Hey there, welcome. Please consider supporting our work with a paid subscription. It’s just $9.95 a month or even better, $99 a year. PS: Follow us also on Twitter @talk_spy. Russian ‘False Flag’ Ukraine Plot Wouldn’t Be Its FirstPutin’s been there, done that before, to justify Chechnya warIf it’s true that Russia has an “extremely elaborate” plan to stage a phony event showing the aftermath of a Ukrainian attack on Russian-speakers and perhaps even Russia itself, it certainly wouldn’t be the first time it’s used a “false flag” incident to justify military action. In 1999, Russia’s internal security force, the FSB, carried out a string of horrific apartment building bombings that the Kremlin blamed on Chechen rebels. The bombings, equivalent psychologically to the 9/11 Al Qaeda airliner attacks on New York and the Pentagon, whipped up Russians’ fears of the Chechens and eventually vaulted Prime Minister Vladimir Putin into the presidency. In 2014, Putin’s intelligence services carried out a highly suspect public opinion poll in Crimea that claimed to show overwhelming local support for annexation by Russia, which soon after dispatched forces to seize the region. Pro-Russia agents in Kiev also paid people $500 to protest against the Maiden democracy movement, according to reports. On Thursday, White House Deputy National Security Adviser Jon Finer told NBC’s Andrea Mitchell the Biden administration had acquired intelligence on an “extremely elaborate” Russian plan to stage a phony attack it would blame on the Ukrainians. A day earlier two unnamed officials told The Washington Post the operation would include “broadcasting images of civilian casualties in eastern Ukraine—and potentially over the border in Russia—to a wide audience to drum up outrage against the Ukrainian government and create a pretext for invasion.” One official said “it was unclear if the casualties would be real or faked.” “Russia,” the New York Times added, also quoting unnamed officials, “intended to use the video to accuse Ukraine of genocide against Russian-speaking people.” It’s a theme Kremlin disinformation organs have been pounding “on social media, on conspiracy sites and with state-controlled media since November, the Times said. “The video was intended to be elaborate, officials said, with plans for graphic images of the staged, corpse-strewn aftermath of an explosion and footage of destroyed locations.” Former top DHS intelligence official Brian Murphy elaborated on current Russian and other foreign disinformation campaigns targeting the United States on this week’s SpyTalk podcast.
Nazi Germany: On the night of August 31, 1939, an SS squad dressed in Polish uniforms seized a radio station near the border and “broadcast a short anti-German message in Polish,” according to historical records, confessions at the Nuremberg war crimes trial and several sources cited by Wikipedia. “They then shot and killed a prisoner and put his body at the scene, dressed in a Polish uniform, to give the impression he had died during the attack. The incident was meant to construct enough anti-Polish sentiment to justify an invasion but was also a part of a larger campaign to serve the Nazis’ propaganda goals prior to the outbreak of World War II.” In 1954, Israel secretly recruited Egyptian Jews to carry out bombings of Egyptian as well as U.S.- and U.K.-owned civilian entities, like movie theaters and cafés, that would be blamed on the Muslim Brotherhood and communists. In 1989, a South African policeman confessed to the nation’s post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission that he’d conspired to carry out bombings that were blamed on the rebel African National Congress. One of the most macabre false flag ideas was generated by the Pentagon in 1962 but was—thankfully—rejected by President John F. Kennedy. “ Operation Northwoods contemplated using the CIA to carry out terrorist attacks on U.S. and civilian targets and blame them on Cuba. The plan, signed by Army General Lyman Lemnitzer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, offered a wide range of murderous options, including assassinating Cuban immigrants, sinking boats of Cuban refugees in the Florida Straits and hijacking U.S. airliners. "We could develop a communist Cuban terror campaign in the Miami area, in other Florida cities and even in Washington," it continued. "The terror campaign could be pointed at Cuban refugees seeking haven in the United States. We could sink a boatload of Cubans enroute to Florida (real or simulated)." Other plans included Operation Bingo, “a plan to fake an attack on the United States base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, providing cover for a devastating U.S. military assault on Havana,” according to a 1997 report by New York Times reporter Tim Weiner. “It also included “Operation Dirty Trick, a plot to blame Castro if the 1962 Mercury manned space flight carrying John Glenn crashed. “ “Then there was Operation Good Times,” Weiner added. ‘That involved sowing Cuba with faked photos of ‘an obese Castro’ with two voluptuous women in a lavishly furnished room ‘and a table brimming over with the most delectable Cuban food.’ The faked photo would be captioned ‘my ration is different.’” Compared to that, the alleged Russian plot to justify an invasion of Ukraine seems timid. Timid, maybe, but just as nefarious and criminal. And JFK, mind you, halted the crazy Northwoods scheme. Will Putin hold back as well? He seems far less constrained—and dangerous. |
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