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China Sending Envoy to North Korea After Trump Talks With Xi

November 15, 2017 by  
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Chinese President Xi Jinping is dispatching a special envoy to visit North Korea this week, shortly after he hosted U.S. counterpart Donald Trump in Beijing.

Song Tao, head of the Chinese Communist Party’s International Liaison Department, will visit Pyongyang on Friday to brief North Korean officials about last month’s once-in-five-year leadership reshuffle, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. 

While the department traditionally briefs Communist allies after the party congress, the timing suggests Song may be carrying a message from the Xi-Trump talks. Song had earlier visited Vietnam and Laos from Oct. 31 to Nov. 3 to brief those Communist governments on changes within the party.

The trip will be the first high-level Chinese visit to North Korea this year. Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin visited Pyongyang last October, and then-Chinese special envoy Wu Dawei visited in February 2016. He has since retired and it’s unclear if his successor, Kong Xuanyou, has visited the country since he took up the job in August.

North Korea was on top of Trump’s agenda on his visit to Beijing, where he called on China to put more pressure on its ally to give up its quest to obtain the ability to strike the U.S. with a nuclear weapon.

Official statements from both the White House and Beijing regarding Trump’s visit to China did not refer to any specific progress on North Korea.

“One striking thing was North Korea was absent from his outcome list,” said Shi Yinhong, a foreign affairs adviser to the State Council and director of Renmin University’s Center on American Studies in Beijing. “Apparently, Beijing didn’t make any compromises. But we don’t know what happened behind-the-scenes.”

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    Russian ‘proof’ of US helping ISIS turns out to be video game screen grab

    November 15, 2017 by  
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    Russia’s latest propaganda attempt backfired badly.


    Media: Vocativ


    Russia’s Defense Ministry on Tuesday posted several photos on social media purportedly showing “irrefutable evidence” that the United States was helping Islamic State terrorists.

    The photos were published on the official Russian-language Twitter and Facebook accounts for the ministry and also on the ministry’s English and Arabic accounts.


    It didn’t take long for the “irrefutable” to be refuted.

    Online sleuths discovered that one of the photos — supposedly showing an ISIS convoy leaving Abu Kamel on Nov. 9, 2017 — appeared to be a screen grab from the 2015 mobile video game AC-130 Gunship Simulator: Special Ops Squadron.

    Another image was identified by the Russian military research site Conflict Intelligence Team and the investigative website Bellingcat as a shot from footage of Iraq taken in 2016.

    The Russian Ministry of Defense post photos Tuesday on Twitter and Facebook purportedly showing evidence of the U.S. backing ISIS. Those claims were quickly debunked by online sleuths. Photo: Twitter

    The Russian Ministry of Defense post photos Tuesday on Twitter and Facebook purportedly showing “evidence” of the U.S. backing ISIS. Those claims were quickly debunked by online sleuths.

    The Russian Ministry of Defense post photos Tuesday on Twitter and…


    “This is the best evidence the [Russian MOD] are shameless liars, they take a video game screenshot then claim it’s from a specific location and date,” Kings College research associate Eliot Higgins said in a post on bellingcat.com.

    The Russian Defense Ministry has since deleted all of the photos, claiming a “mistake.”

    Higgins explained how much effort went into this “mistake.” He said it involved:

    • Taking screenshots at times in the original videos with no explosions,
    • Cropping text out the image,
    • Adding captions in three languages,
    • Posting it on multiple accounts.

    The fake-news photo manipulations were nothing new for the ministry, which has previously used bogus images to support false reports claiming Russian planes had not bombed a Syrian hospital and mosque, according to Bellingcat.

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