The United States, Europe, Saudi Arabia, NATO, The Persian Gulf States and Israel have been engaged in warfare termed "non-obvious warfare" for a few years against Iran. "Non-obvious warfare" is a discreet, covert means of engagement. It is a substitute for outright military conflict.The cyber attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities and the assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists are examples of "non-obvious warfare." Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence Directorate’s also does this type of warfare by working through proxies it created to launch attacks against India and to undertake terrorist attacks in Afghanistan against troops of the United States and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. In effect, such an engagement constitutes a war between Pakistan and Afghanistan without outright military conflict between the two countries.It’s not just a Western concept. Countries such as Iran similarly engage in such activities against a superior military force, such as the United States. This is the case against Turkey, the U.S. and our NATO allies in Syria right now.RAND Corporation, has laid out what all “non-obvious warfare” encompasses. "Non-obvious warfare" include:
- Cyber warfare
- Space warfare
- Electronic warfare
- Drone warfare
- Sabotage, special operations, assassinations and mines
- Proxy attacks
- Weapons of mass destruction
- Intelligence support to combat operations
Dr. Martin C. Libicki of RAND points out that "non-obvious warfare" is in stark contrast to conventional warfare, for example, an armor invasion. “It is quite difficult to take over the capital of another country anonymously,” Libicki wrote in the Fall 2012 Strategic Studies Quarterly.A recent example of non-obvious warfare was infecting the Iranian nuclear program with the Stuxnet, Flame and Gauss electronic viruses. And then some of its nuclear scientists were blown up in Tehran, to which the Iranians reciprocated on at least one occasion.“Even if wielded solely in pursuit of good aims,” Libicki said, “such (non-obvious) techniques corrode both military values and diplomatic norms. Non-obvious warfare, almost by definition, has to be the work of small teams that must isolate themselves from the larger community, much like intelligence operatives, lest word of their adventures leak out.“The efforts of the small non-obvious warfare teams would leave the mass of the national security establishment quite uncertain about what exactly was going on and who exactly was behind all the activity.”Libicki pointed out that wide adoption of non-obvious warfare would likely result in a more suspicious world.“Once attacks are shaped to look like accidents,” he said, “many accidents will start to smell like attacks.”
Another type of warfare is to create a "false flag." For example, the recent riots across the Muslim world are an example. A cabal can create an incident that they know will cause the Arabs to erupt. The cabal knows the Arabs and Muslims are a very emotional people and can be "fired up" easily. This is a favorite tactic of the Illuminati. The Illuminati also wants to create division in order to provoke wars. Why do the Illuminati want to provoke wars? Their secret cabal makes tons of money from war. They employ the Hegelian dialectic, thesis, antithesis to produce a synthesis. In simple terms they will play Arab off against Jews in order to provoke a war. They also used the dialectic in the Cold War pitting capitalism against communism to keep the world in a constant state of preparedness for war. They also created terrorism, it is an almost perfect dialectic because terrorism never goes away and it is easy to blame a group. Friends keep Ephesians 6:12 in mind.
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