Why would
they bother to mount such a sophisticated operation on American
soil knowing that everything in the U.S. is intercepted by American
intelligence – phone calls, emails... It doesn't make sense
at all.
Pepe
Escobar Asia Times
As more details,
or lack there of, emerge about the purported assassination plot
of the Saudi Arabian ambassador to the United States it's becoming
clear that the situation may very well have been fabricated by elements
within the Obama Justice Department. To any observer willing to
look beyond a headline it should be clear that the allegations are
patently absurd.
Via Info
Wars – Video Report Provided by RT
and is available below:
The American
government wants the whole unsuspecting world to believe that
the general of the IRGC, which is a very complex and very sophisticated
operation in Tehran, which is more important than their armed
forces, they have intelligence operations all over the world...
They are going to sub-contract a hit – mafia style killing – to
a failed Corpus Christi, Texas salesman with a record of bad checks,
and he's going to contact somebody posing as a member of the Zetas
Mexican drug cartel, and boast that 'I can give you 1.5 million
dollars and you're going to hit the ambassador at his favorite
restaurant in Washington... I can provide you with tons of
opium if you want to do business with my contacts in Tehran.'
In a script
conference in Hollywood this thing would go to the garbage immediately.
Problem is it's being paddled by the Attorney General of the United
States.
Is it coincidence
that the Attorney General announced this plot on the very day subpoenas
were issued over the Fast
and Furious perjury debacle? As we've said countless times in
the past, when politicians and those highly visible to the public
come under fire and stand to lose their positions of power, they
deflect blame, or in this most recent case of Iran, create a completely
new enemy.
With respect
to blame deflection, this has all of the hallmarks of an event that
took place on August 20, 1998, when then President Bill Clinton
launched a cruise missile attack against suspected Sudenese VX nerve
gas factories at the height of the Lewinsky scandal that threatened
to end his Presidency. You may recall that it was on August
17, 1998 that President Clinton admitted to having an 'inappropriate
relationship' with the White House Intern. It turns out that the
attack, later justified because of ties to Osama Bin Laden, manufactured
pharmaceuticals – aspirin. Do you see the pattern?
The Clinton
Sudanese incident was easily covered up, as Sudan served no significant
strategic importance to the US, its allies or our foreign challengers.
The problem with the Iranian situation, of course, is that we have
been butting heads over nuclear energy and other regional issues
for nearly a decade – with both sides calling for war, albeit indirectly.
One of our
Senators and Presidential candidates even capella'd a song about
it:
We understand
the joke. But we can assure you that if and when we do finally bomb
Iran, no one will be laughing.
While the claims
of on assassination plot may be ridiculous, we need only to look
at the majority of headlines being spoon fed to the American public
to understand what the real goal is.
The Osama Bin
Laden card has been played – and we're pretty sure this was the
last time they'll be able to use it (of course, you never know).
What we need right now is to divert attention from the implosion
of our domestic economy, the rampant lawlessness in the Halls of
Congress and in the business circles that keep our politicians'
coffers filled, and the deficiencies at the Department of Justice
which oversees the legalities of it all.
Target: Iran.
It's easy,
really. A headline and a few talking points repeated hundreds of
times on every medium of mainstream distribution.
We recently
noted that World
War III will not be an accident, and that the world's Grandmasters
(which include Chinese and Russian strategist) are now actively
positioning themselves financially, diplomatically, and militarily.
We firmly hold
the view that in the next year, or two, or five, the United States
and Iran (and likely Syria) will be engaged militarily. The reasons
for why we need to spread democracy to Tehran have been, and are
continuously being, seared into the consciousness of Americans right
now.
Remember Saddam
Hussein? He allegedly
plotted to assassinate President George H.W. Bush in 1993, killed
thousands of Kurds with nerve gas, tortured his own people, worked
directly with Al Queda and Osama Bin Laden to coordinate 9/11, and
of course, manufactured and stockpiled weapons of mass destruction
whose smoking gun would come in the form of a mushroom cloud:
Iran is the
enemy. But in our view, this is only part of the story. Do not underestimate
the perceived silence and calls for peace by the Chinese and Russians,
who also have signififcant strategic interests in the middle east
and are, though they won't push the envelope right now, strongly
allied with Iranian interests. Speaking realistically, it's not
so much that they like the Iranians. It's that they really don't
want the U.S. to have total control of the entire middle east and
north African region.
The end game
here is resource domination and [global] political control.
Eventually,
someone is going to pull the trigger, and then we may very well
see that mushroom cloud President George W. Bush warned about.
If you don't
think this is a possibility, or that we are blowing this out of
proportion, consider that the President – yes, the President of
the United States approved this latest "terror plot" information
release – just overtly accused the Iranian government of attempting
to assassinate an ambassador on U.S. soil. These are extremely serious
charges, the kind that have led nations to war throughout history.
The Saudis are calling for Iran to "pay the price," while Secretary
of State Clinton says this is a "dangerous escalation of the Iranian
government's longstanding use of political violence and sponsorship
of terrorism." Israel, parroting
Mrs. Clinton, agrees, saying, that this is "definitely an escalation."
One small mistake
in this high stakes game could mean the lives of not millions, but
billions of people.
The scary thing
is that those in the command and control centers of these operations
seemingly could care less.