Puppet Masters
"Venezuela is a mess," Trump said on Friday. "The place needs to be cleaned up, and people need to be taken care of." The comment came during a photo-op at the White House with the President of Chile Sebastian Piñera, who is visiting Washington.
Shortly before that, Pence retweeted a photo of Haley addressing a gathering of Venezuelan dissidents in New York on Thursday through a megaphone. "We'll continue to hold the regime accountable until democracy is restored," the vice-president wrote.
The resolution to extend the probe into alleged human rights violations in Yemen was adopted on Friday by the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), with 21 countries voting for it, 8 against and 18 abstaining.
The decision comes amid strong criticism from Saudi Arabia and the Saudi-backed Yemeni government, who accused the UN body of bias. Ahead of the UNHRC vote, Riyadh yet again condemned the UN report on Yemen, published late in August, accusing the international body of turning a blind eye to "the countless violations perpetrated by the Houthis, both against the Yemeni people and against the kingdom."
The Saudi-backed Yemeni government, in turn, refused to cooperate further with the UN experts.
Comment: Investigations should lead to more than just reports. Reports have never stopped a war nor have they changed the way battles are fought. They are determinations after the fact.
The down-to-the-wire 2017 tax act passed in late December contained a mix of permanent and temporary changes that had to result in a net increased cost that fell within a structural limit of $1.5 trillion that allowed the Senate to approve the bill with a simple majority.
The House's new bill takes effect starting in 2025, and would add $600 billion to the national debt within the next decade, and then $3.2 trillion in the 10 years after that, according to Howard Gleckman of the Tax Policy Center.
Comment: The Kavanaugh circus was bound to be a distraction for something. Wonder if anyone will notice...
- The limits of 'Nuts and Sluts': The conservative moral disgust circuit just gets unleashed after the Dem's treatment of Kavanaugh
- The Kavanaugh circus continues: Ambulance-chaser Avenatti admits latest accuser might not come forward, locks Twitter account (UPDATES)
- Moral free-for-all: Another reason why the #MeToo mob is out to get Kavanaugh
- Highlights from Thursday's Ford/Kavanaugh dual testimony
- Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand says Republicans trying to 'silence' Kavanaugh accuser by asking her to testify
- Kavanaugh's 1982 calendar entries don't support Ford's allegations
- Second Kavanaugh accuser, Deborah Ramirez refusing to testify to Senate
The Palestinian government submitted its application to launch proceedings against the US on Friday. The 14-page complaint, released by the UN's principal judicial body, alleges that the US, as a party of the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, has flouted its obligation by setting up an embassy outside the territory of the host state, Israel.
Comment: There may be some publicity value in the Palestinian nation's suit, but the ICC will remain a corrupt, toothless body, so long as it is simply a club to be used on any nation the West targets.
- UN confirms Palestine will become ICC member starting April 1
- Palestine can sue Israel at ICC: Lawyer
- Palestine pushes for Hague Court probe into Israeli war crimes in Gaza
- Israeli mafia lobbying member-states to cut funding to ICC
- African Union accuses ICC of 'hunting' Africans
- International Criminal Court goes after another patsy, issues arrest warrant for Gaddafi
- Mask off: Psychopathic US will use 'any means' to shield citizens & allies from war-crime probes by ICC
- Russia finally says 'enough' to the corrupt ICC
- Hypocrisy of the International Criminal Court
"It seems that entrenched political interest groups on both sides [Israel and the Palestinian political factions] hope to maintain the status quo, and will stop at nothing to prevent forward progress," Abu Sarah said in a Facebook post.
"After seeking advice from friends and legal counsel, we have therefore made a difficult decision: to withdraw from both the mayoral and city council races," he wrote.
"Our relations with Russia are very good, both old and current [relations], they continue. Russian-Iraqi trade has increased by 52 percent from $900 million to $1.4 billion over the past two years," Hadi said on Friday.
The ambassador noted that Moscow and Baghdad would continue their joint work on increasing trade and cooperation in various areas, including energy.
There were Russian companies trying to enter the Iraqi market, Hadi noted, adding that the embassy in Russia would try to support them. Good Iraqi-US relations did not hamper Baghdad's cooperation with other states in various areas, including military cooperation, Hadi pointed out.

Protesters outside the Trump International Hotel during the "March for Our Lives" event, March 2018.
At the heart of the dispute is a broadly defined prohibition from Article I, Section 9, Clause 8 of the Constitution on accepting "any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State."
Democrats have argued that foreign governments doing any business whatsoever with the Trump International Hotel in Washington, DC constitutes prohibited "emoluments," for which the president would have to ask permission from Congress
Led by Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-Connecticut) and Representative Jerrold Nadler (D-New York), the opposition lawmakers filed the lawsuit in June of 2017. The Department of Justice filed a request for it to be dismissed. But, on Friday, Judge Emmet Sullivan ruled that the plaintiffs have standing to proceed.
Using his cherished 'presentations,' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu came out with his new revelations on Thursday, showing aerial photographs of Iranian sites allegedly holding nuclear-related material. It did not take long for Tehran to fire back, saying Tel-Aviv is better to look at its own "undeclared nuclear weapons program."
While Israel has never admitted - notably, not denied as well - to possess military nukes, RT's Murad Gazdiev looks at whether Tel Aviv may really be not the right country to point its fingers at others.
"The US has not fulfilled the roadmap and calendar for Manbij. YPG has not left this region. The US did not keep its promises," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.
Erdogan also accused the US of strengthening its military presence in northern Syria "together with the terrorist organization," adding that Turkey was taking retaliatory measures in Idlib.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the 73rd session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters in New York.
The prime minister called on the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), a United Nations group, to immediately inspect the location. A US State Department official has also called on the IAEA to investigate Netanyahu's claim, according to Reuters. Not everyone, however, is buying it. The atomic inspection agency has repeatedly said Iran is in compliance with its nuclear obligations - still in effect with France, Britain, Germany, China and Russia - as recently as this summer.
Israel itself is exempt from inspections by the IAEA because it is one of four UN members to have never accepted the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Israel has also successfully defeated UN resolutions to bring it into compliance with the treaty.













Comment: US sets the stage, cues negative circumstances into motion, stands back and watches it play out, admonishes and threatens the leaders on the results. Just another failed country according to plan.