Wikileaks
Provides An Update On The Assange Internet Outage
17
October, 2016
It
seems that the Obama administration's efforts to save the
presidential candidacy of Hillary Clinton is finally starting to
yield tangible results as WikiLeaks just provided the following
update that Julian Assange was cut off from using the Internet at the
Ecuadorian embassy in London effective Saturday evening.
We can confirm Ecuador cut off Assange's internet access Saturday, 5pm GMT, shortly after publication of Clinton's Goldman Sachs speechs.
Clearly
the lack of internet for Assange hasn't slowed the release of
Hillary's emails as Part 9 of the Podesta emails were released
yesterday and Part 10 was just released a few hours ago.
Of
course, this comes just a few days after the Obama administration
announced overt plans to escalate a cyber war with Russia over
allegations they were behind the hacking of Hillary's private email
server.
Certainly,
one has to wonder what this means for the future of Assange as
clearly the Obama administration has applied sufficient pressure on
the Ecuadorian government such that they have started to cave on
their support of him. Perhaps we should be checking flight logs for
mysterious planes landing in Quito with billions of Swiss Francs on
board.
Or
perhaps, the Ecuadorian goverment prefers to "swap gold"
with Hillary's other political ally, Goldman Sachs, as Bloomberg
noted they did back in 2014. Just another of the many ways that
Hillary's wall street relationships have paid dividends...quid pro
quo, Goldman.
Ecuador,
one of only eight countries to adopt the U.S. dollar as its official
currency, swapped gold with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. for liquid
assets in a sign the nation is short on cash, according to Loomis
Sayles & Co.
“It
does raise a red flag,” Bianca Taylor, a sovereign analyst who
helps oversee $210 billion at Loomis Sayles, said yesterday in a
phone interview from Boston.
“Whenever a country needs to sell or
monetize its gold reserves, it’s definitely a signal that the
sovereign is strapped for cash.”
President
Rafael Correa is stepping up his search for financing at home and
abroad after borrowing more than $11 billion from China since
defaulting on $3.2 billion of foreign debt five years ago. Ecuador’s
use of the dollar means it can’t finance deficits by printing money
like other countries. Correa, a self-described revolutionary
socialist, is now planning to raise about $700 million in an overseas
bond sale this year and agreed to allow the International Monetary
Fund to perform an economic review for the first time since 2008.
Ecuador’s
central bank, stripped of its autonomy in a constitutional referendum
a year after Correa took power in 2007, says it “invested” the
gold with Goldman Sachs in return for assets that can be liquidated
within seven days. The country will get the same quantity of gold
back three years from now and expects to earn a profit of $16 million
to $20 million from the deal, it said.
Below
is what we recently wrote regarding the Obama administration's
stepped up efforts targeting Russia and Assange.
*
* *
In
what is looking more and more like a season finale of the HBO series
"House of Cards" with each passing day, the Obama
administration is now literally threatening a cyber war with Russia
over allegations it was behind the hacking of Clinton's emails.
According to an exclusive NBC report, the Obama administration "is
contemplating an unprecedented cyber covert action" (though it's
unclear how exactly it's covert if Biden is announcing it to the
world via an interview with Chuck Todd) against Russia, in
"retaliation for alleged" interference in the American
presidential election, and has asked the CIA to draft plans for a
"wide-ranging "clandestine" cyber operation designed
to harass and "embarrass" the Kremlin leadership."
So
now the Obama administration is overtly leveraging the full power of
the United States to intimidate foreign governments, and most likely
Julian Assange, in order to maintain control of the Executive Branch
of the government. Does anyone within the mainstream media see any
problems with this? Certainly Chuck Todd and NBC do not. And notice
that even the NBC article refers to "alleged" Russian
interference because not a shred of evidence has been presented to
prove that senior Russian officials were actually behind the hacking
of Hillary's emails...but who needs facts when you have a complicit
media eager to advance whatever propaganda is necessary to maintain
power?
The
Obama administration is contemplating an unprecedented cyber covert
action against Russia in retaliation for alleged Russian interference
in the American presidential election, U.S. intelligence officials
told NBC News.
Current
and former officials with direct knowledge of the situation say the
CIA has been asked to deliver options to the White House for a
wide-ranging "clandestine" cyber operation designed to
harass and "embarrass" the Kremlin leadership.
The
sources did not elaborate on the exact measures the CIA was
considering, but said the agency had already begun opening cyber
doors, selecting targets and making other preparations for an
operation. Former intelligence officers told NBC News that the agency
had gathered reams of documents that could expose unsavory tactics by
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Vice
President Joe Biden told "Meet the Press" moderator Chuck
Todd on Friday that "we're sending a message" to Putin and
that "it will be at the time of our choosing, and under the
circumstances that will have the greatest impact."
When
asked if the American public will know a message was sent, the vice
president replied, "Hope not."
Former
CIA officers interviewed by NBC said that there is a long history of
the White House plotting potential cyber attacks against Russia.
That said, none of them were ultimately carried out because "none
of the options were particularly good, nor did we think that any of
them would be particularly effective."
Two
former CIA officers who worked on Russia told NBC News that there is
a long history of the White House asking the CIA to come up with
options for covert action against Russia, including cyber options —
only to abandon the idea.
A
second former officer, who helped run intelligence operations against
Russia, said he was asked several times in recent years to work on
covert action plans, but "none of the options were particularly
good, nor did we think that any of them would be particularly
effective," he said.
Putin
Obama
Others
warned that the White House has always caved on plans to follow
through with cyber attacks because anything the U.S. can do against
Russia, they can also do in response. As one of the former CIA
officers said, "if you are looking to mess with their networks,
we can do that, but then the issue becomes, they can do worse things
to us in other places."
"We've
always hesitated to use a lot of stuff we've had, but that's a
political decision," one former officer said. "If someone
has decided, `We've had enough of the Russians,' there is a lot we
can do. Step one is to remind them that two can play at this game and
we have a lot of stuff. Step two, if you are looking to mess with
their networks, we can do that, but then the issue becomes, they can
do worse things to us in other places."
Putin
is almost beyond embarrassing, he said, and anything the U.S. can do
against, for example, Russian bank accounts, the Russian can do in
response.
"Do
you want to have Barack Obama bouncing checks?" he asked.
Former
CIA deputy director Michael Morell expressed skepticism that the U.S.
would go so far as to attack Russian networks.
"Physical
attacks on networks is not something the U.S. wants to do because we
don't want to set a precedent for other countries to do it as well,
including against us," he said. "My own view is that our
response shouldn't be covert -- it should overt, for everybody to
see."
Here
is a brief clip of Biden discussing the "covert" planning
with NBC's Chuck Todd.
If
the Obama administration is willing to go to such great lengths,
literally escalating tensions with another superpower, to protect
their candidate from whatever it is that she's hiding then we suspect
whatever WikiLeaks has yet to release could be really good.
Here is the whole interview
Here is the whole interview
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.