Welcome to Sott.net
Fri, 05 Nov 2021
The World for People who Think

Puppet Masters
Map

Arrow Up

A 'sleepless night' in South Korea as all eyes are on Kim-Trump summit

Trump/Kim monitor
© Mike Blake/Reuters
South Korea watches and waits.
The South Korean government is hoping for a success of the Singapore summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, since it could lead to peace on the peninsula after almost 70 years.

President Moon Jae-in and his cabinet watched the start of the summit before their morning meeting at Cheong Wa Dae ("Blue House"), the South Korean news agency Yonhap reported.
"I guess the attention of all our people must currently be directed toward Singapore," Moon said. "I too spent a sleepless night. I, along with all our people, sincerely hope that it will be a successful summit that will open a new era of complete denuclearization, peace and a new relationship between South Korea, North Korea and the United States."
The summit is only the beginning of a "long process" of re-establishing peace in the Korean Peninsula, Moon cautioned.
"The deep-rooted hostile relationship and the North Korean nuclear issue cannot be resolved in one single action in a meeting between leaders," the president said after the cabinet meeting on Monday. "Even after the two leaders open the dialogue, we will need a long process that may take one year, two years or even longer to completely resolve the issues."

Attention

Iran warns N. Korea of possibility of Trump U-turn on Singapore deal

Trump Singapore
© Jonathan Ernst / Reuters
Trump after a news conference at the Capella Hotelin Singapore June 12, 2018.
Tehran, which has its own sad experience in dealing with the US, has warned Pyongyang that President Donald Trump may cancel the recent Singapore agreement, hours after the meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jing-un.

"We don't know what type of person the North Korean leader is negotiating with. It is not clear that he would not cancel the agreement before returning back home," Iran's government spokesman, Mohammad Bagher Nobakht, said on Tuesday as cited by IRNA new agency.

The statement came hours after Trump and Kim signed an agreement stipulating "complete denuclearization" of North Korea. Trump praised what had been achieved at the summit calling it a "new chapter" in relations with the North.

In the run-up to the Kim-Trump summit Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qassem said that the North's leader should be aware Trump's tendency to betray deals when they talk about denuclearization. "Washington has continued to sabotage international agreements and unilaterally withdraw from them," he stated on Monday.

Comment: No choice but to wait and see if President Trump can stick with his own deal. He has no qualms about nixing those made by his predecessor. See also:


Binoculars

Carter Page: 'The US government abused its power by spying on me'

Carter Page
© AP photo/Pavel Golovkin
Carter Page
Former foreign policy adviser to Donald Trump's presidential campaign Carter Page believes the US government "abused" its power by directing its vast surveillance capabilities at him under the pretext of a "dodgy dossier" that was funded by lawyers for Trump rival Hillary Clinton, Real Clear Investigations reported Thursday.
"Until the DoJ [Department of Justice] discloses full information about the dodgy dossier, amends their court filings that led to extensive abuse of process, and discloses details on the other sources of their lies, it will be impossible for Americans to fully trust them again," Page said in an interview with the outlet published Thursday.
The court that granted authorities a warrant to spy on Page, the so-called FISA courts authorized by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, is different from US Article 3 courts, which provide the accused with the ability to defend themselves. FISA courts are secret, government-only entities, with no prosecutor or defense attorney present during their proceedings.

Comment: Ready or not, case or not, legal or not, the FBI was swift to strike - looking for some microscopic piece of leverage to validate a faux case and hamstring the new administration.


Jet3

UK-built jets to join bombing of Hodeidah, Yemen's 'humanitarian lifeline' port

Yemen airstrike
© YouTube
Saudi-led airstrike in Yemen
UK-manufactured fighter jets may be "central" to UAE air strikes on the Yemeni port of Hodeidah which the UN has warned could result in hundreds of thousands of deaths if it is attacked.

The population of Yemen would be put in severe danger by a UAE bombing of the "lifeline" port. Situated on the Red Sea, it supplies 80 percent of aid to the country, where a three-year civil war has left the nation on the brink of famine.

The UN's Humanitarian Coordinator for Yemen, Lise Grande, stated that, if the attack takes place, humanitarian agencies "fear, in a prolonged worst case, that as many as 250,000 people may lose everything - even their lives".

The UAE is a part of the Saudi Arabia-led coalition which has been bombing Yemen since the start of the civil war in 2015, as they support President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi in his fight against Houthi rebels.

Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT ) said British Prime Minister Theresa May should use her influence to stop the gulf countries' air bombing of Yemen. The UK has come under fire over its licensing of £4.6 billion ($6.2bn) of arms sales to Saudi Arabia since 2015. Many more pounds worth of arms may have been licensed to the UAE, CAAT claims.


Comment: Unconscionable! Cut the UK support and stop the war. See also:


Snakes in Suits

Interview Bashar al-Assad: Theresa May 'staged the chemical attack' in Syria

Assad May
© Getty Images
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad • British PM Theresa May
Theresa May is a colonialist liar who along with the UK's allies deliberately prolonged the Syrian Civil War and even helped stage the alleged chemical attack in Douma, according to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

In a rare interview, the Syrian President claims the alleged chemical weapons attack in Douma, East Ghouta in Syria on April 7 was staged. According to reports from the controversial organisation the White Helmets and rebels Jaish al-Islam (The Sword of Islam), the Syrian military dropped bombs containing an unknown chemical weapon from helicopters.

But Assad claims the UK had a role to play in the alleged attack in which at least 40 people are said to have been killed in order to justify airstrikes. Assad said:
"The UK publicly supported the White Helmets that are a branch of Al Qaeda. "We consider the White Helmets to be a PR stunt by the UK. So yes, definitely, it was staged by these three countries together and the UK is involved."

Comment: See also:


Laptop

US issues additional anti-Russia sanctions for alleged cyber activity

Red tape man US sanct
© Treasury & Risk
Washington has imposed new sanctions against Russia. The restrictive measures that affect three individuals and five entities were introduced in response to allegations of "cyber-activity" by Moscow, according to the US Treasury.

The US has been conspicuously tight-lipped about the reasons behind the new restrictive measures. The US Treasury Department's statement defines the new additions to the list of "specially designated nationals" only as "cyber-related" and "Russia-related" designations. The list of entities targeted by the fresh round of US sanctions actually includes a number of cyber-security firms based in Russia, Israel, Europe, and even the US itself. It also includes a diving-equipment production company.

The Russian state research center, the Kvant Institute, which specializes in research and technological development of electronic hardware and software for the state and its public institutions, has also been added to the sanctions list. All three individuals added to the SDN list have been targeted by the US sanctions due to their links to the Divetechnoservice Company, the Russian diving-equipment producer, according to the Treasury.

Comment: Before sanctions are imposed, shouldn't allegations be proven?


Cowboy Hat

Kim Jong-un reportedly brings portable toilet to Singapore summit to keep his health a complete secret

toilet
© Toru Hanai / Reuters
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has reportedly gone to extreme measures to prevent his enemies getting an insight into the state of his health during the Singapore summit - including bringing his very own toilet.

Kim arrived in the city with a bullet-proof limousine and a portable toilet in tow, according to South Korean newspaper Chosun. The purpose of the toilet, aside from the obvious, is to "deny determined sewer-divers insights into the supreme leader's stools," the conservative news outlet reported.

Lee Yun-keol, who was an official in the North Korean Guard Command unit before he defected to South Korea in 2005, told the Washington Post in April that Kim always travels with his own toilet as he will not use public restrooms.

Vader

Trump again slams "dishonest and weak" Trudeau while venting anger at EU

trump
© Kim Kyung-Hoon / Reuters
US President Donald Trump, apparently still fuming over "dishonest and weak" Justin Trudeau for threatening to respond to US tariffs in kind, took to Twitter to slam the Canadian PM again and vent his anger at the tight-fisted EU.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's ill-fated press conference, where he vowed to retaliate to the tariffs imposed by the US on steel and aluminum, seems to have opened a can of worms, as less than 24 hours before his historic meeting with Kim Jong Un, the US leader continues to be preoccupied with imbalances in trade and "dishonest" Trudeau.

In a string of tweets on Sunday, Trump claimed that Canada made "almost 100 billion dollars in trade with US (guess they were bragging and got caught!)."

"Minimum is 17B," he added, before going after the 270 percent taxes on US dairy products, the focus of one of his earlier diatribes.

Launching another verbal blow at Trudeau, Trump said that, "Justin acts hurt when called out!" apparently referring to his pledge to impose the equivalent of the tariffs on the US that Trump has slapped on Canada.

Bad Guys

IMF warns 'bad weather' coming for global economy

Christine Lagarde
© AFP
Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Christine Lagarde looks on during a press conference at the Chancellery in the German capital, Berlin, on June 11, 2018.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned that some bad weather faces the global economy as tensions rise over US President Donald Trump's protectionist trade policies.

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said on Tuesday that despite the relatively stable economic situation in Europe and many other parts of the world, "the clouds on the horizon that we have signaled about six months ago are getting darker by the day."

She made the remarks in a meeting with leaders of major economic organizations of the world in the German capital, Berlin.

Comment: Lagarde is either delusional or lying. Probably both. The global economy, particularly in the West, is not 'relatively stable'. The IMF has played a huge role in worsening the situation as the global economic hitman, and we've been teetering on the edge of collapse for some time.


Dig

Trump lauds North Korea's development possibilities in video: 'They have great beaches!"

Kim Jong-un
© White House
The heavily produced video, made with both Korean and English voiceovers, portrays Kim Jong-un as a man with a choice of moving his country forward or backward
'They have great beaches!' Trump included image of MIAMI when he showed Kim video about North Korea's future - as he said dictator could develop condos or hotels if he keeps nuke promises and sanctions come off

Donald Trump said Tuesday that part of his hard sell to Kim Jong-un about giving up his nuclear weapons was a video that showed the benefits of shaking off the chains of near-global economic sanctions - including the possibility of developing his country's beaches.

But the image chosen by the film's producers didn't depict anything North Korea has to offer. It showed part of the Miami Beach skyline, something that Trump said was 'a version of what could happen and take place.'