Puppet Masters
Late last week, President Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity that he will declassify "everything" related to the FISA warrant applications used to illegally spy on him and his campaign. When Hannity asked President Trump if he planned to remove the classified status from the FISA applications, the president did not miss a beat before simply saying, "yes." Trump then added, "Everything is going to be declassified and more - much more than what you just mentioned. it will all be declassified." As to why he waited so long to strike back with this move, Trump said, "I'm glad I waited because I thought that maybe they would obstruct if I did it early and I think I was right. So I'm glad I waited and now the attorney general can take a very strong look at whatever it is."
This fits very well with another piece of the puzzle that was also revealed recently.
Sky News reporter Jordan Milne live-tweeted events as they unfolded, reporting that Assange's defense argued that his fears of rendition and torture at the hands of the US government were well-founded. His life in the Ecuadorian embassy and the physical and psychological detriments which came with it were described, including deteriorated health and depression. The judge rejected his entire defense and delivered nearly the harshest sentence possible.
"Your continued residence in the Embassy has necessitated a concentration of resources, and expenditure of £16 million of taxpayers' money in ensuring that when you did leave, you were brought to justice," Judge Deborah Taylor told Assange upon his sentencing.
Comment: Reaction to Assange's sentence was swift. WikiLeaks condemned it as 'shocking & vindictive'

People hold signs during a protest outside Southwark Crown Court, where Julian Assange was sentenced to 50 weeks in prison
WikiLeaks has slammed a UK court's sentencing of its co-founder Julian Assange as "vindictive." It also raised major concerns about whether Assange will be treated fairly during an upcoming extradition hearing.According to former London mayor Ken Livingstone "We should be giving Assange an honor, not arresting him":
The sentence "is as shocking as it is vindictive," WikiLeaks said on Twitter on Wednesday, shortly after Assange received almost a year in prison for violating bail conditions.Julian Assange skipped bail in 2012 while wanted in Sweden over rape allegations (the case was later dropped). The journalist then spent the next several years living under asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, out of fear Britain would hand him over to the US. He was forcibly dragged out of the building last month after the South American nation decided to evict him.We have grave concerns as to whether he will receive a fair extradition hearing in the UK.
The ex-Labour MP claims that the establishment do not want the 47-year-old Australian to get away with exposing the truth. He insists Britain should be doing its best to protect Assange from extradition to the US, adding that he believes UK courts will be reluctant to hand him over to officials stateside.Other commentators weighed in:We should be proud of people doing that... we should be giving people like Assange an honor not arresting them and getting ready no doubt to extradite to the United States of America.
Gabbard is bringing to the forefront suspicions that the Trump/Pence team is hiding the fact that it is the Saudis who are a fundamental cause of the recent attacks on Christians/Christian churches in Sri Lanka and elsewhere. In another Tweet, the Hawaii representative railed at Trump for doing business with a regime many consider one of the instruments of Middle East chaos. Gabbard tweeted directly to POTUS:
"Hey @realdonaldtrump: being Saudi Arabia's bitch is not 'America First."This came on the heels of President Trump announcing his administration would take no actions against Saudi Arabia's rulers regarding the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Trump sided with the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who allegedly ordered the killing. The CIA reported to various news outlets that it had concluded the Saudi Prince did, in fact, order the killing.
President Trump made a statement saying, "It could very well be that the Crown Prince had knowledge of this tragic event - maybe he did and maybe he didn't!" In the same statement, Trump outlined how the US needed Saudi support to help fight terrorism and to help keep oil prices low. Right after this chain of events, oil prices plummeted. Here is the President's Tweet to the American people:
"Oil prices getting lower. Great! Like a big Tax Cut for America and the World. Enjoy! $54, was just $82. Thank you to Saudi Arabia, but let's go lower!"Now, unless you are a fanatical right-wing extremist Trump supporter, another American president kissing the Saudi leadership's behind should be an easy vision for you. Tulsi Gabbard made the call for us all. I have no doubt that Rep. Gabbard is focusing on the real Achilles heel of Trump and the deep state on the other side of the political aisle. If you'll allow me to explain.
The way Secret Crush works is pretty simple. You can select up to nine Facebook friends you want to express an interest in and then Facebook does its magic - from Facebook's announcement:
If your crush has opted into Facebook Dating, they will get a notification saying that someone has a crush on them. If your crush adds you to their Secret Crush list, it's a match! If your crush isn't on Dating, doesn't create a Secret Crush list, or doesn't put you on their list, no one will know that you've entered a friend's name.
Comment: Trust Facebook at your own peril:
- Facebook Tracks Your Every Move, Even After Logging Out
- Facebook spied on Android users' calls & texts while pretending to care about privacy
- Facebook May Even Be Tracking Users Who've Canceled Their Accounts!
Footage published on social media by several Latin American TV channels shows three armored military vehicles being confronted by a group of people on a highway in Caracas.
Some of them can be seen punching the vehicles, throwing stones and hitting cars with sticks. At one point, one of the official vehicles is seen ramming the crowd, appearing to run over several people.
Comment: They planned this stunt in such a way that some units of soldiers were ordered to go to the site, but on the pretense of taking part in an awards ceremony. Then they were ordered to take weapons to a prison, arm the prisoners, and set them loose on Caracas:
Meanwhile crowds of protesters and opposition-aligned soldiers mobilized in Caracas on Tuesday, with local health authorities saying that at least 59 people were injured in protests. Still no reports of deaths though.
The US FAA issued an 'international security' notice closing off Venezuelan airspace to all US carriers operating below 26,000 feet, unless they are given permission by 'another agency of the US government'.
This is blatantly part of the stunt, to make it seem like the situation in Caracas is 'hotter' than it actually is.
The Venezuelan Defense Minister has warned that he would order his forces to suppress the armed revolt, if necessary, saying:
"Anyone who comes to [the presidential palace of] Miraflores with violence will be defeated with violence. If we have to use weapons, we will use them," while also blaming Guaido for "any death ... on the streets."Footage tweeted by the Venezuelan NTN24 TV channel shows a crowd in the capital yesterday with a couple of SUVs loaded with soldiers:
This is because there had already been an anti-government protest planned, and the soldiers just blended in 'for the optics' - specifically, making it look like millions of Venezuelans were out on the street cheering on 'the revolution'. There weren't millions; there weren't even that many thousands, and they didn't have a clue what was going on.
Guiado's supporters from across Latin America have emerged to praise this next step in the US-backed regime change. RT reports:
One by one, leaders and officials from Latin American states are taking to social media to applaud opposition leader Juan Guaido's attempted military coup in Venezuela, some even encouraging an army mutiny.And the usual suspects from Washington have made their appearance as well, with the war-whore John Bolton calling for 'regime change' while maintaining that what's happening in Venezuela isn't a 'coup'. His reasoning? "This is clearly not a coup. We recognize Guaido as the legitimate president of Venezuela." American exceptionalism in its ugliest form.
The leaders heaped praise on the Tuesday coup plotters on Twitter, and denounced President Nicolas Maduro as a dictator.
"Brazil sympathizes with the suffering Venezuelan people enslaved by a dictator," said Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, adding "we support the freedom of this sister nation to finally live a true democracy."
Colombian President Ivan Duque went a step further with an open call for mutiny in the Venezuelan military, asking the armed forces and citizenry to "reject Maduro's dictatorship."
Sebastian Piñera, president of Chile, tweeted that "Maduro's dictatorship must end," to "restore liberties, democracy, human rights and progress in Venezuela."
The foreign ministries of Peru and Argentina, in similar fashion, also backed the coup attempt.
Trump threatened Cuba with an embargo if it does not immediately end its support of Maduro's government:
Pompous little Marco Rubio took to Twitter all night long, conducting his own arm-chair regime change, calling on every citizen, soldier, and police officer to kick Maduro out of the country.
However, things don't seem to be going as Washington planned. A number of armed supporters are now seeking refuge in Brazilian and Chilean embassies, suggesting that their attempts to win over military and police forces to their cause was a bust. RT reports:
Venezuelan opposition figure Leopoldo Lopez has sought refuge in Chile's embassy in Caracas, while at least 25 pro-Juan Guaido troops asked Brazil for refuge. The news all but points to the failure of the US-backed coup attempt.Despite these early signs of failure Guaido has doubled down, calling for more protests on Wednesday, stating "Today we started the final stage of Operation Freedom. And tomorrow we will continue, with more spirit than ever," and that "We knew that the start was not going to be easy, but we showed that there are soldiers willing to defend the constitution and many more remain." Unfortunately for him and his backers it does not seem that there are enough soldiers to
Lopez had been under house arrest since 2017, but was seen at the side of Guaido - who had declared himself "interim president" of Venezuela in January - on Tuesday morning, as supporters of the US-backed opposition sought to take control of Caracas by force. At least 50 people were injured and 11 arrested during the unrest on Tuesday.
By the afternoon, however, Chilean Foreign Minister Roberto Ampuero tweeted that Lopez, his wife Lilian Tintori, and their daughter were "guests" of the Chilean diplomatic mission in Caracas, adding that "Chile reaffirms commitment to Venezuelan democrats."
Later on Tuesday, Lopez and his wife moved to the Spanish embassy, according to Ampuero, who tweeted that it was a "personal decision" on the part of the pair, who are of Spanish descent.
Meanwhile, at least 25 armed Guaido supporters have sought refuge in the Brazilian embassy in Caracas, Brazilian media reported. There were no officers among them, according to reports.
Maduro stated that 80 percent of troops involved in the mutiny attempt had abandoned Guaido, with only a small group of about 20 officers "handing over their souls to the coup-mongering far right." Those military officers who answered Guaido's calls for regime change in the country, Maduro noted, were lured by the opposition "under false pretenses," but once they came to their senses, they "left the coup leaders alone" and surrendered.Maduro went on to announce that Guaido's coup attempt has been a complete failure, and proposes pursuing legal action against his conspirators:
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has congratulated the military for "defeating" the plotters of a coup after a day of protests called for by opposition leader Juan Guaido.Pompeo has his own explanation for why things aren't turning out the way Washington hoped - it's Russia's fault! He took to CNN to tell the world that Maduro was ready to 'flee the country' until the Russians convinced him to stay:
Maduro called the opposition supporters a "small group that tried to fill the country with violence" and confirmed his government has faced several "modalities" of a coup d'état.
The president also announced the appointment of "three special prosecutors" to examine "criminal" actions by the opposition, noting that "we have colonels wounded by bullets and in intensive care."
Some of the protests were peaceful and others led to intense skirmishes, yet fatalities were avoided throughout the day. A few dozen people were injured by rubber bullets, tear gas and - allegedly - live ammunition. An armored vehicle was also recorded ramming into a cluster of Guaido supporters.
At least five soldiers and two colonels were also injured in the clashes after being shot by coup plotters, Maduro claimed. At the onset of the violence, Venezuela's defense minister warned early in the day that the army would resort to force if necessary.
He's lying through his teeth of course. Maduro was never in danger of having to flee.
Whatever the extent of Russian backroom support, if they do their part to restore sanity and stability to the world, then why not?
Russian influence sure does seem to have a balancing effect wherever Washington pursues its 'regime change projects'. Russian FM spokesperson Maria Zhakarova did her part by delivering a scathing rebuke of Washington's coup, stating that "If Washington would continue to push forward with its interference ... into the internal affairs [of Venezuela] that might cause the whole situation to collapse."
Erdogan, no doubt reminded of the US-backed coup attempt in his own country, also condemned Guaido:
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, an ally of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, condemned the Guaido "coup" after Caracas saw a day of violent clashes between supporters of the incumbent and the opposition leader.Meanwhile there has been a standoff at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington DC. RT reports:
He told how Turkey has historically "struggled with coups" and speaking after footage emerged of military vehicles seemingly ramming protesters, warned of the "negative consequences" of such uprisings.
"The entire world has to respect the democratic choices of the people in Venezuela," he wrote on Twitter, adding that Turkey unequivocally condemns the coup.
Police have shut down the entrance to the Venezuelan embassy in Washington DC, as crowds backing the country's opposition confront the activists who have been defending the building for over two weeks.UPDATE 1st May 2019 13:00: Checkpoint Asia reports:
Chanting and waving Venezuelan flags, protesters supporting Juan Guaido have been engaged in a heated standoff with a group of activists led by antiwar group Code Pink. The group is one of the organizations who have been holed up inside the Venezuelan embassy in order to prevent diplomats loyal to Juan Guaido from taking control of the building. The activists say they were invited in by embassy staff.
The Entire Venezuela "Coup Attempt" Unfolded Within a Tiny Section of an Upscale Caracas District
Never start a coup without at least two crates of bananas!
The New York Times:President Trump on Tuesday accused Cuba of aiding the government of President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela, who the administration evidently hoped would be ousted by day's end, warning that the United States would impose an embargo and additional sanctions on the country if Cuba did not end its support.And what exactly was the Trump administration placing such hopes in? Moon of Alabama:There are no reliable reports that any additional military besides the 30 or so men on the bridge have switched to Guaidó.
15:00 UC;
Someone points out that the soldiers supporting Guaidó carry M4 Colt assault rifles. The official assault rifle of the Venezuelan military is the Kalashnikov AK-103. Back in February there were a number of flights from Florida to Venezuela which delivered weapons to the opposition.
16:00 UTC:
It is becoming clear that this coup attempt is no more than a stupid PR campaign. Here is a map of the whole 'coup' scene which plays in a small area of the wealthy Altamira district of Caracas.
At the bottom of the map is the La Calota air base, also known as Generalissimo Francisco de Miranda Base, which Guaido supporters tried to enter. They threw rocks against the guards until tear gas drove them away. Directly north of it runs a highway east to west. The two highway bridges on which Guaidó's soldiers stand are crossing the highway right next to the base. Some 500 meters north of the highway bridges is Plaza Altamira (the upper blue point) where Guaidó spoke to some supporters.
The highway bridges can be seen in this video taken from north of the highway looking south across the bridges towards the airport. In the video some fireworks go off to which nervous Guaidó supporting soldiers on a bridge respond (12 vid) by firing a few shots into the air.
The whole coup attempt was run within a 500 x 200 meter corridor with nothing of significance happening outside of it. A dangerous propaganda stunt but so far nothing more than that.
Far from a "military uprising" this was a fake-it-til-you-make-it theatre with Guaido trying to create the appearance of one. Trump, Pence, Pompeo, Bolton and Abrams didn't just root for the "coup attempt" but actively took part calling on Venezuelans to fall behind Guaido. The silly bluff/costume party did not work, the Venezuelan troops stayed at their posts so now of course the Russians, the Cubans, and the Martians probably are to blame because how else to account for the failure of such a foolproof plan Trump admin poured its hopes and efforts into??
Gotta love the Pompeo/Bolton amateur-hour attempt at psy ops. Bolton trying to make Maduro suspect men closest to him are talking to Americans, and Pompeo trying to spread rumors Maduro is soft and a quitter.
Sorry guys but creating the appearance of a "military uprising/coup" on Twitter and pulling one off in the real world are two different things.

New York Times cartoon by Patrick Chappatte (1/31/19) featuring Nicolás Maduro and Juan Guaidó.
Of the 76 total articles, opinion videos or TV commentator segments that centered on or gave more than passing attention to Venezuela, 54 (72 percent) expressed explicit support for the Maduro administration's ouster. Eleven (14 percent) were ambiguous, but were only classified as such for lack of explicit language. Reading between the lines, most of these were clearly also pro-regime change. Another 11 (14 percent) took no position, but many similarly offered ideological ammo for those in support.
The Times published 22 pro-regime change commentaries, three ambiguous and five without a position. The Post also spared no space for the pro-Chavista camp: 22 of its articles expressed support for the end to Maduro's administration, eight were ambiguous and four took no position. Of the 12 TV opinions surveyed, 10 were pro-regime change and two took no position.
Comment: And they wonder why they're called Fake News.
See also:
- 'Regime change' in Venezuela ramps up as military vehicle runs over rioters in Caracas - UPDATES
- Washington Goes For The Jugular: Puppet 'Leader' in Venezuela Launches 'Military Coup' Against Maduro Government
- US Treasury slaps sanctions on Venezuela's top diplomat Jorge Arreaza
- Activists guarding Venezuela's DC embassy brace for US seizure - takeover meant to shore up failed Guaido coup
- Rosneft helps Venezuela evade US sanctions? Reuters amends story as firm vows to get agency banned
- IMF execs refuse to recognize Guaido as Venezuela's 'interim president' - a twist the US didn't see coming
A combination of repeated Israeli attacks and the sealing of its borders by Israel and Egypt, have left the territory unable to process its water or waste. Every drop of water swallowed in Gaza, like every toilet flushed or antibiotic imbibed, returns to the environment in a degraded state.
When a hospital toilet is flushed, for instance, it seeps untreated through the sand into the aquifer. There it joins water laced with pesticides from farms, heavy metals from industry, and salt from the ocean. It is then pumped back up by municipal or private wells, joined with a small fraction of freshwater purchased from Israel, and cycled back into people's taps. This results in widespread contamination and undrinkable drinking water, about 90% of which exceeds the World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines for salinity and chloride.
The complaint against the embassy was submitted to the attorney general's office in Ecuador on behalf of Assange on Monday. The journalist has been targeted with blanket surveillance for about two years - and subjected to an extortion attempt, Poveda said. The compromised data includes legal, medical and personal information on Assange, yet his legal team did not disclose to whom exactly it had been allegedly leaked.
Apart from Ecuador, the case - namely the alleged extortion attempt - is being investigated by Spanish authorities, as three Spanish nationals are believed to be involved into it.

(L-R) Eric Trump, Lara Yunaska Trump, Donald Trump, Barron Trump, Melania Trump, Vanessa Haydon Trump, Kai Madison Trump, Donald Trump Jr., Donald John Trump III, Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump, and Tiffany Trump at Trump Tower in New York on June 16, 2015.
The federal lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court's Southern District of New York, contended that demands for records by Democrat-controlled House committees have no legitimate or lawful purpose and are so broad they would include transaction records on the Trump family's personal shopping.
"The subpoenas were issued to harass President Donald J. Trump, to rummage through every aspect of his personal finances, his businesses, and the private information of the President and his family," the lawsuit stated.
It also stated that the Democrats hope "they will stumble upon something they can expose publicly and use as a political tool against the President."
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), chairwoman of the Financial Services Commission, and Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), chairman of the Intelligence Committee, called the lawsuit "meritless" in a joint statement, The New York Times and other media reported.
Legislative Purpose
On April 15, two U.S. House of Representatives committees issued subpoenas to multiple financial institutions for information on Trump's finances. Both banks have been involved in Trump's real estate empire.
The committees need to have a legislative purpose for their action and have justified the subpoenas as a part of an investigation of "potential foreign influence on the U.S. political process" or the use of the financial system for "illicit purposes."
"The potential use of the U.S. financial system for illicit purposes is a very serious concern. The Financial Services Committee is exploring these matters, including as they may involve the president and his associates, as thoroughly as possible," Waters said in an earlier statement.
Schiff said previously in a statement the subpoenas issued included a "friendly subpoena to Deutsche Bank."
Schiff, Waters, and other Democrats had consistently accused Trump of being in "collusion" with the Russian government-an allegation that goes back to 2016, when the Democratic Party and the presidential campaign of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were seeding rumors that the Trump campaign worked with Russia to influence the elections. After more than two years of investigations, Trump and his associates were cleared of those allegations by special counsel Robert Mueller.
'Overbroad'
Trump's suit complains that the subpoenas are "intrusive and overbroad" and seek information that "long predates the President's election to office, reaches well beyond transactions associated with foreign parties, and encompass reams of account records for entities, individuals, children, and spouses who have never even been implicated in any probe."
The suit says that Schiff and Waters refused to share the subpoena with the plaintiffs or even reveal any information about their content, "notwithstanding their willingness to discuss the subpoenas with the press."
From what the plaintiffs learned from Deutsche Bank, Capital One, and public statements of Schiff and Waters, the subpoenas demand all banking and financial records, including "records of every single checking withdrawal, credit-card swipe, or debit-card purchase-no matter how trivial or small-made by each and every member of the Trump family."
"The dates and times when these individuals purchased books, groceries and other personal items is not the business of the House of Representatives or anyone else," the suit says.
The plaintiffs learned the lawmakers seek records reaching back to 2010 and some documents, such as account applications and opening documents, without any time limitations.
The banks told the plaintiffs that they intend to start handing over the documents on or by May 6.
A representative of Deutsche Bank said in a statement: "We remain committed to providing appropriate information to all authorized investigations and will abide by a court order regarding such investigations."
Trump has recently said that he intends to defy any efforts from the Democrats to dig into his affairs.
His suit, which includes The Trump Organization Inc. and Trump's three eldest children, Donald Jr., Eric, and Ivanka, stated that the court has the power to declare the subpoenas invalid.
Schiff's and Waters's offices didn't respond to requests for comment.
Probes Galore
After gaining a majority in the House of Representatives in January, Democrats have vowed to use their oversight powers to investigate the president, including the dealings of his real estate empire.
Aside from Schiff and Waters, Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), chair of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, issued a subpoena to Trump's accounting firm, Mazars USA, for his financial records. Trump sued to block the subpoena.
In addition, Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.), chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, requested Trump's tax returns from the Internal Revenue Service. In response, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the request raised "serious constitutional questions" which resolution could have "serious consequences" for taxpayer privacy.
He said he would provide the committee with a final decision by May 6 after receiving the Justice Department's legal conclusions.

The terrorists still control a large part of that territory in Syria, Russia's top diplomat states
According to him, the remaining members of the Islamic State and Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (formerly known as Jabhat al-Nusra) terror groups outlawed in Russia continue to stage provocations and are reluctant to abide by ceasefire agreements. "This is what is going on in the Idlib de-escalation zone," Lavrov said.
"We seek to ensure the implementation of Russian-Turkish agreements on resolving the Jabhat al-Nusra issue in the Idlib de-escalation zone," he noted. "As Russian President Vladimir Putin has said, Russia cannot tolerate these terrorists remaining safe there like in a preserved area," Lavrov said.
Comment: See also:
- The Real Problem For Syria's Idlib Offensive is Turkey
- Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard Accuses Trump, Pence of Shielding Al-Qaeda in Idlib
- Jihadi, Inc. Cornered Like Rats in Idlib. What to do With Them?
- Over 450 refugees leave deplorable US-controlled Rukban camp via Syria-Russia humanitarian corridor in the last 24 hours














Comment: See also: Fmr CIA analyst: 'Attempted Russiagate coup against Trump biggest violation of Constitution in US history'