The Chechen Alibi: Russia's Role in 9/11
1n 1997, Ayman al-Zawahiri was trained by the FSB in Dagestan. The 1999 Russian apartment bombing was a false flag to bring Vladimir Putin and his cohort of ex-KGB officials to power.
"The center of global terrorism is not in Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan or the Chechen Republic. The terrorism infection creeps away worldwide from the cabinets of the Lubyanka Square and the Kremlin." -Alexander Litvinenko
Blowing Up Russia: Terror from Within written by Alexander Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky describe the Russian apartment bombings as a false flag operation that was guided by the FSB to justify the Second Chechen War and bring Vladimir Putin to power.
The 1999 Russian apartment bombings were a series of explosions that hit four apartment blocks in the Russian cities that hit Buynaksk on September 4th, and Moscow on the 9th and 13th. The bombings killed more than 300, injuring more than 1,000, and spreading a wave of fear across the country.
On September 13th, Russian Duma speaker Gennadiy Seleznyov made an announcement in the Duma about receiving a report that another bombing had just happened in the city of Volgodonsk, but the bombing didn’t happen in Volgodonsk at that time. The last bombing occurred three days later—on September 16th. Chechen militants were blamed for the bombings, but denied responsibility, along with Chechen president Aslan Maskhadov. The bombings, together with the Invasion of Dagestan, triggered the Second Chechen War.[1][2] The handling of the crisis by then Prime Minister Vladimir Putin boosted his popularity and helped him attain the presidency within a few months.
The 1999 apartment bombings were Vladimir Putin’s false flag operation, so the West would feel sympathy towards Russia, because they were the first to fight in the Global War on Terrorism.
Grey Terror - According to Suvorov [Russian GRU defector], World War III will not begin with conventional military operations, or even with massed nuclear missile strikes.
He describes "a series of large and small [terrorist] operations the purpose of which is, before actual military operations begin, to weaken the enemy's morale, create an atmosphere of suspicion, fear and uncertainty, and divert attention of the enemy's armies and police forces to a huge number of different targets...." According to Suvorov: "The principle method employed at this stage is 'grey terror.'" This is a kind of terror that is carried out "in the name of already existing extremist groups not connected in any way with the Soviet Union, or in the name of fictitious organizations…"
When America's international support erodes away, explained Suvorov, the "grey terror" gathers in scope and "reaches its peak." The next stage is pink terror, "when active military operations have not yet begun and there is still peace, but when some of the best spetsnaz units have already gone into action." This leads directly to "red terror" - which is open warfare between major powers.
Perhaps it is crazy to make this suggestion: But is it possible the "grey terror" of Viktor Suvorov has begun? Are key leaders in al Qaeda paid agents of the old Communist Bloc, paving the way for "pink terror" and the "red terror" that logically follows?
Yuri Felshtinsky started collecting materials about the bombings in 1999, not thinking that the FSB had anything to do with the acts of terrorism.[8] He was deeply disturbed after discovering that the bombings were in fact committed by the FSB. He consulted with Viktor Suvorov, a writer and former GRU officer, who defected to the UK in 1978. When asked: "Would you personally blow out the building with innocent people after receiving the order?" Mr. Suvorov replied: "Of course I would. That is our job. We always follow the order."
Shortly after the bombings, the ex-Secretary of the Security Council of Russia Lieutenant General Alexander Lebed claimed that he is "almost certain" that the bombings were organized by the Russian government.[9]
In 2002, Lebed died in a helicopter crash. According to Lebed's associates, the crash was caused by an explosive device and most likely on the orders of Vladimir Putin.[11]
On 23 June 2023, Yevgeny Prigozhin launched a rebellion against the Russian military leadership. Exactly two months after the rebellion, Prigozhin was killed along with nine other people when a jet crashed north of Moscow. Analysts have reached the conclusion that an on-board bomb likely downed the plane.[25][26][27][28]
Alexander "Sasha" Litvinenko was a British-naturalized Russian defector and former officer of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) who specialized in organized crime. He was a prominent critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin and coined the term "mafia state."
Litvinenko stated before his death at the hands of his former compatriots that "all the bloodiest terrorists of the world" were connected to FSB-KGB, including Carlos "The Jackal" Ramírez, Yasser Arafat, Saddam Hussein, Abdullah Öcalan, Wadie Haddad of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, George Hawi who led the Communist Party of Lebanon, Ezekias Papaioannou from Cyprus, Sean Garland from Ireland, and many others. He stated that all of them were trained, funded, provided with weapons, explosives, and counterfeit documents to carry out terrorist attacks worldwide.[48]
Putin`s revival of the traditional Soviet policy of dividing the international terrorists into two categories: "freedom fighters" and "radical elements." The first served Moscow's geopolitical interests and received its support. The others, acting against Russia or declining its sponsorship, were labeled "terrorists."
In a July 2005 interview with the Polish newspaper Rzeczpospolita, Litvinenko alleged that Ayman al-Zawahiri, a prominent leader of al-Qaeda, was trained for six months by the FSB in Dagestan in 1997.[48][66][67][68] Litvinenko stated that after this training, al-Zawahiri "was transferred to Afghanistan, where he had never been before and where, following the recommendation of his Lubyanka chiefs, he at once ... penetrated the milieu of Osama bin Laden and soon became his assistant in Al Qaeda."[69][68]
Konstantin Preobrazhenskiy, a former KGB officer, supported this claim by stating Litvinenko "was responsible for securing the secrecy of Al-Zawahiri's arrival in Russia; he was trained by FSB instructors in Dagestan, Northern Caucasus, in 1996–1997."[70] Preobrazhenskiy said, "He was ordered to undertake the delicate mission of securing Al-Zawahiri from unintentional disclosure by the Russian police. Though Al-Zawahiri had been brought to Russia by the FSB using a false passport, it was still possible for the police to learn about his arrival and report to Moscow for verification. Such a process could disclose Al-Zawahiri as an FSB collaborator. In order to prevent this, Litvinenko visited a group of highly placed police officers to notify them in advance."[71]
In the book, Gang from Lubyanka, Litvinenko alleged that Vladimir Putin during his time at the FSB was personally involved in protecting drug trafficking from Afghanistan organized by Abdul Rashid Dostum.[87] Shortly before his death, Alexander Litvinenko alleged that Vladimir Putin had cultivated a "good relationship" with Semion Mogilevich (head of the Russia mafia) since at least 1993.[89]
KGB Back at Power: The Spies' Coup in Russia
“In March 2000 the ex-head of the FSB became the second President of Russia. He repeated the capture of authority, which was carried out twenty years ago by the ex-head of the KGB, Yuri Andropov. However Putin's advantage was not only because of his youth. As opposed to Andropov, he came to authority not alone, but accompanied by thousands of former colleagues and subordinates.
The year 2000 became the year of the beginning of a mass "conscription" of former officers of the KGB into all the structures of authority, at national, regional and municipal levels. Today just among the highest-ranking people in the Russian leadership are the President, the Minister of Defense, the Minister of Internal Affairs and the Minister of Natural Resources, all ex KGB men.”
'The [Not So] Banality of Evil': Following the Steps to Sept. 11
Atta didn't even want to be in Germany — his parents had forced him to leave Egypt to make something of himself abroad… "He and his friends in Hamburg spent five years, really, talking about what they should do, what their obligation was, what should a good Muslim do," McDermott says…
It almost didn't happen. As the millennium approached, after long nights of debate, Atta and his friends made a decision. They would fight in Chechnya, against the Russians. By chance they met another Muslim on a train, who basically said, "How are a bunch of amateurs like you going to get to Chechnya?"
He suggested they go to Afghanistan instead and get training first.
"Coincidences just pile on top of each other," McDermott says. "It couldn't have been more than a month after bin Laden approved that plot that these guys stumbled into Kandahar. It's a remarkable coincidence."
Bin Laden had just given the OK to the plot — something he called "The Planes Operation." It required men who were willing to die, but also smart enough to fly a plane. They had to know the West and be able to get a U.S. visa. Then Atta showed up in Afghanistan.
Unlike McDermott, I do not believe this is a coincidence. Mohammad Atta was originally planning to fight in Chechnya against the Russians, but “someone” persuaded him to go to Afghanistan instead. Afghanistan where Russian trained Al-Zawahiri was in charge of the Al Qaeda training camp.
The Russian spy agency provided Palestinian terror organizations with funds, training and arms, running agents like 'Krotov' - aka Mahmoud Abbas, 'Aref' - or Yasser Arafat, and 'Nationalist,' who was behind several plane hijackings long before 9/11.
The Soviet Union and Russia have a long history of funding revolutions and infiltrating the Middle East. Lebanese Hezbollah commanders fighting in Syria are receiving heavy weapons directly from Russia with no strings attached.1 There is a relationship of complete coordination between the Assad regime in Damascus, Iran, Hezbollah, and Russia.
Hezbollah bombed the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut where 241 American servicemen were killed in 1983.
The Covert ''love affair" between Russia and Hezbollah
“According to Israeli sources Babayev discovered that at the end of 1994 the head of SVR, Evgeny Primakov, using his close relations with Syria and Iran, found a channel to contact Hezbollah…
In December, 1997, the Russian ambassador to Israel, Michail Bogdanov, admitted during an interview that Moscow constantly keeps in touch with Sheikh Nasralla`s subordinates. According to him, the contacts are kept primarily through the Russian embassy in Beirut. Bogdanov noted: "our cooperation with the organization is meant to encourage restraint. Less then a month before this interview, Primakov had visited Beirut. While he was conducting official meetings with Lebanese government figures, his attendant, Viktor Posovaluk, secretly met with the leaders of Hezbollah, including its General Secretary's deputy, Naim Kassem. Later in Moscow, during his meeting with journalists, Posovaluk called Hezbollah a "national liberation organization"… He came back to Lebanon in May, 1998, and again unofficially met with Naim Kassem., Posovaluk was conducting the contacts with Hezbollah on behalf of the Russian Foreign Office until he died in the summer of 1999. All this time he was the Russian President's special envoy to the Middle East and a deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs. Incidentally, he also managed contacts with representatives of the Taliban.”
The 9/11 Commission Report found that several al-Qaeda operatives and top military commanders were sent to Hezbollah training camps in Lebanon in 1994.[12] American intelligence officials speculated there has been contact between Hezbollah and low-level al-Qaeda figures who fled Afghanistan for Lebanon.[34][35][36][37][38] Ali Mohamed testified that Hezbollah trained al-Qaeda operatives on how to use explosives.[39]
The Primakov doctrine revolves around 5 key ideas: 1. Russia is viewed as an indispensable actor who pursues an independent foreign policy. 2. Russia ought to pursue a multipolar world managed by a concert of major powers. 3. Russia ought to pursue supremacy in the former Soviet sphere of influence and should pursue Eurasian integration. 4. Russia ought to oppose NATO expansion. 5. Russia should pursue a partnership with China.
Rudi Dekkers is the former owner of Huffman Aviation, the flight school in Venice, Florida, who had trained two of the 9/11 hijackers. In 2012, Dekkers was convicted of trafficking 18.74 kilograms of cocaine and 860 grams of heroin.
In south Florida, Russian organized crime is the FBI’s number one priority. “The challenge [to law enforcement] is the hierarchy is overseas and has greater access to political protection,” stated FBI agent Rick Brodsky.2
80% of world heroin comes from Afghanistan and a third of Afghan heroin travels along the “Northern Route”—a collection of numerous routes into and through Russia.
SEMION MOGILEVICH ORGANIZATION EURASIAN ORGANIZED CRIME (1996)
Mohammad Atta is persuaded against jihad in Chechnya against the Russians and goes to Afghanistan instead. The same Afghanistan that has FSB asset Ayman al-Zawahiri as Osama bin Laden’s sidekick.
Atta just happens to pick a flight school whose owner is also involved in the heroin drug trade that is controlled by the Russian mafia in South Florida? For some reason Rudi Dekkers isn’t arrested for drug trafficking until 2012. Vladimir Putin is also accused of protecting the heroin routes through Russia and has connections to the boss of all bosses of the Russian mafia: Semion Mogilevich.
Where is CNN, MSNBC, Michael Moore, or even Info Whore Alex Jones to cover Russia’s role in 9/11?
The silence of mainstream media and our politicians is bordering on treason, especially for the number of lives lost to the Global War on Terror. Not just the lives lost of American servicemembers, but also civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan.
-D.C.
Additional Sources:
'Putin Involved in Drug Smuggling Ring', Says Ex-KGB Officer (newsweek.com)
Russian Intelligence, the Arab Sheikhs, Afghanistan...
“The Russian experts, especially the ex-secret servicemen, just love to recollect the CIA's connections with mujaheddin during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. It ostensibly confirms the participation of the USA in the creation of the Taliban movement and the "Al-Qaeda" organization.
However, the Russians prefer not to recall the active participation of the USSR and its satellites in the creation and financing of terrorist groups in Western Europe, in the Middle East, in Africa and Latin America. Moreover, the video recording aired by the RTVi could become testimony to Moscow's participation in the transformation of Afghanistan into an incubator for the terrorist number one and his associates. To answer a question on the probability of the KGB's participation in the overthrow of the first President of Afghanistan, we have to track the role of Soviet Intelligence in the development of the Kremlin's Afghani policy in the year and a half after the coup d'etat. Having completed the revolt in the capital, the left radicals were unable to gain control over the other parts of the country and, moreover, to remain in power for a long time. In Afghani politics they represented a marginal phenomenon and had no popular support. Besides, their political and economic program was an absolute Utopia in contrast to the conditions in Afghanistan. The only chance for the new owners of Kabul to survive was the massive support of Moscow.”
Chechnya once resisted Russia. Now, its leader is Putin's brutal ally in Ukraine : NPR
But as Russia took control of what is now the Chechen Republic of Russia, he flipped, and ultimately became the leader of Chechnya in the early 2000s, aligned with Russian President Vladimir Putin. But Kadyrov was assassinated in 2004 by Chechens who opposed him.
Today, his son Ramzan Kadyrov is in charge. Like his father, Ramzan Kadyrov is a key ally of Putin, and he's played a role in Russia's war in Ukraine as his fighters – known as the Kadyrovtsy – have taken part in the battle.
Have Russian hitmen been killing with impunity in Turkey? - BBC News
As a young man in the 1990s, Israpilov had fought with thousands of other Chechens to repel Russian forces from their land - for many Chechens it was a war of independence, though Russia ultimately crushed the Chechen fighters, and made one of them, Ramzan Kadyrov, head of the republic…
Edelgiriev had been one of those Chechens who continued to fight for an independent, and Islamic, Chechnya, even after most Chechen rebel units had been destroyed, or turned and recruited by the notoriously brutal Kadyrov.
He remained holed up in the mountains until 2008 when he stepped on a trip wire, triggering an explosion that left his foot badly wounded. Then, after treatment in Turkey, he joined thousands of other Islamist militants from the former USSR in Syria, allying himself with the local affiliate of al-Qaeda, Jabhat al-Nusra…
In 2004, a former acting president of Chechnya, Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, was killed when his car exploded in Qatar.
A Qatari court found two Russian military intelligence agents guilty of his murder before allowing them to fly home to serve their sentences in Russia - where a red carpet was laid on the steps leading down to the tarmac…
Since the 1990s there has been "an interpenetration of organised crime and the security services," according to Prof Mark Galeotti.
"We have cases of hitmen being trained by spetsnaz special forces," he says. "We have cases of gangs being set up - criminal gangs being set up by former state security, KGB and then FSB, officers."
The KGB's Terrorist Footprints - The Washington Post
General Jan Sejna, a senior Czech security officer who defected to the West in 1968, reports establishment in the mid-60s of terrorist training camps in Czechoslovakia under direct KGB control. He even recalls the names of 14 senior members of the Italian Red Brigades who took this training and returned to Italy to assassinate Italian business and political leaders, including former premier Aldo Moro. (Since that time some 7,300 terrorist incidents have been reported, about 40 percent of which were directed against American citizens or property. By contrast, almost none were directed against Soviet or Eastern European targets.)
Illyich Ramirez Sanchez, "Carlos the Jackal," would have a place on any all-pro team of international terrorists. His record of terrorist involvement-- with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the Japanese commandos, the Italian Red Brigades, the German Red Army Faction, Turkish arms smugglers, South American guerrillas--is widely known. But it all began in 1966, when he was trained in terrorist arts by KGB Col. Viktor Semenov at a guerrilla camp in Cuba.
Nestor Garcia, until his defection a year ago, served as the nominal first secretary of the Cuban mission to the United Nations, but was actually chief of the Cuban intelligence service (DGI) in New York. He reports that since 1969 the DGI has been completely controlled and financed by the KGB under the direction of the same Viktor Semenov, now a KGB general.
How Russia allowed homegrown radicals to go and fight in Syria (reuters.com)
Reuters has identified five other Russian radicals who, relatives and local officials say, also left Russia with direct or indirect help from the authorities and ended up in Syria. The departures followed a pattern, said Sharapudinov, relatives of the Islamists and former and acting officials: Moscow wanted to eradicate the risk of domestic terror attacks, so intelligence and police officials turned a blind eye to Islamic militants leaving the country. Some sources say officials even encouraged militants to leave…
They were just a fraction of the radicals who left Russia during that period. By December 2015, some 2,900 Russians had left to fight in the Middle East, Alexander Bortnikov, director of the FSB, the Russian security service, said at a sitting of the National Anti-terrorist Committee late last year. According to official data, more than 90 percent of them left Russia after mid-2013.
“Russian is the third language in the Islamic State after Arabic and English. Russia is one of its important suppliers of foreign fighters,” said Ekaterina Sokiryanskaya, a senior analyst for International Crisis Group, an independent body aimed at resolving conflicts.
Russian Secret Services' Links With Al-Qaeda (archive.org)
The right hand of bin Laden, the Number Two in "Al-Qaeda" was trained at the secret base of the Russian secret services on Caucasus, the former Lieutenant Colonel of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) Alexander Litvinenko told the Polish Rzeczpospolita newspaper. Until the end of 1998, Litvinenko had served in several top-secret units that specialized in struggle against the terrorist and the mafia organizations.
Litvinenko claims that Ayman al-Zawahiri, who headed at that time the terrorist organization "Al-Jihad al-jadid" (it was formed from the Egyptian emigrants - activists of "Al-Jihad" and "Al-Jamaah al-Islamiyah"), in 1998 secretly stayed on the territory of Russia.
Russian Secrets of Al-Qaeda's Number Two (archive.org)
All available information allows drawing a certain picture, though not a complete one, of the mysterious liaisons between the architect of the September, 11th attacks and the successor of the almighty KGB…
After the beginning of the warfare in Afghanistan, in autumn, 2001, the CIA got hold of al-Zawahiri's portable computer. It contained information about the first trip of Al-Jihad al-jadid leader to Azerbaijan, and then – to Russia, in 1996. In December that same year, he arrived in Daghestan under the legend of a Sudanese businessman, accompanied by two assistants. All three were detained by the Russian Border Guard for violating the local passport regime, and were then delivered to the FSB officers. Al-Zawahiri's and his men's laptop, electronic agendas, and various documents were confiscated. The electronic devices and the papers contained encoded messages in Arabic as to the activity of Al-Jihad al-jadid in the Caucasus…
In the first half of 1998, al-Zawahiri is totally occupied by the preparation of the terrorist bombings against the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. In the same period, using the same route as previously, he secretly visits Russia. After crossing the border, al-Zawahiri disappears once again, but this time his destination is known – it is a secret FSB base in Daghestan.
By all appearances, already after his return to Afghanistan, al-Zawahiri receives a strange envoy from Russia. This happens a little more than a month prior to the terrorist blasts in the East Africa. In consequence, there appear most serious suspicions that the man, who visited al-Zawahiri in June, 1998, is directly connected to the Russian secret services…
Unknown History of Jihad (archive.org)
In the first half of October 1981, several officials of the Soviet embassy were accused of espionage by the Egyptian authorities. In response, Moscow recalled its ambassador from Cairo. The staff of Egypt's Defense Attaché Office was instructed to leave the USSR in seven days. Publication in Pravda reflected the Kremlin's position concerning these events. Its last passage contained a hardly concealed threat towards the Egyptian regime: "The Soviet side leaves itself the right to undertake any necessary actions directed toward protection of its interests". After two and a half weeks, during military parade in Cairo, the President Sadat was killed by the officer, who was member of the radical Islamic organization Al-Jihad.
Soviet Past of Worldwide Jihad (archive.org)
In the first half of the 1970s, Qaddafi became one of the sworn enemies of the Egyptian President. In this the Libyan leader based himself upon the growing Kremlin's support. Soviet leaders saw Libya as an alternative for their lost outpost in Egypt, and as a counterweight to Sadat's regime. As a consequence, Soviet arms' deliveries to Libya were considerably increased. Number of the Soviet military advisors and secret services' representatives grew as well. No wonder that during the investigation several Salah Siriyah's adherents stated that the Russian-speaking instructors were present in process of their training in the Libyan camps…
Al-Qamri's group had one more particularity: part of its members were graduates of the Soviet higher educational institutions. After return to their home country, and Anwar Sadat's rise to power, some of them cooperated with the Soviet military intelligence (GRU) until the middle of 1972. Such was the company, which absorbed young Ayman al-Zawahiri, who was recruited by al-Qamri himself. Preparing to military coup d'Etat, his men were hiding arms in the medical storehouse of one of the Cairo hospitals. Al-Zawahiri, who worked there, helped them to do it. He was in the special confidence of cell's chieftain, who had a great influence over the formation of his views. Al-Qamri got killed in a firefight, in the summer of 1988. It was not only the ideas that the future architect of worldwide jihad got from him, but also certain connections, which had no small share in framing his destiny…
The Afghani Intrigue of the Russian Intelligence (archive.org)
Exploring Al-Qa’ida’s Russian Connection – The XX Committee (20committee.com)
That Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri, bin Laden’s right-hand man and the leader of the global jihad movement since bin Laden’s death in May 2011, spent almost a half-year in the mid-1990s in the custody of Russian intelligence is admitted by both sides and is a matter of public record.[3] Just as significant, Zawahiri’s Russian sojourn occurred at a pivotal point in the development of al-Qa’ida; the shift in strategy, resulting in attacks on the “far enemy” (i.e. the United States), the road leading to 9/11, occurred after Zawahiri’s imprisonment by the Russians.
The outline of the story is clear.[4] At about 4 am on December 1, 1996, Zawahiri was detained in southern Russia while attempting to enter Chechnya, the breakaway province of Moscow recently roiled by war. Accompanying the doctor in the van were two other radicals from Egypt and a Chechen guide.
The FSB had ample reason to doubt the Arabs’ cover story. Among the items confiscated from the trio included details about bank accounts in Hong Kong, mainland China, Malaysia, and the U.S. (specifically St. Louis), plus substantial cash in seven currencies. Their laptop computer was seized and subjected to forensic analysis by the FSB. “Mr. Amin,” whose Sudanese passport depicted a Western-dressed middle-aged man with a very short beard, arrived in Russia possessing two forged graduation certificates from Cairo University’s medical faculty, with differing dates. FSB investigation of Bavari-C, the EIJ front company in Baku, quickly determined that no such firm existed in Azerbaijan.
There are many reasons to doubt the official story told by both sides in the affair. In the first place, Zawahiri was one of the world’s most wanted terrorists in 1996, having played a leading role in the assassination of President Anwar Sadat in 1981; the doctor’s role in the subsequent public trial was televised in many countries. He was hardly a secret mujahid. Furthermore, it is difficult to believe that a security service as proficient and thorough as the FSB did not have its interest piqued by the appearance of three Arab mystery men, bearing multiple identities and cash, in the middle of a warzone. It is equally difficult to accept that the FSB was unable to uncover the mysteries contained in Zawahiri’s laptop – as the Americans would do after many such laptops belonging to al-Qa’ida leadership were captured in Afghanistan after 9/11 – had the Russians really wanted to. Last, it can be assumed that the FSB would have tortured the Arabs to obtain information, had that been deemed necessary; and Zawahiri’s breaking by the Egyptian security service through torture in the 1980s is a matter of public record, and a subject of some remorse by the al-Qa’ida leader.
Russia & Their Islamic Terrorists, The Scissors Strategy & Gray Terror
the strategy of Putin appears to be to fund both sides. One way this is done is through what you call the “scissors” strategy. We’ve called it the Hegelian dialectic process, pitting opposites against each other to create a synthesis, to create compromise – also to create chaos, but then to cause people to say that they will compromise with their enemies in order to have a little bit of peace…
Let me give you one example, I think, and you tell me if this is plausible. Russia funding the extreme right, people who are more provocateurs, saying extreme things, maybe even on the border of racist things if not outright racist things, in regard to immigration. By getting the far right to say racist things, and even funding what would be the other side, the Neo-Nazis, supposedly fighting the Fascists, they’re, in other words, funding both sides. But what that does is causes true conservatives to think twice about talking against immigration for fear of being labeled with the racists, but it also creates this chaos and this war that goes on, kind of like in Charlottesville, Virginia, so that you have Americans fighting each other to bring about a civil war. Am I anywhere near being accurate in this?
Jeff Nyquist: You’ve hit the nail on the head with that one, because look, the Russians infiltrate every significant group, even insignificant ones. The Nazis were, at one time, fighting against the Soviet Union. They infiltrated the Nazis. They have infiltrated the racist right and the anti-immigrant right in Europe is heavily infiltrated with Russian agents who are trying to make the anti-immigrant right in Europe pro-Russian so that they can guide Europe from both the right and the left in Europe towards a breakup of NATO and integration with the Russian Federation – a new Soviet Union, so to speak, that would stretch from Brest to Vladivostok. This is their strategy.
I mean look, Gorbachev talked about this strategy, our “one common European home” he called it back in the late ’80, he said would be from – you know, Brest is in France, the furthest point in France, all the way to Vladivostok on the Pacific – the Pacific coast of Russia. This was talked about by Boris Yeltsin as well as well. And this strategy, they have to bring the right and left together; this is called the “Red-Brown Coalition.” And they bring in Islam, they bring in the right, they bring in the left, and if you think that the extremes of the political spectrum are always fighting with each other, you could see that in the scissors strategy, the extreme left and the extreme right can both be used to destroy the middle, to destroy the moderate center, and to bring chaos.
Rosenfeld, Jesse. 2017. “Russia Is Arming Hezbollah, Say Two of the Group’s Field Commanders.” The Daily Beast, Accessed September 11, 2023. https://www.thedailybeast.com/russia-is-arming-hezbollah-say-two-of-the-groups-field-commanders
“Miami becomes 'Little Moscow': FBI says Russian mob eclipses Italian Mafia in South Florida.” Daily Mail, Accessed September 11, 2023. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1393246/Russian-mob-eclipses-Italian-Mafia-South-Florida-FBI-says.html
The 9/11 Commission was a cover-up , for sure , just like the Warren Commission of 1963 - 64 . I don't think the Rooskies had anything to do with the DEMOLITION of the Twin Towers AND Building # 7 a few hours later ! ! !
No doubt Lebed was murdered. There are photos of open casket. Prigozhin was most likely murdered, but no body shown. I looked for photos of Trump and Mogilevich, found none, however, a man working for Mogilevich paid 6 million in cash for 5 condo's in Trump tower in 1984