pull down to refresh

I mean off the top of my head when you fund terror organizations that directly impact the US like Iran has it’s an issue. There is a stark difference between North Korea and Iran that really boils down to North Korea has the fuel but it’s not really certain that they have a bomb that they could launch that could survive the aerodynamic pressures. Look at there failed satellite launches for instance. I mean even that boat they tried to launch a week or two ago… they couldn’t even launch a boat…
Iran is much more capable thus it is much more concerning that they would act upon this. I mean they have shelled US bases before under Trumps first term and their proxies have recently killed US troops. That’s not something North Korea is able to do.
Also China has North Korea on a pretty tight leash while the same isn’t the case for Iran.
The USA is a terrorist organisation and usurped the lawful Iranian government of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad_Mosaddegh installing US puppet Shah in order to steal Iranian oil and sovereignty. Irans sovereignty will only be secure if/when they have nukes and Israels attacks now expose the very fragile situation in Iraq where Iranian militias have considerable influence. Iran is backed by China and along with Russia is part of the Chinese backed challenge to US hegemony.Iran and iraq being originally separated by European imperialists in order to divide and rule the Persians. Israel is a terrorist state and treats Palestinians the same way as Nazis treated Jewish people in the 1930s and 40s. Jewish bankers control US empire via usury , as they have controlled western civilisation for centuries...and now the Jewish bankers risk losing their monetary power over the global economy if China succeeds in building an alternative trading and monetary system outside of Jewish bankers control.
reply
China and Russia backing is really working out isnt it? Super dooper successful those russian air defense systems right? I mean to live in the wild wild fantasy land you are in where the US is going to roll over and die at any time is wild.
You have stated for months now how Russia is going to change finally claim Ukraine or China will do this or that and non of your stuff is remotely accurate. I mean in 500 years sure but ya know read the room and idk just do some basic research.
Your terrorist acusation would also make Iran, Russia, China, Saudi, UAE, India, Pakistan, South Africa, Rwanda, DRC, Mali, etc. are all terrorist orgs as well so cry me a river you cant just throw out labels at things without actually thinking about what that means.
reply
You have not refuted any of the points I have raised. You probably cant, so you fall back on a garbled completely incomprehensible misrepresentation that claims to. The US is fucked without Chinese supply chains. USA is broke without USD/SWIFT hegemony over trade payments protocols. Iran and Russia are both dependent upon Chinese trade and trade payments protocols that maintain their economic viability despite US sanctions. They both challenge, militarily, US hegemony while China profits from sale of goods and purchase of discounted oil and gas. US hegemony is dependent upon USD/SWIFT hegemony- Trump admits this when he threatens BRICS members with 100% trade sanctions of they dare adopt Chinese payments protocols like CIPS and mBridge. The Saudis have signed up to both. Trump is managing the decline of US military, monetary, cultural and economic dominance. Good luck selling those $7T USTs before Xmas.
reply
1041 sats \ 3 replies \ @Cje95 OP 23h
The US didnt chose how to divide Persa and you really are giving the US a ton of credit with the Shah when it was the UK that was the one that was going to lose its oil access no the US.
I do not believe that the German Jews ever paid or created funds to pay for German Jews to kill other German citizens. Its odd because there is an Arabic party in Israelis legislative government and sure wasnt a Jewish one in German. Pretty sure that ya know the citizens of Israel who are Muslim yeah they have rights they even serve in the military when they do not have to which again Nazi Germany never did.
China has not been exactly thriving so I am not sure how you think this alternative is being built successfully given the BRICS countries are increasingly finding themselves in war. Ethiopia is once again facing an increaseing likelihood of internal war again and South Africa is becoming another internal mess as well.
Tell me which of these countries is exactly thriving to become to new leader? Who is actually innovating which is going to drive their economies? The US leads in fusion, quantum, AI and has done so with a fraction of the Federal Government support its been private money. No other country has that.
Blaming the Jews or claiming they control things is frankly a low IQ way to think. It requires no brain power or critical thinking skills and is the reason you tend to see it with the under or uneducated. You do not see intellectuals that think this way. Jewish culture places a high value on literacy, study, and intellectual inquiry from a young age so you are claiming they are doing things because well they are smart and teach their kids young.
reply
Sixty years after the overthrow of Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh, a declassified CIA document acknowledges that the agency was involved in the 1953 coup.
The independent National Security Archive research institute, which published the document Monday, says the declassification is believed to mark the CIA’s first formal acknowledgment of its involvement.
The documents, declassified in 2011 and given to George Washington University research group under the Freedom of Information Act, come from the CIA’s internal history of Iran from the mid-1970s and paint a detailed picture of how the CIA worked to oust Mossadegh.
In a key line pointed out by Malcom Byrne, the editor who worked through the documents, the CIA spells out its involvement in the coup. “The military coup that overthrew Mossadeq and his National Front cabinet was carried out under CIA direction as an act of U.S. foreign policy, conceived and approved at the highest levels of government,” the document says, using a variation of the spelling of Mossadegh’s name.
While this might be the CIA’s first formal nod, the U.S. role has long been known.
President Barack Obama acknowledged the United States’ involvement in the coup during a 2009 speech in Cairo.
“In the middle of the Cold War, the United States played a role in the overthrow of a democratically elected Iranian government,” the president said.
In 2000, then-U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright spoke of the intervention, and in the same year, the New York Times published what it said was a leaked 1954 CIA-written account of the overthrow.
Iranians elected Mossadegh prime minister in 1951. Quickly, the leader moved to nationalize oil production in the country – a move that would have been a serious blow to the United States and Britain and a win for the USSR.
Because of the failure of oil negotiations with Iran, along with a number of other issues, the United States was concerned “that Iran was in real danger of falling behind the Iron Curtain.”
“If that happened, it would mean a victory for the Soviets in the Cold War and a major setback for the West in the Middle East,” Donald N. Wilber, a principal planner of the mission, wrote within months of the overthrow. “It was the aim of the TPAJAX project” – that was the mission’s code name – “to cause the fall of the Mossadeq government; to reestablish the prestige and power of the Shah.”
Shortly after Mossadegh’s election, the CIA began to plan his overthrow. The goal of the coup was to elevate the strength of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and appoint a new prime minister – Gen. Fazlollah Zahedi.
Before the coup, the agency – along with the British Secret Intelligence Service – helped foment anti-Mossadegh fervor using propaganda, according to CIA documents. “In Iran, CIA and SIS propaganda assets were to conduct an increasingly intensified effort through the press, handbills and the Tehran clergy in a campaign designed to weaken the Mossadeq government in any way possible,” Wilber wrote.
On August 19, 1953, the coup swung into full effect as the CIA and British intelligence agency helped pull pro-Shah forces together and organized large protests against Mossadegh.
“The Army very soon joined the pro-Shah movement and by noon that day it was clear that Tehran, as well as certain provincial areas, were controlled by pro-Shah street groups and Army units,” Wilber wrote. “By the end of 19 August … members of the Mossadeq government were either in hiding or were incarcerated.”
In order to provide Zahedi, the country’s new prime minister, with some stability, the “CIA covertly made available $5,000,000 within two days of Zahedi’s assumptions of power.”
After the coup, Mossadegh was sentenced to death, but the sentence was never carried out. The former leader died in Tehran in 1967.
Even 60 years removed, the 1953 coup still hangs over U.S.-Iran relations.
Iranian politicians and religious leaders still use the coup as a way to foment anti-American sentiment. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iranian president from 2005 until earlier this year, demanded apologies from the United States for “crimes” the CIA committed in Iran during the 1953 coup.
“The issue is more than academic,” wrote Byrne of George Washington University. “Political partisans on all sides, including the Iranian government, regularly invoke the coup to argue whether Iran or foreign powers are primarily responsible for the country’s historical trajectory, whether the United States can be trusted to respect Iran’s sovereignty, or whether Washington needs to apologize for its prior interference before better relations can occur.”
reply
Nice obfuscation and cherry picking diversions but you have not credibly refuted anything. Good luck selling those USTs... Jewish bankers own the Fed, and the US government...as they owned the Brits until they moved to using the US as their vehicle. The underlying conflict here is between Jewish bankers and the CCP.
'Eventually, the CIA's involvement with the coup was exposed. This caused controversy within the organisation and the CIA congressional hearings of the 1970s. CIA supporters maintained that the coup was strategically necessary and praised the efficiency of the agents responsible. Critics say the scheme was paranoid, colonial, illegal, and immoral—and truly caused the "blowback" suggested in the pre-coup analysis. The extent of this "blowback", over time, was not completely clear to the CIA, as they had an inaccurate picture of the stability of the Shah's regime. The Iranian revolution of 1979 caught the CIA and the U.S. very much off guard (as CIA reporting a mere month earlier predicted no imminent insurrectionary turbulence whatsoever for the Shah's regime) and resulted in the overthrow of the Shah by a fundamentalist faction opposed to the U.S., headed by Ayatollah Khomeini. In retrospect, not only did the CIA and the U.S. underestimate the extent of popular discontent for the Shah, but much of that discontent historically stemmed from the removal of Mosaddegh and the subsequent clientelism of the Shah.[118]
In March 2000, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright stated her regret that Mosaddegh was ousted: "The Eisenhower administration believed its actions were justified for strategic reasons. But the coup was clearly a setback for Iran's political development and it is easy to see now why many Iranians continue to resent this intervention by America."[8] In the same year, The New York Times published a detailed report about the coup based on declassified CIA documents.'
reply
Wowser! 🔥
reply