Puppet Masters
Her face was a progression of sneers and imperious indifference; she addressed Julian with an arrogance that reminded me of a magistrate presiding over apartheid South Africa's Race Classification Board. When Julian struggled to speak, he couldn't get words out, even stumbling over his name and date of birth.
When he spoke truth and when his barrister spoke, Baraister contrived boredom; when the prosecuting barrister spoke, she was attentive. She had nothing to do; it was demonstrably preordained. In the table in front of us were a handful of American officials, whose directions to the prosecutor were carried by his junior; back and forth this young woman went, delivering instructions.
The judge watched this outrage without a comment. It reminded me of a newsreel of a show trial in Stalin's Moscow; the difference was that Soviet show trials were broadcast. Here, the state broadcaster, the BBC, blacked it out, as did the other mainstream channels.
Having ignored Julian's barrister's factual description of how the CIA had run a Spanish security firm that spied on him in the Ecuadorean embassy, she didn't yawn, but her disinterest was as expressive. She then denied Julian's lawyers any more time to prepare their case - even though their client was prevented in prison from receiving legal documents and other tools with which to defend himself.
Her knee in the groin was to announce that the next court hearing would be at remote Woolwich, which adjoins Belmarsh prison and has few seats for the public. This will ensure isolation and be as close to a secret trial as it's possible to get. Did this happen in the home of the Magna Carta? Yes, but who knew?
"The withdrawal is taking place right now, we are beginning [the process] today," Prystayko said at an investment forum in the city of Mariupol, on October 29, adding that the process was delayed due to preparations by the OSCE mission.
Prystayko also said that after the withdrawal process in Zolote is over, Kyiv will start withdrawing its forces from the nearby town of Petrivske.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who rose to the presidency earlier this year on promises to end the conflict, accepted the withdrawal plan, known as the Steinmeier Formula, earlier in October.
The Steinmeier Formula lays the groundwork for reinvigorating the larger peace deals known loosely as the Minsk Accords, and the first major international summit on the Ukraine conflict in three years.

The compound was destroyed in a US helicopter raid while Baghdadi fled into a tunnel, then detonated an explosive belt, killing himself and three of his children
'I know the president had planned to talk down to unit and unit members, but I don't know what the source of that was,' Milley said at the Pentagon Monday. 'But I assume it was talking directly to unit and unit members.'
Milley said he hadn't 'talked to unit members,' and so wouldn't have heard those details, but told reporters that visual content from the raid was going through the declassification process and in the 'coming days' journalists would be 'provided some videos, photos, etc. of it.'
Trump had already teased having the video of the raid released.
'We're thinking about it. We may. The question was, am I considering releasing video footage of the raid. And we may take certain parts of it and release it, yes,' the president told reporters at Joint Base Andrews as he prepared to leave for Chicago, Monday morning.
No timeline has been provided for the release and White House deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley didn't have one when asked about it by reporters later that day.
"Today, I won't hide that I reached a dead end and it's time for a major shock to confront the crisis," Hariri said in a televised address. "I'm going to the presidential palace in Baabda to submit my government's resignation to the president and to the Lebanese people everywhere in response to their will."
Hariri's resignation came hours after supporters of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah party attacked demonstrators in central Beirut and destroyed their tents.
Live television footage showed hundreds of men throwing rocks at protesters who had blocked a major Beirut intersection and beating them with sticks and fists. The mob then descended on the main protest area in the capital tearing down tents and setting them ablaze while warning that they would not allow their political leaders -- Hezbollah's Hassan Nasrallah and his ally, parliament speaker Nabih Berri -- to be criticized or insulted.
"Let's hope, we'll see. I wouldn't say that there are no guarantees [that they will not have time to withdraw their forces within the 150-hour period stipulated by the memorandum]. An agreement has been reached between our presidents, which means that both presidents gave certain guarantees. Let's wait and see", Lavrentyev told reporters in Geneva.Lavrentyev also commented on the US plans to protect the oil fields in northeastern Syria, saying that the area must be under control of the Syrian government. Earlier in the day, US Secretary of Defence Mark Esper said that Washington would not allow the Russian and Syrian forces access to the oil fields, ensuring instead that the Kurds will take control over the areas.
The deadline for the withdrawal of Kurdish forces from the 30-kilometer border zone in northeastern Syria, stipulated by the Russian-Turkish memorandum, expires at 6.00 pm Moscow time (15:00 GMT) on Tuesday, 28 October. Russia's president Vladimir Putin and his counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan negotiated the agreement on 22 October during their meeting at the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi.
The motion comes amid Turkish Operation Peace Spring in northeastern Syria, launched on 9 October to establish a ''safe-zone'' and secure its border from the Kurdish militants and terrorists.
"I'm not worried about a single thing in connection with any of the matters under investigation," he said at Politicon on Saturday. "Gather the facts, write a report, and share it with the American people -- please do that."
Comey said transparency would help protect the integrity of the Justice Department.
"The way to protect that is [to] show the folks the facts; lay it out," he said. "Don't drip it out, don't leak it out. Give it out. And I'm confident that when the American people see the picture of why we did what we did, their confidence in the institution will be maintained, restored and protected."

A Turkish armoured vehicle patrols the border between Turkey and Syria, in Akcakale, Sanliurfa province, southeastern Turkey
The suspects were detained by the provincial police department's counterterrorism units, according to the Anadolu news agency.
The Turkish authorities said that over 300 people have been killed in civilian-targeted suicide bombings and armed attacks claimed by the terrorist group in Turkey over recent years. The Turkish security forces have been actively involved in the fight against terrorism.
The sanity test was spectacularly failed recently when former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton lashed out at her party member Tulsi Gabbard, inferring she was a "Russian asset". The Hawaii congresswoman, who is vying for a run at the presidency in next year's elections, was defended by some fellow Democratic politicians. But many Clinton aides and media pundits doubled down on Clinton's smear campaign, reiterating that Gabbard was "working for the Kremlin".
This bipartisan Russophobia can be traced back decades to the Red Scare paranoia of the Cold War and McCarthyite persecution during the 1950s of suspected Soviet sympathizers in Washington and Hollywood. But for the past three years, since the 2016 election, the Cold War has been crazily enlivened with the "Russiagate scandal" of alleged interference in American political affairs by Moscow. It was the Clinton campaign, establishment media and her intelligence agency supporters that launched that canard against Trump.
Michael Lynk, a Canadian law professor, told the UN's human rights council that only urgent international action could prevent Israel's 52-year occupation of the West Bank transforming into de facto annexation.
He warned of a recent surge in violence against Palestinians from settlers, assisted by the Israeli army, and a record number of demolitions this year of Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem - evidence of the ways Israel is further pressuring Palestinians to leave their lands.
He urged an international boycott of all settlement products as a necessary step to put pressure on Israel to change course. He also called on the UN itself to finally publish - as long promised - a database that it has been compiling since 2016 of Israeli and international companies doing business in the illegal settlements and normalising the occupation.
Israel and its supporters have stymied the release, fearing that such a database would bolster the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign that seeks to end Israel's impunity.
Africa's dark situation was never due to simplistic terms like "corruption" or "incompetence", nor was Africa ever "culturally incompatible" with western technology as some racists have taught in social science classes. The truth is that Africa was never given true independence as is popularly believed. Sure there was nominal independence, but the economic independence needed to become sovereign nations on the continent was never granted by the empire.
Comment: See also:
- Russia-Africa Summit in Sochi: Putin hosts ALL African leaders and 3,000 delegates in gargantuan round of trade talks - UPDATES
- 'We Are The Vaccine Against The Cancer of Unilateralism' - Delegates From 120 Nations Meet in Venezuela to Plot Escape From U$ Hegemony
- Africa's pivotal role in the successful implementation of China's One Belt One Road vision
- The history of NATO's war against Africa
- NewsReal: Interview With The Moriartys - New Light on Benghazi, And Liberating Libya
- Behind the Headlines: Confessions of an Economic Hitman: Interview with John Perkins













Comment: As pointed out yesterday, the U.S. military has 'confirmed' that they have already disposed of the remains: Which is nonsense, just as it was with bin Laden. It isn't "Islamic tradition" to bury people at sea: Obviously, the UN cannot confirm Baghdadi's death (especially given that the remains are now allegedly somewhere at the bottom of the Mediterranean, or some body of water): Hasn't stopped them in the past...
What HAS been released so far: the photo and identity of the attack dog who chased down Baghdadi: As for how they were apparently able to verify the DNA, SF spokesman Mustafa Bali that an informant who led them to Baghdadi's location provided them with Baghdadi's underwear and a blood sample. This story keeps on getting better!
ISIS reportedly now has a new leader: Abdullah "The Destroyer" or "The Professor" Qardash, an ex-military officer under Saddam Hussein: Damian Wilson of RT reminds us: Previous updates and commentary here: