Americas Dictatorship Phobia Goes Way Way Back…

I watch the media play game of twisting the words of the Geneva agreements on the settlement of the situation in Syria. As always the West is dancing one tune and one tune only, as Russia and China stick to their guns and are adamant about what should be done in Syria. Russia is a no games approach and America, is the same approach that she has done as long as I can remember…

This has come up because I read books to Sveta in English. Lately I have taken to reading the very old Nancy Drew Series to her and she loves them. They are designed for teen girls in America and are very very propaganda to sway teen minds. Sveta and I can see through that kind of stuff and we enjoy the stories about Nancy Drew and her detective escapades. The older books are based on communism and the newer books are based on terrorism…

I wonder if you even realized that for over 80 years, a variety of writers using the pen name Carolyn Keene have been writing one of the biggest propaganda series in history. 80+ years of Nancy Drew saving America from the evil world. I bet you did not know, Nancy Drew was that old? (Tidbit info time – Nancy Drew first appeared in 1930!)

But this latest book that I am reading to Sveta, called “Deadly Doubles” it is Nancy Drew #7 (Nancy Drew Files #7) is about dictators. This book is part of a series that was done in the eighties. It is a little more modern wording and uses the latest words of government propaganda, more familiar to today’s audience, than the original Nancy Drew’s…

It uses terrorists, instead of communist and of course the term dictator is prevalent through out the book as that is what the book is about! An evil, terrible, disgusting and terrorist dictator from a South American country and what is really interesting is that the book explains to the reader that America is the cause of these revolutions happening in South America and such. Explained in such a way that makes it perfectly normal and acceptable that we interfere in a country with a Dictator…

So true to form, America is interfering in a country that has a dictator as she always does and our populace has been conditioned from birth with propaganda material to make our young people consider our interference as a normal part of everyday life and that all good honest countries like America have a patriotic right to destroy dictators everywhere in the world… 🙂

I am lucky that Sveta just likes the story and she is not into politics, for she might think that America intentionally writes books for young girls to read that includes material to sway and shape young girls minds. That is a good thing, huh!

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) in Russia Under Scrutiny…

The majority pro-Kremlin party United Russia intends to submit to the State Duma a bill whereby non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that pursue political activity and receive financing from abroad are assigned the status of a foreign agent.

A co-sponsor of the bill MP Alexander Sidyakin commented that the draft law does not ban NGOs or limit their rights. It is intended to make publicly available information about the function of such NGOs as a foreign agent.

An NGO would be regarded as a political organization, with the exception of parties, if it finances and holds political rallies in order to impact state authorities’ decisions aimed at changing their policy and also shapes public opinion for the above-mentioned purpose. Political NGOs would be obliged to issue reports about their activities on a semiannual basis.

NGOs would be required to specify in materials distributed via mass media and the Internet that information is published by an organization acting as a foreign agent.

An authorized federal body is expected to assess information about foreign agents within the framework of the law against money laundering and financing of terrorism.

There is a network of NGOs financed from abroad in Russia, with the purposes of their paymasters looking suspicious, Siidyakin said.

After people see how many agents of influence operate in Russia they will be more active in shaping civil society, he added.

Representatives of NGOs that could be affected by the draft law said that the Kremlin does not need organizations that do not support the president and the government.

Assistant director of Golos Association told Kommersant business daily that some officials believe that NGOs pose a threat of staging a coup allegedly financed from abroad.

Windows to Russia!

A Russia House on the Indian Ocean – By M K Bhadrakumar…

The building blocks of the historic visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin to Pakistan in September have begun arriving in Islamabad. It is a poignant moment in the region’s history and politics. This will be the first time a Russian president visits Pakistan since its birth in 1947.

The Russians are fabricating some hardy bricks for the mansion they hope to build in the region which forms a beachhead on the Indian Ocean – a mansion large enough for their friends in Pakistan and in the neighboring countries of India, Iran and Afghanistan to consort with them.

But then, the very sight of the Russian bricks infuriates the United States. The point is, this Russia House will stand bang on the way of the New Silk Road that the US has been planning, which also needs to run through Pakistan. If the access is blocked, it becomes problematic for the US to keep together the body and soul of the tens of thousands of its troops who were hoping to settle down in the Hindu Kush and Central Asia as pioneers in the “Wild West” of China’s Xinjiang and on the “soft underbelly” of Russia.

In sum, the battle is joined for influencing Pakistan’s future. The stakeholders are many and a keen struggle lies ahead, since at the core of it lies a host of other issues of profound consequence to world politics – energy security of the two big power-houses of Asia (China and India), the future of the New Middle East, and of course, the US strategy to contain Russia and China.

Moscow deputed a talented and vastly experienced diplomat to visit Pakistan in May to make an estimation of the lay of the land. He was a surveyor of great experience whose reputation is the stuff of legends in the Hindu Kush mountains – Ambassador Zamir Kabulov, Russia’s point person for Afghanistan. By the choice of Kabulov, Moscow also gently stated its broad intentions as regards its architectural design, namely, that it is a mansion with Afghan characteristics.

Following up on Kabulov’s visit, Russian experts began arriving in Pakistan. The proposals they brought are of momentous significance to the long-term security and stability of the region. Moscow has zeroed in on energy cooperation as the fulcrum of its nascent cooperation with Islamabad.

A six-year old idea reappears …

This is a shrewd decision by Moscow since energy security is a key issue in Pakistan’s political economy today, no less important than terrorism. Much of Pakistan gets only a few hours’ electricity in a day and the people’s rancor is visible. Moscow has assessed that energy security is integral to Pakistan’s capacity to maintain “strategic autonomy” as a South Asian power of standing and, therefore, by assisting that country in this sphere, Russian geopolitical interests in a vast swathe of the Greater Middle East stretching from the Persian Gulf to China’s Autonomous Region of Xinjiang would also be served.

Besides, in immediate terms, mutual understanding with Pakistan is becoming an imperative need for Russia in the post-2014 scenario in Afghanistan, where the Western powers would have withdrawn the bulk of their troops but are nonetheless establishing an open-ended, sizeable military presence of tens of thousands of combat troops.

Russia and Pakistan are joined in their opposition to the long-term occupation of Afghanistan by the West; Russia hopes to influence Pakistani policies with regard to Afghanistan’s future and, in turn, cooperation with Pakistan enhances the overall Russian resilience to play an effective role in the stabilization of Afghanistan and in providing security to Central Asia; and, equally, a strong relationship with Pakistan – in the field of energy security, in particular – can provide yet another underpinning for Russia’s strategic ties with other key regional powers, especially China, India, Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Last but not the least, Pakistan is a valuable interlocutor for Russia with regard to the activities and movements of the militants operating in North Caucasus.

Having said that, Russia weighs its options carefully and is averse to embarking on Soviet-era adventures that might be a drain on its resources. The priority of the Russian leadership lies in regenerating and innovating the economy and building the national strength, and in the case of Pakistan, Moscow estimates there could be an interesting partnership of much economic value to Russia and of mutual benefit.

All in all, Moscow’s strategy is to develop new sinews of cooperation with Pakistan that are sustainable, durable, and which dovetail with Russia’s vibrant strategic partnerships with China, India and Iran.

Put differently, the Russian approach becomes a necessary regional-policy “adjustment” or even a pre-requisite to the impending admission of Pakistan and India into the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) as full members. Putin is an action-oriented statesman and the unhappy part is that six long years have passed since he first proposed at the SCO summit in Shanghai in June 2006 the setting up of an energy club within the regional grouping comprising the energy producing countries of Russia, Iran and the Central Asian countries and the three big energy consuming countries of China, India and Pakistan.

It was at the very same Shanghai summit of the SCO that Putin came out openly for the first time to say that Russia’s energy leviathan Gazprom was willing to take part in the construction of the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline. Putin said in his address, “Gazprom is ready to take part and provide technological and, if necessary, financial assistance, and we are willing to provide an unlimited amount of it, especially for a project that is certain to take off.”

Putin’s idea is that the oil and gas exporters within the SCO have been competing for promising markets (such as China or India), and to coordinate the moves SCO needs an energy club, which will act as a coordination center uniting both energy producers and the three key consumers.

One major Central Asian player who has stayed out of the SCO so far has been Turkmenistan, and it is a bit awkward to speak of an energy club in the region that doesn’t include such a large-scale gas producer. Russia also has some gas disputes with Turkmenistan – with which, however China has a warm relationship built around energy cooperation.

A little-noticed development of great significance was that Chinese President Hu Jintao invited the Turkmen president to visit Beijing at the time of the SCO summit last month – and the latter accepted. Suffice to say, China is keen to harmonize its regional policies with Russia and would even lend a hand to Moscow’s efforts to coordinate the impulses of energy security amongst and within the SCO member countries and observer countries.

A stunning thing is that the proposals brought by the Russian experts in the past week to Islamabad essentially pick up the threads of Putin’s 2006 proposal. According to the details available so far, Moscow has made the following proposals to Islamabad: Russia can offer financial and technical assistance for Pakistan’s multi-billion dollar gas and power import projects that are in the pipeline. Specifically, Russia is interested in participating in the two big gas pipeline projects on the anvil, namely, the TAPI (Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India) and the IP [Iran-Pakistan].
Russia prefers that the cooperation is negotiated at the governmental level through direct negotiations rather than through bidding. Russia is also keen on participation in the Central Asia and South Asia (CASA) project, which was originally floated in 2006, to bring to Pakistan via transmission lines across eastern Afghanistan 1,000-1,300 megawatts of surplus energy during the summer months from Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. (The project has the backing of the World Bank and the Islamic Development Bank.) Russia will be willing to cooperate in the exploration of oil, gas and minerals in Pakistan.

Unsurprisingly, Islamabad has eagerly responded to the Russian proposals. The following understanding seems to have been reached at the talks, which concluded in Islamabad on Wednesday:
Pakistan welcomes the Russian proposals; Specifically, Pakistan is agreeable to negotiate the contracts with the state-owned Russian energy companies on a government-to-government basis and will be willing to amend its public procurement rules accordingly; Steps will be taken to conclude a memorandum of understanding to move ahead with the identified projects during Putin’s visit; As regards the IP, Pakistan has already floated the tenders for awarding contracts for the pipeline procurement and construction work for the US$1.5 billion project. Russia’s Gazprom may also participate. Pakistan proposes to give weight to bids that have a financial package attached. (China and Iran have also shown interest in the project.)
Meanwhile, Pakistan will hand over to Russia by mid-July a draft agreement for financial and technical assistance from the latter for the IP project. Russia has agreed to finance the rehabilitation of the Guddu and Muzaffargarh power plants.

… which infuriates the overlord

These developments constitute a daunting challenge to the US’ regional strategies in Asia and the Middle East. The ramifications are quite far-reaching. First and foremost, Pakistan’s “defection” from the Western camp all but amounts to a crippling blow to the US’ New Silk Road Initiative aimed at rolling back the Russian and Chinese influence in Central Asia. Along with that, the US’ dreams of getting access to the vast mineral resources of Central Asia and Afghanistan would also suffer setback.

On a practical plane, Pakistan’s geography has been the lynchpin of the US regional strategies in Afghanistan and Central Asia, and without Pakistan’s cooperation no viable (non-Russian, non-Iranian) communication link with those regions is sustainable, which in turn, jeopardizes the plans for the establishment of a permanent US and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) military presence in the region in the “Eurasian heartland”.

Indeed, energy security is the Achilles heel of Pakistan’s political economy, and it debilitates Pakistan’s capacity to develop a strategic autonomy that safeguards its vital interests and core concerns and, conversely, the current level of acute energy deficiency makes Pakistan very vulnerable to US pressures. Therefore, the helping hand from Russia, even if it is self-seeking, would have serious geopolitical implications for the US regional strategies insofar as it results in augmenting Pakistan’s independence and resilience and creating space for it to navigate its way through a particularly difficult and dangerous corridor of time when it is beset with existential problems.

Again, a coming together of the energy producing and energy consuming countries of Asia is the ultimate nightmare scenario for the US, which fears exclusion from the ensuing matrix of regional cooperation involving countries that happen to be spearheading the fastest-growing region in the world economy. The entire US strategy in the post-Soviet era had aimed at forestalling such a catastrophic eventuality that might put paid to the US efforts to get embedded in the “Eurasian heartland”, which includes or overlooks some of the major regional powers in the coming decades – Russia, China, Kazakhstan, India, Pakistan and Iran. (Turkey’s admission as a “dialogue partner” of the SCO – at China’s behest – at the Beijing summit last month further unnerves the US.)

To be sure, a host of other issues also arise. The Russian moves in Pakistan effectively outflank the US’ policies to isolate Iran. If hostilities erupt between the US and Iran, Washington faces almost near-total isolation in the region between the Persian Gulf and Malacca Strait. On the other hand, the IP project (which seems a priority for Russia and China alike) would have a devastating impact on the US’ Iran policy, as it would manifoldly enhance Iran’s strategic prowess. The US will factor in that it is a matter of time before China gets connected to the IP gas pipeline. These communication links effectively help China also to reduce its dependence on the Malacca Strait.

Worst of all, Washington is unsure of India’s approach to the emergent geopolitical shift that Russia is triggering. India and Russia have traditionally enjoyed mutual trust and confidence. India and Iran also enjoy fundamentally strong ties, which have even withstood the US pressure. India is independently working on the normalization of its ties with China, and the two countries have made appreciable headway in this direction. (Curiously, the Indian and Chinese state-sector energy companies recently concluded a memorandum of understanding agreeing not to outbid each other in third countries and to cooperate across-the-board including in the two countries’ domestic sector.)

Most important, energy security is becoming a gnawing worry for the Indian leadership as the economy expands rapidly and the need for assured access to reasonably priced energy sources is becoming an all-consuming passion in the country’s external policies. (India’s External Affairs Minister S M Krishna is heading for Tajikistan, which is the energy source of the CASA project, on Tuesday.)

The US’ diplomatic and politico-military options to counter the Russian moves in Pakistan would lie principally in the direction of influencing the policies of Pakistan and India. The US is pursuing a mixed approach toward Pakistan, alternating soft signals with a flexing of muscle that is vaguely assuming threatening overtones already. At one point recently, it all but seemed that the US would render an apology of sorts for the massacre of Pakistani troops in a US military strike last November on the Afghan-Pakistan border following which the reopening of the Pakistani transit routes for the NATO convoys could be expected within the month of June.

However, following the Russian-Pakistani confabulations, the US line has hardened. Another attack has taken place on Monday on Pakistani troops (18 of whom were brutally beheaded) by militant groups of obscure background operating from “safe havens” inside Afghanistan. It doesn’t need much ingenuity to work out that the US forces in Afghanistan prefer to look away from what these militants are doing right beneath their nose. (Curiously, these militant “safe havens” also happen to be in the region through which the CASA transmission lines from Tajikistan will have to pass.)

At any rate, on Wednesday, the US’ commander in Afghanistan, John Allen, came down to the Pakistani army headquarters in Rawalpindi to propose to the Pakistani army chief Parvez Kayani that the two sides could undertake “joint operations” against the militants operating along the Afghan-Pakistan border.

This is indeed going to be a cat-and-mouse game. The signs are ominous. The relentless drone attacks through the recent months have destabilized Pakistan’s tribal areas adjacent to the border with Afghanistan. The drones are causing a lot of civilian casualties, so much so that the United Nations officials begin to wonder if these wanton killings would constitute “war crimes”.

The drone attacks infuriate the people who live in the tribal areas and in turn are fueling anti-government sentiments, while Islamabad looks helpless in stopping the US from violating the country’s territorial integrity. Quite obviously, Pakistan is hunkering down, and the US won’t allow that to continue. The indications are that the US will step up pressure on Pakistan and escalate the tensions in a calibrated way.

A paradigm shift:

The heart of the matter is that Pakistan’s “strategic defiance” has taken the US by surprise. The US always counted on the perceived comprador mentality of the Pakistani elites and has been somewhat thrown off balance in discovering that those very same elites (the military leadership, in particular) are no longer what they were supposed to be.

Of course, this is a flawed perspective and at the root of it lies Washington’s unwillingness to countenance an honest appraisal as to why this paradigm shift has occurred at all. The US doesn’t have to look far to realize the complexities. The latest survey by the Pew Global Attitudes Project, released on Wednesday, shows that 74% of Pakistanis “hate” the US and hold President Barack Obama in exceptionally low esteem. Interestingly, the most popular Pakistani politician today is Imran Khan (70%), whose main plank is that Pakistan should pull out of the war in Afghanistan and demand that the US troops should pack up their gear and leave the region for good with their war machinery.

The US faces a more complicated challenge with regard to India. Washington has audaciously complimented New Delhi recently by naming India as the “lynchpin” in its Asia-Pacific strategies. But to the discomfiture of the US, India’s response has so far been one of deafening silence, while demonstratively distancing itself from any perceived “ganging-up” against China. On the other hand, a crucial mass is steadily accruing in the Sino-Indian normalization. Equally, India has been carefully sequestering its dialogue process with Pakistan from the chill and vagaries of the US-Pakistan standoff. Even with regard to Iran, India has drawn a bottom line and made it clear that it won’t be pushed around – and the current signs are that Washington has finally got the point.

Having said that, the US will endeavor to butt into the India-Pakistan dialogue and try to turn its focus away from a broad-based approach in a constructive spirit to the highly emotive issues of Pakistan’s support of terrorism and the fidayeen attacks on Mumbai in November 2008, which deeply scarred the Indian psyche and still arouse Indian suspicions regarding Pakistani intentions.

With regard to energy security, the US has encouraged Saudi Arabia to offer a big hand to India, with the hope of encouraging it to reduce its dependence on Iranian oil and in overall terms to wean India away from the IP gas pipeline project. Ideally, Washington would seek a cozy three-way embrace between the US, India and Saudi Arabia, which would keep the Indians away from the alluring thoughts of an SCO energy club.

But the US is unsure, as the Indians also have their preferences and a passion for keeping their thoughts to themselves while making independent choices about how to go about realizing their national objectives in a complicated regional scenario.

Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar was a career diplomat in the Indian Foreign Service. His assignments included the Soviet Union, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Germany, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Kuwait and Turkey.

Windows to Russia!

Moscow – Just Grew a Bunch…

I have an article in the past about how Moscow was going to grow in size. Well it has happened and this looks like just the beginning of her growth phase…

Reclaiming and developing new territories will take dozens of years. Fresh projects listed include building two highways, extending the Moscow metro and constructing over 1,000 houses, as well as new headquarters for the Russian Parliament among other brand-new state buildings…

Looks like according to the news one day, all of the region called Moscow Area will be simply Moscow. Now that is going to be a huge city as far as land mass is concerned…

Windows to Russia

PS:

Moscow acquired on Sunday 150,000 hectares of neighboring territories from its southwest borders, following the city’s expansion plan brokered by then-President Dmitry Medvedev in 2011.

According to the plan of the Russian capital’s new structure, Moscow’s land area doubled on July 1 after being enlarged by 150,000 hectares. The so-called “Big Moscow” includes the territory of the two cities in Moscow region, Shcherbinka and Troitsk as well as 19 smaller residential areas.

Kyle keeton

Russia Ombudsman ‘Shocked’ by U.S. Kids Ranch…

Russia’s children rights ombudsman has condemned a U.S. ranch, where troubled adoptees are held.

Pavel Astakhov has been visiting the Ranch for Kids, in the U.S. State of Montana, which is a respite care home that helps children, most of them from Russia, who have suffered disrupted adoptions.

“The very form of the children’s being there is shocking. What is it, a pre-trial detention facility? A penal colony? Or a trash can for unwanted children?” Pavel Astakhov said, in comments carried by his official website.

All the children were removed from the facility just before Astakhov’a arrival.

“These children are completely isolated from the outside world, which is grounds for violating their rights. It has not been made clear to us whether the children receive the necessary help and treatment, which is why the condition of the Russian kids at the ranch causes concerns,” Astakhov said.

Adoptions have become a thorny issue in U.S.-Russia relations following a series of scandals, including the uproar surrounding a 7-year-old boy who was sent back to Russia unaccompanied in 2010 by an adoptive U.S. mother.

It is difficult to follow any particular kid as the ranch has not kept its records properly, Astakhov’s press service said in a statement. Ranch head Joyce Sterkel declined to disclose information on the children.

The statement also cited a local state prosecutor as saying that children at the ranch were being “subjected to abuse,” and that a 9-year-old Russian girl had recently attempted to escape.

Source:

Windows to Russia…

I am enclosing a copy of the Executive Order I have issued. Sincerely, BARACK OBAMA

Letter–Russian Highly Enriched Uranium

TEXT OF A LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT TO THE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND THE PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE

June 25, 2012

Dear Mr. Speaker: (Dear Mr. President:)

Pursuant to section 204(b) of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), 50 U.S.C. 1703(b), I hereby report that I have exercised my authority to declare a national emergency to deal with the threat posed to the United States by the risk of nuclear proliferation created by the accumulation in the Russian Federation of a large volume of weapons-usable fissile material.

In Executive Order 13159 of June 21, 2000, the President found that this same risk constituted an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States and declared a national emergency to deal with that threat.  The United States and the Russian Federation had entered into a series of agreements that provide for the conversion of highly enriched uranium (HEU) extracted from Russian nuclear weapons into low enriched uranium (LEU) for use in commercial nuclear reactors.  There were concerns that payments due to the Russian Federation under these agreements may be subject to attachment, garnishment, or other judicial process, in the United States, which could put implementation of such agreements at risk.  In Executive Order 13159, the President therefore ordered blocked all property and interests in property of the Government of the Russian Federation directly related to the implementation of the HEU Agreements so that it would be protected from the threat of attachment, garnishment, or other judicial process.

In the Executive Order I have issued today, I find that the risk of nuclear proliferation created by the accumulation in the Russian Federation of a large volume of weapons-usable fissile material continues to constitute an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.  I therefore declared a national emergency to address this threat and to continue the blocking of all property and interests in property of the Government of the Russian Federation directly related to the implementation of the HEU Agreements.

A major national security goal of the United States is to ensure that fissile material removed from Russian nuclear weapons pursuant to various arms control and disarmament agreements is dedicated to peaceful uses, subject to transparency measures, and protected from diversion to activities of proliferation concern.  The United States and the Russian Federation entered into an international agreement in February 1993 to deal with these issues as they relate to the disposition of HEU extracted from Russian nuclear weapons (the “HEU Agreement”).  The HEU Agreement provides for 500 metric tons of HEU to be converted to LEU over a 20-year period.  This is the equivalent of 20,000 nuclear warheads.

Additional agreements were put in place to effectuate the HEU Agreement, including agreements and contracts on transparency, on the appointment of executive agents to assist in implementing the agreements, and on the disposition of LEU delivered to the United States (collectively, the “HEU Agreements”).  Under the HEU Agreements, the Russian Federation extracts HEU metal from nuclear weapons.  That HEU is oxidized and blended down to LEU in the Russian Federation.  The resulting LEU is shipped to the United States for fabrication into fuel for commercial reactors.

The HEU Agreements provide for the Russian Federation to receive money and uranium hexafluoride in payment for each shipment of LEU converted from the Russian nuclear weapons.  The money and uranium hexafluoride are transferred to the Russian Federation executive agent in the United States.

The executive branch and the Congress have previously recognized and continue to recognize the threat posed to the United States national security from the risk of nuclear proliferation created by the accumulation of weapons-usable fissile material in the Russian Federation.  This threat is the basis for significant programs aimed at Cooperative Threat Reduction and at controlling excess fissile material.  The HEU Agreements are essential tools to accomplish these overall national security goals.  The Congress has repeatedly demonstrated support for these agreements.

Payments made to the Russian Federation pursuant to the HEU Agreements are integral to the operation of this key national security program.  Uncertainty surrounding litigation and the possible attachment, garnishment, or other judicial process that could impede these payments could lead to a long term suspension of the HEU Agreements, which creates the risk of nuclear proliferation.  This is an unacceptable threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.

Accordingly, I have concluded that all property and interests in property of the Government of the Russian Federation directly related to the implementation of the HEU Agreements should remain protected from the threat of attachment, garnishment, or other judicial process.  I have, therefore, exercised my authority and issued an Executive Order that provides:

except to the extent provided in regulations, orders, directives, or licenses that may be issued pursuant to the order, or that were issued pursuant to Executive Order 13159 of June 21, 2000, all property and interests in property of the Government of the Russian Federation directly related to the implementation of the HEU Agreements that are in the United States, that hereafter come within the United States, or hereafter come within the possession or control of any United States persons, including any foreign branch, are blocked and may not be transferred, paid, exported, withdrawn, or otherwise dealt in;

unless licensed or authorized pursuant to the order, any attachment, judgment, decree, lien, execution, garnishment, or other judicial process is null and void with respect to any property or interest in property blocked pursuant to the order; and

that all heads of departments and agencies of the United States Government shall continue to take all appropriate measures within their authority to further the full implementation of the HEU Agreements.

The effect of this Executive Order is limited to property that is directly related to the implementation of the HEU Agreements. Such property will be clearly defined by the regulations, orders, directives, or licenses that will be issued pursuant to this Executive Order.  I have delegated to the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State, the authority to take such actions, including the promulgation of rules and regulations, and to employ all powers granted to the President by IEEPA as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of the order.  All agencies of the United States Government are directed to take all appropriate measures within their authority to carry out the provisions of the order.

I am enclosing a copy of the Executive Order I have issued.

Sincerely,

BARACK OBAMA

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/06/25/letter-russian-highly-enriched-uranium

American Media Lies: a Fact…

I saw this years ago and then I saw it again the other day. I decided to see if this was true. I decided are they that manipulative in America. Since I started to look I have found hundreds of cases of this type of manipulation. But hey! lets worry about this particular case and let you decide if you care enough to start looking around as I did and see if what you read is being swayed by dollars and immoral issues…

I commented the other day that people in America don’t like bad news and don’t like to deal with reality. But hey if you can’t even see the fly that landed on the end of your nose, much less the cover-up in the media that is happening, right around the corner. Then there really is not much help for you anyway…

I found the original covers on Newsweek. It was not easy because Newsweek does not like their covers in this instance to be very accessible. At least not the originals. Hence I had to dig through two types of archives to get to the same cover on the same day, same month and same year, except that one was an International issue and the other just a American only issue. So that image to the left is real and here are the originals…

October 2, 2006 that is the date on each magazine. It is an intentional modification of a magazine issue that was not allowed or could not be printed in America, because it went against what people want to see or be told as they live their false lives…

I say Newsweek in America looks more like People Magazine than a news magazine…

I have found many more of this type of manipulation and it is explained that the American people do not want to see the reality and will respond with their pocket books as the issue of the magazine will not make money. It all has to do with money…

So I am being told that the American people want to see Tiger Woods get divorced, Demi Moore naked pregnant and Americans want to be lied to about the war! (Any War!) That is news American style. While that rest of the world gets an issue that tells the truth about Afghanistan in 2006, that we in America are just now starting to understand in 2012…

I guess I am right, Americans are happy as we kill millions of people all over the world! Just please lie to us and please do not stop showing “Dancing With the Stars,” for it would mess up our perception on the perfect life that we live… 🙁

You need to think! That issue was world wide. Europe, Latin America and Asia saw one cover and then in America the cover was changed to the other. Why? Was it because the magazine would not sell or was it because the government pressured Newsweek to change the cover. It seems to have sold well in the rest of the world. Are Americans that removed from the world issues that they can not handle the truth? Are Americans that weak and scared that they can not handle the truth? Are are Americans that coddled and babied that they can not see what is happening? What about this situation, like the changing of covers to protect the interests of the powers at large? Do you feel like there is an issue here? Do you think that you should open your eyes and look around?

I think it is a combination of several things, I think that Americans are a classic example of head in the sand as an Ostrich and our government loves to promote and accommodate that example and uses our psychosis issues to its benefit…

Have a nice day and pull that head out and look around once in awhile…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Syria and Turkey F-4 Crisis in Perspective by Daniel McAdams…

As we sadly see, the Syrian shoot-down of a Turkish surveillance aircraft in Syrian airspace threatens to finally provide the casus belli for a NATO assault on Syria despite the fact that a UN Security Council resolution will not be forthcoming. Turkey, which by providing safe harbor and facilitating the transfer of weapons to those who are at war with the Syrian government has technically de facto declared a state of war against Syria, has nevertheless acted as the proverbial kid caught with his hand in the cookie jar: “it’s not my fault, mommy, and by the way you were not supposed to be in the kitchen anyway!” Or: “Yes we were on a spying mission in Syrian airspace, testing your air defenses in advance of a possible attack on your country, but still it was totally outrageous of you to respond in such an un-neighborly fashion.”

Read More at the Source:

Putin Knelt & Prayed in Jerusalem 2012…

What a wonderful video about Putin’s trip to Israel…

This is how it is in the Orthodox churches in Russia, Ukraine and Georgia that Sveta and I have visited. Very wonderful places and very very embedded with the presence of God…

America needs a Putin…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Truth is a Casualty: As the War Drums Beat in Rhythm – Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re!

Wow! A Turkish jet flies intentionally into Syrian airspace, sent by NATO and was trying to test what Syria would do in this situation and when Syria responds as any country would respond and shoots down the jet that refused to answer to warnings and calls. Just like it would have happened if a Syrian jet had done the same to Turkey…

Now all we hear is about how the West and NATO supports Turkey and the war drums have started to beat double time as a result of Turkey violating Syrian airspace…

Yes, it would be normal to assume that Turkey was in trouble for the act of war against Syria! Yes, Turkey should be reprimanded over what they tried to do and got what they deserved, a shot down war plane…

But hey this is fantasy land and the West calls the shots…

Syria is threatened with war and Turkey is made out to be the good guy!

Kinda strange when if Turkey had shot down a Syrian jet, we (the West) would all be singing the praises about how good and swift Turkey was to protect its homeland. So now we (NATO) try to start a war and we praise the scum that tried to start it…

Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re! (sung eight times)
Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re!
Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re!
Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re!
Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re!
Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re!
Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re!
Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re!

Keep singing it people! It is better to sing and smack that drum, than to look at the truth as it really is. Louder people and you will not have to hear the truth. Common louder people and then you can learn to dance like the “Dance Hall Ladies” in the above picture…

Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-re! (sung eight times)

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…