Ordered the 1976 assassination of one of his country’s diplomats in Washington, documents reveal…

Officials at the Pentagon and the State Department, reflecting the views of the President himself, made clear yesterday that the Obama Administration will not share intelligence with the Russians on ISIS, or cooperate with Russia against ISIS in any other way.

“I don’t know how you share intelligence when you don’t share a common objective,” said State Deaprtment spokesman John Kirby.  The “common objective” that the Russians don’t share is the overthrow of Syria’s legitimately-elected President Bashar al Assad.

“If there are some forces that also have weapons in their hands and are on the ground fighting, as the coalition says, with the Islamic State, and they should not be touched, then wonderful,” said Maria Zakharova, a Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman.  “Give the list, give the call signs of these people, tell us where are they located, explain why they shouldn’t be touched.  Indeed, this information is not provided.”

The US response to the Russian offer is, in effect, “not on your life.” Unnamed US officials told the New York Times that the last thing they were going to do was provide coordinates for where American-backed opposition groups were, lest they be bombed by the Russians as part of Moscow’s alleged “effort to back Assad.”

Secretary of Defense Ash Carter, while in Italy yesterday, went so far as to describe Russia’s strategy as “tragically flawed,” and claim that, therefore, the US could not cooperate with the Russian campaign. Carter said:

“We believe that Russia has the wrong strategy. They continue to hit targets that are not ISIL.  We believe this is a fundamental mistake…We are not prepared to cooperate in a strategy which is tragically flawed, and that is why I said the United States is not collaborating with Russia.”

Can you conjure up the image of any presidential hopeful in a field actually working to grow food for his/her family?

“The US Air Force and other parties have been conducting airstrikes for a year.  We have reasons to believe that they don’t often hit terrorist targets, or rather do so very rarely,” Igor Konashenkov, the spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry, told RT.

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov said:

“The refusal to share intelligence on terrorists just confirms once more what we knew from the very start, that the US goals in Syria have little to do with creating the conditions for a political process and national reconciliation.  I would risk saying that by doing this the US and the countries that joined the US-led coalition are putting themselves in a politically dubious position.  The question is: which side are you fighting for in this war?”

Ryabkov said that Russia would do quite well without US intelligence, since it has plenty of other sources.  “There are our own means of reconnaissance.  We get intelligence from a number of other countries and coordinate its flow through the Baghdad information-sharing center,” he said.

Everybody is measured by a score between 350 and 950, which is linked to their national identity card.

It won’t be much of a surprise to those living outside the Washington D.C. beltway.