"It Can't Happen Here" - Color Revolution By Force
15
January, 2016
The
"Donald Trump likes Russia" and "Russia bad"
strategy was propagated by the Clinton election campaign. It build on
constant U.S. incitement against Russia after the U.S. coup in
Ukraine partially failed and after the Russian intervention on the
side of the government in Syria. Hillary Clinton as Secretary of
State was the main force behind the original anti-Russian campaign.
When Clinton lost the election to Trump the theme connecting Trump
and Russia was continued and fanned by
parts of the U.S. intelligence community.
The
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the FBI published a
propaganda report claiming nefarious Russian cyber activities during
the election without providing any evidence. The report came together
with the expulsion of
35 Russian diplomats by the Obama administration. The DHS
then planted a false
story of
Russian cyber-intrusion into a Vermont utility with the Washington
Post.
The
Director of National Intelligence Clapper followed up with a "report"
of alleged Russian interference with the election. Even the
Putinphobe Masha Gessen found that
to be a shoddy piece of implausible propaganda. The DNI
then helped to
publish an MI6
"report" of
fakes asserting Russian influence on Trump. In an unprecedented
threat escalation the Pentagon sends a
whole brigade and other assets to the Russian border.
Now
the head of the Central Intelligence Agency, John Brennan, warns the
President elect to "watch
his tongue".
Is there any precedence of some "intelligence" flunky
threatening a soon to be President?
This
has been, all together, a well though out propaganda campaign to
reinforce the scheme Clinton and her overlords have been pushing for
quite some time: Russia is bad and a danger. Trump is aligned with
Russia. Something needs to be done against Trump but most importantly
against Russia.
Americans are more concerned than they were before the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign began about the potential threat Russia poses to the country, according to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll released on Friday. The Jan. 9-12 survey found that 82 percent of American adults, including 84 percent of Democrats and 82 percent of Republicans, described Russia as a general "threat" to the United States. That's up from 76 percent in March 2015 when the same questions were asked.
Such
extensive and expensive campaigns are not run by chance. They have a
larger purpose.
Originally
the campaign was only directed against Russia with the apparent aim
of reigniting a (quite profitable) cold war. Seen from some distance
the campaign now looks more like the preparation for a typical CIA
inducedcolor-revolution:
In most but not all cases, massive street protests followed disputed elections, or requests for fair elections, and led to the resignation or overthrow of leaders considered by their opponents to be authoritarian.
What
is missing yet in the U.S. are the demonstrations and the large
civilian strife.
Unlike
the earlier CIA launched color revolutions in Georgia (2003), Ukraine
(2004) and elsewhere, all recent U.S. instigated "color-revolutions",
i.e. putsch attempts, have been accompanied by the use of force from
the side of the "peaceful protesters".
Such color-revolutions
by force were
instigate in Libya, Syria and Ukraine.
A
common denominator of these was the primary use of violence occurred
from the "good side" against the "bad side" while
the propagandists claimed that it was the "bad side" that
started the shooting and strife. The "good site" is
inevitably "demonstrating peacefully" even when many
policemen or soldiers on the "bad side" die. Thus was the
case in Libya where the U.S. and its Gulf proxies used al-Qeada
aligned Jihadis from Benghazi as "peaceful demonstrators"
against the government, in Syria where the NATO and Gulf supported
Muslim Brotherhood killed policemen and soldiers during "peaceful
demonstrations" in Deraa and in Ukraine where fascist
sharpshooters killed demonstrators and policemen from a hotel roof in
the hand of the opposition. All three happened while Hillary Clinton
was Secretary of State.
There
have been claims of an upcoming color-revolution in the U.S. from
different extremist sides of the political spectrum. Before the
election Neocon Jackson Diehl claimed that
"Putin" was preparing a color-revolution against a
President-elect Clinton to enthrone Donald Trump. But as Trump won
fair and square and Clinton lost that plot did not make it to the
stage. After the election the conspiracy peddler Wayne Madsen
immediately "discovered"
that Clinton and George Soros were launching a color-revolution
against Trump.
Remnants
of the Clinton campaign have called for a large anti-Trump
demonstration during the inauguration on January 20 in Washington DC.
Mass
shootings in the United States by this or that type of
lunatics happen every
other month. There are no wild conspiracy theories or nefarious plots
necessary to consider some what-if questions around such an event.
So
what happens after some "Trump supporter" on January 20
starts to shoot into the demonstrating masses (and also into the
police cordons)?
What
if the CIA, DHS and DNI then detect and certify that the ensuing
"massacre" was a "Russian plot"?
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