Puppet Masters
"The first of these additional personnel, approximately 47 individuals, arrived in South Sudan on July 12, 2016, supported by military aircraft," Obama stated.
The US president noted that some 130 troops stationed in Djibouti are also ready to provide support as necessary.
"The president must maintain the ability to take action as appropriate," Brennan stated. "There are circumstances where I know that the commander in chief is going to continue to exercise his responsibility to do what is necessary, and sometimes that is going to be going into foreign airspace without the prior consent of the government."
The CIA director recalled that in 2011, President Barack Obama authorized an operation to capture or kill Osama bin Laden in Pakistan without any consultations with the Pakistani government.
Bin Laden was killed on May 2, 2011 in Abbottabad, Pakistan as a result of a US special operation following a ten-year manhunt. The manhunt was initiated in part as a response to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks against the United States that killed some 3,000 people.

Britain's royal head-chopper-in-chief, Prince Charles, attends a do in Saudi Arabia at which the Brits sold billions more in weapons to Saudi Arabia (and thus ISIS)
Assessing the likelihood of Sunni royal families directly funding terrorist groups, Foreign Office Minister Tobias Ellwood called the issue "very opaque." "When somebody who is close to the top of a royal family is a very rich individual donor ... that is very likely to happen," Ellwood is quoted as saying in the committee report.
Foreign Office senior civil servant Dan Chugg also said when "dealing with royal families, wealthy princes and those kind of things" it is "difficult with some of these countries to know exactly what is government funding. Our strategy was not to try to ascertain whose problem and whose fault it was, but to stop the funding going to Daesh [Arabic pejorative term for IS]. That was what was important. And that is what our efforts have been focused on," Chugg told the committee.
Comment: "Vague' and 'opaque,' not words one might ordinarily use to describe a genuinely indepth investigation of enemy funding sources, be it truly an enemy and not one that is just sort of. These connotations are more in line with words that might be used to obfuscate a source, protecting its own out-funding streams, in order to have you look the other way. The Counter ISIL Finance Group (CIFG) is co-chaired by Italy, Saudi Arabia and the US. They are focusing on Iraqi sourcing capabilities, not their own...not the sources they can absolutely influence and control. While it might be true and evident that the "princes" of the region are involved, it is just another finger-pointing distraction.
Meanwhile, the British MPs would do better to look closer to home for stopping the ultimate source of ISIS funding...
British High Court rules to conduct full legal review of UK's supply of illegal weapons for Saudi Arabia's atrocities in Yemen
Business of war: US, UK cash-in on weapons sales furthering Saudi's horrific war crimes in Yemen
I couldn't help but laugh when I read in this article that one of the key topics of discussion at the summit will be the deployment of four (F-O-U-R!) battalions in the Baltic states and Poland in order to scare Putin and convince him that it is impossible to invade the Baltic countries. I don't even know what's funnier: Western analysts' assurance that 4 battalions of NATO are something terribly strong, or the fact that Russians are supposed to be dreaming in their sleep of capturing Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. This leaves the impression that our neighbors have some kind of very advanced case of megalomania. Well, judge for yourselves, should we take the Baltic countries? Instead of their ports, we have our own ultra modern Ust-Luga port. Our neighbors have no industry left. Nor agriculture. What's left? Tuna and Laima Vaikule? No thanks. In fact, Russians have long since switched to fish from Kaliningrad so, even from a gastronomic point of view, the Baltic countries are of no interest.
I must admit that the idea of four NATO battalions defending the Baltic countries from the Russian army seems to me to be a brilliant joke. It'll turn out like in the famous joke about the lunatic who drives crocodiles away by clapping so he won't have any crocodiles in his bathroom. It works great. But we'll see how it will work out for the Baltic states. Western media will write that Putin hasn't taken Vilnius because he's afraid of four NATO battalions. This reminds me of the triumphant bragging of Yatsenyuk, who told Ukrainians about how effective his anti-tank ditch would be against the Russian army. Apparently, NATO officials are actively adopting Ukraine's experience in conjuring virtual victories over imaginary threats.
Comment: The writer forgets that he is expecting the NATO brass to reason like human beings. They are not. Faced with the prospect of not achieving the global hegemony the West dreams of, they are just as likely to 'kick over the board' and try to start an unwinnable war on the flimsiest of pretexts. Russia is aware of this of course, and therefore handles its western 'partners' most carefully, allowing them to save face when and where possible without compromising Russia's security.
Jeff Shell, who is also the chairman of NBCUniversal Filmed Entertainment Group, was stopped by security officials shortly after arriving on a flight from Prague just after midnight on July 13, according to the BBG.
Shell was kept in locked rooms at the airport for several hours before being escorted to a flight to Amsterdam about 5 a.m. Moscow time, according to a BBG statement.
Shell told colleagues he was traveling with that airport security authorities told him the "denial of entry to Russia has permanent status" and was "a lifetime ban" from the country, the agency said.
Development NGO War On Want published its latest cutting report, titled 'The New Colonialism: Britain's scramble for Africa's energy and mineral resources', on Monday.
The study argues that a British relaunch of the 19th-century imperialist conquest of Africa is already well underway in an effort to profit from the natural wealth of the vast continent - to the detriment of those who live there.
Flynn was forced out of his job as DIA director because, he says, his views "did not fit the narrative." But what narrative is he talking about? In order to understand this intramural fight within the highest levels of the intelligence and military communities, we have to go back to the Bush administration, and the Iraq war.
Comment: It's hard to believe it's Trump "thinking outside the box". Since the neocons seem to hate him so much, maybe we should ask: who is giving Trump these ideas? Are we seeing the ripples of a power struggle among the Washington elite?
"The fact these systems have gone forward without any public debate or oversight that we've been able to find is very troubling," Nicole Ozer, Technology and Civil Liberties Director at the California chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, told the Verge, which obtained the documents through a public records request.
Documents show three California sheriff's departments have been collecting iris data from arrestees over the last two and a half years under an alleged FBI pilot program. The nationwide trove includes over 430,000 iris scans.
"The fact these systems have gone forward without any public debate or oversight that we've been able to find is very troubling," Nicole Ozer, Technology and Civil Liberties Director at the California chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, told the Verge, which obtained the documents through a public records request.
The FBI argues the program is necessary to easily track criminals, promptly catch repeat offenders and suspects who try to hide their identities. The documents, or "operations reports," show collaboration through information-sharing agreements between sheriff's departments and other agencies, including US Border Patrol and the Pentagon. They further show that three counties, Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Riverside, have contributed more than quarter-million "enrollments" in the database from the California Department of Justice. In both 2014 and 2015, more than 100,000 documents were added to the system.
Comment: This 'program' is just one that we know about. It's likely there are more U.S. cities and states that are doing the same thing under the pretense of tracking criminals.
The agency's biometric database has grown to massive proportions, the largest in the world, encompassing everything from fingerprints, palm, face and iris scans to DNA, and is being increasingly shared between federal, state and local law enforcement agencies in an effort to target potential criminals long before they ever commit a crime.
America's Gestapo: The FBI's reign of terror
The details of the Balad special forces base and its operations, which came to shape the war, are not recounted in last week's long-awaited report by Sir John Chilcot.
However, kill or capture operations in and around Baghdad, launched from the Balad base 50 miles (80km) north of the city, were a key if little known chapter in Britain's shadow war, the Independent reports.
Despite killing or taking as prisoner up to 3,500 insurgents, the mission against the Sunni insurgency caused deep rifts to the point where a senior commander, himself ex-SAS, demanded to know why the UK Special Forces were "helping to run Latin American-style death squads?"
Comment: Death squads are an Anglo-American tradition. Syria, Libya and Iraq are just the latest examples in a long history of exactly the same thing: state-sponsored terrorism.
Given that the DHS has labeled such things as using binoculars, paying with cash, or even "appearing normal" as "possible terrorist activity" in the past (thus making pretty much every human being a possible terrorist), everyone can breathe a sigh of relief that the bill failed.
But don't breathe that sigh too deeply, because exactly as that threat to privacy was being extinguished, another one was rising to take its place. It goes by the name of "Pokémon Go" and it is a so-called "augmented reality" game that allows users to capture, train and battle virtual Pokémon by chasing them around through real world environments with your smart phone.
Full disclosure: Although I live in the land of anime and video games, I have never played any Pokémon games, watched any of the shows, read any of the comics or bought any of the toys associated with the franchise. I don't know anything about it except for the name of that ubiquitous yellow Pikachu character. So if you are an out of touch fuddy duddy like me, you may be surprised to learn that the "Pokémon Go" app, launched just one week ago, is the hottest thing on the planet right now.
To put into perspective just how popular this game is, it topped the App Store's "Top Grossing" category within 24 hours of its release. Now, just one week out, it has been downloaded an estimated 7.5 million times in the US alone and is generating an estimated $1.6 million a day for Nintendo. But here's the truly staggering part: In just the first two trading days after the game's release, Nintendo's market value rose a staggering $7.5 billion. That's right, folks, this is not merely a game, it is a phenomenon.
For those unfamiliar with "augmented reality" gaming, it's a type of game where one tracks virtual characters or objects that appear on their smart phones through real world environments. The Pokémon Go game is prompting scores of people out into the streets to go chasing for wild Pokémon to capture.
It is also prompting heists, violence, hoaxes and hysteria.














Comment: Just what this world doesn't need, a global police from one nation. Especially now with the poor human rights track record the US has.