BLACKWATER USA | DAILY BRIEF

Posted by BW Actual on Oct 22nd 2024

BLACKWATER USA | DAILY BRIEF

Venezuela

  • Venezuelan police arrested former oil minister Pedro Tellechea and accused him of sharing key internal documents from state oil company PDVSA with "a company controlled by the US Intelligence Services."
  • Tellechea had just resigned from his post as Minister of Industry and National Production on Friday, citing health reasons.
  • He's the fourth Venezuelan oil minister since 2017 - out of five who have served in that time - to be arrested on similar allegations.

Russia

  • Former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan spoke for the first time about his experience in the Russian prison system before his release in a swap this summer.
  • In an interview with CBS (https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/21/world/europe/paul-whelan-russia-prisoner-swap.html), Whelan called prison conditions "monotonous and filthy," and said he passed information from fellow prisoners who fought on the front lines in Ukraine along to Western officials using burner phones.
  • In other news about ex-Russian prisoners, murdered dissident Alexey Navalny's memoirs (titled "Patriot") come out today. The Economist called the book "a passionate and moving testimony to Russia’s extreme violence."
Argentina
  • Argentina's Pres. Milei - who campaigned with a chainsaw symbolizing his pledge to slash the size of the bureaucracy - took another bold step towards that promise by dissolving the country's bloated revenue service, Administración Federal de Ingresos Públicos (AFIP).
  • Milei announced the creation of a new entity - Agencia de Recaudación y Control Aduanero (ARCA) - to replace AFIP. ARCA's directors will get paid 90% less than AFIP's, while salaries at lower levels of ARCA will see smaller reductions of 30%.
Hezbollah and Hamas
  • SecState Blinken landed in Israel today to try to convince PM Netanyahu's government to agree to a ceasefire and hostage deal now that Israel's Enemy No. 1 - Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar - is dead. That won't be easy: Netanyahu has indicated that he isn't ready to end the war yet.
  • Israel's army declassified intelligence about one of the targets of its airstrikes aimed at cutting off Hezbollah's funding: a vault with tens of millions of dollars in gold and cash.
  • It's unclear whether the Israeli airstrikes destroyed that money, but the IDF also said it had not yet targeted a separate vault hidden under a hospital in Beirut that contains much more: "at least half a billion dollars in dollar bills and gold." A spokesman added: "This money could and still can be used to rebuild the state of Lebanon."
Iran
  • Over the weekend, two documents purporting to show Five Eyes-only U.S. intelligence analysis of Israel's possible plans to retaliate on Iran for its ballistic missile barrage were posted on Telegram and then shared widely - especially within Iran.
  • The fact that the White House said Pres. Biden was "deeply concerned" about the unauthorized release of the files - plus the fact that they were first publicized by a pro-Iran account, Middle East Spectator - suggests the U.S. didn't deliberately leak them and they may have been stolen by hackers instead.
  • Most foreign airlines have paused flights to Iran in anticipation of Israel's retaliation.
DRC
  • Rwanda-backed M23 rebels captured the North Kivu town of Kalembe, ending a ceasefire signed in August after years of Angolan mediation. Few believed the truce would last as long as it took DRC and the M23 to agree to it.
Other News
  • Moldova confirmed that its referendum on (eventually) joining the EU was approved - though the vote was too close to call yesterday, thanks in part to Russia's meddling to buy 300,000 votes against the measure. Pres. Sandu called the Russian intervention "fraud of an unprecedented scale."
  • A Peruvian court sentenced former President Alejandro Toledo to 20 years in prison following his conviction for accepting millions of dollars in bribes from Brazilian construction firm Odebrecht (now Novonor) while he was president from 2001 to 2006. That was only the beginning of Odebrecht's impressive 15-year campaign to corrupt top officials from 12 countries with bribes worth a total of $3.5 billion in exchange for lucrative public contracts.
  • Indian airlines have reported 90 bomb threats in the last week alone. Though it seems all were fake so far - no real bombs have been found - the threats have forced expensive cancellations, diversions, and fighter jet escorts. It's not clear who's behind the hoax.