Puppet Masters
Investors are rethinking their views of Russia as a prospective country for growth and Russian governmental stocks are now considered much safer than three months ago, the media source wrote.
The discoveries by the Zebedee exploration well were described by companies involved as "better than expected".
The oil explorers said they found 27.9 meters of net-oil bearing reservoir and 18.5 meters of net gas-bearing reservoir. The license area being explored is 40 percent owned by Falklands Oil and Gas, 36 percent by Premiere Oil and 24 percent by Rockhopper Exploration.
Comment: Another hot spot getting warmer.
First and foremost, and I have said that innumerable times on this blog, this is not about some putative Iranian nuclear weapons program. I will not repeat all the arguments in detail here (those interested can look into the archives), but here is a short summary of why Iran never intended to have a nuclear weapon:
Comment: The key leaders are not just dumb, crazy or fanatical. Some may be. But the real problem is this: they are psychopaths. They can't meaningfully project their actions into future consequences. And even if they could, those consequences wouldn't have any emotional weight or value for them. They want what they want, and they want it now, no matter how many people they have to kill, and no matter how self-defeating those policies may be in actuality.
Ground operation in Yemen may begin any day now. This was announced by the representative of the government, who fled to Saudi Arabia. A small state with a tribal system became a toy in the hands of American and Saudi elites. In an interview with Business Online, Shamil Sultanov, a member of the Izborsky Club, the head of the center "Russia - Islamic world", talked about the situation.The situation in Yemen, in my opinion, can not be described as dynamic. This country has its own constants, its own constant forces, the ratio and collision of which will determine how the conflict will develop further. These four forces are: on the one hand - the Houthis from the movement Ansar Allah, joined by the supporters of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh; and on the other - the official Yemeni government led by president Abd Rabbuh Hadi, who escaped to Saudi Arabia; as well as local jihadis, funded by the Saudi intelligence to commit acts of sabotage within the country. On one side - the Sunnis, on the other - the Shiites. And these forces have not been formed today, so I'm not talking about dynamism, but rather about a certain constancy in the political world of Yemen.
Yemen is one of the most complex conflict zones not only in the Middle East, but also in the world. Even in Syria and Iraq, everything is less complicated. Because Yemen has too many internal problems and contradictions. For example, one of the goals of Saudi Arabia is to force Iran to come to the aid of the Houthis, to interfere in this war and thus help Riyadh to disrupt the upcoming deal on Iran's nuclear program. And what does this mean? That certain American counter-elites are also in this game, who also oppose this agreement with Iran. Here we see not just a manifestation of a U.S. foreign policy, but the clash in Yemen of certain American elite clans, security agencies of various kinds, business groups, and so on.
Comment: The West tried the same trick with Russia re: Donbass.
The lawsuit in Baltimore seeks $1 billion in damages for individuals, spouses and children of the victims, who were infected with diseases including syphilis and gonorrhea. It seeks at least $75,000 in damages for each of nine counts.
Former research subjects and their families claim Johns Hopkins officials had "substantial influence" over the studies and were involved in masterminding the experiments. The plaintiffs also feature the estates and families of 124 people who died from complications of diseases that they contracted through the hazardous experiments.
While an attorney for the university has called the suit "baseless," officials from the institution described the experiments as "deplorable" and "unconscionable," while arguing they didn't "initiate, pay for, direct or conduct" the Guatemala studies.
Today, the bill is back, largely unchanged, and if congressional insiders and the bill's sponsors are to believed, the legislation could end up on President Obama's desk as soon as this month. In another boon to the legislation, Obama is expected to reverse his past opposition and sign it, albeit in an amended and renamed form (CISPA is now CISA, the "Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act"). The reversal comes in the wake of high-profile hacks on JPMorgan Chase and Sony Pictures Entertainment. The bill has also benefitted greatly from lobbying by big business, which sees it as a way to cut costs and to shift some anti-hacking defenses onto the government.
Comment: Obama has already signed an executive order in February, after a Cyber Security Summit speech at Stanford University promoting Private Sector Cybersecurity Information Sharing -- intended to coerce organizations and corporations to share more info with the government while promoting the creation of organizations to process data collected for an unspecified end. (Don't let that "unspecified" door slam shut behind you.)
When certain countermeasures are employed, it is difficult to control "who can intercept the code in transmission, whether it will reach its intended target, whether it will be copied and reused by others, and whether it will spread virally across the internet and cause damage to innocent persons and businesses." -ACLU Comment
It is unlikely companies are going to "verify individual threats" and keep the innocent out of NSA databases. They will more likely default and send ALL info to the NSA and many bystanders will suffer unwarranted accusation and harm due to misattribution. Law enforcement will have a loophole to conduct backdoor searches on Americans, including digital communications without a warrant, undermining 4th Amendment protections, as well as use the information for investigations and prosecutions regarding any infraction whatsoever.
It is extremely unlikely, dear peeps, this will turn out well...
The minister also said Ukraine was seeking to reach a deal with Russia that would last till the end of a 2016 heating season.
"We need to sign an agreement not for the second and the third quarters, but till the end of the next heating period," the minister said Wednesday at a briefing in Kiev.
The situation with gas supplies for the next three months is "more or less clear", but Kiev "needs an agreement," he said.
Demchishin's statement comes after Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed Tuesday to extend the terms of the so-called 'winter package' till the end of June. The deal signed in October 2014 includes a $100 discount.
The minister said Naftogaz is buying gas from Europe for about $280 per thousand cubic meters. If Russia reduces the price from the $329 it paid in the first quarter to about $250 in the second, in accordance with the 2009 contract and the discount, gas purchases from Russia will become economic, he added.
The 'take or pay' provision included in the 2009 contract but annulled by last October's agreement will remain excluded. "The 'take or pay' principle doesn't work," said Demchishin.
The situation with gas supplies in Ukraine is currently balanced, according to the energy minister. Gas storage is above 7.7 billion cubic meters, with daily consumption at about 110 million cubic meters.
The Minister also added that Ukraine gets about 40-45 million cubic meters of gas in reverse supplies daily, and produces another 55 million cubic meters on its own. This is almost completely balancing the demand, Demchishin said.
Comment: One has to wonder at the Ukraine leadership's state of mind. One the one hand they are denouncing Russia as an agressor to any and all who will listen. Then they turn around and demand sweetheart deals on gas from that same Russia, a lot of which they openly steal for resale. When Russia attempted to collect on Ukraine's legitimate debt, by refusing to deliver what had not been paid for,the world howled about its cruelty. Out of compassion for the beleagered citizens of Ukraine, Russia has so far tolerated this treatment on the world stage. But for how long?
RT: Does Europe really need this huge show of American strong armed bravado?
Marcus Papadopoulos: Let's say it as it is. That American military parade was dangerous, provocative and foul-hearted, and it is aimed at Russia. And it is hardly conducive to ensuring peace and stability in Europe, in regard to the European sentiment. Have the people of Europe been asked whether they want an American military parade going through their countries? No they have not. And it is all very well for policy makers in Washington to come up with these antagonistic spectacles because they don't live in Europe, because they don't live near to the Russian border. And of course Russia is going to interpret that American military parade, quite correctly, as being very, very aggressive. And the European people don't want to get caught up in a potential conflict between America and Russia. Because that of course could mean potentially devastation for them.
RT: What is the public opinion in the areas of Eastern Europe where all these personnel carriers are rolling through?
MP: Well it is certainly the case in Germany, in the Czech Republic, that thousands of people object not just the American military parade but to the American military presence in their countries. Because, once again, they are extremely fearful of getting caught up in a potential war between Russia and America. And until policy makers in Washington understand that it is ordinary peoples' lives potentially on the line here, then we will keep on seeing these parades.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter said that a deal with Iran wouldn't necessarily prevent war.
Military.com reports:
The U.S. will reserve the right to use military force to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon even if a deal is reached Iran's nuclear program, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Tuesday.We thought that Iran getting nuclear weapons was the main reason we were thinking of bombing them. So if a peace deal is signed with the U.S., why are we still talking about bombing them?
"The military option certainly will remain on the table," Carter said as negotiators in Lausanne, Switzerland, struggled to reach an agreement ahead of a March 31 deadline.
"One of my jobs is to make sure all options are on the table,' Carter said in remarks at Syracuse University and earlier on NBC's "Today" program.
What's going on?
In reality, top American and Israeli military and intelligence officials say that Iran poses no danger.
But the hawks have desperately been trying to stir up war with Iran for decades, as part of a 65-year program of regime change all over the world carried out by the U.S.
And the U.S. has inserted itself smack dab in the middle of a religious war ... and is backing the most violent side. And see this.
The American people want peace, but the military-industrial complex wants war.
Comment: And we wonder why the rest of the world is rapidly becoming cynical about any statement coming from Washington. What is the use of talks, if in the next breath the 'exceptional' US say it may choose to abrogate any agreement if it becomes convenient to do so. It's just theater for the brainwashed home audience.
"If Iran cheats, the world will know it," Obama said.
The preliminary agreement on Iran's nuclear program will not put an end to the country's enrichment activities, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said. "None of those measures include closing any of our facilities. The proud people of Iran would never accept that," he said. Iran will, however, abide by the agreement, which would limit enrichment activities to one location, he said.
Comment: So it's a deal but it isn't. Can't wait to hear Netanyahu's response.
Update: Well that didn't take long...
A nuclear deal with Iran based on current framework will "threaten the survival of Israel", said PM Benjamin Netanyahu, warning it would increase the risk of a "horrific war."
In a phone conversation with the US President, the Israeli Prime Minister expressed his opposition to a framework agreement reached with Israel on Thursday.
Netanyahu has once again called for a "better deal" insisting that the only way to reach it would be "standing firm and increasing the pressure on Iran."
Netanyahu warned that if the final deal due to be signed in June, fell in line with the current framework, it would "increase the risks of nuclear proliferation in the region and the risks of a horrific war."















Comment: Also see: Who needs the United States? Not Russia and China