Puppet Masters
In an interview with the Interfax and Anadolu news agencies published on Friday, Putin said Russia has been considering any "reliable" information on the terrorists' location in Syria.
"We have even worked together with the Free Syrian Army (FSA)," he said. "Russian aviation has conducted several strikes on targets identified by the FSA. We excluded areas, which had been indicated by FSA commanders as being under their control."
He stressed this "proves once again that we are not bombing the so-called moderate opposition or the civilian population."

NASA Coupled Ion Neutral Dynamic Investigation (CINDI) mission satellite in orbit around Earth
Launched from the remote Korla facility in China's sparsely-populated Xinjiang province on October 30, the missile in question allegedly traveled at hypersonic speed in a complex upward trajectory. The spiral contrails it left during an energy-management steering maneuvers have been widely captured and shared on China's social media.
Beijing, which customarily releases minimal information about its military programs, has acknowledged the launch, saying it was a missile intercept test. When questioned by the media about the launch, the Chinese embassy in Washington said it did not possess "detailed information."
"China advocates for the peaceful use of outer space, and opposes space weaponization or arms race in space," said the official reply to the Washington Free Beacon.
Jim W. Dean, a managing editor at Veterans Today, has told Press TV that Iran and Russia would be still vulnerable to US sanctions over the next years. Dean said the stakes for both countries would be particularly high if a "hardline, neocon, extremely pro-Israeli" president is elected to office in Washington next year. "Anybody else is still vulnerable to what the wild card of what
Comment: Woo! Are we scared yet? Considering who really picks the pres, what are the chances a hardline, neocon, extremely pro-Israeli president won't win...
What testifies this, he said, are the recent remarks by the French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius that EU countries should be given guarantees from the US that any project they win from Iran, they would not be subject to the sanctions.
Dean said the US businesses are going to lose a lot from the expansion of Iran's economic relations with Russia and other European countries. He blamed what he described as the "greedy, militaristic foreign policy" of the White House leaders over this. Dean said relations between Iran and Russia are yet expected to grow in the future.

A Su-34 multifunctional strike bomber of the Russian Aerospace Force takes off from the Hemeimeem Air Base in the Syrian province of Latakia.
"The airstrikes resulted in the elimination of 34 command observation and operational posts of the armed gangs, 16 munitions and fuel storage depots, two workshops producing munitions and homemade explosive devices, three field and training camps, 50 strongholds with military hardware and fire units, 184 fortified localities and defense positions," Konashenkov reported.
Islamic State's (IS, formerly ISIS) stronghold and a field ammunition depot have been eliminated in one sortie by a Sukhoi Su-24M bomber near Thaniet al-Rajma pike in Homs province. "A direct hit onto terrorists' engineer installations completely destroyed them along with three mortar detachments and a field ammunition depot," Konashenkov said. An air reconnaissance in Syrian province of Deir ez-Zor near the town of Mayadin exposed a convoy of tank trucks transporting crude oil towards the Iraqi border, in the direction of the oil processing facilities controlled by IS.
A notice was immediately passed to a Sukhoi Su-34 bomber patrolling the area, which delivered an airstrike on the convoy. "Objective control data confirmed complete elimination of the tank train," the military spokesman said. More than 50 aircraft and helicopters, including the Sukhoi Su-34 and Su-24M bombers, Su-25 attack aircraft, Su-30SM fighters and Mil Mi-8 and Mi-24 helicopters are taking part in Russia's ongoing military operation against terror groups in Syria. Russia's Caspian Flotilla ships also delivered a massive strike on ISIS targets in Syria using Kalibr NK ship-born cruise missiles on October 7. Kremlin has repeated on multiple occasions that Russia's military forces would not take part in any ground operations in Syria.
Comment: Preemptive strikes is how you fight terrorism. As a result:
Russian airstrikes have illuminated the complete sham of the US-led coalition against ISIS, as Russian airstrikes have been far more effective already, comparative to America's campaign.
The optics around Moscow's strikes have been a veritable nightmare for the US. The steady barrage of videos released by the Russian Defense Ministry seem to depict a successful air campaign (although it's impossible to assess exactly what the clips show) and one that's done far more damage in the space of 45 days than the US campaign has done in the space of 13 months. One problem of course is that Russia has a ground force in the Iranians and Hezbollah and the cooperation between air and ground seems to be far more robust than what Washington has been able to accomplish with Kurds.
So, in a last ditch effort to avoid complete humiliation, The Pentagon first prepared the US public for the deployment of spec ops (by releasing helmet cam footage of an ISIS prison raid) and then tried to float the idea of sending Apache gunships to Baghdad. When Baghdad rejected that strategy, The White House said it would send 50 spec ops to Syria and now, in conjunction with the Kurds, the US is attempting to take back the Northern Iraqi town of Sinjar which ISIS captured more than a year ago before terrorizing the local Yazidi population. This operation has received an enormous amount of Western media coverage over the past several days.
Well now, in the latest effort by Washington to prove to an increasingly skeptical world that the US can (or is willing) to bring something to the fight, the US says it has probably killed "Jihadi John," the ISIS member and Kuwaiti-born Brit who became famous after appearing a number of videos depicting the beheading of Westerners.
Comment: Of course the US was concerned Russia might get to "Jihadi John" first. If this drone hit is meant to impress us, it doesn't.
Behind the Headlines: Who is 'Jihadi John'? Interview with Jon Ryman
It's not over yet. But six weeks after Russia's President Vladimir Putin made the bold and principled move to intervene militarily in Syria, the result is already showing a stunning victory.
With Russian air power wiping out hundreds of foreign-backed terror targets, the Syrian Arab Army appears to be decisively turning back the enemy.
The latest gains by the Syrian state forces to liberate a key airbase near the northern city of Aleppo and surrounding countryside from the siege of terror groups is proving that Putin was so right in his intervention.
After a year of US-led air strikes against the so-called Islamic State, Syria was under more threat than ever from the wannabe jihadists. Six weeks after Russian air strikes, the same mercenary network is now on the run. The enemy is in disarray and in retreat.
Comment: Expect many more lies, underhanded tactics and false flags as the flailing U.S. Empire continues to undermine the stunning successes of Russia in Syria and on the world stage in general. Though it is disturbing to know that it has come to such a struggle - when so many lives are at stake - we can take solace in the fact that there exists at least one body of leadership on the planet that sees the problem and has the intelligence, will and resources to address it head-on. We are currently witnessing major historical events that will be studied and appreciated for many years to come.
Comment: Nazemroaya pretty much sums it up with this article. Just look at the Islamic State's latest propaganda (warning: disturbing images). Remarkably, ISIS's goals seem to always match up with the U.S.'s goals: Assad must go, attack Russia. Funny, it was the same with al-Qaeda...
Ahead of a meeting scheduled between Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Barack Obama and their speeches to the United Nations General Assembly in late September, the Russian President branded Washington's support for the insurgent forces in Syria as both illegal and ineffective in an interview with Charlie Rose for the U.S. CBS and PBS television networks. Aside from saying that U.S. support to the insurgents was a "provision of military support to illegal structures" that violates "the principles of modern international law and the United Nations Charter," Putin pointed out that the militants being trained and armed by the U.S. were actually joining the so-called Islamic State.
Washington is fighting a multi-dimensional global war on several fronts using proxies. In Europe it is using the Ukrainian government and the European Union to confront the Russian Federation while in Arabia it is using Saudi Arabia and a group of Arab regimes to gain control over Yemen. In East Asia, the U.S. is using tensions between the People's Republic of China and its neighbours to confront Beijing. In this context South Korea is being used to confront the North Koreans as a means of ultimately targeting the Chinese.
The so-called Islamic State or ISIL/ISIS is a creation of the U.S. It has been incubated by Washington as a proxy to wage the very same multi-dimensional war that has been described above. In fact, the U.S. military build-up in Iraq and Syria that the U.S. is leading is a smokescreen for regime change and war operations in Southwest Asia that target Syria, Iran, and their regional allies. The U.S. has been using parallel tracks of engaging these players while it continues to build-up the means for war and regime change. This is why mission creep is setting in and the U.S., along with Canada and France, has been bombing Syria and its infrastructure under the pretext of bombing ISIL/ISIS. The fact that the U.S. and its allies are engaging with Iran or Syria is only a repeat of the scenario of what happened to the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya; while the U.S. engaged with Muammar Qaddafi, it built-up the means for regime change against him. Moreover, it is precisely due to these regime change plans that Russia, Iran, Iraq, and Syria have setup a coordinating cell in Baghdad to fight the ISIL/ISIS and that the Russians are reinvigorating their military presence inside Syria.
The man is a citizen of one of the former Soviet republics and took part in the Syrian conflict throughout 2013-2014. Shevchenko court in Ukraine's capital has issued an arrest warrant for the suspect, believed to be one of Al-Nusra's leading lights.
According to the SBU, the suspect will be extradited, but it's not clear to which country. The identity of the detainee hasn't been revealed to the media.
On November 11, Ukrainian border guards reported they had detained a Russian citizen suspected of belonging to Islamic State in Kiev's Borispol International Airport. The man on the international wanted list landed in Kiev on a flight from Istanbul. He was handed over to police and the arrest was reported to Ukraine's Interpol office.
The Al-Nusra Front, also known as Jabhat al-Nusra, is the Syrian branch of Al-Qaeda. The Sunni Islamic jihadist group is fighting against Syrian government troops alongside Islamic State. Their declared aim is to establish a caliphate in Syria and neighboring Iraq.
Comment: What is a Russian leader of the Syrian branch of al-Qaeda doing in Ukraine? And what is Kiev doing, arresting him? They're happy enough to have Chechen ISIS members fight their war against Donetsk and Lugansk!
- Agents of chaos: ISIL using Ukraine as a forward base into Caucasia and entry into Europe
- U.S. backed Jihadists in Ukraine
- Western media celebrates ISIS fighting in Ukraine
- Death trafficking: ISIS militants given passage through Odessa to Donbass
In its "exclusive" story published on November 10, Reuters claimed it had obtained a "draft" of Russia's plan for a "constitutional reform process of up to 18 months," prepared for the multilateral talks on Syria this week.
The Reuters News Agency requested a comment from the Foreign Ministry, which it was given, but then decided to ignore it in their report.
"The [news] agency indeed contacted us prior to writing this information," Maria Zakharova, spokesperson for the Russian Foreign Ministry told reporters on Thursday. "[Reuters'] Moscow correspondents have received extensive comments that this information does not correspond to reality."
Comment: Mainstream news at its finest.












Comment: Those horrible "funding selfies." How dare they!