Puppet Masters
To be clear, no one is alleging that Trudeau and his minions flat-out ordered Wilson-Raybould to reverse her decision in the case. In true Canadian style, the badgering of the former justice minister seems to have been a largely passive aggressive exercise, with a succession of public figures reminding her about all the many, many jobs that might be lost in (politically sensitive) Quebec if she didn't reconsider her decision. And when she stuck to her principles and failed to relent, the PM removed her from her justice-ministry post, and pushed in a newcomer named David Lametti who - quelle surprise - seems quite open to revisiting Wilson-Raybould's original decision. As dry as all this must sound to non-Canadians, the scandal (which doesn't have a name yet) has become a huge deal in my country. And the latest polling suggests it has done severe damage to the Liberal brand in the run-up to this year's national election.
All governments eventually become enmeshed in some kind of scandal, of course. But Justin Trudeau's Liberals are unlike their predecessors in one crucial respect: They have created the first national government anywhere that has explicitly presented itself as a political vessel of ultra-progressive social-justice mantras such as intersectionality and #MeToo. And there is evidence to suggest that this scandal has been all the more damaging to the Liberals precisely because their grubby treatment of a principled indigenous woman is so obviously at odds with the pious social-justice posturing that, until just a few weeks ago, often made the Liberals sound more like an activist organization or undergraduate student society than a G7 government.

On the left is Jody-Wilson Raybould, the Minister of Justice who apparently stood up to intimidation and veiled threats from the PMO in regards to letting slide a criminal case being pursued against engineering giant SNC-Lavalin.
Comment: The answer is yes, and to a pathological degree that the apologies have no meaning or value anymore.
No one was asking that question Thursday. There had been rumours a show of contrition from the PM would be the PMO's latest gambit to quell the month-long controversy over serious allegations the government interfered with a criminal prosecution and exerted pressure on then attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould for partisan ends. That didn't happen. Instead Trudeau doubled down on his probity while confirming some of Wilson-Raybould's bombshell testimony.
Comment: Overall, Trudeau shows himself time and time again to be someone incapable of leading by example and is simply all talk. The SNC-Lavalin scandal only highlights this further. For more on this scandal, see also:
- Alleged threats, bribes, prostitutes: Growing scandal threatens to bring down Canada's Trudeau
- Scheer calls for emergency meeting over Trudeau's potential interference in justice system
- Justin Trudeau's fall from grace is like 'watching a unicorn get run over'
- 'Progressive hero' Justin Trudeau is a fraud and a hypocrite

Students study the Koran at a religious school run by a religious scholar and leader of the political party Jamiat Ulam-e Islam at Akora Khattak.
Provincial authorities have "taken in their control management and administration of 182 seminaries (madaris)," the Interior Ministry said in a March 7 statement, referring to religious schools.
"Law enforcement agencies have taken 121 people under preventive detention as of today," the statement said.
But his journey from a French foster home to a Brussels court began not in a Middle Eastern desert but in a run-down industrial town.
On Thursday, after a two-month trial in the Belgian capital, 12 jurors found the 33-year-old guilty of the four murdered in an anti-Semitic attack during a shooting spree at Belgium's Jewish Museum on May 24, 2014.
He faces life in prison and is expected to be sentenced on Friday.
Nemmouche, an athletic-looking man with a trimmed beard, told the court in his final testimony this week that he had been "tricked."
He seemed to refer to arguments made by his lawyers that he was not to blame for the murders and had been caught up in some kind of plot targeting the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad.
Comment: Almost certainly true. Rather, he was told he'd be targeting Mossad agents... by Mossad agents.
Comment: Don't get us wrong; he's guilty, and this monster needs to be behind bars.
Just remember that he's a tool of bigger monsters in our midst.
Timely intelligence and backdoor messaging made it clear to India that a befitting response would be given if it were to go ahead with the planned attack, one which would possibly take the countries to a "point of no return".
And as the nuclear-armed neighbours wound up a tough week in what was possibly the most near-war situation the two have been in since decades, no one is quite sure of what to expect next.
However, the top civilian source observed that the next possible escalation by India would not be in terms of ground, air or missiles - but more likely in the form of a hybrid conflict in the nature of militant attacks, economic measures etc.
Comment: Israel certainly knows all about that.
Comment: India's debasement from pro-Palestinian supporters to Israeli boot-lickers is repugnant.
But, who else are you gonna call when you want something done?
India is determined to force Pakistan to finally deal with its terrorist problem, and both India and Israel benefit from regional tension thwarting China's leading role in Eurasian integration.
'Someone' here gave the Pakistanis a heads-up. Without it, India and Israel might have escalated this flare-up into something more serious than we've seen to date.
On the other hand, the 'plan' may have been deliberately leaked as psy-op, a bluff to put the Pakistan government on notice regarding what India could do, and what powerful backing its aggressive moves potentially have.
The program, known as "Assault Breaker II," mirrors a Cold War era program designed to stop Soviet armored spearheads poised to roll into Western Europe. The effort would consist of a combination of long-range sensors and bombers loaded with smart weapons designed to seek out and destroy tanks, ships, and other enemy systems.
Back in the 1970s, NATO faced a numerically superior Soviet Army in Europe. In the event of war, Soviet forces would have streamed into Western Europe with waves upon waves of tank and mechanized divisions. The use of tactical nuclear weapons to strike back in such a scenario, while a centerpiece of NATO's defense strategy since the 1950s, risked escalation to all-out nuclear warfare.
Comment: It's worth noting the first flight of the B-52H bomber was in 1955. Russia and China must be scared out of their wits!
Comment: This is probably as close we'll get to governments admitting they use terrorists as proxy military forces. And make no mistake; Pakistan is NOT the exception...
Facing global isolation for harbouring terrorists, the establishment in Pakistan seems to have gone into a tizzy. While the civilian leadership is busy defending "unwell" Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) chief Masood Azhar who "cannot even leave his home" the powerful Pakistan Army says there is no Jaish in Pakistan.
And even as Pakistan continues to deny the JeM links to the Pulwama terror attack and acknowledge the evidence handed over by India, the country had more international embarrassment on Wednesday after former Army Chief and President Pervez Musharraf admitted that the ISI has been using the terror outfit to carry out attacks in India during his tenure.
"Our intelligence men were involved in a tit-for-tat between India and Pakistan. They were conducting bomb blasts in Pakistan and we were getting it done there (in India)," he said. The exiled former leader made the revelations while talking to a Pakistani journalist for a talk show.
"Today the State Department is announcing that the United States will revoke 77 visas, including many officials of the Maduro regime and their families," Pence said in a speech to the Latino Coalition in Washington.
"Iran is trying to bypass the sanctions on it through the covert smuggling of petroleum via the sea," the prime minister said at a graduation ceremony for an Israeli Navy cadets course, held at the Haifa naval base. "As these attempts expand, the navy will have a more important role in efforts to block these Iranian actions.
"I call on the international community to halt, by any means, Iran's attempts to bypass the sanctions via the sea," Netanyahu said.
Israel, he added, constantly carries out sea-based operations against its enemies, "most of [which] are unknown."

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross (c) speaking to President Trump regarding adding citizenship question to the 2020 census.
California argued that Commerce Department Secretary Wilbur Ross' plan to add the question would discourage immigrants and Latinos from participating in the census. They also contended it would cause an undercount and jeopardize congressional seats and billions of dollars in federal funding.
The ruling by U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg in San Francisco found that the citizenship question violates the Constitution's Enumeration Clause, which requires "actual enumeration" of all people in each state every 10 years. It also was found to be in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act's prohibition against agency action that is "arbitrary and capricious."
At least six lawsuits have been filed over the Trump administration's plans, including several in New York. A federal judge in Manhattan in January also blocked the Commerce Department's plans to add the citizenship question.
The U.S. Supreme Court also has weighed in on the controversy, announcing last month it will hear arguments on the administration's plans.












Comment: "One of Trudeau's great political gifts is that he is extremely photogenic." One of? How about the only thing he's good at - through no effort of his own. Otherwise, idealogues like him are dangerous to society and country. See also: