The Vatican Bank, or more formally the Istituto per le Opere di Religione (IOR), has refused to confirm or deny that it has acted and continues to act as a conduit for funds managed and controlled by billionaire Gorge Soros.
The queries were put to the IOR's president Jean-Baptiste de Fanssu,who declared last year that as a result of changes he had introduced it was now "impossible to launder money" via the IOR.
by Ganesh Sahathevan The following comments in reports about the USS Carl Vinson's South China Sea freedom of navigation tour have not been given the attention they deserve.From the US:
Prior to their operations in the South China Sea, ships and aircraft from within the strike group conducted training off the islands of Hawaii and Guam to maintain and improve their readiness and develop cohesion as a strike group. The strike group recently enjoyed a port visit to Guam and after departing the Marianas, conducted operations in the Philippine Sea.
"The training completed over the past few weeks has really brought the team together and improved our effectiveness and readiness as a strike group," said Rear Adm. James Kilby, commander, CSG 1. "We are looking forward to demonstrating those capabilities while building upon existing strong relationships with our allies, partners and friends in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region."
Defence ministry spokesman Ren Guoqiang said China had a "grasp" of the situation regarding the carrier group in the South China Sea.
"China hopes the U.S. earnestly respects the sovereignty and security concerns of countries in the region, and earnestly respects the efforts of countries in the region to maintain peace and stability in the South China Sea," Ren told a regular monthly news briefing.
"Of course, we also respect freedom of navigation and overflight for all countries in the South China Sea in accordance with international law," he added.
The situation in the South China Sea was generally stable, Ren said.
"We hope the actions of the U.S. side can contribute positive energy towards this good situation, and not the opposite." Prior to the above,there was some chest thumping, which seems to have given way to the above: “China always respects the freedom of navigation and overflight all countries enjoy under international law,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a daily news briefing.
“But we are consistently opposed to relevant countries threatening and damaging the sovereignty and security of littoral countries under the flag of freedom of navigation and overflight,” Geng said in China’s first official comment on the latest U.S. patrol since it began.
“We hope relevant countries can do more to safeguard regional peace and stability,” he said. The Chinese more than anyone else would have been acutely aware that this was a show of force,and their response suggests that more, not less, needs to be done by the US and all other countries in this region to demonstrate clearly that Chinese aggression of any form in the South China Sea will meet with retaliation. END
U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communications Specialist 3rd Class Kurtis A. Hatcher
PHILLIPINE SEA - The aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70) transits the Philippine Sea.
The Carl Vinson Strike Group is on a regularly scheduled western Pacific deployment as part of the U.S. Pacific Feet-led initiative to extend the command and control functions of U.S. 3rd Fleet.
SOUTH CHINA SEA (NNS) -- Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 1, including Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70), Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 1's Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Wayne E. Meyer (DDG 108), and aircraft from Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 2, began routine operations in the South China Sea, Feb. 18.
Prior to their operations in the South China Sea, ships and aircraft from within the strike group conducted training off the islands of Hawaii and Guam to maintain and improve their readiness and develop cohesion as a strike group. The strike group recently enjoyed a port visit to Guam and after departing the Marianas, conducted operations in the Philippine Sea.
"The training completed over the past few weeks has really brought the team together and improved our effectiveness and readiness as a strike group," said Rear Adm. James Kilby, commander, CSG 1. "We are looking forward to demonstrating those capabilities while building upon existing strong relationships with our allies, partners and friends in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region."
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Vinson last deployed to the Western-Pacific in 2015 and conducted a bilateral exercise with the Royal Malaysian Navy and Royal Malaysian Air Force in the South China Sea. Vinson first operated in the South China Sea in 1983 and in total, has operated there during 16 previous deployments over its 35 year history.
While deployed, the Carl Vinson CSG will remain under U.S. 3rd Fleet command and control, including beyond the international dateline, which previously divided operational areas of responsibility for 3rd and 7th Fleets. Third Fleet operating forward offers additional options to the Pacific Fleet commander by leveraging the capabilities of 3rd and 7th Fleets. This operational concept allows both numbered fleets to complement one another and provide the foundation of stability in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
CVW-2 includes the "Black Knights" of Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron (HSC) 4, the "Blue Hawks" of Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 78, the "Bounty Hunters" of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 2, the "Blue Blasters" of VFA-34, the "Kestrels" of VFA-137, the "Golden Dragons" of VFA-192, the "Black Eagles" of Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron (VAW) 113, the "Gauntlets" of Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 136 and the "Providers" of Fleet Logistic Support Squadron (VRC) 30.
n
court papers quietly filed this past week, various entities connected
to Red Granite Pictures co-founder Riza Aziz are attacking the U.S.
government's attempt to seize real estate properties in the huge $1
billion action targeting alleged corruption of Malaysian public funds.
The Justice Department has touted the 1MDB case as its biggest kleptocracy case to date,
but Aziz's lawyer, Matthew Schwartz, a former assistant U.S. attorney
who once prosecuted Bernie Madoff, slams the U.S. government for failing
to include "essential detail" about the supposed crimes. He's demanding
a dismissal.
"[T]he
Government's entire theory of the case presupposes that the Malaysia
Attorney General's findings are factually and legally invalid," states
the court papers. "There is therefore no way for this litigation to
proceed without a ruling from this Court on whether the Malaysian
Attorney General's sovereign functions were illegitimate.".
by Ganesh Sahathevan The following from Wikileaks concerns Cody Shearer,and his breaching the Logan Act for unauthorized contact with Bosnia.It should be read in conjunction with these previous publications by this writer on this and related blogs.
Clinton insider faced IG probe for informal diplomacy
<http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/clinton-insider-blumenthal-faced-ig-probe-for-informal-diplomacy/article/2568516>
// Washington Examiner // Sarah Westwood – July 19, 2015*
A longtime Clinton ally who was once under investigation for a possible
violation of the Logan Act may have helped Sidney Blumenthal prepare
intelligence memos for Hillary Clinton while she served as secretary of
state.
Cody Shearer was the subject of a State Department inspector general probe
in 1998 after he allegedly conducted rogue negotiations that "caused
temporary diplomatic damage in Bosnia," according to documents obtained by
Citizens United through the Freedom of Information Act.
The inspector general found that Shearer, whose ties to the Clintons
stretch back to the 1992 election, "may have represented himself as
speaking on behalf of the U.S. Department of State" in private
conversations about the proposed partitioning of Bosnia — a policy the U.S. publicly opposed.
More than a decade later, Shearer is entangled in another instance of
back-channel information peddling at the State Department.
Shearer assisted Blumenthal and Tyler Drumheller, a former CIA operative,
in preparing a series of informal intelligence memos for Clinton as she
waded deeper into the Libyan conflict, according to Pro Publica.
The edited tranche of emails published by the State Department in May and
June suggest she relied almost exclusively on their guidance to inform her
decision-making in the country.
Shearer's sister Brooke first grew close to Clinton during the 1992
presidential election, when she traveled with the former first lady on the
campaign trail.
Shearer's brother-in-law, Strobe Talbott, has been close to the Clintons
for decades.
After rising through the ranks of the State Department to become deputy
secretary of state, Talbott accepted a position as head of the Brookings
Institution.
But it appears he, too, maintained influence at the agency through his
connection to Clinton.
When she went looking for a new assistant in June 2009, Clinton turned to
Talbott for suggestions on who to hire.
Clinton's emails suggest she and Talbott were in frequent contact and even
had "catch-up calls" to provide each other with diplomatic updates.
Talbott's name surfaced in the inspector general documents as having
written a letter to his brother-in-law that warned Shearer to "be careful
in his actions" in Bosnia during Bill Clinton's presidency.
The records suggest the FBI participated in the probe of Shearer's
independent diplomacy. https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/1517
From:mwhelan@nsnetwork.org
To: bigcampaign@googlegroups.com
Date: 2008-07-03 18:18
Subject: [big campaign] Did McCain violate US law on the Colombia trip?
http://www.democracyarsenal.org/2008/07/mccains-undiplo.html
McCain's UNdiplomatic missions
Posted by Moira Whelan
McCain's gaffe confusing Shia and Sunni in Iraq<http://thinkprogress.org/2008/03/18/mccain-iran-al-qaeda/> is perhaps his most notable foreign travel experience of the campaign thus far. This week, McCain attempted to trump that by sliding into the news coverage of US hostages being released in Colombia just after he'd left. Trouble is that for John McCain, this trip, the release of hostages and what John McCain knew, could cause him more trouble than his infamous trip to Iraq. Couple that with questions about how he conducted himself on his trip to Canada, and it looks like the guy who wants to be diplomat-in-chief may be rather...undiplomatic.
Just as John McCain was wheels up from Cartagena earlier this week, three US hostages were freed by the FARC after years in captivity. Good news, most certainly. However, at issue now is what John McCain knew, when he knew it, and whether or not he should have known it at all.
John McCain took the trip south-billed as official Congressional travel--with his two colleagues Joe Lieberman and Lindsey Graham. It's been reported <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/02/AR2008070203272.html> that prior to the trip, John McCain spoke to Colombian President Alvaro Uribe at around 4pm and Uribe gave him some highlights of the operation to spring the hostages. When the Senators had dinner with Uribe that night, they were briefed on the operation but none revealed it because they said it was "classified."
When McCain was asked about the operation once the hostages were freed, he revealed the fact that he'd been briefed, and praised the operation.
Here's the problem, there's a law known as the Logan Act<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logan_Act> that reads:
"Any citizen of the United States, wherever he may be, who, without authority of the United States, directly or indirectly commences or carries on any correspondence or intercourse with any foreign government or any officer or agent thereof, in relation to any disputes or controversies with the United States, or to defeat the measures of the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both."
The conversation with Uribe definitely qualifies as "correspondence or intercourse" and we have a "controversy" with the Colombian government because the United States has been on their back for years to get these hostages freed. To be sure, the trip itself was cleared by the US government, but that's different from State expressly allowing McCain to have a direct "classified" conversation with President Uribe about an ongoing controversy. If McCain was going to have private conversations with a foreign leader, the conversation itself would have to be cleared.
John McCain's conversation with Uribe raises some serious questions that make more investigation necessary. Namely:
* Was John McCain's conversation with Uribe classified?
* Did McCain have prior approval for this conversation?
* Did McCain's staff (or that of Liebermann's or Graham's) clear the content of the conversation with Uribe through the State Department?
* Once McCain knew this information, did he-in good faith-make that information known to the State Department?
When asked about it, McCain's aide reportedly said:
"I don't think that there is an established protocol" for such briefings, said a McCain aide, speaking on the condition of anonymity. " 'Protocol' is not a word I would associate with this."
Perhaps there isn't protocol, but there are laws. And for someone who wants to have the top job of enforcing them, voters deserve to know the due diligence he did on this trip to ensure that he upheld the same laws that govern our diplomats.
Questions are also circulating about McCain's recent trip to Canada . It too was billed as not being political but rather Senatorial. Therefore, he needs to act like a senator, and not as a presidential candidate. This is because according to the Hatch Act,<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatch_Act_of_1939> US government resources and personnel cannot be used in support of political purposes. As the principal on the trip, McCain would have to adhere to these rules, and save the conversation about his campaign for his own plane, at his own events, and not those done on the taxpayer dime. However, in his remarks while in Canada, McCain repeatedly referred to his presidential campaign including in the trip's headline speech. <http://www.johnmccain.com/informing/news/Speeches/6925c6d4-93fe-4ff4-bfb0-bd1e1aed3c3b.htm>
Diplomatic work by senators-be they running for President or not-is important. That said, it's also important that Senators set aside their own political interests while doing these trips, and pursue the facts tax payers have paid for them to go find. At very least, John McCain needs to be transparent about the steps taken by his staff to ensure that he's following both the spirit and the letter of the law when it comes to these trips.
UPDATE: At writing, the general welcoming the hostages back to the United States and briefing on their care in a live press conference reveals that he found out yesterday from officials in Colombia about this operation. So...did John McCain know before the US government?
H/T to a friend of Democracy Arsenal on this one.
July 03, 2008 at 01:17 PM | Permalink<http://www.democracyarsenal.org/2008/07/mccains-undiplo.html>
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It now appears that as a result of Najib's Pedra Branca/Middle Rocks gambit which gives China effective control of the waters off south-east Johor, China may well gain control of Petronas Block 310. Being an "open" block, it does not have to be put out for auction,and while theoretically anyone can propose an exploration programme for the block, anyone who has had to deal with Petronas knows that "anyone" means a party favoured by the UMNO/BN government.
These are shallow water blocks and given that the market for oil services is still somewhat depressed it would be well within the means of the Johor Government to explore and possibly exploit the area on its own.There is no need for Chinese investment, at least at the early exploration stage.
Douglas Paal, the author of the Brookings publication below in support of Malaysian PM Najib Razak, prior to the 2013 election,is a well known US government intermediary in East and South East Asia, given his often overt support for politicians favoured by the State Department. Paal and the other author of this article, Jeffrey Bader, are both former senior State Department officials. Paal at least has always claimed to be acting independently , and this writer would be surprised if the State Department or any other US agency were to now claim that he was acting with authorization. as defined for the purposes of the Logan Act. While the article appears to be directed at the Malaysian voter, its publication on a website most Malaysians would be unaware of suggests that it was meant for local US consumption. Nevertheless, it does make explicit support for Najib Razak, even as he was stealing from his own 1MDB sovereign wealth fund, and investing that money in the US. This article does appear to be the work of a private person or persons acting without authorization to "influence local and foreign government policy in relation to any disputes or controversies with the United States, or to defeat the measures of the United States".The Brookings Institution, Paal and Bader must wear the blame, if the Logan Act is to be applied consistently. That the Brookings Institution has close ties to the Clintons raises questions about their involvement in any attempt to help Najib win the Malaysian election and/or conceal his theft.
END
An American Perspective on Malaysia’s Elections: Preserving Najib Razak’s Gains
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has called national elections for May 5. This date is perilously close to the statutory deadline to hold the elections, suggesting he is concerned that the results may lead to his departure from office. Malaysia, the United States, and much of the world have a stake in the outcome.
The traditionally dominant party, the United Malays National Organization (UMNO), and its partners in the long-ruling Barisan Nasional coalition have experienced internal divisions. Ethnic preferences for Malays in government and the economy have alienated many Chinese, who are a minority (roughly 40 percent of Malaysia’s population) but economically dominant. Najib’s efforts at internal reform have threatened traditionalists associated with former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad. Younger, urban voters seem itching for change.
There is a strong challenge from an opposition coalition headed by former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim. His Pakatan Rakyat coalition includes Chinese and Islamic parties and is close enough in some polls to win outright.
But many longtime observers believe the real election is within UMNO, between old warhorses associated with Mahathir and the reformists surrounding Najib. The argument is that if Najib cannot bring in a result that preserves UMNO’s two-thirds majority and capacity to rewrite the constitution, old-line leaders, possibly current Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, would displace Najib and stem reforms.
This is where the stakes need to be clearly stated. Under Mahathir, opposition to perceived residual Western colonialism was a rallying cry and a frequent and increasingly anachronistic theme. His successor, Abdullah Badawi, was less shrill but did not move significantly away from Mahathir’s policies. Najib has fundamentally repositioned Malaysia internationally. He has moved away from the old UMNO policy seeking to divide Asia from the United States and has seen the United States as an important partner for Malaysia and ASEAN.
Najib and his top officials have been forthright in speaking about democratic values in international forums such as the ASEAN Regional Forum. They have been critical of states such as North Korea and even Myanmar before reforms commenced there, something that would not have been countenanced in an earlier period when criticism was aimed solely at the West.
Najib has done all this as part of a strategy to retain domestic (Chinese) investment and attract foreign investment in order to accelerate Malaysia’s development. As a demonstration of his commitment to a more open Malaysian economy, he has joined the discussions on the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement with ten other nations.
After economic contraction in 2009, Malaysia’s GDP growth has rebounded to a robust 5 percent, led by double-digit export growth in 2010 and large FDI inflows in 2010 and 2011. Gross investment for 2012 was up 9 percent over the last year, with the fastest growth in private and domestic investment (up 22 percent and 55 percent, respectively). The current account surplus is expected to narrow in the near term, and employment growth is expected mostly in domestic-oriented sectors such as services, in line with Najib’s New Economic Model that aims to create more sustainable, equitable, high-income growth. The Asian Development Bank forecasts that Malaysia’s GDP will grow by 5.3 percent in 2013, accelerating a little to 5.5 percent next year. Malaysia’s strong performance under Najib stands in marked contrast to the ethnic preferences and frequent allegations of corruption and cronyism under Mahathir.
Domestically, Malaysia remains an impressive Muslim-majority nation with a democratic system, pluralism, and generally good standards for human rights protection. Najib has given a number of speeches in international settings denouncing terrorism in the Islamic world and indeed has preached formation of a league of moderate nations to fight terrorism.
Under Najib, Malaysia also has moved to significantly tighten its previously porous export-control system, which had made the country a transit point for shipment and financing of dual-use products going to Iran. Defense cooperation with the United States and others has been normalized, and it has not remained a forum for grandstanding against the West.
Najib has moved to dismantle one of the instruments of repression, the Internal Security Act inherited from the British when Malaysia became independent. Under his guidance the legislature has replaced the law, which provided the basis for lengthy detention without trial.
These are not just achievements for Najib’s leadership, but they are gains for Malaysia, the region, and the world.
As the election campaign unfolds, it will be interesting to see what issues UMNO and its Barisan National coalition and Anwar with his Pakatan Rakyat coalition use against each other (see the table below).
Barisan National (ruling coalition) Coalition head: Najib Razak
Pakatan Rakyat (opposition) Coalition head: Anwar Ibrahim
The Economy
Gradually increase the government’s 1Malaysia People’s Aid (BR1M) handouts to RM1,200 for qualified households and RM600 for qualified singles
Enact a more broad-based tax system and gradually reduce personal and corporate tax rates
Maintain BR1M cash assistance if elected
Broaden income tax band, raise the income floor for the 26 percent tax rate to RM400,000 from RM250,000
Bumiputera (Ethnic Malays and Indigenous Groups)
Promote and improve Bumiputera policies that favor ethnic Malay businesses
Provide RM500 million in seed funding to the Indian community
Equally distribute economic assistance regardless of race
Undertake an inclusive development platform that includes all ethnic groups
Transparent Government
Establish additional corruption courts
Elevate officers of Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission to higher level
Introduce corruption elimination policy (DEBARAN) to free anticorruption institutions from political control and improve anticorruption prosecution
Undertake electoral reform
Living Standards
Expand transport subsidies, education aid, food and housing assistance, public transportation, and rural infrastructure
Undertake similar populist policies, and raise minimum monthly income to RM4,000 by end of first term
Innovation
Enact the 2020 plan for high-income development based on innovation
Attract RM1.3 trillion worth of investments and create 2 million new high-income jobs
Channel investment to small and medium enterprises
Raise research and development expenditures to 5 percent of GDP
Create a RM500 million national innovation fund
Reshuffle tax incentives to give more assistance to small and medium industries
The Environment
Introduce financial incentives for renewable energy investment
Voluntarily reduce emissions intensity of GDP by up to 40 percent by 2020
Pass stricter illegal logging laws
Halt work at the Lynas rare earth plant
Review the implementation phases of the RAPID petrochemical project in Pengerang
Reform logging regulation
Anwar has a mixed record. He earlier stood out as one of Malaysia’s leading progressive political figures and someone who creatively reconciled Islam and Western values. Since his imprisonment by Mahathir in 1998 on allegations of sodomy and a subsequent revival of similar charges in 2008 that was overturned in Malaysia’s courts, he has moved toward a closer alignment with Islamic politics. He has, for example, irritated women voters by suggesting that sharia law could be adopted by tradition-minded Malaysian states. Anwar nonetheless continues to be a strong public advocate of democracy and human rights and criticizes Najib as essentially continuing the more repressive policies of the Mahathir years.
Whether the winner is Najib or Anwar or the conservative forces within UMNO, Malaysians should consider seriously how to preserve the gains of the Najib era.