US Intelligence Community is Tearing the Country Apart from the Inside
By Dmitry Orlov
July 30, 2018 "Information
Clearing House"
- In today’s United
States, the term “espionage” doesn’t get too
much use outside of some specific contexts.
There is still sporadic talk of industrial
espionage, but with regard to Americans’ own
efforts to understand the world beyond their
borders, they prefer the term
“intelligence.” This may be an intelligent
choice, or not, depending on how you look at
things.
First of all, US “intelligence” is only
vaguely related to the game of espionage as
it has been traditionally played, and as it
is still being played by countries such as
Russia and China. Espionage involves
collecting and validating strategically
vital information and conveying it to just
the pertinent decision-makers on your side
while keeping the fact that you are
collecting and validating it hidden from
everyone else.
In recent years, the US intelligence
agencies have decided that torturing
prisoners is a good idea, but they have
mostly been torturing innocent bystanders,
not professional spies, sometimes forcing
them to invent things, such as “Al Qaeda.”
There was no such thing before US
intelligence popularized it as a brand among
Islamic terrorists.
Most recently, British “special services,”
which are a sort of Mini-Me to the to the
Dr. Evil that is the US intelligence
apparatus, saw it fit to interfere with one
of their own spies, Sergei Skripal, a double
agent whom they sprung from a Russian jail
in a spy swap. They poisoned him using an
exotic chemical and then tried to pin the
blame on Russia based on no evidence.
Are You Tired Of The Lies And Non-Stop Propaganda? |
There are unlikely to be any more British
spy swaps with Russia, and British spies
working in Russia should probably be issued
good old-fashioned cyanide capsules (since
that supposedly super-powerful Novichok
stuff the British keep at their “secret” lab
in Porton Down doesn’t work right and is
only fatal 20% of the time).
There is another unwritten, commonsense rule
about spying in general: whatever happens,
it needs to be kept out of the courts,
because the discovery process of any trial
would force the prosecution to divulge
sources and methods, making them part of the
public record. An alternative is to hold
secret tribunals, but since these cannot be
independently verified to be following due
process and rules of evidence, they don’t
add much value.
A different standard applies to traitors;
here, sending them through the courts is
acceptable and serves a high moral purpose,
since here the source is the person on trial
and the method—treason—can be divulged
without harm. But this logic does not apply
to proper, professional spies who are simply
doing their jobs, even if they turn out to
be double agents. In fact, when
counterintelligence discovers a spy, the
professional thing to do is to try to
recruit him as a double agent or, failing
that, to try to use the spy as a channel for
injecting disinformation.
Americans have been doing their best to
break this rule. Recently, special counsel
Robert Mueller indicted a dozen Russian
operatives working in Russia for hacking
into the DNC mail server and sending the
emails to Wikileaks. Meanwhile, said server
is nowhere to be found (it’s been misplaced)
while the time stamps on the files that were
published on Wikileaks show that they were
obtained by copying to a thumb drive rather
than sending them over the internet. Thus,
this was a leak, not a hack, and couldn’t
have been done by anyone working remotely
from Russia.
Furthermore, it is an exercise in futility
for a US official to indict Russian citizens
in Russia. They will never stand trial in a
US court because of the following clause in
the Russian Constitution: “61.1 A citizen of
the Russian Federation may not be deported
out of Russia or extradited to another
state.”
Mueller may summon a panel of
constitutional scholars to interpret this
sentence, or he can just read it and weep.
Yes, the Americans are doing their best to
break the unwritten rule against dragging
spies through the courts, but their best is
nowhere near good enough.
That said, there is no reason to believe
that the Russian spies couldn’t have hacked
into the DNC mail server. It was probably
running Microsoft Windows, and that
operating system has more holes in it than a
building in downtown Raqqa, Syria after the
Americans got done bombing that city to
rubble, lots of civilians included. When
questioned about this alleged hacking by Fox
News, Putin (who had worked as a spy in his
previous career) had trouble keeping a
straight face and clearly enjoyed the
moment.
He pointed out that the hacked/leaked
emails showed a clear pattern of wrongdoing:
DNC officials conspired to steal the
electoral victory in the Democratic Primary
from Bernie Sanders, and after this
information had been leaked they were forced
to resign. If the Russian hack did happen,
then it was the Russians working to save
American democracy from itself. So, where’s
the gratitude? Where’s the love? Oh, and why
are the DNC perps not in jail?
Since there exists an agreement between the
US and Russia to cooperate on criminal
investigations, Putin offered to question
the spies indicted by Mueller. He even
offered to have Mueller sit in on the
proceedings. But in return he wanted to
question US officials who may have aided and
abetted a convicted felon by the name of
William Browder, who is due to begin serving
a nine-year sentence in Russia any time now
and who, by the way, donated copious amounts
of his ill-gotten money to the Hillary
Clinton election campaign.
In response, the US Senate passed a
resolution to forbid Russians from
questioning US officials. And instead of
issuing a valid request to have the twelve
Russian spies interviewed, at least one US
official made the startlingly inane request
to have them come to the US instead. Again,
which part of 61.1 don’t they understand?
The logic of US officials may be hard to
follow, but only if we adhere to the
traditional definitions of espionage and
counterespionage—“intelligence” in US
parlance—which is to provide validated
information for the purpose of making
informed decisions on best ways of defending
the country. But it all makes perfect sense
if we disabuse ourselves of such quaint
notions and accept the reality of what we
can actually observe: the purpose of US
“intelligence” is not to come up with or to
work with facts but to simply “make shit
up.”
The “intelligence” the US intelligence
agencies provide can be anything but; in
fact, the stupider it is the better, because
its purpose is allow unintelligent people to
make unintelligent decisions. In fact, they
consider facts harmful—be they about Syrian
chemical weapons, or conspiring to steal the
primary from Bernie Sanders, or Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction, or the
whereabouts of Osama Bin Laden—because facts
require accuracy and rigor while they prefer
to dwell in the realm of pure fantasy and
whimsy. In this, their actual objective is
easily discernible.
The objective of US intelligence is to suck
all remaining wealth out of the US and its
allies and pocket as much of it as possible
while pretending to defend it from phantom
aggressors by squandering nonexistent
(borrowed) financial resources on
ineffective and overpriced military
operations and weapons systems. Where the
aggressors are not phantom, they are
specially organized for the purpose of
having someone to fight: “moderate”
terrorists and so on.
One major advancement in their state of
the art has been in moving from real false
flag operations, à la 9/11, to fake false
flag operations, à la fake East Gouta
chemical attack in Syria (since fully
discredited). The Russian election meddling
story is perhaps the final step in this
evolution: no New York skyscrapers or Syrian
children were harmed in the process of
concocting this fake narrative, and it can
be kept alive seemingly forever purely
through the furious effort of numerous
flapping lips. It is now a pure confidence
scam. If you are less then impressed with
their invented narratives, then you are a
conspiracy theorist or, in the latest
revision, a traitor.
Trump was recently questioned as to whether
he trusted US intelligence. He waffled. A
light-hearted answer would have been:
“What sort of idiot are you to ask me such a
stupid question? Of course they are lying!
They were caught lying more than once, and
therefore they can never be trusted again.
In order to claim that they are not
currently lying, you have to determine when
it was that they stopped lying, and that
they haven’t lied since. And that, based on
the information that is available, is an
impossible task.”
A more serious, matter-of-fact answer would
have been:
“The US intelligence agencies made an
outrageous claim: that I colluded with
Russia to rig the outcome of the 2016
presidential election. The burden of proof
is on them. They are yet to prove their case
in a court of law, which is the only place
where the matter can legitimately be
settled, if it can be settled at all. Until
that happens, we must treat their claim as
conspiracy theory, not as fact.”
And a hardcore, deadpan answer would have
been:
“The US intelligence services swore an oath
to uphold the US Constitution, according to
which I am their Commander in Chief. They
report to me, not I to them. They must be
loyal to me, not I to them. If they are
disloyal to me, then that is sufficient
reason for their dismissal.”
But no such reality-based, down-to-earth
dialogue seems possible. All that we hear
are fake answers to fake questions, and the
outcome is a series of faulty decisions.
Based on fake intelligence, the US has spent
almost all of this century embroiled in very
expensive and ultimately futile conflicts.
Thanks to their efforts, Iran, Iraq and
Syria have now formed a continuous crescent
of religiously and geopolitically aligned
states friendly toward Russia while in
Afghanistan the Taliban is resurgent and
battling ISIS—an organization that came
together thanks to American efforts in Iraq
and Syria.
The total cost of wars so far this century
for the US is reported to be
$4,575,610,429,593. Divided by the
138,313,155 Americans who file tax returns
(whether they actually pay any tax is too
subtle a question), it works out to just
over $33,000 per taxpayer. If you pay taxes
in the US, that’s your bill so far for the
various US intelligence “oopsies.”
The 16 US intelligence agencies have a
combined budget of $66.8 billion, and that
seems like a lot until you realize how
supremely efficient they are: their
“mistakes” have cost the country close to 70
times their budget. At a staffing level of
over 200,000 employees, each of them has
cost the US taxpayer close to $23 million,
on average. That number is totally out of
the ballpark! The energy sector has the
highest earnings per employee, at around
$1.8 million per. Valero Energy stands out
at $7.6 million per. At $23 million per, the
US intelligence community has been doing
three times better than Valero. Hats off!
This makes the US intelligence community by
far the best, most efficient collapse driver
imaginable.
There are two possible hypotheses for why
this is so.
First, we might venture to guess that these
200,000 people are grossly incompetent and
that the fiascos they precipitate are
accidental. But it is hard to imagine a
situation where grossly incompetent people
nevertheless manage to funnel $23 million
apiece, on average, toward an assortment of
futile undertakings of their choosing. It is
even harder to imagine that such
incompetents would be allowed to blunder
along decade after decade without being
called out for their mistakes.
Another hypothesis, and a far more plausible
one, is that the US intelligence community
has been doing a wonderful job of
bankrupting the country and driving it
toward financial, economic and political
collapse by forcing it to engage in an
endless series of expensive and futile
conflicts—the largest single continuous act
of grand larceny the world has ever known.
How that can possibly be an intelligent
thing to do to your own country, for any
conceivable definition of “intelligence,” I
will leave for you to work out for yourself.
While you are at it, you might also want to
come up with an improved definition of
“treason”: something better than “a
skeptical attitude toward preposterous,
unproven claims made by those known to be
perpetual liars.”
This article was originally published by "Club Orlov" -
The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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