April 19, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--
The White House plan
to destroy Russia by calling President
Vladimir Putin names proceeds apace.
Apparently, the man whom President Joe Biden
has called a “thug,” “killer,” and “war
criminal” is now also charged with carrying
out
a “genocide” and, according to CIA
Director William Burns, he may in “despair”
over his apparently stalled invasion, be
contemplating the use of tactical
nuclear weapons. Meanwhile over at the
Pentagon, positively aglow with the largest
“defense” budget since Vietnam, Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark
Milley
is advising that the war started in
Ukraine will require building still more US
military bases in Europe to confront Putin.
It is unclear who
exactly in the band of rogues surrounding
Biden is most responsible for the rhetorical
flourishes and hyperbole, though one might
assume that it is in a fact a group effort
by a chorus of mental midgets, most of whom
were inherited from the beatified Barack
Obama’s Administration. Only Hillary is
missing. But at the same time, one must
wonder how if all the sobriquets inevitably
fail to bring down Putin what plan B might
be. After all, as Russia is a significant
country possessing a ballistic and submarine
launched nuclear missile capability that
could destroy the United States, there will
have to be some way to dialogue with the
Kremlin after the Ukraine fiasco has ended.
Calling foreign heads of state criminals and
mass murderers is not the best way to
restore a satisfactory level of mutual
respect that will permit discussion
regarding issues of mutual concern, like war
and peace.
Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelensky is being heavily coached
by neocon handlers to push the right buttons
to appeal to international sentiment in
favor of his country. He has been very
successful at being alarming about the
Russian threat coupled with his demands for
more and better weapons. Two expressions
that have come to the surface recently to
further blacken Vladimir Putin have centered
around the concern that the Russians will
employ what is referred to as a false flag
deception or use chemical weapons in such a
fashion, possibly against themselves, so as
to justify broadening their invasion.
Indeed, the two can be used together. A
false flag essentially involves an assailant
or a contact pretending to represent
something apart from their or his/her
genuine identify in an attempt to deceive
the targeted individual. False flags are
used extensively in intelligence operations
and also in military operations where an
attempt is being made to hide the true
attribution of an act of war.
In my own experience
as a CIA operations officer, I once
“developed” a relationship with a Libyan
intelligence officer using the false
identity of an Italian businessman. The
Libyan was amendable to an information
sharing relationship with an Italian to line
his own pockets, but would have balked at
the treasonous implications of having a
connection with an American. Libya was, not
so long ago, a colony of Italy and my
contact spoke decent Italian. That was a
classic false flag operation conducted to
carry out espionage against a foreign
target.
A more recent
instance of what might be regarded as a
false flag with much more lethal
consequences was when President Donald Trump
attacked a Syrian airbase with 59 cruise
missiles in the wake of an almost certainly
fabricated report that President Bashar
al-Assad’s army had used chemical weapons in
an attack on Khan Shaykhun in 2017.
Independent investigators subsequently
determined that the anti-regime terrorists
who were occupying the city at the time had
themselves staged the attack and
deliberately set it up and blamed it on the
Syrian government to produce an expected US
response, which was forthcoming as Trump
responded to the news headlines and did not
bother to order anyone to check the
reliability of his intelligence sources
before ordering “bombs away.” Fortunately,
the evidence that it had likely been a false
flag carried out by allies of Islamic State
in Syria (ISIS) soon surfaced and there were
no additional American attacks.
The latest
recriminations hurled at Putin have included
his alleged massacre of possibly hundreds of
civilians at Bucha as well as the killing of
over 50 civilians at the Kramatorsk Train
station on April 8th, which almost
immediately raised suspicion about a
possible false flag. Starting with motive,
it made no sense for Russia to either
massacre civilians or attack a non-military
target like a transportation hub, which
would produce a large number of casualties,
as it would give NATO and the US a wedge
issue to increase pressure on Russia and its
soldiers while also turning world opinion
against Moscow. In that sense, both the
claimed massacre and the attack succeeded as
they were both immediately linked to Russia
by hostile media.
But that is where the
stories
began to unravel. Russian soldiers left
the town of Bucha on March 30th.
Two days later, Bucha was occupied by the
Ukrainian Azov Brigade with the objective of
finding and
removing ‘traitors’. The Azov Brigade
has been plausibly described as extremely
nationalist and even as neo-Nazi. On April
2/3 the first video was published that
showed freshly killed men laying on the
streets of Bucha, several of them displaying
white arm bands that were presumably used
for signaling to departing Russian forces
that they were “friendlies.” The “west” and
Ukrainian officials immediately
called those dead the result of “Russian
atrocities.”
Azov
has reportedly shot men “fleeing” the
combat zones as “traitors” and pledged no
surrender to or collaboration with the
Russians. It has credibly been responsible
for atrocities committed against Russian
ethnic Ukrainian citizens in the past. Going
back to motive, it was definitely in the
Ukrainian interest to kill a couple hundred
of its own civilians to further demonize
Putin and bring about a western direct
military intervention, which is what
Zelensky and his neocon advisers have been
attempting to do. So, was it a false flag
attack in which Ukrainian soldiers
deliberately killed Ukrainian citizens so
the deaths could be blamed on Russia?
And it also turned
out that the missile used in the Kramatorsk
Train station attack was of a type found in
the Ukrainian arsenal, not that of Russia. A
video report by Italy’s
LA7 video channel was made by one of
their teams inside Ukraine. They were one of
first Western news teams to arrive at the
alleged bombing site in Kramatorsk. At the
time of the attack, numerous Ukrainian
citizens were evacuating the city due to its
proximity to fighting with Russian forces.
Kramatorsk is the temporary seat of the
administration of the Donetsk region because
the city of Donetsk is in the hands of
Russian affiliated Donbass militias and is
not under the control of the Kiev based
Ukrainian authorities.
The Italian film clip
shows close-ups of the remains of the
projectile that hit the building, which
reveals that the serial number is that of
the Tochka-U vehicle launched ballistic
missile, which Kiev claimed was Russian, is
actually far more plausibly Ukrainian. The
clearly visible missile’s serial number
appears as (Φ91579), and a comparison,
admittedly made by Russian analysts,
indicates that the missile belongs to the
same series of weapons that have been fired
against targets in the regions in the
Donbass that are seeking union with Russia.
They
have been used against “Khartszsk in
04.09.2014 (rocket number ‘Φ15622’) and
Tshevsky in 02.02.2015 (Rocket No.
‘Φ91565’), Lugvinova in 13.02.2015 (Missiles
No. ‘Φ91566, Φ915527, Φ915328’), Perdiansk
in 19.03.2022 (rocket no. ‘Φ915611’), and
Militobol on 17.03.2022 (rocket no.
‘Φ915516’).” Furthermore, the missile in
question is, according to the Kremlin, still
in the Ukrainian arms inventory but
considered obsolete by the Russian military.
But let’s think this
through a little deeper. If the Russians
truly want to blame the Ukrainians for
killing other Ukrainians what better way to
do it than to fake a missile launch using
ordnance that is in operational use with the
Ukrainian Army? There exist what are claimed
to be eyewitness accounts of Russian troops
using the Tochka inside Ukraine, though they
come through Ukrainian controlled sources,
but the Kremlin very likely has some Tochkas
sitting around in various arsenals even if
they are no longer suitable for front line
use. And the serial numbers, which are
painted on or appear on attached labels, can
be changed.
The fundamental
problem is not the possible use of a false
flag in what is already a war between two
neighboring states. It should be expected,
when convenient for either side. The
complication is that actually authenticable
information about what is taking place is
rare and the two sides are both lying and
spinning like crazy to convince an
international audience as well as their own
citizenry of a “truth” which is actually
often closer to fiction. As has long been
recognized, the first victim of a war is the
truth.
So forget
about false flags and other tactical
contrivances as well as the lies coming out
of Washington and Western Europe. The sad
part is that the focus on possible
atrocities has reversed what the United
States and the west should be doing, i.e.
creating an environment where there can be a
ceasefire leading to genuine negotiations
that can bring about a
status quo
acceptable to both Russia and Ukraine.
Instead, Washington and its allies seem
intent on funneling ever more weapons into
Ukraine based on a steady stream of
questionable accounts of Russian war crimes,
a guarantee that the fighting will go on for
many more months, if not longer.
Witness for example
the line being promoted by
the notorious retired US Army Colonel
Alexander Vindman, formerly of the US
National Security Council but
Ukrainian-Jewish born and an enthusiastic
advocate of war with Russia. He argues based
on the claimed Russian crimes that “Despite
what people like Tucker Carlson tell you,
there are not two sides to the story of
Russia’s war on Ukraine. It IS a story of
good and evil. All you have to do is look at
the massacre of civilians in Bucha, the
missile strike on Kramatorsk railway
station, or the countless other atrocities
being committed by Russian forces across
Ukraine to see it clearly.”
Vindman’s thinking
comes out of the neocon playbook of a proper
role of the United States as the rule maker
for the entire world without any
accountability for its own action. He can
easily be dismissed as little more than a
partisan prepared to go with any half-truth
as long as it denigrates Russia. Whatever
one feels about “gallant little Ukraine”
versus the Russian bear, this kind of
advocacy by someone wrapping himself in the
Ukrainian flag provides no real rationale
for the United States to get involved in a
war in which it has no real interest and
which will almost certainly turn out badly
for all involved. Unfortunately, Vindman is
not the only public figure who suffers from
precisely the same tunnel vision.
Philip M. Giraldi,
Ph.D., is Executive Director of the Council
for the National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax
deductible educational foundation (Federal
ID Number #52-1739023) that seeks a more
interests-based U.S. foreign policy in the
Middle East. Website is
councilforthenationalinterest.org,
address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA
20134 and its email is
inform@cnionline.org.