A couple of days ago, we mentioned that the Kazakhstan insurrection was probably another "color revolution." Those are revolutions which favor Globalist interests and are usually created by, or supported by, Globaloney outfits.
Often those outfits are cats-paws for CIA or State Department, although one cannot exclude such as MI6, where the Rothschilds have more than a little influence.
Geopolitical commentator Clint Ehrlich has reported while on the ground in Moscow that "the situation in Kazakhstan is a much bigger deal than Western media is letting on." He further argues that the mayhem unleashed this past week and ongoing violent destabilization significantly increases the risk of NATO-Russia conflict. ...
The essay lists a number of good reasons for Russia to be concerned, among them the Russki spaceport, uranium mining/processing, and a sizeable Russian Orthodox minority population (among the 65% Muslim Kazakhs)
What about that "color revolution" stuff? Glad you asked!!
...It's debatable whether the West has anywhere near the power to spark revolutions that Russia contends. Yet America plays into Russian paranoia by funding "civil society" NGOs overseas....
Such as the National Endowment for Democracy
Only a year ago, the NED published a paper on "Defending Peaceful Assembly" in Kazakhstan.
Putin ain't stupid.
...In 1991, NED President Allen Weinstein said, "A lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA." He claimed that operating overtly via NED, rather than covertly through the CIA, made the risk of blowback "close to zero." The Russians do not see things that way. When they witness overt US support for ousting pro-Russian governments, they assume there is also covert support being provided. To them, NED is only 1/2 of a "hybrid war" strategy in Kazakhstan that includes kinetic operations. Russia's Foreign Ministry made that clear yesterday.
It describes the situation in Kazakhstan as "an attempt to undermine the security and integrity of the state by force, using trained and organized armed formations, that is inspired from the outside." ...
The result?
...This claim forms the predicate for intervention by the "Collective Security Treaty Organization," the Russian-led equivalent of NATO. It's the first ever CSTO intervention, and it's based on the accusation of a foreign attack on the sovereignty of Kazakhstan....
We all know that Bai-Den and the Democrats desperately need a 'unifying' event, such as a foreign adventure to 'secure democracy,' fighting against an Evil Empire. We also know that Bai-Den is NOT running the Executive Branch. That leaves the Deep State in charge, and their special talent is fomenting war and getting US troops to fight it.
Worth watching.
2 comments:
If the CIA remains competent enough to execute a major clandestine operation -- which would make it unique among our major institutions, most of which have lost the capacity to carry out their core functions -- it would make sense as a way of deescalating the fight in Ukraine. On the principle that one should not wage war on two fronts at once, the need to deploy troops to the east makes it less likely they'd deploy troops to the west at the same time. Otherwise, it is looking like Ukraine will see a Russian invasion as soon as the roads melt.
That would almost be nice to believe, but in fact I can't easily believe it. I see that the Russians are taking a very hard line on negotiations re: Ukraine, and the Biden administration is making Chamberlain-like noises about reducing our commitment to Poland if only Russia will be kinder to Ukraine. That doesn't sound like the dynamic one would expect if the US had just pulled off a major battlefield-shaping coup in Kazakhstan.
Blinken showed up on TeeeVeeee today (Nod was taking his nappy-nap) and the clips I saw seemed to be full of bravado on Ukraine. "Serious consequences" and "More Sanctions", he uttered.
The TeeeeVeee didn't relay comments about Poland but then, the Poles aren't behaving according to the EU Standards of Moral Rot, so throwing them to the wolves would accord with State Department protocol.
Hungary will be next.
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