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Thursday, January 23, 2025

Politico snuffed out Hunter Biden laptop story to protect Joe in 2020

Lest anyone still have doubts, two ex-Politico reporters just confirmed how far the media went to protect Joe Biden prior to the 2020 presidential election.

It’s solid proof these outlets are can’t be trusted.

On a podcast this week, Axios’ Mark Caputo and Puck’s Tara Palmeri revealed that Politico intentionally killed or resisted negative stories about Biden and his son — citing, for instance, its limited coverage of The Post’s election-eve scoop on Hunter Biden’s laptop.

“Politico did that terrible, ill-fated headline: 51 intelligence agents, or former intelligence agents, say that the Hunter Biden laptop was disinformation,” recalled Caputo.

“Turns out that story was closer to disinformation, because the Hunter Biden laptop appeared to be true.”

Caputo told his editor the outlet needed to “write about the Hunter Biden laptop” but was instructed, per orders from “on high” at Politico, not to: “Don’t write about the laptop. Don’t talk about the laptop. Don’t tweet about the laptop,” he was told.

So “the only thing Politico wound up writing was that piece that called it disinformation.”

Caputo also cited his reporting in 2019 on a tax lien Hunter got for his Burisma income.

“That story was killed by the editors. And they gave no explanation.”

Poltico was hardly alone.

And don’t buy the media’s excuse that they needed to pin down all the facts before publishing or that they were wary, after Russia’s interference in the 2016 election.

The Post managed to confirm the facts — and they all proved true.

Most outlets now admit that, but they waited until well after Joe Biden was safely in office before doing so.

The 51 Spies Who Lied — ex-intel officials who signed an open letter that trashed The Post’s laptop scoop as a “Russian information operation” — gave the media cover.

But that letter was spurred by the Biden campaign (notably, Antony Blinken) and was clearly meant to influence the election.

Which is why ex-CIA boss John Brennan’s griping about President Trump’s stripping his and the other spies’ security clearance is so pathetic.

Brennan whines that their statement merely notes that the laptop story “was one of the hallmarks of Russian information operations.”

Please.

If these intel veterans weren’t sure about Russia’s involvement, and weren’t trying to mislead the public, they could’ve checked with their sources at the FBI, which had already verified the laptop’s authenticity.

Or just kept their mouths shut.

Brennan & Co. knew exactly what they were doing.

So Trump was dead right to cancel their security clearances.

They clearly can’t be trusted.

Fact is, neither the media nor these spies have been honest with Americans.

Trump’s victory, despite their bid to defeat him, suggests Americans know it.

https://nypost.com/2025/01/23/opinion/reporters-admit-politico-snuffed-out-hunter-biden-laptop-story-to-protect-joe-in-2020/

From Idlib To Davos: Al-Qaeda Linked Syrian Official On Mainstage At WEF

 A US-designated terrorist group still remains the current de facto ruling entity in Damascus and over Syria. But for the West, all that matters is that al-Qaeda linked Jolani is not Assad. A decade-plus long proxy war in pursuit of regime change finally overthrew the secular Baath government early last month, and resulted in the hardline Islamists of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) controlling most of the country.

The West appears to be fully embracing the new rulers which we previously referred to as al-Qaeda in suits. This week we have been treated to the spectacle of a HTS representative speaking on the main stage at Davos. He's come a long way from Idlib and its black flags... straight to the red carpet jet-setting champaign-sipping insider atmosphere of world elites.

During the 55th annual WEF meeting in Davos, Switzerland, January 22, 2025. via Reuters

Syria's new HTS-appointed Foreign Minister Asaad Hassan Al-Shaibani told the World Economic Forum on Wednesday that Saudi Arabia is now the exemplar for Syria to follow.

"Where do we see inspiration for the new Syria? We have the Vision 2030 of Saudi Arabia," Al-Shaibani said during a conversation with former UK prime minister Tony Blair.

"We need Syria to be a place of peace, to be a place of development, a place free of war," the top HTS diplomat added.

On top of the irony of an AQ-linked official being invited to Davos (and merely within less than two months after HTS took power), there's the added irony that Tony Blair - one of Bush's key allies who pushed the 2003 invasion of Iraq - was hosting the Davos main stage discussion with Al-Shaibani.

Former leaders like Blair, in overthrowing Saddam Hussein, are responsible for having overseen the sectarian and Islamist nightmare which gripped Iraq and the region in the aftermath. The rise of ISIS would not have been possible if it weren't for the US/UK 'shock and awe' regime change operation, for example. Later, the West and Gulf states funded the Syrian insurgency, during which time Al-Qaeda in Iraq jihadists poured across the border into Syria. HTS was born out of this West-backed anti-Assad jihad (it was known as Nusra Front in the beginning).

But of course, the Davos elites are embracing it allwar crimes and jihad

Meanwhile, in Syria HTS has allowed ISIS-linked foreign fighters to intimidate the population with impunity. Alawites, Druze, and Christians live in fear as sectarian-driven killings are on the rise in the "liberated Syria" - especially in the Homs, Latakia, and coastal and countryside regions.

Did Blair extract from Shaibani a firm commitment to protect Syria's Christians and uphold secularism for Syria at Davos? Of course not.

The future looks bleak as Jolani has pledged eventual implementation of Sharia law. Already there have been widespread reports of alcohol stores being smashed, women forced to wear the Islamic veil, and imposed separation of the sexes in many public places. But the WEF has enthusiastically greeted this new Syriaistan

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/idlib-davos-al-qaeda-linked-hts-official-mainstage-wef

Thacker Dismantles WSJ Propaganda Over Gain-Of-Function Research

 The Wall Street Journal is playing sleight of hand over an (allegedly) upcoming Trump executive order that would halt federal funding for gain-of-function (GoF) research.

For starters, they frame opposition to GoF as partisan, and suggest that concerns over it are recent. Journalist Paul Thacker of The Disinformation Chronicle breaks it down.

For example, the WSJ writes "The gain-of-function studies had been a staple of research into viruses, but became an object of controversy and criticism during the pandemic crisis. Republicans in Congress criticized the studies."

Wrong: GoF has been under scrutiny for more than a decade. In fact, the Obama Administration banned it in 2014, which is why Dr. Anthony Fauci offshored it to Wuhan, China via EcoHealth Alliance.

Next, the Journal suggests that only "some Republicans" who think GoF caused Covid-19, when in fact a majority of Americans think that's the case, including 53% of Democrats.

The article also cites scientists with huge conflicts of interest, and that "Many scientists and public-health officials have said there isn’t any public evidence that an experiment at the Wuhan lab could have created the virus that caused the pandemic."

Wrong: The government was concerned at the highest levels that the virus started in a lab.

And about those conflicts of interest...

Amazing.

Oklahoma Attorney General files lawsuit against CVS Caremark for ‘below-cost reimbursement’

 Attorney General Gentner Drummond sued CVS Caremark Tuesday in an Oklahoma administrative court alleging that the company is under reimbursing pharmacies for prescription drugs. 

The lawsuit alleges CVS Caremark reimbursed Oklahoma pharmacies below the actual cost to acquire the drugs about 200 times between May and October 2024. Drummond said more unreported violations are possible. 

The state’s complaint asks the Oklahoma Office of Administrative Hearings to censure, suspend or revoke the licenses of the CVS Caremark and assess fines between $100 and $10,000 per violation. 

Drummond, who has been tasked by lawmakers to enforce regulations for pharmacy benefit managers, said the lawsuit has the potential to recover $2 million in fees and restitution for pharmacies and is the first of many expected to be filed in the coming weeks. 

CVS Caremark is a pharmacy benefit manager, or PBM, that works to negotiate prices between insurance companies, drug manufacturers and pharmacies. CVS Caremark operates under the parent company CVS Health. 

“CVS Caremark delivers value daily to our Oklahoma clients and their members. We are reviewing the allegations in the complaint and will respond to them in due course,” said Phillip Blando, a spokesperson for CVS Health, in a statement.

Drummond said during a Senate committee meeting Wednesday that his office has received over 3,100 complaints about multiple pharmacy benefit managers operating in the state. The major areas of complaint include unfair reimbursement, unlawful and burdensome fees and lack of a “reasonable appeal mechanism,” he said. 

He said in a statement that pharmacies have lost thousands of dollars to fill the prescriptions and get medication to patients. 

“Oklahoma is seeing a rise of independent pharmacy closures due to PBM practices, leaving vulnerable populations throughout Oklahoma without access to central health care,” Drummond said. “And this creates both job losses and other negative economic impacts, especially in the rural part of our state.”

Drummond’s office requested a formal hearing before the administrative court. 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/oklahoma-attorney-general-files-lawsuit-210147736.html

Syria's new leaders turn to Islamic law in effort to rebuild Assad's police

 Syria's new authorities are using Islamic teachings to train a fledgling police force, a move officers say aims to instil a sense of morality as they race to fill a security vacuum after dismantling ousted president Bashar al-Assad's notoriously corrupt and brutal security forces.

Police they brought into Damascus from their former rebel enclave in the northwestern region of Idlib are asking applicants about their beliefs and focusing on Islamic sharia law in the brief training they offer recruits, according to five senior officers and application forms seen by Reuters.

Ensuring stability and winning the trust of people across Syria will be crucial for the Sunni Muslim Islamists to cement their rule. But the move to put religion at the centre of policing risks seeding new rifts in a diverse country awash with guns after 13 years of civil war and alienating foreign governments they have been trying to woo, regional analysts warn.

"There are many Syrians who will find this concerning," said Aron Lund, a fellow at Century International, a Middle East-focused think tank, when asked about Reuters' findings. "Not just minorities - Christians, Alawites, Druze - but also quite a lot of Sunni Muslims in places like Damascus and Aleppo, where you have a fairly large secular, cosmopolitan population that's not interested in religious law."

FILE PHOTO: A woman distributes muffins to police after the ouster of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, in Damascus, Syria, December 21, 2024. REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi/File Photo© Thomson Reuters

The religious foundations of the police training are also making Western governments wonder how big a role Islam might play in Syria's constitution, which the former rebel faction now in power plans to revise, said one diplomat, who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

"It's not a good sign, but it also depends on how strictly it will be implemented," the diplomat told Reuters. 

Syria's de facto leader, Ahmed al-Sharaa, has sought to reassure Western officials and Middle Eastern governments worried about their own Islamist movements that his faction has renounced its former ties to al Qaeda and will rule with moderation, including protecting minorities.

The group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), has a track record of pragmatism, backing away from enforcing some strict interpretations of Islamic law in areas it controlled during the war.

Syria's Interior Ministry, which oversees police, and Information Ministry did not respond to questions about the focus on religion in police recruitment and training, or whether there are plans to incorporate Islamic law into the legal code.

FILE PHOTO: New police members attend a graduation ceremony after completing training at a Damascus police academy following the ouster of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, in Damascus, Syria, January 14, 2025. REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi/File Photo© Thomson Reuters

The senior police officers interviewed by Reuters said the intention was not to impose it on the general population but rather to teach recruits ethical behaviour. 

FILE PHOTO: A view of Kafr Sousa police station after the ouster of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, in Damascus, Syria, December 23, 2024. REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi/File Photo© Thomson Reuters

Hamza Abu Abdel Rahman, who helped set up the group's police academy in Idlib before transferring to Damascus, said an understanding of religious matters, "what is permissible and what is not", is crucial for recruits to "act justly". 

POLICE DISBANDED

Assad's myriad security forces were widely feared for tyrannical and predatory behaviour, ranging from arrests of dissidents who ended up tortured or killed to demanding bribes to resolve minor infractions.

The extent of public anger against them was evident in the days after Assad was toppled on Dec. 8. Most of the capital's police stations were ransacked by looters, with equipment and records pillaged or destroyed.

Police said half of the roughly 20 stations have since reopened, but they are each staffed by around 10 officers, mostly brought in from Idlib, instead of their previous complement of 100-150 officers.

FILE PHOTO: A view of the Damascus police directorate after the ouster of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, in Damascus, Syria, December 21, 2024. REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi/File Photo© Thomson Reuters

At three stations visited by Reuters in late December, a handful of exhausted officers was trying to deal with a welter of issues, from complaints of rampant crime to a garbage collector who brought in two bags of hand grenades he found on the street.

When the rebels seized power, they announced they were disbanding Assad's Interior Ministry and security forces, including the police.

More than 200,000 people have registered to join a new police service they are establishing, said Hesham Hilal, who is leading courses for recruits at a police academy in Damascus.

Police who defected to the rebel side before Assad's fall are welcome to apply for the new force, the senior officers told Reuters.

Those who did not have been asked to complete a "reconciliation" process, including signing a document accepting the change of regime and handing in their gun. It is not yet clear whether any will be allowed to join the new force.

Seven officers who manage police stations or are involved in recruitment said they needed more members and welcomed applications from people of any faith. 

But the focus on sharia has been a deterrent to some.

A 45-year-old Christian, who worked in Assad's traffic police, said he wouldn't apply for the new force even if he could. Speaking on condition of anonymity for safety reasons, he said he was worried that even people in lowly roles like his would be seen as part of Assad's regime, and that the focus on Islamic law meant there would be discrimination against those of other faiths.

Hundreds of residents took part in a demonstration in the capital, Damascus, in December to call for secular governance and equal rights for women.

"No one is against Islam, but we are certainly against a religious rule based on specific texts and hadiths" - sayings and actions attributed to Islam's Prophet Mohammad - one participant, Ali al-Aqabani, said when asked about using sharia in policing.

Aqabani, 50, is Muslim himself but said Damascus is "diverse in its sects and doctrines."

At the same time, Syria's new authorities need to train police quickly, because Assad's forces "evaporated completely, and stability is a major, major issue," said Lund, of Century International. "Going with what they know and have always done may be the easiest way of doing that."

In Idlib, which HTS has dominated since 2017, the group initially carried out patrols to enforce strict Islamist views on public behaviour, said Aaron Zelin, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Women were detained for travelling without a male family member or immodest attire, a U.N. commission of inquiry said in a 2021 report.

But morality patrols were later scaled back because residents did not like them, Zelin said.

Sharaa, HTS' leader, has spoken out against a rigid approach to public behaviour, but the coalition he leads includes members regarded as more extreme, adding to the fears of minorities.

THE NEW FORCE

The scale of the crisis confronting the new force was starkly apparent at the police stations Reuters visited in December.

At the Damascus police directorate, and at Marja and Kafr Sousa stations, rooms were strewn with paperwork, broken glass, abandoned uniforms, ammunition and smashed furniture. Officers had cleared a few rooms to work from, but the computers and telephones had been stolen.

Outside Marja and Kafr Sousa, there were green and white police cars with broken windows and flat tires.

At the Damascus directorate, the new police chief, Basel Faoury, and operations head Abu Ahmed al-Sukkar said they had barely slept since arriving from Idlib.

Sukkar had a mattress propped up against a cupboard because he was sleeping in his office. At least 20 people entered with requests, problems or complaints in the two hours Reuters was there.

A businessman wanted approval to hire a private security company to protect his restaurants and shopping malls from thieves. Others wanted permission to organise neighbourhood protection groups. Police said they mostly welcomed this for now but would not allow such groups to bear arms.

All the senior officers Reuters interviewed said they expected staffing levels to improve and more stations to reopen as recruitment and training expand this year.

On Jan. 14, the Damascus academy celebrated the graduation of around 500 police cadets who paraded before their trainers in new black uniforms. When Reuters visited in December, a dozen men were lined up at the academy's gates to interview for the force.

One of them, 19-year-old Zakaria al-Hiji from the eastern city of Deir al-Zor, said he had disliked Assad's rule but liked what he had seen so far of the new authorities. He said his cousins, who already worked for HTS, had told him the police would offer good salaries.

Application forms seen by Reuters contain a section on "beliefs, orientations and opinions" in which recruits are asked to provide their "referential authority," an expression often used for Muslim religious leaders who are considered authoritative by different sects.

Although religion has long been listed on identity documents in Syria, it was not usual under Assad to specify the school of thought.

Three HTS officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to address media, said the question is intended to help identify applicants who will need closer scrutiny, especially Alawites, who come from the same sect as Assad and may have had ties to his regime.

Houmaida Antara al-Matar, who was interviewing police defectors who want their old jobs back at the Damascus academy, said it was "merely a routine question" and was not intended to discriminate against any faith or sect, including Alawites.

New recruits are receiving just 10 days of instruction, mostly in weapons handling and Islamic law, trainers and recent graduates told Reuters. 

When security improves, the aim is to increase the training to nine months, using a system introduced by the rebels in Idlib, said Ahmed Latouf, who headed the police academy in the former rebel enclave before he was appointed police chief in Aleppo. 

The religious instruction offered recruits includes principles of Islamic jurisprudence, the biography of Prophet Mohammad and rules of conduct, Latouf said by phone from Aleppo.

The head of Marja police station in Damascus, Ayman Abu Taleb, said he was worried that many Syrians would see HTS as extremists and would not accept their rule. But he said he did not understand why their reliance on Islam would be a concern.

"The religion that respects human rights the most is Islam," he said.

https://www.msn.com/en-ie/news/world/syria-s-new-leaders-turn-to-islamic-law-in-effort-to-rebuild-assad-s-police/ar-AA1xKoGT