Crashed MH17 flight was 300 miles off typical course MH17 flight feared to have been shot down over Ukraine was taking a significantly different route to the usual course for flights from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, according to aviation expert http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/ukraine/10975524/Crashed-MH17-flight-was-300-miles-off-typical-course.html
Investigative reports: Malaysian Airliner down over Ukraine but what was it doing there? The Malaysian Airways airplane MH17 crash in Ukraine: the Buk weapon that probably brought it down and who could have been in charge of this gun; possible motives of different players - false flag?; chemical weapons attack in Syria done by Turks and Saudis. BRICS countries form The Global Development Bank, an alternative to the Bretton Woods System which the West have used to control world finance since World War II - the IMF and World Bank finally challenged. Bristol based Palestinian journalist Iqbal Tamimi discusses the recent Israel collective punishment in Gaza, Palestine conflict, real reasons behind it: Labour leader Ed Milibands support for Israel expresses just before attacks on Gaza and now silence, his close ties with Labour Friends of Israel and the fact that he is Jewish. He should be seen to distance himself from the acts of the Israeli military but he does not do so. The desperation of the Palestinian situation and the unfairness of the Israeli government; Hezbollah; Ramadan; ISIS; Ed Miliband attends Friends of Israel meeting. Annie Machon discusses implications of the Edward Snowden revelations at this years Independence from America Day: Snowden and how to rein in and regulate the secret services - MI5, MI6 and GCHQ. Dan Glazebrook breaks it all down in his new book Divide and Ruin: The Westâs Imperial Strategy in an Age of Crisis. Dan Glazebrook analyses a new overarching strategy employed by U.S. and British imperialism since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of so-called Cold War. Limited by its relative decline in the context of the global economy and unable to sustain the Bush-like adventurism that led to the Iraq debacle, the Empire, argues Divide and Ruin, seeks now to rely primarily on proxy military forces against those it targets for regime change. The goal though is nothing other than the long-term weakening of any country that serves as a regional counter-weight to the absolute dominance of imperialism. From Glazebrookâs view, U.S. and British foreign policy should be viewed as a wrecking ball of sorts aimed at weakening the strongest and most independent players in the Global South.