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War pimp Panetta says 'we'll have to go back go Afghanistan' to get ISIS now, after Kabul bombing

panetta biden
Leon Panetta, one in a host of voices of the US national security establishment objecting to the withdrawal from Afghanistan, says Joe Biden will have to "go back in" to deliver on a pledge to avenge the deaths of troops in Kabul.

Panetta, who headed the CIA between 2009 and 2011 before moving to replace Robert Gates at the helm of the Pentagon, went on CNN to predict a forever war on terrorism in America's forceable future, including in Afghanistan.

"I understand that we're trying to get our troops out of there. But the bottom line is we can leave a battlefield, but we can't leave the war on terrorrism, which still is a threat to our security," he told the OutFront program.


The Obama-era official was commenting on President Joe Biden's promise to go after the Afghan branch of terrorist group Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS), which claimed credit for the Thursday bomb attacks in Kabul. The bombings claimed dozens of lives, including 13 US soldiers. Panetta said Biden was right to promise to retaliate against the people who orchestrated the bombings, and that pledge may require him to act against his withdrawal plan.
We're gonna have to go back in to get ISIS. We'll probably have to go back in, when Al-Qaeda resurrects itself - as they will with this Taliban [government].
The Taliban has been promising to deny access to Afghanistan territory under its control to international terrorist organizations, including Al-Qaeda, as the Islamist militant movement seeks international recognition of its power in the country. Taliban fighters, who were guarding the perimeter of the Hamid Karzai International Airport, were among the victims of the Thursday attack.

Comment: The fact that a total non-entity like Panetta amounts to anything in this world is a testament to the selection process at work in American politics.


Binoculars

CENTCOM commander reveals US intelligence-sharing operation with Taliban

Kenneth McKenzie
© Yuri Gripas/Reuters
U.S. Marine Corps General Kenneth McKenzie Jr. briefs the media at the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., March 13, 2020.
General Kenneth McKenzie, commander of the United States Central Command, revealed an intelligence-sharing operation between the U.S. and Taliban on Thursday at a Department of Defense briefing, just hours after attacks at Hamid Karzai International Airport killed at least twelve U.S. service members and 60 Afghan civilians.

According to McKenzie, the Taliban and U.S. share a "common purpose" of finishing the ongoing evacuation mission by August 31.

"As long as we've kept that common purpose aligned, they've been useful to work with," said the general.

McKenzie said he didn't believe the Taliban intentionally allowed Thursday's attacks to occur, but conceded he didn't know for sure.

Nevertheless McKenzie said the U.S. has been sharing "versions of this information [regarding threats to the airport] with the Taliban so that they can actually do some searching out there for us," though he stipulated that the U.S. "cuts down" the intelligence before handing it over to the Taliban. He also said that the U.S. "thinks" attacks have already been "thwarted" by the terror group that the U.S. deposed from power in 2001. The intelligence-sharing program has been in effect since August 14, McKenzie said.


Comment: According to the Taliban, they were the ones to initially warn the Americans about the imminent attack.


Some experts have criticized the Biden administration for not expanding the perimeter around the airport and instead entrusting the Taliban to secure the area.

Eye 1

Snowden: The all-seeing "i": Apple just declared war on your privacy

apple surveillance
"Under His Eye," she says. The right farewell. "Under His Eye," I reply, and she gives a little nod.

By now you've probably heard that Apple plans to push a new and uniquely intrusive surveillance system out to many of the more than one billion iPhones it has sold, which all run the behemoth's proprietary, take-it-or-leave-it software. This new offensive is tentatively slated to begin with the launch of iOS 15⁠ — almost certainly in mid-September⁠ — with the devices of its US user-base designated as the initial targets. We're told that other countries will be spared, but not for long.

You might have noticed that I haven't mentioned which problem it is that Apple is purporting to solve. Why? Because it doesn't matter.

Having read thousands upon thousands of remarks on this growing scandal, it has become clear to me that many understand it doesn't matter, but few if any have been willing to actually say it. Speaking candidly, if that's still allowed, that's the way it always goes when someone of institutional significance launches a campaign to defend an indefensible intrusion into our private spaces. They make a mad dash to the supposed high ground, from which they speak in low, solemn tones about their moral mission before fervently invoking the dread spectre of the Four Horsemen of the Infopocalypse, warning that only a dubious amulet — or suspicious software update — can save us from the most threatening members of our species.

Bad Guys

Taliban claims 'no proof' ever offered that Osama bin Laden was involved in 9/11 attacks

osama bin laden
© AP Photo / Mazhar Ali Khan
Osama bin Laden in 1998 file photo from his hideout in Afghanistan.
Taliban leaders tried to rewrite history this week, arguing that there is "no proof" longtime al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was involved with the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

In an interview with NBC News that aired Wednesday night, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid mostly deflected questions about whether the Islamist group can and will guarantee that Afghanistan won't be used as a base of operations for terrorist organizations moving forward.

Comment:


Syringe

France 'will not back down' from sanctioning unvaccinated care-workers; boosters will be given to aged in September

france vaccine protests elder vaccination
© AFP / Pascal GUYOT; AFP / Pascal GUYOT
Vaccine protest in Montpellier. (R) A vaccine clinic in Montpellier.
France's prime minister has confirmed that Covid booster shots for the elderly and care-home residents will begin next month, and that the government will impose sanctions on caregivers who are not vaccinated by September 15.

Speaking to French media outlet RTL on Thursday, Prime Minister Jean Castex clarified the dates for the next phase of the country's vaccination campaign, which is poised to launch next month for "the most vulnerable members" of the public.

Comment: Why such hurry? Covid has been proven over and over to be a relatively mild illness. Even in those with co-morbidities, the prognosis can still be positive. There is something suspicious about the contradictions and yet lockstep actions of so many countries.


Pyramid

Ruling class increasingly calls upon the private sector to make lives of the "unvaccinated" difficult

Terry McAuliffe

Terry McAuliffe
Is anyone sick of being ruled and owned yet? The ruling class is not letting up and increasingly calling upon businesses in the private sector to help them roll out the permanent slave state.

They aren't even trying to hide the fact that they want to own us, our bodies, and our minds at this point. Gubernatorial nominee Terry McAuliffe is just one of the tyrants calling on businesses to mandate Covid-19 vaccines after promoting efforts to make the lives of those who are unvaccinated more "difficult." Joe Biden has already tried this play right out of the slave owner's handbook:

The Ruling Class Urges Businesses To Mandate COVID Vaccines For Employment

It's like these rulers know they cannot do this alone. The slaves have to help them and sadly, all too many are all too ready to help make this planet a permanent prison. This only gets worse though as more people start to figure out what's really going on.

Binoculars

If Britain violates Russian territorial waters again, Moscow's forces will make things 'much more difficult,' ambassador warns

Royal Navy
© Reuters / Sergey Smolentsev
FILE PHOTO. British Royal Navy's Type 45 destroyer HMS Defender arrives at the Black Sea port of Odessa, Ukraine June 18, 2021.
Moscow's ambassador to the United Kingdom, Andrey Kelin, has warned London that there will be consequences in the event of a repeat of the incident in June when a British ship crossed into Russian territorial waters near Crimea.

Speaking to state broadcaster the BBC, Kelin urged Britain not to try the same maneuver again, suggesting that the Kremlin would not hesitate to order decisive action to protect its sovereignty. He explained that the Russian Navy would make it "more difficult" for a repeat incident to happen.

On June 23, the British warship HMS Defender purposely violated Russia's territorial waters, crossing three kilometers (two miles) over the border near Cape Fiolent, on the Crimean Peninsula. While Moscow described the incident as breaking the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, London said the boat had passed peacefully through Ukrainian waters. Following the incident, the British ambassador in Moscow was summoned to the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Comment: Britain wouldn't stand a chance, and it knows it, that's why it has to resort to such petty antagonistic games. But the increasing incursions along the borders of, and into territories belonging to, Russia and China, are notable, even if they do only reflect the impotence of the West:


Bullseye

Like the Soviets with communism, US mission to 'democratize' Afghanistan failed as it couldn't impose what it doesn't have at home

US Army Khogyani
© AFP/Wakil Kohsar
US army soldiers in the Khogyani district in the eastern province of Nangarhar.
Every once in a while, the US messes up so badly that it actually notices. This time, the chaos is in Afghanistan. Snatching defeat from the jaws of stalemate, it has now ended a disgraceful 20-year war with a self-inflicted rout.

The disaster is already being spun into a rousing tale of special-forces-to-the-rescue - the rights for a future movie titled something like 'The Secret Soldiers of Kabul' are probably being bought up in Hollywood as we speak. But across the world, the Great American Rout of Afghanistan will live in infamy - and for much longer than two decades.

The debacle is so spectacular - and, for now, so omnipresent via the global media, traditional and social - that it has even started to shake, a little, the usually rock-solid conformism and complacency of the "indispensable nation's" political-military-think-tank elite. It's indicative of how bad things must be this time at the heart of the American empire that there are hardly any serious attempts to blame everything on "the Russians," recently the American default response to severe self-inflicted pain, from Trump to anti-vax sentiment.

Ironically, all of this has led to a very Russian question being asked all over American chattering space: Who is to blame?

Comment: Will America examine, redefine and self-correct to become what it has claimed to be for 245 years and never achieved? National delusion is an engine running on fumes.


Airplane

Kamala Harris arrives in Vietnam after delay over possible 'Havana Syndrome' case

Harris Vietnam
© Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
US VP Kamala Harris
Vice President Kamala Harris finally arrived in Vietnam from Singapore early Wednesday after a potential case of the mysterious "Havana Syndrome" was reported, causing her flight a three-hour delay.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the case had not been confirmed and a safety assessment was completed before the vice president flew on to Hanoi, the Vietnamese capital, Reuters reported. "After careful assessment, the decision was made to continue with the Vice President's trip," a statement for the vice president said.

Harris left Washington on Friday for a brief tour of Southeast Asia.

In Singapore, where she was delayed, she sharply criticized China, emphasizing U.S. support for a free Indo-Pacific region and condemning aggression there from Beijing's communist regime.



Comment: Telling it like it is, Fox News offers a scathing commentary on the VP and Biden administration.


Propaganda

Western media 'complicit in hiding truth' of Afghan war, allowing 'extraordinary lie' to last two decades says WikiLeaks' Hrafnsson

Kabul evacuees
© Reuters/US Marine COrps/Sgt. Isaiah Campbell
Kabul evacuees in queue
The abrupt US withdrawal from Afghanistan should not surprise anyone, WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Kristinn Hrafnsson told RT, saying the fact that Washington was able to deceive the world for two decades is more shocking.

Washington's 19-year-long war campaign in Afghanistan was one "big lie" that only benefited America's military industrial complex and private contractors, Hrafnsson said. The WikiLeaks editor-in-chief said it was not the ongoing chaotic withdrawal of the US and its allies that was now a surprise, but the fact that mainstream media did not catch on to the lies which prolonged the war long ago.

WikiLeaks published a trove of documents that "all painted a true picture of what was going on in Afghanistan 11 years ago," Hrafnsson said, referring to the so-called Afghan War Diary - a collection of internal US military logs, diplomatic cables and CIA documents covering the period between 2004 and 2010.

The leak that included a total of 91,000 documents was considered one of the biggest in US military history. It did hit the headlines at that time, eventually leading to the arrest and prosecution of whistleblower Chelsea Manning and put WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange in Washington's crosshairs.

Comment: Fallacy: The profit from delusion is worth more than the cost of the truth.

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