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Germans Pretend To Hate Putin To Please US Warmongers, UK Also Pretends While Planning To Not Fight Or Boycott | Culture of Life News. Americans are being told that the Crimea crisis is terrible and huge and gigantic and we are leading the ‘free world’ in fighting Putin. Nothing could be further from the truth. After reading a number of papers from Europe, it is obvious that no one in the EU top nations wants to wrestle with Putin. At all. They are happy to say propaganda things to keep the US happy but actions? Nein! Nichts! Nothing. Nothing! Putin Can’t Stop – NYTimes.com is the noxious Zionist, David Brooks who has bellowed for many, many illegal wars, invasive actions, bombings of people, attacks on tribes, stealing land, threatening nations that aren’t threatening us (Iran being one of these), bloviating about how Putin is ‘insane’ and the Russians are stupid to be ‘nationalists’. The US also has encouraged unilateral seizures of land with Japan and Israel.

And this is what the rulers of the US want! Hague and Cameron will also not send in any troops. The US has spent all our capital playing imperial overlord. Breaking news on 2014 National Defense Authorization Act. Top House Armed Services Members Remind Senate of Tight NDAA Schedule. The top members of the House Armed Services Committee on Thursday warned that "time is running short" to finish the National Defense Authorization Act, as the Senate failed to overcome a procedural roadblock. But Committee Chairman Buck McKeon, R-Calif., and ranking member Adam Smith, D-Wash., said that even if the upper chamber does kick the passage of the bill into December, it could still get finished. "Time is running short to reach an agreement this year, but it has not yet run out," the two said in a statement. "There are still pathways to passage for this vital bill. We urge the Senate to resume NDAA consideration as soon as they return from their Thanksgiving recess.

" Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., has previously suggested that if the Senate doesn't pass the bill until after the Thanksgiving recess it will be difficult for the conference committee to agree to a bill by the end of the year. The House passed its version of the bill in mid-June. House passes budget deal, NDAA — Senate slogs through nominations — Air Force leaders discuss future plans today - POLITICO Morning Defense. By Kate Brannen With Jonathan Topaz, Juana Summers, Austin Wright and Philip Ewing HOUSE PASSES BUDGET DEAL AND DEFENSE BILL — ALL EYES TURN TO THE SENATE: Last night, the House wrapped up some major end-of-the-year business, sending both the bipartisan budget deal and the annual defense authorization bill over to the Senate for final consideration. FIRST THE BUDGET: The House passed the two-year bipartisan budget deal, 332-94, reducing the likelihood of another government shutdown next year and rescuing the Defense Department from sequestration in fiscal 2014 and 2015.

The agreement, crafted by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), truly won bipartisan support with 169 Republicans and 163 Democrats voting for it, reports POLITICO’s Jake Sherman. . — IMPORTANT TO NOTE: The legislation does not extend emergency unemployment benefits or address the debt ceiling. — Here’s Hagel’s full statement: IT’S FRIDAY. President Obama Signs 2014 NDAA, Releases Statement on GTMO Provisions. Human Rights First Calls on Obama to Veto Defense Authorization Bill. Inhofe praises passage of defense bill » Headlines » The Norman Transcript.

NORMAN — U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, praised the passage of the national defense bill. The final version of this bill, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, marks the 51st consecutive NDAA and includes several legislative measures that were either authored or supported by Inhofe. The House passed the bill on Thursday, and the Senate passed the bill Friday by a 81-14 vote. “Overall, I support this bill because it contains important provisions for our military members, and I urge the President to immediately sign this bill into law when it arrives on his desk,” Inhofe said. “At the same time, I am disappointed that the process of passing this important bill was delayed until so late in the year, well after the fiscal year that it governs has started, potentially impacting critical military programs such the KC-46 that will be maintained at Tinker Air Force Base and, hopefully, based at Altus Air Force Base.”