syria is in after 4 years. This country has a long road ahead to recover from this needless war.















Comment: With their unbelievably belligerent actions against Russia and Iraq, Turkey is asking for this level of retaliation. Also see: