Puppet Masters
If you don't remember Swalwell from his controversial tweet last year claiming that the US government could use nuclear weapons on Americans who revolted if their guns were outlawed, you may remember him from his relentless promotion of demented Russiagate conspiracy theories, or from his general foaming-at-the-mouth hawkishness toward Russia. Swalwell has openly admitted that he supports an agenda to "isolate Russia from the rest of the world" using economic warfare, and that he sees the alleged 2016 Russian election interference as "an act of war".
Swalwell joins another recent addition to the presidential race, Ohio Representative Tim Ryan, as a generic white guy with no redeeming features and nothing distinctive about himself as a politician besides virulent hatred of Russians. Ryan's official campaign launch speech included a completely gratuitous Red Scare diatribe in which he blamed Russians for the divisiveness which has overtaken political discourse in America.
NATO expansion now is poised to help re-start the Donbass civil war or spark a larger Ukrainian civil war (and/or similar conflicts involving Moldova and its breakaway republic of Transdnestr). Specifically, the NATO/western Ukraine nexus confounds resolution of the Donbass civil war. On the one hand, western Ukraine is the only one of Ukraine's mega-regions that supports Ukraine becoming a NATO member, a policy NATO also supports. On the other hand, western Ukraine is the only mega-region in Ukraine that opposes all the measures that could address the grievances that drive Donbass resistance to Kyiv. All the other mega-regions have majorities that support some of the compromises that might resolve the civil war. In this way, western Ukraine, representatives of which dominate Ukraine's Maidan government, are holding the rest of Ukraine hostage to its nationalist/ultra-nationalist orientation; an orientation that is supported in turn by the West's policy of NATO expansion.
A Western public opinion survey in October 2018 found that only 36 percent of Ukrainian citizens "want Ukraine to be a NATO member-state by the year 2030" - the poll did not include very anti-NATO Crimea and Donbass. Only in Western Ukraine is there a majority - 64 percent, supports NATO membership. This includes the ultra-nationalist hotbed of Lviv (Lvov), where 77 percent support it. In central Ukraine, 33 percent support it; this includes the capitol Kyiv, where only 38 percent support NATO membership. In southern Ukraine, only 21 percent support it. In eastern Ukraine only 17 percent. This includes the major industrial center of Kharkiv (Kharkov), where only 16 percent support it. Kherson Oblast was polled separately, and there only 28 percent support NATO membership. Therefore, the issue sharply divides western Ukraine from the rest of the country, where universally there are strong majorities against Ukraine becoming a member of the military bloc.
The vote is a result of moves by Labour MP Yvette Cooper that sought a legally-binding way of stopping the UK leaving the EU without a deal agreed.
The motion was passed with 420 votes in favour and 110 against, with the support of the opposition Labour Party and despite a rebellion from hardline Tories who want Brexit sooner.
Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Theresa May on Tuesday met German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron to seek support for her extension request on Tuesday evening.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (right) and National Security Adviser John Bolton announce sanctions against Venezuela, which are meant to put pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
US-led sanctions against Venezuela's state-owned oil company Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) are "playing with fire," causing blanket starvation, and harming people with no stake in the leadership struggle, warned the United Nation's special rapporteur on unilateral coercive measures.
"I have reviewed sanctions across the world. Very few of them have really been a positive, helpful factor. It's like going into microsurgery using a kitchen knife. It's a very blunt tool to achieve the proclaimed objective," said ambassador Idriss Jazairy in an interview with The Grayzone.
Comment: The uncdelared war on Venezuela has been ongoing since 2013
Russia's ambassador to the UN Vassily Nebenzia has accused the US of causing "billions of dollars" of damage to Venezuela since 2013 and said Washington "artificially provoked" a crisis to overthrow the legitimate government.
Speaking at a UN Security Council meeting on Venezuela on Wednesday, Nebenzia said the Trump administration was "picking the pockets" of the country while at the same time calling "for urgent assistance to the Venezuelan people."
The comments come as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) suspended Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's access to nearly €400 million ($451mn) in cash, citing the chaos which has unfolded since opposition leader Juan Guaido declared himself rightful president in January.
It is not clear whether the IMF will formally recognize Guaido, but an economic advisor for the opposition leader told Bloomberg that the IMF was safeguarding the funds and they would be available again when Maduro's "usurpation" ends.
Nebenzia called for diplomatic solutions to the Venezuelan crisis, rather than regime change. Referring to other US regime change operations, he said it was "precisely as a result of Western intervention" that the "true suffering" is happening in countries like Syria.
He also addressed representatives from other Latin American countries, some of which have supported the US's regime change efforts, asking them "Haven't you learned anything from history?" adding that to the US, Venezuela only a "bargaining chip" in its geopolitical games.
"If you want to make America great again, and we're all sincerely interested in seeing that, stop interfering in the affairs of other states," he said.
Meanwhile, US Vice President Mike Pence called on the body to revoke the UN credentials of Maduro's government and to recognize unelected opposition leader Guaido as the country's legitimate head.
Pence said Washington plans to present a draft resolution to the Security Council aimed at having Guaido recognized and his represenative appointed as the country's ambassador to the international body.
Venezuela's communications and information minister said in March that more than $30 billion was illegally diverted from Venezuela over just two months, with around $1 billion in stolen funds being transferred to personal accounts of opposition leaders. Venezuela has also accused Washington of stealing €5 billion in funds that had been allocated for medicine production.
The former UN rapporteur to Venezuela told RT in January that there is a "direct nexus" between the US' tightening sanctions and the deaths of ordinary people.
"Why is there death? There's malnutrition, there's lack of medicine. If you need insulin, and you don't get it? You die. You need anti-retroviral drugs. You don't get them? You die. That has happened," he said.
In 2016, 10 US sailors strayed into Iranian waters in the Persian Gulf and were briefly held by Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Iran returned the vessels and the sailors, who later said the Iranians treated them with respect and dignity. But what if a similar incident happened today?
"The approach will be much different... the American soldiers would be treated as terrorists and not as soldiers of a [state-run] army," Ali Rizk, a Middle East-based journalist and writer, said.
Terrorism is a criminal offense under Iranian law, and so "Iran could have taken the toughest action, including imprisonment and a subsequent trial," Vladimir Sazhin, senior research fellow at Russia's Institute for Oriental Studies, stated.
As the story developed, some US military and intelligence leaders opposed the White House's decision to add the IRGC to the list of foreign terrorist organizations. They argued that this would affect troop safety in the Middle East, according to the New York Times.
Comment: More on Iran's response to the US rebranding the IRGC terrorists:
The White House's designation of Tehran's Revolutionary Guard as a terror group is evidence of US support for terrorism, but it doesn't mean Iran will be attacking US troops in the Middle East, a high-ranking MP has said.See also:
Washington's latest decision to include the elite Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) into the State Department's list of foreign terrorist organizations "shows that the Americans are backing terrorism," Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, chairman of the parliament's national security committee, told RIA Novosti. "But it doesn't mean that we are taking steps towards killing American soldiers."
President Hassan Rouhani said the US was the "leader of world terrorism." His government also hit back, naming US Central Command (CENTCOM) as a terrorist organization.
The move "wasn't a declaration of war against America," Falahatpisheh explained. He did not believe the standoff will eventually lead to a confrontation between Washington and Tehran.
Meanwhile in Tehran, MPs from various factions came on Tuesday wearing a dark green IRGC uniform in a show of solidarity with the elite force. After chanting anti-American and anti-Israeli slogans, emotive speeches were given denouncing Trump's decision.
- Show of solidarity: Iranian MPs hold Revolutionary Guard 'flashmob',denounce US, SA, Israel
- Iranian lawmaker: IRGC to ignore Israeli strikes in Syria, avoid escalation
- Iran releases trespassing US sailors after US apology
Yet while Moscow's appetite for gold, which has doubled Russia's international gold reserves over the past three years, remains unparalleled, Beijing has also quietly joined its northern neighbor in casting a smaller if just as material vote of no confidence in the dollar: overnight, the PBOC reported that the world's second-largest economy added to its gold reserves for the fourth straight month, adding to recent speculation that central banks globally will continue to build holdings even as they dispose of their US dollar reserves.
Comment: See also:
- US efforts to prop up dollar by suppressing gold prices allows Russia and China to buy gold at major discount
- China expands gold reserves, surged past Italy and France in ranking
- Russia and China could set international gold price based on physical gold trading
- Central Banks are Acquiring Gold, Dumping US Dollars
After WWII it was inevitable that there would be a conflict between the Liberal Capitalist world and the growing Red Communist one. Perhaps if the Soviet Union would have resigned itself to being the only Communist nation rejecting any form of proselytization and rebranding itself as some kind of Democracy B as a mild alternative to the West's Democracy A then the Cold War could have been avoided.
But this did not happen and was very unlikely to do so. The motto of the Soviet Union on its seal was "Workers of the World Unite!". That was workers of the "world" not "only Russia". So it is not surprising that the West took a preemptive move and formed NATO to gang up on the USSR.
However now the Soviet Union is dead and gone. NATO fulfilled its mission a little after turning 40. Sadly rather than phasing out and riding off into the sunset it had a midlife crisis, bought a Camaro and continued to not only exist but expand and bomb. But should it exist? Why is this organization still around at 70 years old posing as if we are still living in some sort of Cold War dynamic where if we don't bomb Libya back to the stone age somehow Belgium and Greece will fall to evil ideologically different invaders.
Comment: See also:
- Shocked Europe hits back at Trump over 'obsolete' NATO
- NATO Plotted 'Skripal Case' to Justify Their Defense Spendings - Moscow
- Time to smash NATO before it's too late
- Had enough! Thousands protest in Spain and Italy against NATO
- Japan turns down Merkel's NATO offer because it would 'negatively affect our relations with Russia'
- Need more war: NATO General calls to resume military operation in Afghanistan

Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, Head of Iranian National Security and Foreign Policy Commission
"Israeli Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu has repeatedly said that his country is attacking our positions in Syria. However, one of the reasons why we do not pay attention [to the Israeli attacks] is our unwillingness to have Syria become a war arena [again]," the lawmaker said in an interview.
However, Tehran is ready to give a symmetrical response to any attacks, no matter where they might come from, Falahatpisheh added, answering the question what would be Iran's response to US potential strikes on the IRGC positions.
Israel conducted airstrikes on Syrian soil on multiple occasions, claiming to have hit Iranian military targets. Iran denies having a military presence in the Arab Republic apart from advisers sent in at the request of Damascus and to help it fight terrorist groups.
Members of parliament from various political factions wore a dark green revolutionary guard uniform in a show of solidarity with the elite forces on Tuesday. After chanting anti-American and anti-Israeli slogans, several speeches were given denouncing the unprecedented decision of putting an official branch of a foreign military on a list of terrorist organizations. The session coincided with the country celebrating the National Day of the Revolutionary Guard.
Washington labeled the IRGC a terrorist group on Monday, accusing them of financing and promoting terrorism through the Middle East. In direct response to Washington's decision, Iran's Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) reciprocally declared the United States Central Command (CENTCOM) "all its affiliates" to be terrorists, a point they continued to emphasize today.
"It was an illegal investigation, it was started illegally, everything about it was crooked," Trump told reporters outside the White House. "It was an attempted coup."
He also said that he himself hadn't seen or read the report on alleged Russian involvement in the 2016 election presented by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
"I won," he said. "There was no collusion, no obstruction."














Comment: See also: EU rejects Theresa May's bid for short delay, Brexit 2020?