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Disastrous tumble off stage leaves German economy minister hospitalized

Altmaier
© Global Look Press
Helpers shield the view to the stage with a blanket after Economics Minister Peter Altmaier fell heavily on Tuesday.
A sure-footed captain with a steady hand at the wheel is seen as ideal to run a country's economy, so Germany's economy minister Peter Altmaier may struggle to pick himself up after his disastrous tumble from a stage on Tuesday.

Altmaier, who is Federal Minister for Economic Affairs, was rendered unconscious after he fell from the stage at a conference in Dortmund. The politician then regained consciousness and was chatting after his impromptu dive into the front row, but the full extent of the damage to his reputation has yet to be assessed.

The minister's unfortunate stumble came after concluding his remarks on a proposal for cloud-based data storage. He has thanked medics from the event who treated him and he is now recovering in hospital.

Comment: What's going on with politicians? We've seen Angela Merkel repeatedly shaking, the EU's Juncker is often stumbling around, seemingly drunk, meanwhile over in the US Hillary Clinton's health has been evidently deteriorating in multiple ways, and more recently we've had Joe Biden talking as though his brain is scrambled.


Pirates

With me or Against me: George Soros says all his 'enemies' are wannabe dictators

anti-Soros poster in Hungary
© Global Look / Martin Fejer
anti-Soros poster in Hungary
In the world of billionaire financier George Soros, his critics are "would-be dictators" who will not succeed. Meanwhile, under Trump, the Open Society founder has been pouring greater sums into lobbying than ever before.

"I'm very proud of the enemies I have," he told the New York Times in an interview published Friday, in which he confidently predicted the popular opposition to his globalist philosophy was winding down and that a backlash against Trump-style nationalism was on the horizon.
It's a perfect way to tell a dictator or a would-be dictator, if he identifies me as an enemy.
Soros slammed the US president as "an aberration," predicting "what he has done in the Middle East" - clearing troops from the Turkish-Syrian border, allowing peace to break out with a deal between Russia and Turkey - "will contribute to his demise next year."

Comment: See also:


Newspaper

Turkey-backed FSA hands over 11 villages to Russian military police per Ankara's request

FSA army village handover to Russia
© Sputnik / Hikmet Durgun
The Free Syrian Army has abandoned 11 Syrian villages, situated along the M4 highway, ceding control to the Russian military police following Turkey's request, a source close to the FSA said on Wednesday.

Earlier in the day, the Syrian armed forces demanded from FSA armed groups to leave 11 settlements in Ayn Issa area of Tal Abyad district and to hand them over to the Russian military police.

"The FSA groups have departed from these 11 villages per the request of Turkey's armed forces and handed them over to the Russian military police", the source said.

The Turkish military had informed the FSA that those settlements were not part of the safe zone's border, the source explained.

Comment: See also:


Cult

Camp Bucca, Abu Ghraib and the Rise of Extremism in Iraq

Abu Bakr Al- Baghdadi

Video stills (cropped) of Abu Bakr al-Bagdhadi and of a soldier torturing a prisoner at Abu Ghraib
Yesterday morning, President Trump announced the death of Abu Bakr Al- Baghdadi and three of his children.

President Trump said Al-Baghdadi, the founder of ISIS, was fleeing U.S. military forces, in a tunnel, and then killed himself by detonating a suicide vest he wore.

In 2004, Al-Baghdadi had been captured by U.S. forces and, for ten months, imprisoned in both Abu Ghraib and Camp Bucca.

I visited Camp Bucca in January, 2004 when, still under construction, the Camp was a network of tents, south of Basra, in an isolated, miserable area of Iraq.

Quenelle

How the 'Right' has won: Liberals need a new go-to insult for disruptors

populist
© dpa
AfD (Alternative for Germany) chairwoman Frauke Petry (L-R) and the chairwoman of the French Front National (FN) Marie Le Pen, representative of Italian Lega Nord, Matteo Salvini, and the chairman of the Dutch Party for Freedom (PVV), Geert Wilders, on 21 January 2017.
Last weekend's electoral successes in Italy and Germany have given 'populist' parties just the boost they needed, while the MSM and others struggle to come to terms with new kids on the block.

There has been a subtle shift in the way that European election results are reported over the last year or so.

Once, the liberal insult of 'populist' explained everything. It explained why people were anti-European Union and the single currency; it explained why there were concerns about immigration from the East and Africa and it was loaded with meaning about education, ethnicity and cultural practices. It explained a lot.

Comment: See also: And check out SOTT radio's:


Arrow Up

Denmark finally agrees to Nord Stream 2 pipeline

nord stream 2

Russia's state-owned gas monopoly, Gazprom, has completed almost 90 percent of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. (file photo)
Denmark has granted Russia's state-controlled energy company Gazprom permission to build a controversial gas export pipeline through Danish waters.

The October 30 approval removes the last major regulatory hurdle for Gazprom to complete its 1,230 kilometer Nord Stream 2 pipeline along the Baltic Sea floor from Russia to Germany.

The Danish decision puts greater pressure on U.S. Congress to quickly pass a sanctions bill to halt the project before it is completed.

Washington has opposed the project over concern it will increase Europe's dependence on Russian energy, boost the Kremlin's coffers for military adventures, and hurt Ukraine.

Comment: Of late everywhere from South America, the Middle East, Africa and many across Eurasia, have signalled that the future is in partnership with Russia and China, America's sanctions be damned:


Network

How the Russian-Turkish 'safe zone' deal shapes course of Syrian conflict

turkey safe zone syria northern border
© Graphic News
The military crisis in northeastern Syria started by the Turkish military offensive on Kurdish militias amid the US troops withdrawal deflated.

On October 23, Turkey, Russia and Syria started implementing the 'safe zone' agreement reached by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin a day earlier. Units of the Russian Military Police deployed in the border town of Kobani. According to the Russian Defense Ministry, the Syrian Army will establish a total of 15 observation posts on the Turkish-Syrian border to the east of the Euphrates. The next steps are the withdrawal of Kurdish YPG units and their heavy weapons from the agreed buffer zone and the start of joint Russian-Turkish patrols.

Meanwhile, the Turkish Defense Ministry announced that Operation Peace Spring in northeastern Syria does not need to be expanded and that there is no need to carry out any new operations because the main goals had been achieved. Turkish sources say that some YPG fighters, that they call "terrorists", may remain in the area, but do not expect large-scale military actions. Members of the Turkish-backed coalition of militant groups, the Syrian National Army, remain in the captured areas between Tell Abyad and Ras al-Ayn.


Blue Planet

'Bad Erdogan!' US House passes resolution recognizing Armenian genocide

armenian genocide protest sign
© AFP
Demonstrators rally outside the Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles, California in April 2018.
The U.S. House of Representatives has overwhelmingly passed a resolution that describes the killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the 20th century as genocide, a move hailed by Armenia but labeled as "worthless" by Turkey.

The House passed the nonbinding resolution on October 29 by a vote of 405 to 11. The vote comes amid tense relations between Washington and Turkey, the successor of the Ottoman Empire, over its recent military incursion against U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish militia forces in northeastern Syria.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian welcomed the resolution, calling it "a bold step towards serving truth and historical justice." In a series of tweets, Pashinian said the move "offers comfort to millions of descendants of the Armenian Genocide survivors" and praised the efforts of Armenian-Americans, "whose selfless activism and perseverance were the driving force and the inspiration behind today's historic vote."

Comment: Ilhan Omar is receiving a bit of flak for simply voting "present", and not in favor of the resolution.



She's not wrong about the timing and context... Still, it smacks of the U.S. not voting against Nazism at the UN:


Rocket

Russia's newest nuclear submarine launches ballistic missile from underwater for first time

Knyaz Vladimir russian submarine
© HoteitH • CC BY-SA 4.0
Knyaz Vladmir during sea trials in February 2019
The Russian Navy's newest nuclear-powered submarine, 'Knyaz Vladimir,' has successfully fired a ballistic missile from underwater, which traveled all the way from the White Sea to Kamchatka.

A video posted by the Defense Ministry on Tuesday shows the submarine launching an RSM-56 Bulava ('Mace') ballistic missile from a submerged position. Fired from the White Sea, the missile successfully reached its target on the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia's Far East.


Having joined the Russian Navy in 2017, 'Knyaz Vladimir' is the newest addition to the fleet of upgraded Borei-class submarines. It is currently undergoing sea trials. The submersible is named after 10th century Russian prince Vladimir the Great.

In August, another Borei-class submarine, 'Yuri Dolgorukiy,' also successfully test-fired a Bulava missile.

Binoculars

Veteran journalist exposes OPCW Douma chemical-weapons evidence suppression on BBC

douma
© Sputnik / Mikhail Voskresenskiy
On 23rd October, The Courage Foundation released the landmark findings of its investigation into the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons' (OPCW) suppression of vital evidence in its investigation of the alleged 7th April 2018 chemical weapons attack in Douma, Syria.

The Foundation's expert panel met with a member of the OPCW's Douma fact-finding mission, who provided the an "extensive presentation, including internal emails, text exchanges and suppressed draft reports" - in its resultant report, the team were unanimous in expressing alarm "over unacceptable practices in the investigation of the alleged chemical attack in Douma", and concluded each of the key evidentiary pillars of the investigation (including chemical analysis, toxicology, ballistics and witness testimonies) were flawed and bear little relation to the facts".


"We became convinced key information about chemical analyses, toxicology consultations, ballistics studies, and witness testimonies was suppressed, ostensibly to favour a preordained conclusion. We've learned of disquieting efforts to exclude some inspectors from the investigation whilst thwarting their attempts to raise legitimate concerns, highlight irregular practices or even to express their differing observations and assessments — a right explicitly conferred on inspectors in the Chemical Weapons Convention, evidently with the intention of ensuring the independence and authoritativeness of inspection reports," the panel said in an official statement.

The bombshell findings went entirely unreported in the mainstream media, however - until award-winning veteran journalist Jonathan Steele managed to slip a reference past the BBC censors five days later.

Comment: For more on the OPCW scandal, see: