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Cloud Lightning

White House climate science overseer sanctioned and barred by The National Academy of Sciences

Jane Lubchenco
© Alex Wong/Getty Images
For "clear violations of the fundamental tenets of research."

A senior White House climate advisor has been sanctioned by the National Academy of Sciences for violating its ethics policies.

Axios reports that Jane Lubchenco, the deputy director for climate and environment at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, has been pulled up by the NAS for editing a paper later found to contain technical errors, as well as having worked with the scientists involved in it, one of which turned out to be her brother-in law.

Bandaid

Poland wants Ukraine to admit genocide

poland genocide rememberance day
© Sputnik / Alexey VitvitskyPolish troops take part in Genocide Remembrance Day ceremonies in Warsaw, commemorating the victims Poles massacred in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia during WWII.
A deputy culture minister says the 1943 Volhyn massacres fit the definition of genocide and Kiev will have to recognize that.

The mass murder of Poles by Ukrainian nationalists during the Second World War meets the definition of genocide and the government in Kiev will have to recognize this sooner or later, Poland's Deputy Minister of Culture and National Heritage Jaroslaw Sellin said on Tuesday.

"They have to acknowledge it because it's a fact. It's simply a fact. A political decision was made and implemented for ethnic cleansing, the extermination of the entire national minority that has lived there for centuries," Sellin told the Polish Press Agency (PAP) during a TV interview.

Comment: It seems little has changed in Ukraine.

See also:


War Whore

Caitlin Johnstone: Modern US warmongering is scaring Henry Kissinger

biden kissinger
In a new interview with The Wall Street Journal, immortal Hague fugitive Henry Kissinger says the US is acting in a crazy and irrational way that has brought it to the edge of war with Russia and China:
Mr. Kissinger sees today's world as verging on a dangerous disequilibrium. "We are at the edge of war with Russia and China on issues which we partly created, without any concept of how this is going to end or what it's supposed to lead to," he says. Could the U.S. manage the two adversaries by triangulating between them, as during the Nixon years? He offers no simple prescription. "You can't just now say we're going to split them off and turn them against each other. All you can do is not to accelerate the tensions and to create options, and for that you have to have some purpose."

On the question of Taiwan, Mr. Kissinger worries that the U.S. and China are maneuvering toward a crisis, and he counsels steadiness on Washington's part. "The policy that was carried out by both parties has produced and allowed the progress of Taiwan into an autonomous democratic entity and has preserved peace between China and the U.S. for 50 years," he says. "One should be very careful, therefore, in measures that seem to change the basic structure."

Mr. Kissinger courted controversy earlier this year by suggesting that incautious policies on the part of the U.S. and NATO may have touched off the crisis in Ukraine. He sees no choice but to take Vladimir Putin's stated security concerns seriously and believes that it was a mistake for NATO to signal to Ukraine that it might eventually join the alliance: "I thought that Poland โ€” all the traditional Western countries that have been part of Western history โ€” were logical members of NATO," he says. But Ukraine, in his view, is a collection of territories once appended to Russia, which Russians see as their own, even though "some Ukrainians" do not. Stability would be better served by its acting as a buffer between Russia and the West: "I was in favor of the full independence of Ukraine, but I thought its best role was something like Finland."

Comment: See also:


Eye 2

Australia's former PM secretly granted himself FIVE additional ministerial positions during lockdowns

Australian PM Scott Morrison
© AFPFILE PHOTO: Australian PM Scott Morrison. Incumbent prime minister says he 'cannot conceive of the mindset' that enabled Scott Morrison to appoint himself to additional positions while PM.
Scott Morrison secretly appointed himself to five additional ministries while Australia's prime minister, in what his successor has labelled an "unprecedented trashing of the Westminster system".

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, said on Tuesday he was waiting on legal advice over any possible ramifications of the secret appointments and was "open to reforms and suggestions" so the situation did not reoccur.

Morrison now faces calls to resign from parliament over the revelations, including from one of his former ministers. Karen Andrews, a former minister for home affairs, which is one of the departments to which Morrison appointed himself, said: "This is totally unacceptable, for a prime minister to behave in this manner undermines everything that a federal government constitutionally should stand for."


Comment: Where were these MPs with their supposed values and principles when certain regions of Australia were enforcing one of the most brutal lockdowns seen across the planet?


Comment: Whilst the political class may cry foul, few objected when Australia's government called for secrecy protections during its lockdown cabinet meetings.


Attention

World order looks different from Moscow, Beijing

Warships on Exercise
© Indian Punchline
The Chinese Defence Ministry announced today its participation in the Vostok 2022 strategic command and staff exercise in Russia, which is slated for August 30-September 5. The low-key statement in Beijing said China will send some troops and the participation is within the framework of the two countries' annual cooperation plan.

The statement mentioned that "India, Belarus, Tajikistan, Mongolia and other countries will also participate." It said the Chinese participation "aims to deepen pragmatic and friendly cooperation with the militaries of the participating countries, enhance the level of strategic coordination among all participating parties, and enhance the ability to deal with various security threats."

In what can be construed as an oblique reference to the conflict in Ukraine and the big power tensions in general, Beijing stated that the exercise is "unrelated to the current international and regional situation."

Vostok is one of the capstone events of the Russian Armed Forces' annual training cycle to test national preparedness for large-scale, high-intensity warfare against a technologically advanced peer adversary in a multidirectional, theatre-level conflict.

Vostok 2018 involved approximately 300,000 troops -- as well as 1,000 fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, 80 ships, and 36,000 tanks, armoured and other vehicles โ€” and was unprecedented in scale. And Russian, Chinese and Mongolian forces were the sole participants and was hyped up as a carefully orchestrated Russian-Chinese military demonstration.

Attention

A Eurasian jigsaw: BRI and INSTC interconnectivity will complete the puzzle

Shrugging off western obstacles, Eurasia's ambitious connectivity projects helmed by China and Russia are now progressing deep into Asia's Heartland.
Eurasia
© The Cradle
SAMARKAND - Interconnecting Inner Eurasia is an exercise in Taoist equilibrium: adding piece by piece, patiently, to a gigantic jigsaw puzzle. It takes time, skill, vision, and of course major breakthroughs.

A key piece was added to the puzzle recently in Uzbekistan, bolstering the links between the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the International North South Transportation Corridor (INSTC).

The Mirzoyoyev government in Tashkent is deeply engaged in turbo-driving yet another Central Asian transportation corridor: a China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan-Afghanistan railway.

That was at the center of a meeting between the chairman of the board of Temir Yullari - the Uzbek national railways - and his counterparts in Kyrgyzstan and Afghanistan, as well as managers of the Chinese Wakhan Corridor logistics company.

In terms of the complex intersection of Xinjiang with Central and South Asia, this is as groundbreaking as it gets, as part of what I call the War of Economic Corridors.

The Uzbeks have pragmatically spun the new corridor as essential to cargo transport under low tariffs - but that goes way beyond mere trade calculations.

Imagine, in practice, cargo containers coming by train from Kashgar in Xinjiang to Osh in Kyrgyzstan and then to Hairatan in Afghanistan. Annual volume is planned to reach 60,000 containers in the first year alone.

That would be crucial to develop Afghanistan's productive trade - away from the "aid" obsession of the US occupation. Afghan products will finally be able to be easily exported to Central Asian neighbors and also China, for instance to the bustling Kashgar market.

And that stabilizing factor would bolster the Taliban's coffers, now that the leadership in Kabul is very much interested in buying Russian oil, gas and wheat under vastly attractive discounts.

Toys

Hubris: 'Delusional', defeated Liz Cheney ripped for likening herself to Lincoln in concession speech

liz cheney
© Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images"Lincoln ultimately prevailed," Rep. Liz Cheney said in her concession speech.
Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney was blasted by Republicans and conservatives after she compared herself to Abraham Lincoln in her concession speech following Tuesday's primary loss.

"Abraham Lincoln was defeated in elections for the Senate and the House before he won the most important election of all," Cheney said of the 16th president after she was soundly beaten by Trump-backed challenger Harriet Hageman.

"Lincoln ultimately prevailed," Cheney went on. "He saved our union and he defined our obligation as Americans for all of history. Speaking at Gettysburg of the great task remaining before us, Lincoln said, 'That we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain. That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom and a government of the people, by the people and for the people shall not perish from this Earth.'

Comment: Trump took note of Cheney's drubbing:
trump truth social post liz cheny
© Donald Trump/Truth Social



Pistol

US military expert says Ukraine could be put on 'ammo diet'

military aid ukraine west
© Sergei Supinsky / AFPUkrainian servicemen load a truck with Javelin anti-tank missile systems at Boryspil International Airport near Kiev, Ukraine.
Michael Kofman says Europe may already have given Kiev most of the weapons it's willing to provide

Ukraine's European backers may be about to put the country on an "ammunition diet", an American military analyst has claimed in an interview with Germany's Der Spiegel. Michael Kofman said these nations may already have reached their limit in terms of weapons supplies to Kiev.

In an article published on Tuesday, Kofman was quoted as saying it is not in the Ukrainian military's best interests to bide its time, as the weather will soon begin to worsen, making any counteroffensive more difficult to pull off. On top of that, according to the US expert, Russian troops could use a hiatus to regroup and "solve some of their personnel problems."

Comment:


Nuke

Germany to keep last three nuclear-power plants running in policy u-turn

german nuclear power plant
© Boris Roessler/picture alliance via Getty ImagesAerial view of Germany's Biblis Nuclear Power Plant block A and B
Move prompted by the mounting economic war with Russia marks the first departure from a two-decade policy to abandon nuclear energy

Germany plans to postpone the closure of the country's last three nuclear power plants as it braces for a possible shortage of energy this winter after Russia throttled gas supplies to the country, said German government officials.

While temporary, the move would mark the first departure from a policy initiated in the early 2000s to phase out nuclear energy in Germany and which had over time become enshrined in political consensus.

The decision has yet to be formally adopted by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz's cabinet and would likely require a vote in Parliament. Some details are still under discussion, three senior government officials said. A cabinet decision would also need to wait on the outcome of an assessment of Germany's energy needs that will be concluded in the coming weeks but which the officials said was a foregone conclusion.

Comment: Russia gets the last laugh again.


Clipboard

Inventory list from Mar-a-Lago raid provided by FBI is 'borderline worthless': Trump attorney

trump fbi raid
An attorney for former President Trump said on Monday he and his legal team aren't sure precisely what items were seized by the FBI during a search of Mar-a-Lago last week, saying that an inventory list provided to them was "worthless."

Lindsey Halligan, a Florida-based lawyer who was at the estate during the search, told Fox News's Sean Hannity that details of what the FBI took remain scant to them and questioned whether some of the material was appropriate for the agency to obtain.

"We don't know exactly what they took. We have asked multiple times for a real inventory description of what was taken. But the inventory list they gave us is borderline worthless," Halligan said. "It doesn't say where the documents were located, what specifically was taken."

Comment: