Puppet Masters
Trump was interviewed by Chris Mitchell of the Christian Broadcasting Network, who asked if Trump might be like the Old Testament's Queen Esther, whom God helped to save the Jews thousands of years ago.
"As a Christian I certainly believe that's possible," Pompeo replied.

Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage is pictured during the 'Brexit Betrayal' march
Farage, who has ostensibly appointed himself leader, told various media, including the BBC and Sky News on Friday morning: "I will take over as leader of the Brexit Party and lead it into the European Elections."
It comes after the Brexit Party's leader, Catherine Blaiklock, quit over a series of alleged Islamophobic statements and retweets of far-right figures on social media.
It is not yet known if Farage has officially been elected as leader, as the party does not, as yet, appear to have a formal infrastructure to conduct such a vote.
Comment: At least with regards to Brexit, it seems as though Farage hasn't succumbed to the anti-Russia hysteria:
'Russian collusion': Farage mocks 'cancel Brexit' petition with signatures from RussiaFrom Theresa May to Donald Tusk, it seems Brexit has many politicians getting all religious:
Former UKIP leader Nigel Farage has reacted to a tweet making fun of the fact some Russians have signed a petition calling for Brexit to be stopped, suggesting that an investigation should be launched into "Russian collusion."
Hugh Bennett, news editor at right-wing blog Guido Fawkes, took to social media on Thursday night after the 'Revoke Article 50' petition had passed the 1 million signatures barrier.
Bennett attached a data image from the petitions website, revealing that 12 Russians had signed up and cheekily asked: "I thought they were meant to be against foreign interference in our democracy?"
The tweet got picked up by the Independent MEP, who could soon be officially registered as leader of his new Brexit Party in the coming weeks. He seized on the irony of 'Russian involvement' in a pro-EU, UK petition, arguing that an inquiry was needed.
Bennett also noted verifiable interest in the stop Brexit petition from other countries such as Saudi Arabia and even North Korea, which has one signature. It couldn't be from the big man, surely?!
The tweet triggered an avalanche of seemingly irate Remainers, not seeing the funny side and instead insisting it was "fake news." Others living in various countries around the world felt the need justify their signatures.
At the time of publishing this article, the petition had broken the 3 million barrier.
Tusk: 'Lots of space' in hell for British MPs who vote against Brexit dealConsidering Tusk's milieu, one suspects he was referring to Shakespeare:
Donald Tusk, who last month blasted the architects of Brexit, suggesting there may be "a special place in hell" for them, believes the place of eternal suffering is big enough to also include British MPs voting against the deal.
The initial acerbic remark about hell made by the president of the EU Council targeted people who "promoted Brexit without a sketch of a plan how to carry it safely." It caused quite a stir among participants and watchers of Britain's dramatic divorce with the EU. European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker at one point remarked that he personally knew no hell except his current job.
A journalist asked Tusk if he sees hell a suitable place for MPs who now vote against the deal, to which the stone-faced Polish Catholic politician replied: "According to our Pope, hell is still empty. It means there is a lot of space." The news conference was then wrapped up to the laughter of the audience and a parting shot by Juncker: "Don't go to hell."
Tusk was likely referring to last year's controversy, which happened after an Italian journalist misquoted Pope Francis as saying that there was no hell. The Vatican had to disprove the claim and clarify the Catholic view on what hell is.
Or did Tusk actually mean Shakespeare and not the Pope? Who knows?
"Hell is empty and all the devils are here."Finally, Sputnik outlines some of the hypothetical consequences of a no-deal Brexit:
― William Shakespeare, The Tempest
But what is so terrible about a no deal Brexit and why are so many MPs so keen to avoid it?See also:
Trade
Trade between the UK and the EU could be severely affected.
The UK government has rolled over existing EU trade agreements with Israel, Switzerland and Chile as well as aviation services with US and Canada and nuclear deals with Australia.
But it is not clear what concessions it will have to make to other countries to get them to roll over EU agreements.
The biggest difficulty for Britain though is the tariffs which would be imposed on imported and exported goods.
Earlier this month the UK government said it would scrap 80 to 90 percent import tariffs on goods, in order to keep food and commodities prices down for consumers and manufacturers.
Britain imports 90 percent of its lettuce, 80 percent of its tomatoes and 70 percent of its soft fruit from the EU, according to the British Retail Consortium.
Law and Justice
The Home Secretary, Sajid Javid, has written to his counterparts in the EU27 asking for them to put contingencies in place in the event of a no deal Brexit, but has had no reassurances.
British police officer carry out 539 million checks on the Schengen Information System (SIS) every year - checking on EU nationals' criminal records in their home countries.
Last month the National Police Chiefs' Council lead for Brexit, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Richard Martin, said Britain would be "less safe".
"Will we be less safe? Yes. Will criminal gangs be running amok? No. But will it make our jobs more difficult, yes," Mr. Martin said.
"Crime is by its nature borderless....organised criminals are entrepreneurs of crime...and if there is a gap to exploit I'm sure they would," Mr Martin told a briefing in London.
Mr. Martin said the EU Arrest Warrant would also no longer work in the event of a no-deal Brexit.
He said the system would revert back to the 1957 Convention on Extradition which would be a "much slower and clunkier process".
Mr Martin said before the EU Arrest Warrant the UK extradited around 60 people a year - now it's almost 2,000 a year.
Health
The government will continue to accept EU-approved medicines but the EU has said UK pharmaceutical companies will have to re-register their products in order to sell them in Europe.
The UK government has asked hospitals and UK companies to build "buffer stocks" of key items to deal with any interruption to supply.
The Department of Health has also bought warehouse space and secured additional freight capacity for shipping medical goods to the UK.
Transport
British adults, including lorry and coach drivers, would not be allowed to drive in EU countries without a special driving permit.
UK tourists could also end up paying more to use their mobile phones in Spain, France, Italy and Greece.
Borders
Border checks would be re-introduced at British airports and ports and on the land border with the Republic of Ireland.
This could potentially resurrect dormant Irish republican groups, like the IRA and the INLA, who have long fought for a united Ireland but laid down their arms after the Good Friday Agreement.
HM Revenue and Customs has been talking to businesses about how the customs process would work in the event of no deal but many businessmen and women are still unaware how they will be affected because the UK and EU economies are now so closely enmeshed.
Migration
The UK has offered EU citizens who are in the UK before 29 March 2019 can gain the right to remain and eventually become UK nationals.
But in the event of no deal there would be no such offer to the millions of UK nationals who live in the EU27, especially tens of thousands of people who retired to Spain or Portugal.
The rights of UK nationals would vary depending on each country.
In the event of no deal it would be up to the UK government to decide what to do with EU citizens who arrive in the country after Brexit.
Agriculture
The government has said it will to continue to allow EU agri-products into the UK even in the event of no deal.
But again UK exporters of goods like lamb, beef, fish, grain and vegetables would have to go through protracted bureaucracy in order to be able to export to the EU27.
When Britain leaves the EU - deal or no deal - we will be exiting the Common Agricultural Policy, which currently gives generous subsidiaries to British farmers in certain circumstances.
Miscellaneous
The UK has promised a new environmental watchdog to replace EU functions, such as air pollution but it will not be in place until 2021 so some complaints may just sit in an in-tray until then.
The Competition and Markets Authority will also be expanded as it takes on the work currently done by the European Commission when it comes to monopolies and cartels.
Places like Cornwall and west Wales, which ironically voted strongly to Leave in the 2016 referendum, actually do very well from EU grants, which will soon be drying up.
Iain Begg, a professor at the European Institute at the London School of Economics, said the grants would disappear with or without a deal.
"Although some research grants may last until 2024, the bulk of the grants from the EU will have been spent by 2022," Prof. Begg told Sputnik.
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Reacting to the White House's official statement, the Syrian envoy to the UN called the Pentagon's announcement of victory over Daesh a 'bluff'.
The envoy's response comes shortly after a Sputnik source in the Russian Foreign Ministry said that the US announcement about the complete elimination of Daesh is not very convincing.
Fatah Chairman and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has blasted Hamas over Monday's attack on Fatah Gaza spokesman Atef Abu Seif.
"Hamas, which carried out a coup in Gaza, will enter the trash can of history. The Palestinian people will not forgive Hamas for its actions," Abbas said, according to Arutz Sheva.
Last week, 31st MEU, backed by the 3rd Marine Division, 3rd Marine Logistics Group and 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, members of the Air Force 353rd Special Operations Group, and Army soldiers with 1st Battalion, 1st Special Forces Group, conducted a series of simulated military exercises attacking and seizing Ie Shima Island located off the northwest coast of Okinawa Island in the East China Sea, reported Task Purpose.
The new military strategy, known as Expeditionary Advanced Base (EAB) Operations, will allow Marine units to seize, establish, and operate multiple small bases across the Pacific Ocean, a tactic that will be beneficial in a high-end fight with China.
Comment: It's notable that just as any progress is being made with China, up pops a provocation: US scrambles as China extends influence everywhere, EU caught in middle
See also:
- Why Washington wants to ban Huawei: US wants to spy and China won't cooperate
- UK provokes China in S. China Sea after courting Beijing with free-trade deal
- John Pilger: The Coming War on China
Donald Trump sparked quite some confusion on Friday when he declared on Twitter that the US would be canceling "additional sanctions" against Pyongyang. While initially it was thought the president was referring to the latest sanctions announced by the Treasury Department on Thursday, some administration officials familiar with the matter told the Washington Post that Trump was indeed "referring to a future round of previously unknown sanctions scheduled for the coming days," as no new sanctions had been issued against the North on Friday when Trump made the micro statement.
"It was announced today by the US Treasury that additional large scale Sanctions would be added to those already existing Sanctions on North Korea. I have today ordered the withdrawal of those additional Sanctions!" Trump wrote, capitalizing the "Sanctions".
Comment: See: How Trump sabotaged the North Korea summit to appease the hawks and lied about Kim's terms
Also check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Trump Wags the Iran Riot Dog, Kim Talks Korean Peace
Ukrainians have had little to feel confident about over the past decade. Incumbent President Petro Poroshenko's predecessor, Viktor Yanukovych, was involved in a number of scandals and was ousted after the Maidan revolution in 2014. Yanukovych fled to Russia because he is wanted for high treason by the Ukrainian courts. During his presidency, confidence in national government was no higher than 24%.
Early in Poroshenko's presidency, there were signs that the then-new president was starting to rebuild Ukrainians' shaky trust in their leadership -- 24% were confident in their government and 48% approved of Poroshenko's job performance. However, these hopes quickly faded as many Ukrainians saw the government failing to deliver on what protesters had demanded during the Maidan revolution. Since 2015, confidence has been no higher than 14%.
Comment: The 'Maidan revolution' was in fact another US-backed coup, which included the Odessa and Mariupol massacres, and Ukraine has in a state of collapse ever since.
Comment: Ukraine is falling apart, and fast - even the once 'loyal' neo-Nazi far right (civilian and military) are losing faith in the demented leadership: Far-right protesting military corruption clash with police in Ukraine, 'You have 7 days!' - UPDATE
Below are just a few of the damning stories relating to Ukraine's dire situation from the last few months:
- Ukrainian soldiers kill their commander after being forced to commit war-crimes
- Former Ukraine PM: 'Poroshenko should resign', claims FBI investigating IMF cash embezzlement
- Senior Ukrainian official launches probe into Clinton 2016 election meddling
- 'Censorship unacceptable in Europe': Austrian FM condemns Ukraine's journalist ban
- Ukraine 100 years behind economically according to World Bank figures
- Why the Silk Road from Europe to China bypassed the 'dead-end' Ukraine
Watch Tucker Carlson come as close to an appropriate and articulate expression of righteous indignation that anyone in the mainstream media is going to give:
Zionist Neocons offered Nick Griffin's BNP much-needed funding in 2007, but in return he was asked to focus on the evils of Islam and never criticize the banking system.
Where they couldn't buy off established parties, they created their own, hence giving rise to pro-Israel groups like the EDL, Britain First and Pegida.
When Tommy Robinson created the EDL, it was started with its own Jewish section run by Jewish extremist Roberta Moore, who now runs the Jewish Defence League.
This is why there were always Israeli flags flying at EDL rallies.
This is why all 'new right' parties are ardent supporters of Israel.
This is why it's highly doubtful that anything will change for the better with them in power.
Comment: Since his refusal, Griffin has been castigated in UK media as a 'Nazi' (long before that tactic became commonplace).
Assuming the gist of his claim in the above video is accurate, what does this say for the other 'new right' parties across the Western world who have enjoyed meteoric rises in recent years?
Griffin has since been kicked out by his own party, and has tried restarting with another, the British Unity Party. At a time when it's fashionable to pillory Muslims as terrorists, Griffin is - like his fellow 'Nazi' leading the Labour Party - showing his support for Hezbollah...
Which one is 'nationalist', and which one is 'socialist'?
Also, compare and contrast:
Russia's Finance Ministry raised €750 million in a top-up issue of an existing euro-denominated Eurobond and $3 billion in a new dollar-denominated Eurobond.
Dollar-denominated obligations are set to be paid off in 2035 with a yield of 5.1 percent, while a yield for euro-denominated papers were set at 2.375 percent with final maturity in 7 years.
"British investors purchased 40 percent of the euro-denominated bonds, while European financiers bought 18 percent. Businessmen from the US accounted for 17 percent of the issuance," Solovyev said, adding that 18 percent were purchased by Russians.
The economist noted that the share of Swiss investors totaled five percent, while two percent of the issuance were bought by financiers from Asia and other countries.
Britain also became the major buyer of dollar-denominated bonds, accounting for 55 percent of the issuance.















Comment: RT reports that Pompeo was also busy touring Jerusalem's most controversial sites: