Saturday, June 24, 2023

‘Classic False Flag’: Analyst on Fox News Says Putin ‘Orchestrated’ Wagner Coup to Make Biden Think Russia’s No Threat

Fox News guest Rebekah Koffler claimed during an interview with host Eric Shawn on Saturday that Russian President Vladimir Putin worked with Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin to stage the recent armed coup as a “classic false flag.”

Over the last 24 hours, chaos has upended the military and political establishment in Russia after Prigozhin marched his paramilitary group from Ukraine into Russia, taking over two cities and marching his men toward Moscow. In a sudden turn of events, however, Prigozhin reportedly called off the armed coup after negotiations with Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko.

The rebellion represented the largest existential threat to Putin’s regime since he took control of Russia over twenty years ago.

Koffler, an intelligence analyst, claimed during a long-winded nine-minute rant on Fox News that Putin orchestrated the coup to boost his political power in the Russia.

“My intelligence analysis suggests, Eric, that this is a classic false flag operation that’s been orchestrated by Putin and Prigozhin,” Koffler told the cable news host. “Prigozhin is not a stupid man. He’s a highly intelligent formerly convict. He turned his life around from a prisoner to a hot dog stands owner to the owner of a multi-million catering business that served the Kremlin, including Putin himself.”

Koffler notes that the Wagner group 50,000 men in Ukraine while Putin’s National Guard, created in 2016 to put down social unrest, has 340,000 men enlisted into the group and the Wagner forces were being tracked every minute” by the Russian security service.

“So again, what has changed from this in the last few hours? All of a sudden he decided to turn his troops around and made this deal? No, this is all staged,” she added. The analyst then appeared to claim that Putin used the rebellion to boost the mobilizations of recruits for the military.

“Putin wants us to believe that he’s weak, that there’s an ongoing threat of a military insurrection,” Koffler claims. “So this is a pretext to declare martial law, which Putin has already done. He made an amendment today that anybody who is violating the martial law is going to be imprisoned for 30 days. Another very interesting and revealing point is that Putin just authorized that men with a criminal record can join the military.”

“So this is a justification for extra mobilization of the Russian forces to send them to the meat grinder in Ukraine. It is also to demonstrate to President Biden that, no, Russia is not a threat. Russia is actually, you know, involved in its own domestic turmoil. But this is all a classic distraction and classic Putin,” she said.

“What you’re describing is like three dimensional chess. That’s a type of thinking that is just beyond,” Shawn said in response to Koffler.

Near the end of her interview, Koffler predicted that Putin will remain in power and potentially used the coup to get rid of Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu.

“In the meantime, Putin is going to gain momentum, mobilize additional personnel, and re-energize his offensive on Ukraine,” she concluded.

OK WHICH IS IT?


Fox host floats conspiracy theory that either U.S. or NATO is behind attempted Russian rebellion


Ray Hartmann
June 24, 2023, 

Fox host Rachel Campos-Duffy (Photo: Screen capture)


Fox News host Rachel Campos-Duffy tossed out an evidence-free conspiracy theory today that perhaps the U.S., NATO or both were behind the apparent coup unfolding in Russia.

One of Campos-Duffy’s takers was K.T. McFarland, a key aide to scandal-ridden Michael Flynn during the early years of the Trump administration. Campos-Duffy began by saying that she no longer trusted the government on foreign affairs.

“I’m always questioning things. I asked our last guest on this subject, Rebeka Koffler on this topic, if she thought it was possible that we could be behind this attempted coup with the Wagner group, and she said it’s definitely one of the possibilities or NATO.”

McFarlane responded: “I think she’s right that the United States government –whether it’s been actively or behind the scenes – has been very involved in Ukraine Russia all the time.”
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Journalist Ben Smith mused on Twitter, “Fox and Friends host Rachel Campos-Duffy cheerfully floating the theory that Prigozhin is working for the US/NATO.”

That prompted former Rep. Adam Kinzinger to offer this concise analysis.

“No, he isn’t. This is nuts.’



Ray Hartmann is a St. Louis-based journalist with nearly 50 years experience as a publisher, TV show panelist, radio host, daily newspaper reporter and columnist. He founded St. Louis alt weekly, The Riverfront Times, at the age of 24.


Wagner Boss planning coup against Putin? Ex-Russian commander's chilling warning | Report

  3 weeks ago  

#wagner #putin #igor

Russia’s ex commander Igor Girkin has claimed that Wagner military group chief Yevgeniy Prigozhin is planning a ‘mutiny’ against Kremlin. This comes just days after the Wagner group left from Bakhmut. Watch to know more

 

MEANWHILE ON MSNBC THE SPECULATION IS ALSO RIFE


Russian citizens' reaction to Wagner rebellion could set the stage for a coup: retired U.S. general
Tom Boggioni
June 24, 2023, 

Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures during a ceremony, marking the Day of Remembrance and Sorrow, June 22, 2023 in Moscow, Russia. (Photo by Contributor/Getty Images)

Appearing on MSNBC on Saturday morning after Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of the Wagner paramilitary group, launched what appears to be a revolt against Russian President Vladimir Putin, a retired U.S general suggested all eyes should be on how the Russian populace reacts to what could turn into a coup.

Speaking with MSNBC host Jonathan Capehart, (Ret) Lt. Gen. Stephen Twitty, the former Deputy Commander of the U.S. European Command, suggested all the elements that could lead to a coup are present as Wagner troops are reportedly moving north and Putin faces the greatest crisis of his life.

"Is what we are watching the beginnings of a coup in Russia?" the MSNBC host prompted.

"I wouldn't say that at this point in time," Twitty carefully replied. "Of course a coup, you don't see the military at this point in time trying to gain control of the seat of power in Russia."

"So Putin still firmly has control of the seat of power there and his administration is firmly in control at this particular point," he added before continuing, "I do see this more as a mutiny and, again, we will see if this thing gets ground swell from two locations. Number one, the Russian civilians. That is what we should be watching for: will the support start to turn in favor of the Wagner Group versus Putin."

"And number two, whether we start to get the groundswell of support from the western military favoring the Wagner Group," he added. "If that starts to happen, then we can start to look and determine whether or not we are in a coup situation here."

Watch below or at the link.

GREEN CAPITALI$M
Siemens Energy Falls by Record After Wind Unit’s Woes Deepen


Wilfried Eckl-Dorna
Fri, June 23, 2023

(Bloomberg) -- Siemens Energy AG slumped by a record over escalating issues at Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy SA, the latest in a long line of costly problems uncovered at the wind turbine unit.

The shares plummeted as much as 36% after the Spanish division found worse-than-expected quality flaws at its onshore wind turbines, delaying turnaround efforts. Siemens Energy, scrapping its annual profit guidance, warned that additional costs may exceed €1 billion ($1.1 billion).

The German manufacturer has had years of troubles with Gamesa. The unit fell deep into the red due to rising costs of steel and other key raw materials as well as a string of technical problems with installed and unfinished wind turbines — complex products that contain hundreds of moving parts.

“This is a bitter setback,” Chief Executive Officer Christian Bruch told reporters Friday.

Siemens Energy last year moved to fully control Gamesa with a roughly €4 billion offer after three years of straight losses. The plan was to bolster oversight and get a turnaround going. In January, the parent was forced to cut its outlook after reviews at Gamesa uncovered costly turbine flaws. At the time, the company expressed confidence it had checked everything.

IMPACT ACROSS WIND TURBINE INDUSTRY


But the latest evaluation — part of new Chief Executive Officer’s Jochen Eickholt’s drive to get on top of issues that led to the ouster of three unit chiefs in five years — revealed even more quality deficiencies.

Read more: Siemens Energy’s Troubled Wind Takeover Haunts Green Push

Some of the problems stem from rushing out new turbines too early in 2019 to counter fierce competition, Bloomberg reported last year. Gamesa has also faced difficulties scaling up its new onshore turbine model, dubbed the 5.X platform — a review of which is still ongoing.

“It is difficult to be sure that this is the ‘last’ charge,” Citi analysts led by Vivek Midha said Friday in an emailed note. “This will likely reduce investor confidence in the turnaround story.”

The protracted issues could also influence plans by Siemens AG to start selling down its 32% stake in its former energy unit after it listed in 2020. Last month, Siemens Chief Financial Officer Ralf Thomas flagged it could start divesting shares sometime during the next fiscal year starting in October, though plans haven’t been finalized yet.

Read more: Siemens Energy Orders ‘Overflowing’ as Green Shift Gains Speed

In contrast, the company’s gas turbine and transmissions divisions have been profiting from the rising demand for cleaner energy.

Siemens Energy had upgraded its revenue expectations about a month ago after strong orders for energy transition technologies helped offset Gamesa’s deepening losses. The manufacturer stuck to its revenue guidance for the group and assumptions for Gas Services, Grid Technologies and Transformation of Industry.

While unit chief Eickholt declined to say when the long-troubled unit will turn a profit, Bruch vowed that taking over Gamesa will eventually prove to be the right move.

“I still believe in the wind turbine business,” he said.

--With assistance from Jan-Patrick Barnert.

Bloomberg Businessweek

ONE YEAR AGO
ILLEGAL Israeli settlers again attack Palestinians in West Bank

dpa

TEL AVIV, Israel — There was renewed violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank on Saturday.

Several dozen Israelis entered a village north of Ramallah and set fire to Palestinians' vehicles and buildings, according to reports.

The Israeli army said there were confrontations between Israelis and Palestinians and that the security forces had been deployed to break up the violence.

One Israeli citizen was arrested.

One soldier was injured by a stone thrown at him.

"The Israeli army will continue to take firm action against all acts of violence and destruction of property," the army said in a statement. "The Israeli army condemns such nationalist crimes that lead to escalation."

The latest violence comes after a Palestinian opened fire on Israeli security forces at a crossing north of Jerusalem on Friday night, according to Israeli sources. He was shot dead.

There have been several outbreaks of violence by settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank since a fatal attack by two Palestinians on four Israelis in the region on Tuesday.

Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid tweeted, "Settler violence crosses every line."

The German ambassador to Israel, Steffen Seibert, expressed "shock" at the new fighting.

"The latest terrorist attacks cannot be used as an excuse," he tweeted. Israel is responsible for the security of all residents of the occupied territories, he said.

The security situation in Israel and the Palestinian territories has been tense for months. Since the beginning of the year, 24 people have died in attacks. In the same period, 139 Palestinians have been shot dead, mostly in Israeli military operations and confrontations but also after attacks of their own.

Israel took control of the West Bank and East Jerusalem during the 1967 Six-Day War.

Palestinians claim the territories for their own state.




CRYPTO CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M

Binance faces continued troubles as regulatory scrutiny grows

Binance faces mounting regulatory challenges as scrutiny grows across Europe and the US.

Alina Ivanov

Belgium’s Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA) has dealt another blow to Binance.

In response to concerns raised by the FSMA, Binance has been ordered to halt its cryptocurrency services in Belgium immediately. The FSMA expressed apprehension about Binance offering exchange services and custody wallet services involving virtual currencies and legal currencies from non-European Economic Area countries within Belgium.

This regulatory action by Belgium adds to the mounting challenges faced by Binance, as regulatory scrutiny across Europe and the United States intensifies. The possibility of a domino effect looms large, with other regulators likely to delve into Binance’s operations. The exchange’s native token, BNB, has struggled to keep pace with the broader cryptocurrency market due to the increased regulatory scrutiny. Over the course of this week, BNB has recorded a modest 1.35% rise, currently trading at $247.

In an attempt to comply with local regulations, the exchange recently announced its decision to exit the Dutch market. As of July 17, 2023, existing Dutch resident users will only be able to withdraw their assets from the Binance platform. Furthermore, Binance has ceased accepting new users residing in the Netherlands with immediate effect.

These developments represent a significant setback for Binance, which has faced escalating scrutiny in recent weeks. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in the United States has already filed a lawsuit against the exchange, accusing it of substantial violations, particularly related to the trading of unregistered securities in an unlawful manner.

Our Milky Way Is Somewhat Of An Oddball Galaxy, New Study Confirms

Our Milky Way Galaxy —- often billed as an ordinary massive spiral, one of billions of such disk galaxies that populate the observable universe —- got off to an unusually early, shotgun start. Or so says a new paper just submitted to The Astrophysical Journal.

What’s clear is that the Milky Way and likely many other galaxies like it were massive enough to begin disk formation within the first few billion years after the big bang. That’s a fact also confirmed by new observations made by NASA’s Webb Space Telescope.

Our findings suggest that the Milky Way assembled most of its mass early, and after that, it did not experience significant mergers with other galaxies that could destroy its disk, Vadim Semenov, a NASA Hubble and ITC postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University, told me via phone.

Using computer simulations of representative samples of Milky Way-like galaxies, the authors note that most such galaxies formed their galactic disks much later than our own Milky Way. But some ten percent of Milky Way-mass galaxies formed their disks quite early, similar to our galaxy, the authors write.

We looked at a relatively large sample of 61 such Milky Way analogs extracted from the simulation of a representative cosmological volume (essentially, a chunk of the universe), says Semenov. We find that galaxies tend to form disks when they become massive enough, he says. After the disk is formed, the rest of the galaxy evolution must be relatively quiet, without significant mergers with other galaxies which could destroy its disk, says Semenov.

Why is this important?

Understanding disk galaxy formation is a fundamental question in astrophysics, but it also connects to many other fields, from cosmology to planet formation, says Semenov. Most of the stars in the universe are formed in disk galaxies, he says. And stars, in turn, synthesize chemical elements thereby defining the chemical evolution of the universe, says Semenov.



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The early universe appears to have been wild and woolly.

The rates at which stars were forming were higher; newly born massive stars exploded as supernovae more frequently, stirring up the turbulence in the gas of these early disks and making them thicker, says Semenov. Accretion of gas from the intergalactic medium was also more active and galaxy mergers were more frequent, he says.

As for our own Milky Way?

Galactic archeology data suggest that there were several stages in the evolution of our Galaxy, says Semenov. First, there was that chaotic state without a clear disk (a “proto-galaxy”), he says.

The progenitor of our galaxy was highly irregular and experienced vigorous and chaotic accretion of gas from the intergalactic medium and frequent mergers with other galaxies, says Semenov. With time this vigorous evolution settled down and a galactic disk emerged, he says. This early disk was likely very different from the disk that we see today, it was significantly thicker and more turbulent, he notes.

Later, however, it settled down to the thin disk that we see today, says Semenov.

As for what is most surprising about the team’s results?

One surprise was that the Milky Way analogs are not rarer than we found, says Semenov. From these results, one could expect that only a small fraction (if any) of Milky Way-mass disks are early-forming, he says. However, 10% of such early forming galaxies is quite a significant fraction, Semenov says.

Yet the authors note there is still no consensus on how galactic disks actually form.

That remains an open question, says Semenov.

Follow me on Twitter or LinkedInCheck out my website or some of my other work here

I'm a science journalist and host of Cosmic Controversy (brucedorminey.podbean.com) as well as author of "Distant Wanderers: the Search for Planets Beyond the Solar System."  I primarily cover aerospace and astronomy. I’m a former Hong Kong bureau chief for Aviation Week & Space Technology magazine and former Paris-based technology correspondent for the Financial Times newspaper who has reported from six continents. A 1998 winner in the Royal Aeronautical Society's Aerospace Journalist of the Year Awards (AJOYA), I’ve interviewed Nobel Prize winners and written about everything from potato blight to dark energy. Previously, I was a film and arts correspondent in New York and Europe, primarily for newspaper outlets like the International Herald Tribune, the Boston Globe and Canada's Globe & Mail. Recently, I've contributed to Scientific American.com, Nature News, Physics World, and Yale Environment 360.com. I'm a current contributor to Astronomy and Sky & Telescope and a correspondent for Renewable Energy World. Twitter @bdorminey