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Dr. Steve Pieczenik: The Game Changing Implications of Vault 7 and the Destruction of the CIA

Dr. Steve Pieczenik
This is as close to a real life spy novel as you're going to get...

Dr. Steve Pieczenik is a legend. For those of you who don't know - he's the guy Tom Clancy based Jack Ryan on. He's served 5 U.S. Presidents (Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan and the 1st Bush) and was co-founder of Delta Force. Pieczenik served as former Dep. Sec of State under Kissinger, Vance and Baker - and was instrumental in negotiating the 1978 Camp David Accords. He holds degrees from Cornell, M.I.T. and Harvard, and as a CIA expert in psychological warfare, he was the first psychiatrist ever to receive a PhD focusing on international relations. Steve can probably crush your larynx with his mind.

Shortly before the election, Pieczenik released a series of YouTube videos explaining just what in the hell was going on with all of the Wikileaks revelations - which, as he revealed, were part of a "counter-coup" by patriotic elements within the intelligence community - assisted by Julian Assange, to wrestle control out of the hands of the globalists by exposing Hillary Clinton and the deep-state apparatus she represented.

If you haven't seen the original clips - check them out.

Last night, Pieczenik appeared on Infowars to discuss #Vault7, the counter-coup, Edward Snowden, Currencies, Steve Mnuchin the death of the DNC, and where we go from here. The entire interview is almost 50 minutes long, however here are some select clips (or scroll down for the entire thing):

The implications of Vault7, technology overreach, and the fact that the NSA has a mandate for cyber-command and cyber-warfare. The CIA never did, and it has committed "crimes against the state"


Comment: For much more context on the monumental Vault 7 leak, see: WikiLeaks Vault 7 CIA hacking release: Highlights and updates


Gear

Five Democratic state attorneys moving to challenge Trump's new travel ban in the courts

Trump Travel ban
© Noah Berger / Reuters
A ruling by the federal judge in Seattle blocking President Donald Trump's original travel ban should apply to the new measure as well, says the Washington state attorney general. New York, Oregon and Minnesota are joining the lawsuit as well.

Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson said Thursday that he will ask Judge James Robart to extend his February 3 injunction against the original "Muslim ban" to the new executive order signed by Trump on Monday, which is scheduled to go into effect on March 16.

"We're asserting that the president cannot unilaterally declare himself free of the court's restraining order and injunction," Ferguson said at a news conference, according to Politico. "It's our view that that temporary restraining order that we've already obtained remains in effect."

Comment: Sessions threatens to fire US attorneys who refuse to enforce new Trump travel ban


Snakes in Suits

South Korea's ex-President refuses to vacate residence after impeachment, two dead during protests

protest against South Korea's President Park Geun-hye in Seoul
© Kim Hong-Ji / Reuters
As discussed last night, in a historic ruling, the South Korean Constitutional Court upheld an impeachment decision against President Park Geun-hye, removing her from office on Friday over a graft scandal involving the country's conglomerates at a time of rising tensions with North Korea and China. The ruling sparked protests from hundreds of her supporters, two of whom were killed in clashes with police outside the court.

Park becomes South Korea's first democratically elected leader to be forced from office, capping months of paralysis and turmoil over a corruption scandal that also landed the head of the Samsung conglomerate in jail. A snap presidential election will be held within 60 days. Her ouster caps a 5 month-long political scandal, whose verdict exposed fault lines in a country long divided by Cold War politics. The ruling to uphold parliament's Dec. 9 vote to impeach her marks a dramatic fall from grace of South Korea's first woman president and daughter of Cold War military dictator Park Chung-hee, both of whose parents were assassinated.

While Park's conservative supporters clashed with police outside the court, elsewhere, most people welcomed her ouster. A recent poll showed more than 70 percent supported her impeachment. Hundreds of thousands of people have for months been gathering at peaceful rallies in Seoul every weekend to call for her to step down.

Document

Washington Post's response to Vault 7 leak? The Russians are behind it!

wash_post
© AP Photo/ Pablo Martinez Monsivais
After WikiLeaks shocked the world with their "Vault 7" disclosures about CIA tactics and methods, the Washington Post's only response was to blame Russia and attempt to smear and discredit the country.

Despite the Washington Post happily, and arguably favorably, covering WikiLeaks during the Chelsea Manning State Department disclosures, the paper has now become the go-to source of conspiracy theories for all things Russia.

Cross

Claims of sex orgies, prostitution and porn videos shake Catholic Church in Italy

Prato della Valle
© courtesy of Creative Commons/Julien Lagarde
The Prato della Valle in Padua, Italy, on Nov. 19, 2005.
Lurid accusations of priests involved in sex orgies, porn videos and prostitution have emerged from several parishes in Italy recently, sending shock waves all the way to the Vatican and challenging the high standards that Pope Francis has demanded of clergy.

In the southern city of Naples, for example, a priest was recently suspended from the parish of Santa Maria degli Angeli over claims he held gay orgies and used internet sites to recruit potential partners whom he paid for sex.

The allegations concerning the Rev. Mario D'Orlando were brought to the attention of the diocese when an anonymous letter was sent to a Naples bishop. D'Orlando denied the charges when he was summoned by the city's archbishop, Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe, but is now facing a formal inquiry conducted by local church officials.

"He has been removed from his position while the investigation is underway," a spokesman for the cardinal told Religion News Service. "I have no further comment."

Info

Wikileaks revelations create fresh doubts about Russian 'hacking'

Julian Assange
© REUTERS/Peter NichollsJulian Assange
The gauzy allegations of Russia "hacking" the Democrats to elect Donald Trump just got hazier with WikiLeaks' new revelations about CIA cyber-spying and the capability to pin the blame on others.

WikiLeaks' disclosure of documents revealing CIA cyber-spying capabilities underscores why much more skepticism should have been applied to the U.S. intelligence community's allegations about Russia "hacking" last year's American presidential election. It turns out that the CIA maintains a library of foreign malware that could be used to pin the blame for a "hack" on another intelligence service.

That revelation emerged from documents that WikiLeaks published on Tuesday from a CIA archive that WikiLeaks said had apparently been passed around within a community of former U.S. government hackers and contractors before one of them gave WikiLeaks some of the material.

Info

Iran postpones rocket carrier launch fearing US threats

Iran flag and rocket
© AFP 2017/ STR/VAHIDREZA ALAI
Iran has put off a planned launch of a rocket carrier fearing threats from the United States, Commander of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Aerospace Force Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh said.

On Thursday, Hajizadeh said as cited by the Tasnim news agency that IRGC had successfully test-launched a Hormuz-2 domestically-made ballistic missile capable of destroying sea-based targets at a range of up to 300 kilometers (186 miles).


Later, Hajizadeh said as quoted by Tasnim that Iran had prepared a civilian rocket intended for putting satellites into orbit, but, fearing threats from Washington, postponed the planned launch.

Rocket

Iran confirms new successful missile test as tensions with US mount

Iranian ballistic missile
© Mahmood Hosseini / TIMA / Reuters
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps have successfully test-fired a new ballistic missile, officials have said, amid escalating tensions with the United States.

In Iran's latest missile launch, the Hormuz-2 naval missile destroyed a seagoing target from a distance of 250 kilometers, Revolutionary Guards aerospace commander Brigadier General Amir Ali Hajizadeh confirmed to Tasnim News Agency on Thursday.

The agency does not mention the exact date of the test, saying merely it has been conducted "in the past days."

Bug

Two instances of spying on Trump now confirmed - Zero connection to Russia found

Obamagate
New evidence found in #Obamagate. Two instances of spying on Trump.

More facts are coming in from the Trump wiretap, #Obamagate scandal, as reported by John Soloman and Sarah Carter from Circa.com.

The journalists reported that there was a warrant issued for a server at Trump Tower.

The FBI investigation into the server was brief, and resulted in no evidence of collusion or communication. There was no basis for the Russia story being peddled by the Democrat party.

The Trump-Putin connection has been fictitious the entire time the Democrats spread the story that Trump was a target. The FBI was never looking at Donald Trump as part of the Russia hacking investigation.

Info

UK army withheld information in N. Ireland inquest into 1971 bombing

Judge's gavel
© Pixabay
Families of the victims in the 1971 McGurk's Bar bombing in Northern Ireland filed a request with Attorney General John Larkin for a new inquiry into the attack, citing evidence previously withheld by the British Army, a lawyer of victims' relatives said Thursday.

"The recently discovered [British Army] log sheets of the 4th and 5th December 1971... provide clear evidence that the ATO [ammunition technical officer] who examined the scene was convinced from the outset that the bomb had been placed in the entranceway of the pub," solicitor Padraig O Muirigh said in a press release.

The bomb's location was a key question in the investigation, with police reports claiming the Irish Republican Army (IRA) had mistakenly bombed Irish nationalists.

Comment: For more analysis: The British Empire - A Lesson In State Terrorism
In December 1971, a month before Bloody Sunday, an explosion ripped apart McGurk's Bar, a Catholic pub in Belfast, killing 15 people and wounding 17 more. The Army and police claimed to have found evidence that the bomb that caused the blast had gone off inside the bar. Given that McGurk's was a Catholic bar, this implied that it must have been an IRA device that went off 'accidentally'. Forensic evidence later proved that the bomb had clearly been placed outside the pub and that the loyalist pseudo-gang, the protestant paramilitary force UVF, which was controlled by British intelligence, was responsible.