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Thu, 30 Sep 2021
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Attention

'Graveyard of Empires' claims another victim

Graveyard of Empires
© Corbett Report
The war in Afghanistan is over! Long live the war in Afghanistan!

Yes, in case you haven't heard, the US Armed Forces are withdrawing from Afghanistan at the end of the month and NATO's "Resolute Support" mission — which took over from the NATO combat mission that ended in 2014 — will wind up at the same time. And now, exactly as predicted, everything is chaos. And by "everything," I mean everything.

The Taliban is quickly taking over the country. This story is developing by the hour so it will doubtless have moved on by the time you read this, but as of press time the Taliban have already seized half of Afghanistan's provincial capitals — including Kandahar and Herat, the second and third largest cities in the country respectively — and are on their way (inevitably, we are told) to capturing Kabul itself. The US military has given up defending the country and is now launching "over-the-horizon" strikes from Qatar and the Persian Gulf and using drone strikes to destroy its own artillery and armoured vehicles, which are increasingly falling into Taliban hands.

In response, everyone is getting the hell out of Dodge. Denmark is evacuating Afghan citizens who worked at their embassy. Canada is deploying its special forces to evacuate its own embassy staff. The US military is doing likewise and begging the Taliban to pretty please don't hurt us as we run away. (No word yet on whether people will be hanging from helicopters as they make their last minute escape.)

And, oh yeah, by the way, Al CIAda is regrouping.

Are you scared yet? Well, you should be. Not because the scary turbaned bogeymen are coming to get you again, of course, but because the government-media-military-industrial-technological complex want you to be scared, meaning that they doubtless have something up their sleeve.

So what's really happening in Afghanistan?

The simplest answer to that question might be: Nothing unexpected. After all, the country is called "The Graveyard of Empires" for a reason.

MIB

Russian hypersonic weapons company chief detained by security services in Moscow on suspicion of passing secrets abroad

Alexander Kuranov
© Hypersonic Systems Research Institute
Alexander Kuranov
The director of an aerospace firm that works on contracts from the Russian government has been detained by the country's top security service, the FSB, after reportedly sharing sensitive information relating to its high-tech work.

In a statement to TASS on Thursday, an unnamed official confirmed that Alexander Kuranov, the boss of engineering firm NIGS, is being held by authorities. The press service of the Lefortovo Court in the capital later confirmed that prosecutors are seeking to keep him behind bars initially for two months while a case is being prepared against him for alleged treason.

Comment: It would appear that the 'hostage diplomacy' wars are heating up; although, at least Russia and China's charges seem to have some validity, whereas, as usual, the West's borders farcical:


Pharoah

Us and Them: UN globalists arriving in UK for climate summit won't face COVID restrictions imposed on British citizens

United Nations Climate Summit 2014

United Nations Climate Summit 2014
While British holidaymakers continue to face uncertainty and headaches over returning from foreign vacations, UN globalists arriving for a climate conference in Scotland won't face the same COVID-19 restrictions.

For months, Brits have been hesitant to travel due to onerous quarantine rules which enforce self-isolation upon return from different destinations.

This was exacerbated by the government constantly changing which countries were on the green, amber, amber-plus and red lists - leaving many holidaymakers in limbo stranded abroad.

UK citizens returning home from red list countries, many of which are located in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, have to undergo a brutally enforced quarantine in specially designated prison-like hotels at their own expense.

The 10 day quarantine applies even if the individual is vaccinated, while those returning from amber countries have to perform the same self-isolation at home, with local authorities and police routinely checking up on them.

However, the same rules won't apply to globalist environmentalist alarmists visiting Scotland for the United Nations Climate Change Conference in November.


Sheriff

Russia-China joint military exercise 'complete success', US-Israel perform 'first of its kind' military aerial operation in Southern Israel

Russia china military exercise
Russia's joint military exercise with China, the first time servicemen from both nations have participated together on operational and strategic drills, was a "complete success" and demonstrated a "high level" of cooperation.

That's according to Chinese Defense Minister Wei Fenghe, who spoke on Friday following a week of war games.

"These drills have great significance," Wei said. "These are the first joint drills organized in China since the outbreak of the epidemic. And these are the first-ever Chinese operational and strategic maneuvers with the participation of Russian troops."

Comment: Journalist Samuel Ramani comments that Russia is also seeking to improve military relations with India:


Meanwhile the US and Israel have also been engaged in a 'first of its kind, historic' aerial military exercise over southern Israel; which certainly makes a change from the US executing these exercises near Russia's border:
"The aircrews practiced various operational scenarios in the air, including joint exercises against ground, aerial and combined threats while striking designated targets," said the Israel Defense Forces. U.S. and Israeli air forces hold joint aerial exercises over southern Israel, August 2021.

The Israeli Air Force and U.S. Air Force Central Command announced on Tuesday the completion of the Desert Eagle joint exercise at Uvda Air Force Base in southern Israel.

The exercise marked the first joint drill between the IAF and AFCENT, noted the IDF, describing the cooperation as "historic" and "another example of the long-standing alliance and strategic cooperation between Israel and the United States."

During the drill, Israeli F-15 fighter jets from the 133rd Squadron flew alongside USAF F-15s from the 494th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron.

The IAF's 115th Squadron of F-16 jets simulated enemy forces during the drill.

In June, IAF F-35 jets joined counterparts from the United States, Italy and Britain for a joint exercise in Italy.
See also:


Attention

From Monsanto to Pfizer it's the same old playbook

The "settled science" behind GMOs can teach us valuable lessons about the rollout of Covid19 "vaccines".
Monsanto & Pfizer
© Off-Guardian
Why are numerous 'independent alternative' media outlets and writers not questioning the COVID-19 vaccine rollout? If anything, they are promoting it without even considering the serious concerns being voiced by top scientists.

When there are experts like cardiologist and epidemiologist Professor Peter McCullough, Dr Robert Malone (credited with inventing mRNA vaccine technology), former vice president of Pfizer Pharmaceuticals Dr Michael Yeadon, vaccine researcher and immunologist Dr Byram Bridle, world-renowned microbiologist Dr Sucharit Bhakti and hundreds of other respected scientists, immunologists and virologists expressing serious concerns or even calling for a halt to the rollout, surely their views must be given space.

However, from the outset, these self-proclaimed 'anti-establishment' platforms and journalists threw their hand in with the official COVID-19 narrative.

They are now supporting the vaccine rollouts and by implication the entities pushing the vaccines - governments, mainstream media, the Gates and Rockefeller Foundations, Big Pharma and Silicon Valley and its bedfellow, the US military.

In effect, the full weight of the establishment has been brought to bear on pushing the COVID narrative and the vaccines. The very establishment that these 'independent' media outlets have previously challenged over the devastating 'humanitarian' conflicts in Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan or Syria.

To show such contempt for human life (civilian 'collateral damage') via geopolitical and resource-grabbing wars sold under the thin veneer of 'the war on terror' or 'humanitarian intervention' but then feel a need to save humanity from the 'deadly' virus must make some of those supporters of the official line on COVID just a little suspicious of the motives.

As critical care physician Dr Pascal Sacre recently wrote:
If people want trustworthy rulers, honest politicians, they should always judge rulers, financial elites and politicians by their actions rather than by their words."
By not giving space to top scientists in the field of vaccine technology, immunology or virology who express deep concerns, these outlets are in fact engaging in censorship as much as the mainstream media, Facebook, Twitter, Google and YouTube.

Science involves open debate and transparency, not censorship.

Bizarro Earth

Taliban announces total conquest of Kandahar as Afghan officials confirm fall of 2nd-largest city

Kandahar
© REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui
Humvees that belong to Afghan Special Forces are seen destroyed during heavy clashes with Taliban during the rescue mission of a police officer besieged at a check post, in Kandahar province, Afghanistan, July 13, 2021.
The Taliban has claimed complete control over Kandahar following fierce fighting, as officials confirm that government forces have retreated from the second-largest city.

A spokesperson for the militant group posted a statement on Friday announcing that Afghanistan's most important provinces - Kandahar, Helmand, Herat and Badghis - had been completely conquered.

The Taliban said it had seized hundreds of weapons and vehicles, as well as large amounts of ammunition, following the successful military operation.

An Afghan member of parliament who spoke with CNN confirmed the city was no longer under the control of the Kabul government.

"Many (government) soldiers surrendered and the rest fled," Gul Ahmad Kamin told the outlet, adding that some Afghan forces were still waiting to be evacuated from the city.

A local government official quoted by Reuters said the Taliban seized the city following "heavy clashes" that lasted late into the night.

Comment: The UK defence secretary thinks a civil war is coming to the country. Denmark and Norway shut their embassies in Kabul, and Germany has cut its staff to a bare minimum. The U.S. embassy has been instructed to destroy sensitive documents and computers.
US negotiators have asked the Taliban not to attack the embassy, threatening the loss of foreign aid, the Times said. But state-backed NPR said the future of the embassy's many Afghan workers "was not immediately clear." The embassy memo indicated that a small consular staff will remain in Kabul, though it's not clear how that would be feasible if the capital is captured by the Taliban.

Biden has insisted that the fears of a Vietnam-like exit are unfounded. When asked by a reporter last month about possible parallels to the Saigon evacuation, he said, "None whatsoever. Zero. What you had is, you had entire brigades breaking through the gates of our embassy, six, if I'm not mistaken. The Taliban is not the south — the North Vietnamese army. They're not, they're not remotely comparable in terms of capability."
There's going to be no circumstance where you see people being lifted off the roof of an embassy of the United States from Afghanistan. It is not at all comparable.
Not everyone is convinced. US Representative Mike Rogers (R-Alabama), ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, said American lives have been put at risk by Biden's "haphazard" withdrawal from Afghanistan. As a result, he added, the turmoil in Afghanistan is unsurprising, and "the worst is yet to come."

"Weeks ago, President Biden promised the American people that we would not have a Saigon moment in Afghanistan," Rogers said in a statement on Thursday. "Now, we are watching President Biden's Saigon moment unfold before us." The congressman predicted on Friday that the withdrawal deadline will be missed as more troops are sent to the central Asian country.

In addition to the 3,000 troops who have already been dispatched to Afghanistan, 4,500 to 5,000 others are being moved to bases in Kuwait and Qatar, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters on Friday. About 3,500 to 4,000 are from the 82nd Airborne Division and will be put on stand-by in Kuwait, "in case we need even more than the 3,000 going to Kabul," Kirby said.
The U.S. previously estimated it could fall to the Taliban in 90 days. According to some reports, the Taliban could take it over in a matter of days (or hours).
According to ground reports, Kabul is ready for its takeover by Taliban, as the terrorist group continue its offensive against Afghan forces and blitz of cities, sources told CNN-News18.

Police stations are empty, and officers have run away with arms and ammunition for personal safety, the sources said. It is only a matter of time by when the Taliban reach Kabul - either by late night or tomorrow morning, they said, adding that however, the terrorist group will not attack the Presidential Palace.

Sources said the Taliban will honour international commitments and it is possible the Kabul administration will shift to the Kabul airport in the next few hours.
Eighteen of 34 provinces are now in Taliban hands:
  • August 6 - Zaranji (Nimruz)
  • August 7 - Sheberghan (Jowzjan)
  • August 8 - Kunduz (Kunduz)
  • August 8 - Sar-e Pol (Sar-e Pol)
  • August 8 - Talquan (Takhar)
  • August 9 - Aybak (Samangan)
  • August 10 - Farah (Farah)
  • August 10 - Pul-i Khumri (Baghlan)
  • August 11 - Faizabad (Badakhshan)
  • August 12 - Ghazni (Ghazni)
  • August 12 - Kandahar (Kandahar)
  • August 12 - Herat (Herat)
  • August 12 - Qala-e-Naw (Badghis)
  • August 13 - Lashkar Gah (Helmand)
  • August 13 - Tirin kot (Uruzgan)
  • August 13 - Chaghcharan (Ghor)
  • August 13 - Pul-e Alim (Logar)
  • August 13 - Qalat (Zabul)



MIB

The cyber espionage state of Israel

cyber warfare security hacker
After several dozen international publications, including The Washington Post and The Guardian, simultaneously reported in mid-July on a major investigation by Amnesty International and Forbidden Stories over Israel's Pegasus spyware, another scandal over Israeli cyber-spying activities erupted.

According to the articles, not only Israel itself but also dozens of governments used Israeli technology to hack the phones of politicians, journalists, opposition activists, and human rights activists. Tens of thousands of phones were tapped. A direct trace is also evident in Israel's complicity in the cyber-surveillance of the murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, hence the responsibility for the events that happened to him. The investigation contains a great deal of information about human rights abuses in many regions of the world through programs developed by Israel and, in particular, by the NSO Group, but this is only the tip of the iceberg. It has become apparent to everyone that not only government services are engaged in cyber espionage in Israel but, in addition to the NSO Group, there are other Israeli companies competing with each other: they manufacture similar products and supply them to those who commit similar crimes. There are also technologies possessed exclusively by the Israeli security and intelligence agencies, which provide their services to Israel's close friends, including several Arab states.

Comment: Notably, a cyber security firm working in league with Israel's government recently released a report accusing other countries, China in particular, of hacking various other nations to 'advance its negotiations in tech and business'. Meanwhile, as the research above reveals, Israel is involved in much, much worse. And the implications for freedom and democracy around the world are massive. Although this isn't a great surprise to those who've been paying attention to world events over the last two decades.

With the WEF's ominous threat that we can expect to see a 'cyberpandemic' in the near future, one wonders just what part Israel will play?

See also:


Arrow Down

After 20 years and billions of dollars, American defeat in Afghanistan worse than the Soviet failure - how has this happened?

Taliban in truck
© AFP
Taliban fighters drive an Afghan National Army vehicle in Kandahar
As the last men of the dwindling American garrison in Afghanistan pack their bags, there is an echo of the Soviet Union's own withdrawal from the country, more than 30 years ago. But, in truth, Washington's defeat is far greater.

In December 1979, Soviet forces invaded Afghanistan to support the unpopular government of the ruling People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA). They soon found themselves bogged down in a bloody war against the mujahideen guerillas. Nine years later, the Soviets decided that there had been enough bloodshed and, in May 1988, they began their exit. The final contingent of Soviet troops drove back across the bridge to the USSR in February the following year.

Twelve years later, US troops arrived to fight the Taliban. Soldiers of other NATO states then followed. Together, they stayed even longer than the Soviets, but are now on the way out. US President Joe Biden has promised that American soldiers will leave Afghanistan by the end of August.

As the US completes its retreat from its longest war, its enemy is on the march. In the past week, the Taliban have captured 12 of Afghanistan's 34 provincial capitals, including the second and third largest cities in the country, Kandahar and Herat, both of which fell on Thursday.

Comment: Grooves: Even if the lessons of Afghanistan manage to hit home in America, they will not likely carry over into future conflicts, power grabs, resource rapes, population decimation nor governance upgrades. The US is too big, too complex and too compromised to change.


Umbrella

Biden comes to Newsom's recall defense as WH mulls larger role

Biden Newsom Harris
© Washington Times/Gage Skidmore/CNN/KJN
Three Amigos
US President Joe Biden • California Governor Gavin Newsom • US VP Kamala Harris
President Joe Biden resoundingly endorsed Gov. Gavin Newsom against a looming recall vote on Thursday, telegraphing that the White House could come to Newsom's aid in the race's critical final weeks.

The Biden administration had already gone on the record opposing the vote to oust Newsom. But Biden's statement was on a different order of magnitude and came as the White House considers deploying Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris — or both — on Newsom's behalf.

Biden said in a statement:
"Governor Newsom is leading California through unprecedented crises. He is a key partner in fighting the pandemic and delivering economic relief to working families and helping us build our economy back better than ever. He's taking on the climate crisis and standing up for the rights of women, immigrants, and the LGBTQ community. He knows how to get the job done because he's been doing it. And to keep him on the job, registered California voters should vote no on the recall election by September 14 and keep California moving forward."
A source familiar with White House planning said both Biden and Harris intend to take an active role in the campaign's homestretch. That could include in-person appearances and social media support.

Comment: See also:


X

Abbas and Palestinian Authority increase campaign to silence dissent

Abbas
© Thaer Ganaim
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
Late last month, the Palestinian Authority's (PA) Council of Ministers announced a new decision to limit freedom of expression for Palestinians already living under Israel's occupation. The PA eliminated Article 22 of the "Code of Conduct and Ethics for Public Service," which stated that public employees have the right to express their opinion verbally or in writing, including on social media. Article 22's only condition was that employees note it was their personal opinion and not that of the government agency where they worked. This is the latest move by PA President Mahmoud Abbas to further curtail the few freedoms Palestinians have and strengthen his tenuous hold on power.

The PA's decision comes on the heels of the torture and murder of activist Nizar Banat. In response to a wave of protests over the assassination, PA security forces and thugs aligned with Abbas's Fatah movement attacked demonstrators. This was followed by the arrests and intimidation of activists as well as journalists, and the employees of legal assistance and human rights organizations. To prevent protests from spreading, Abbas is hoping to extinguish criticism from inside and outside the PA and Fatah.

Comment: Abbas, like Netanyahu, is looking out for himself - the people a distant second. While representing Palestinians on face value, he thrives on enacting Israeli dictates under Washington's purview. His term of office was up years ago and yet he is still in power. He must be useful.

See also:
Will the torturing to death of a vocal critic lead finally to the ousting of Mahmoud Abbas, Palestine's de facto dictator?