Puppet MastersS


Eye 1

On the UK's equating of journalism with terrorism

As my colleague Ryan Devereaux reports, a lower UK court this morning, as long expected, upheld the legality of the nine-hour detention of my partner, David Miranda, at Heathrow Airport last August, even as it acknowledged that the detention was "an indirect interference with press freedom". For good measure, the court also refused permission to appeal (though permission can still be granted by the appellate court). David was detained and interrogated under the Terrorism Act of 2000.

The UK Government expressly argued that the release of the Snowden documents (which the free world calls "award-winning journalism") is actually tantamount to "terrorism", the same theory now being used by the Egyptian military regime to prosecute Al Jazeera journalists as terrorists. Congratulations to the UK government on the illustrious company it is once again keeping. British officials have also repeatedly threatened criminal prosecution of everyone involved in this reporting, including Guardian journalists and editors.

Arrow Down

The Obama administration plans to embed "Government Researchers" to monitor media organizations

Press Freedom
© Reporters without Borders
Last week, I highlighted the fact that the latest Press Freedom Index showcased a 13 point plunge in America's press freedom to an embarrassing #46 position in the global ranking. If the authoritarians in the Obama Administration have their way, this country is set to fall much further in next year's index.

Incredibly, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is set to roll out something called the Critical Information Needsstudy, which will embed government "researchers" into media organizations around the nation to make sure they are doing their job properly.

No this isn't "conspiracy theory." It is so real, and represents such a threat to the First Amendment, that a current FCC commissioner, Ajit Pai, recently wrote an Op-Ed in the Wall Street Journal, warning Americans of this scheme.

USA

U.S. military intervention in Africa: The East African Response Force, a creation of the Pentagon

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© Unknown
Growing instability in East and Central Africa will be the focus of Washington's intervention

Over the last two months developments in Central and East Africa has dominated the news coverage of the continent. The split within the ruling Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLA), a close ally of Washington, and the deployment of French and African troops in the Central African Republic, has brought the escalation of Pentagon troops in these states.

Recently the Department of Defense announced the formation of an East African Response Force. This new unit is part of the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) which has been strengthened and enhanced under the administration of President Barack Obama.

A recent drone attack in southern Somalia is representative of the growing aggression of Washington in Africa. The government of Djibouti, a former French colony where the U.S. has a military base with over 4,000 soldiers at Camp Lemonnier, released a statement saying that such strikes are "vital" in the so-called war on terrorism.

The drone strike was launched from the Pentagon military installations in Djibouti. Prior to the creation of the East African Response Force Washington operated in the region under the framework of the Combined Joint Task Force Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA).

USA

Shots fired at one Russian TV crew, while a second one is kidnapped, as Kiev riots reignited by mystery snipers

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Snipers, probably hired by the CIA, started shooting at protesters today in order to reignite the conflict
Riots in Kiev have reignited with protesters attacking riot policemen and breaking the uneasy truce that had been agreed between the government and opposition. Rioters are reportedly using firearms, and some witnesses say there are snipers shooting at security forces. RT's Aleksey Yaroshevsky reports from Kiev after RT crew was fired through a window.


Dollar

Energy crisis? Nah, it's just business: Private British energy corporation made £571 million profit after hiking gas prices 6% during record cold winter

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Thousands of elderly people died in recent record cold winters? Sorry, it's just business, innit?
British Gas owner Centrica has revealed a £571m profit haul from its residential energy arm for 2013, months after hiking gas and electricity prices.

It marks a 6% drop on the £606m the year before but is unlikely to calm public anger over rising energy costs.

Centrica said British Gas shed 2% of residential customer accounts in 2013 to 15.3m as households switched to other suppliers following its move to increase tariffs by 9.2% on average from November as part of a round of winter bill rises across the industry.

It added that another 100,000 people had quit the group so far this year, but customer switching was now "stabilising" after it scaled back its price rise by 3.2% following a shake-up of the government's so-called green levies on bills. Across the group, operating profits were 2% lower at £2.7bn last year.

USA

Money for nothing: Feds in D.C. closed 25% of the time

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© Pete SouzaPresident Barack Obama has lunch with members of the Congressional Leadership in the Oval Office Private Dining Room, May 16, 2012
Between snow days, official holidays and the government shutdown, federal employees have worked a normal business day less than 75 percent of the time since Oct. 1, marking a startlingly chaotic beginning to the fiscal year.

Offices have been closed in whole or in part for 27 of the 105 weekdays so far in the fiscal year, according to a Washington Times analysis of announcements from the federal Office of Personnel Management that found the government was closed for 21 days because of the shutdown, snow days or holidays. Delayed openings or unscheduled leave and telework policies were in effect for six more days.

Congress is the worst offender when it comes to time away from the main office. Neither the House nor the Senate has worked a full Monday-to-Friday workweek in 2014. House members have been in session for 17 of the 35 weekdays so far this year, less than 50 percent. Senators have met in full session for 18 days, slightly better than 50 percent.

Red Flag

Health law's impact has only begun

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Faces of the Affordable Care Act
Insurers Seek Healthy Enrollees, Doctors Educate New Patients, Employers Wrestle With Added Costs

On Jan. 1, the key provisions of the Affordable Care Act took effect. Americans gained access to new health plans subsidized by federal dollars. Insurers no longer can turn away people with existing conditions. Millions are now eligible for new Medicaid benefits.

But the federal law also upended existing health-insurance arrangements for millions of people. Companies worry about the expense of providing new policies, some hospitals aren't seeing the influx of new patients they expected to balance new costs and entrepreneurs say they may hire more part-time workers to avoid offering more coverage.

The law's true impact will play out over years. It will depend in part on whether backers overcome serious early setbacks, including crippling glitches in the new online insurance marketplaces and many states' rejection of the Medicaid expansion. But another obstacle the law faces is pushback from some consumers and industry over the higher costs, complex rules and mandatory requirements it imposes.

Snakes in Suits

Tony Blair 'advised Murdoch executives over hacking'

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© AFP
Former British prime minister Tony Blair advised a key executive in Rupert Murdoch's newspaper empire days before she was arrested over phone hacking at the News of the World, a court heard on Wednesday.

Blair also offered to be an "unofficial" advisor to Murdoch and his son James at the height of the scandal which led to the closure of the tabloid in July 2011.

An email written by Rebekah Brooks, then chief executive of Murdoch's British newspaper group, News International, described an hour-long phone call with Blair in which he allegedly told her to "tough up".

The email was shown to the jury at the end of almost four months of prosecution arguments in the phone-hacking trial, in which Brooks is expected to take the stand later this week.

Bad Guys

Convicted criminals serve as "freedom fighters" in Syria: Saudi, Pakistani and Iraqi prison inmates replenish Al Qaeda ranks

Abu Ghraib prison
© APA file photo of renovated Abu Ghraib prison, now renamed Baghdad Central Prison, Iraq.

Several hundred convicted criminals who escaped from carefully guarded prisons in Iraq have recently joined the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) as well as the Al Qaeda affiliated rebel force, Jabhat Al Nusra.


According to the NYT: "the prison breaks also reflect the surging demand for experienced fighterswhich led to a concerted effort by militant groups, particularly the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, to seek them in the one place where they were held en masse - Iraq's prison cells." (Tim Arango and Eric Schmitt, Escaped Inmates From Iraq Fuel Syrian Insurgency, NYT, February 12, 2014):
"American officials estimate, a few hundred of the escapees have joined the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, several in senior leadership roles."
Acknowledged by the NYT, the prison breakouts are part of the recruitment of jihadists to serve in the Syrian insurgency. What is not mentioned, however, is that the recruitment of mercenaries is coordinated by NATO, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar with the support of the Obama administration. Moreover, known and documented, most Al Qaeda affiliated forces are covertly supported by Western intelligence including the CIA, Mossad and Britain's MI6.

Piggy Bank

Japan monthly trade deficit hits record


Haruhiko Kuroda
© BCCLJapan's trade deficit has surged to a monthly record of 2.79 trillion yen (USD 27.30 billion).
Japan's trade deficit has surged to a monthly record of 2.79 trillion yen (USD 27.30 billion).


The figure for January was up from the trade deficit for the same month last year of 1.63 trillion yen.

The development came as the country's imports jumped 25 percent.

The Finance Ministry reported that exports had risen 9.5 percent from a year earlier to 5.25 trillion yen while imports were 8.04 trillion yen.

A weakening in the Japanese yen over the past year has failed to boost exports as hoped. Imports of oil and gas, food, and other products have also surged.

Marcel Thieliant of Capital Economics said "...the monthly numbers may well look worse before they get better."