“Suppressed” report should be a lesson to those who
begged for its release – be careful what you wish
for.
By Kit Knightly
July 22, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The “Russia report” is an action
plan for the intelligence agencies to hand MI5
direct control over the mechanisms of British
democracy, and give the government legal power to
control social media.
Nobody in the mainstream will tell you this. The
media are going to tell you it’s a “shocking
condemnation Britain’s vulnerability to hostile state
actors” or something similar, the Remainers will tell
you it’s cast iron evidence the Brexit vote was rigged,
and Luke Harding will tell you it means “they” are all
around us and you should buy a copy of his book.
The truth is it’s just the latest of the Deep State’s
plays to secure as much power as possible as quickly as
possible. If anything, it already feels old-fashioned,
being authored in a pre-Covid world, but that doesn’t
mean it can’t be put to use in service of the world’s
“new normal”.
In terms of actual content, there’s nothing new here.
It’s just a collection of familiar proven lies
and unproven accusations in the service of four
primary agendas:
- Invalidating the result of the Brexit referendum
- Boosting funding/resources for the UK’s “Cyber
Offensive capabilities”
- Ceding more powers to MI5 to oversee and
“protect” our democratic processes
- Creating a “protocol” that empowers the
government/intelligence agencies to force social
media companies to censor and/or ban certain
material, opinions, websites or users
You can plow through the whole thing
here if you really feel the need.
For those outside the UK, who may not be aware of
this story, sometime last year it was “leaked” that the
UK parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee had
prepared a report on “Russian interference” in UK
politics. In a brilliant piece of PR manoeuvring, Boris
Johnson refused to make the report public.
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This decision manipulated those who consider
themselves “the left” in British politics to clamour for
the release of the “Russia Report”, believing there
would be something in it that Boris didn’t want us to
see. This was an act of pure naivety by Corbynista
influencers, and deliberate public manipulation by the
“leftist” media.
Yesterday Boris Johnson’s government finally “caved”
to this pressure, and released a “confidential report”
which tells us nothing we haven’t been told a million
times before. This apparently secret testimony has been
blasted across headlines in every broadsheet and tabloid
for years.
Russia is accused of poisoning the Skripals, leaking
the DNC emails, using “bots and trolls” to influence
public opinion…and so and so on.
The witnesses called are all either actual spies
(Christopher Steele), or “journalists” heavily involved
with the
Integrity Initiative (Edward Lucas). No evidence is
supplied, save the tired old links to “academic studies”
conducted by bought-and-paid-for
NATO shills like Ben Nimmo and Bellingcat (whose
direct funding from the likes of the Atlantic Council
and National Endowment for Democracy represents a
massive conflict of interest that is never once
mentioned in the report).
In that way, the report is massively dated. Its lies,
worn smooth through repetition, are dry and stale.
But that’s not the point of this report. That’s the
first part of
the Hegelian Dialectic. The “problem”, long since
mythologised, created by force of repetition without
ever being evidenced. This report is far more concerned
with generating a “reaction”, and the procuring consent
for a pre-planned “solution” (the report doesn’t shy
away from this obvious structure – using the terms
“threat” and “reaction” instead).
In short, buried in the 55 pages of waffle,
repetition and bureaucratic double-talk, are key
suggestions to take a more warlike stance against Russia
and parlay this into a simultaneous crackdown on dissent
at home, all while securing shiny new powers for MI5.
Firstly, the UK plans to strike a new attitude on
“attribution” of alleged cyber attacks, claiming,
apparently with a straight face:
The UK has historically been reticent in
attributing cyber attacks – as recently as 2010,
this Committee was asked to redact mention of Russia
as a perpetrator of cyber attacks, on diplomatic
grounds.
But the UK’s “reticence” to blame Russia for cyber
attacks is over, they now intend to “name and shame”
foreign actors who carry out cyber attacks:
there has to now be a cost attached to such
activity. When attacks can be traced back – and we
accept that this is in itself resource-intensive –
the Government must always consider ‘naming and
shaming’.
[NOTE: This section on “attribution” would an
absolutely ideal time to mention that other state player
– namely the US military – have the technology to carry
out cyber attacks and make it appear to have come from
somewhere else. We know they know, because of the
Wikileaks Vault 7 leaks, but they don’t mention it.]
Oh, and they’re going “leverage” their diplomatic
relations to force those countries who would rather not
start a new cold war based on the testimony of lunatics,
fraudsters and underwear salesmen, to publicly blame
Russia for…pretty much everything:
it is apparent that not everyone is keen to adopt
this new approach and to ‘call out’ Russia on
malicious cyber activity. The Government must now
leverage its diplomatic relationships to develop a
common international approach when it comes to the
attribution of malicious cyber activity by Russia
and others.
This is dishonest, and potentially dangerous, but
this kind of geo-political positioning is very much the
long game. It’s the short term stuff, the local stuff,
we should really worry about.
Like handing over powers to “monitor” and “protect”
the democratic processes of the country to MI5 [our
emphasis]:
Overall, the issue of defending the UK’s
democratic processes and discourse has appeared to
be something of a ‘hot potato’, with no one
organisation recognising itself as having an overall
lead. Whilst we understand the nervousness
around any suggestion that the intelligence and
security Agencies might be involved in democratic
processes […] that cannot apply when it
comes to the protection of those processes […]
Protecting our democratic discourse and processes
from hostile foreign interference is a central
responsibility of Government, and should be a
ministerial priority. In our opinion, the
operational role must sit primarily with MI5
They recommend this, based on MI5’s pre-existing
“relationship built with social media companies”.
They don’t mention, at this stage, how social media
companies have “built a relationship” with MI5, or what
role they might serve in “protecting democracy”, but
it’s not hard to guess.
Social Media is an important theme in the report,
actually, being mentioned fifteen times in 47 pages.
Firstly, we’re told that social media companies must
bear the brunt of the blame for “hostile state activity”
being at all effective:
we note that – as with so many other issues
currently – it is the social media companies which
hold the key and yet are failing to play their part
Before they add the government must seek a “protocol”
by which social media companies remove any material the
UK government deems “hostile state use” of their
platform:
The Government must now seek to establish a
protocol with the social media companies to ensure
that they take covert hostile state use of their
platforms seriously, and have clear timescales
within which they commit to removing such material
Any companies who refuse to do this will be
“named and shamed”.
You might think “well, this protocol could easily be
used against people with no state affiliation
whatsoever”, and you’d be right. It could. The
government admits as much, but doesn’t seem to have a
problem with it:
Such a protocol could, usefully, be expanded to
encompass the other areas in which action is
required from the social media companies, since this
issue is not unique to Hostile State Activity
This would be a good time to note that the Atlantic
Council employees this report cites have, in the past,
labelled people “bots” who are definitely, provably
not bots. This includes noted independent
journalists and a world-renowned concert pianist.
The proposed “protocol” opens up an avenue for the
state to silence dissident individuals by similarly
“mistaking” them for state-backed agents.
Another thing the report is keen on is boosting the
UK’s “Offensive Cyber” capabilities:
this is an era of hybrid warfare and an Offensive
Cyber capability is now essential. The Government
announced its intention to develop an Offensive
Cyber capability in September 2013, and in 2014 the
National Offensive Cyber Programme (NOCP) […]The UK
continues to develop its Offensive Cyber capability.
What their offensive cyber capabilities ARE, and how
they use them, is never described. Are they used solely
against other states, or against domestic politic
parties, organizations and individuals too? They don’t
say.
Is cyberwarfare even legal under international law?
Well, no. In fact, the way the report dances around the
idea that cyberwarfare is actually potentially
illegal under international law is a thing of
beauty:
While the UN has agreed that international law,
and in particular the UN Charter, applies in
cyberspace, there is still a need for a greater
global understanding of how this should work in
practice […] Achieving a consensus on this common
approach will be a challenging process, but as a
leading proponent of the Rules Based International
Order it is essential that the UK helps to promote
and shape Rules of Engagement, working with our
allies.
The fact that people out there can even begin to cite
this report in earnest when it describes the UK as a
“key defender of a Rules Based International Order” just
boggles my mind.
The real scary stuff comes later though, in the
“legislation” section.
The UK is already one of the most
surveilled countries in the world, and the report
happily mentions that last February, the UK
police/intelligence agencies got [our emphasis]:
new powers to stop, question, search or
detain any person entering the UK gained
Royal Assent in February 2019; it is not
necessary for there to be suspicion of engagement in
hostile activity in order to use these
powers.
Following on from this, the report recommends a new
Espionage Act and a Foreign Agent Registration Act, to
“crackdown” on espionage.
Hearings resulting from these acts could be
“closed material proceedings” to protect national
security.
For those who don’t know, in UK law a
“closed material proceeding” is a hearing where a
prosecutor presents some evidence directly to a judge
which is kept secret from both the public and the
defense counsel.
Until this new legislation is passed, the report
warns, “the Intelligence Community’s hands are
tied.”
To sum up, the long-awaited Russia report is –
surprise surprise – not a trove of secrets and
corruption which could bring down the Johnson
government. It was never going to be that, despite what
all the fake-left “journalists” were saying, and what
all the Labour supporters who should know better were
tweeting.
It was actually sickening to watch so many people,
especially in Corbyn’s camp, cry-out for this report and
not realise they were getting played. It’s the oldest
trick in the book. Cheap reverse psychology that doesn’t
work on children past the age of about five, but
apparently does work on the majority of the members of
the Labour party.
Thanks to their gullibility, no one is questioning
the honesty, providence or intentions of a report which
finds, in short:
- MI5 should have more control over our democratic
systems.
- We should spend more money on developing cyber
attack ability.
- We should investigate and maybe overturn the
Brexit vote.
- We should pass authoritarian new legislation
- Social Media companies should take down whatever
the government says they should take down.
People who are supposed to guard against tyranny and
hold power to account have abandoned their posts to take
part in anti-Russia hysteria which endangers what
remains of our civil liberties.
As a result, we’re getting headlines like this:
#TomorrowsPapersToday
pic.twitter.com/AiIEXOvI0D
— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)
July 21, 2020
And this.
#TomorrowsPapersToday
pic.twitter.com/SwGzDiT0id
— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)
July 21, 2020
It’s
the same old lies, on the same old topics, told by the
same old people, for the same old reasons. The only
difference is, this time, they managed to trick some of
the gullible “woke” left into begging for it.
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