THE WAR IN UKRAINE
By James Corbett
corbettreport.com
October 29, 2022
Remember way back
in January of this year when I predicted that
geopolitical strife—"the element of the global calculation that has been
excluded from the equation" during the scamdemic—would "come back
with a vengeance" in 2022?
Well, if the
Russian invasion of Ukraine in February and the ramping up of tensions with
China over Taiwan this past summer hadn't yet convinced you that the struggle
for control of the grand (3D) chessboard has
indeed "come back with a vengeance" this year, the events of this
past week should be more than enough to dispel your doubts.
First we had the
news that Russia is ringing the alarm over
a false flag dirty bomb attack that
(they assert) the Ukrainians are planning to stage in Ukraine in order to blame
on Russia. Then we had the US counter-warning that
it's actually Russia that is planning to release nukes in Ukraine and the
Kremlin's false flag warning is a trick to make everyone believe that the
Ukrainians are going to do it.
Is your head
spinning yet? Mine, too. In fact, I think that's the point.
Accusation.
Counter-accusation. Bluffs and double-bluffs in an ever-crazier game of nuclear
chicken. What the hell is going on here? And—regardless of what results from
this latest kerfuffle—what does the normalization of false flag accusations
portend for the future of geopolitics?
Let's find out.
THE BLAME GAME GOES NUCLEAR
It passed through
the newswires so quickly that you may have missed it at the time, but back in
January the US intelligence community revealed themselves to be a bunch of
tinfoil hat-wearing conspiraloons.
Specifically,
as the AP reported on
January 15:
US
intelligence officials have determined a Russian effort is underway to create a
pretext for its troops to further invade Ukraine, and Moscow has already
prepositioned operatives to conduct “a false-flag operation” in eastern
Ukraine, according to the White House.
The theory, in a
nutshell, was that Russia—in seeking an excuse to kick off their invasion of
Ukraine—had "dispatched operatives trained in urban warfare" who
could "use explosives to carry out acts of sabotage against Russia’s own
proxy forces" in the country. These attacks would then be blamed on the
Ukrainian government, thus giving Putin an apparent casus belli to
justify the decision to send Russian forces into Ukraine.
Now, you'd think
it would be pretty big news that the US government was openly promoting the
very type of false flag conspiracy theory that they've so long denigrated as
bark-raving lunacy, wouldn't you? Well, if you did think that, you'd be wrong.
As I say, you may
have never even heard that startling accusation when it was first made, and
you'd be forgiven for having forgotten about it even if you did hear it at the
time. After all, the theory proved groundless; no spectacular terror attack
occurred to justify Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
But that wasn't
the end of
the story. Rather, the US government's very public accusation that the Kremlin
was plotting a nefarious false flag conspiracy was in fact just the beginning of a
new era of geopolitics.
With false flag
conspiracy theorizing having successfully transitioned from a topic only
entertained by mentally disturbed kooks to
a matter that can be solemnly discussed by level-headed paragons of mental
acuity like unnamed "US intelligence officials," the floodgate had
been opened. It was only a matter of time before other nations began bandying
false flag allegations about on the world stage.
And so it was that
earlier this week the Russians began frantically warning anyone who would
listen that the Ukrainians are preparing a false flag provocation of their own.
According to a report from
Russia's state-owned news agency, TASS, "[t]wo Ukrainian organizations
have received concrete instructions to create a ‘dirty bomb’, and work on the
bomb is nearing completion." In a briefing to journalists last Monday,
Russia's Chemical and Biological Protection Troops Lieutenant-General Igor
Kirillov did not specify which Ukrainian "organizations" are alleged
to be involved in this plan. He did, however, reiterate that those
organizations "have concrete instructions to create a so-called dirty
bomb"—a weapon that combines conventional explosives and radioactive
material and which, when detonated, leaves behind an area of deadly radioactive
fallout.
Kirillov further
asserted that "[w]ork [on the bomb] is at the final stage" and that
"[t]he Russian Defense Ministry has data on contacts of the Ukrainian
presidential office with the UK on the issue of potentially obtaining these
nuclear technologies."
Kirillov's press
conference came hot on the heels of a bout of telephone calls that Russian
Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu made to his counterparts in Britain, France,
Turkey and the US last Sunday to warn them of the plot. Unsurprisingly, Shoigu
was rebuffed by those officials, who immediately went on the record to
dismiss Russia's false flag concerns as an "absolute and quite
predictable absurdity."
This has not
dissuaded Russia from pursuing the matter. In fact, Russia's Permanent
Representative to the United Nations even raised the allegation at
a closed door session of the UN Security Council on Thursday. Although that
session didn't result in any Security Council action on the alleged plot,
it did convince
the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency to send inspectors to Ukraine in
the coming days "to detect any possible undeclared nuclear activities and
material."
Needless to say
(but I'll say it anyway), the threat of a dirty bomb being used as a
provocation in any situation is disturbing enough.
The threat of a
dirty bomb in a false
flag provocation designed to dupe the international community
into hasty action against an innocent target is even more troubling.
The threat of a
dirty bomb false flag operation being used in the middle of an ongoing military
conflict is yet more dangerous.
The threat of a
dirty bomb false flag operation taking place in Ukraine specifically—where one
wrong move could send the world tumbling into all-out war between Russia and
the US—is profoundly worrying.
But the prospect
of such a scenario playing out in Ukraine right now—right in the midst of
simultaneous nuclear war games by Russia and NATO, when both
sides are already preparing for a full-scale nuclear war and
the Pentagon is announcing that it will no longer rule out a
nuclear first use strategy—is the most sinister scenario of all.
And if you thought
this game of nuclear Russian roulette was crazy, just you wait. It gets even
worse!
THE FALSE FLAG FALSE FLAG
Given the
situation in Ukraine and given the state of NATO/Russian relations, it is no
surprise whatsoever that the West has been quick to denounce Russia's dirty
bomb false flag accusation as disinformation. Nor is it surprising that the
dinosaur media have taken it upon themselves to "fact check"
Russia's allegations.
No, none of that
is surprising.
What is surprising
is that the US State Department and their friends around the world are not simply
denouncing the Russians as wild-eyed conspiracy cranks for daring to suggest
that false flag operations exist. No. They're going one step further.
US State
Department spokesman Ned Price, for one, has used the affair to remind Moscow "about
the severe consequences that would result from nuclear use" in Ukraine,
warning that there "would be consequences for Russia whether it uses a
dirty bomb or a nuclear bomb."
Wait. Stop.
Re-read that.
Do you see what's
happening? The US is now implying that Russia's warning about a planned
Ukrainian false flag operation is itself
a false flag operation. In the State Department's narrative, it
is Russia that
is thinking of deploying a dirty bomb, and their talk of a Ukrainian dirty bomb
is part of a false flag deception to convince the world that any nuclear device
going off in Ukraine is the work of Kiev, not Moscow.
The US is going a
level deeper! They're suggesting a False Flag False Flag—a false flag operation
to create the impression of
a false flag operation!
Now that's some
Christopher Nolan-level, Inception-type,
5D backgammon thinking right there. I thought I'd seen some crazy conspiracy
theories in my day, but apparently the online crazies have nothing on the State
Department crazies.
Of course, if
we were to
take this idea seriously even for a moment, the most cursory analysis would
instantly reveal this particular False Flag False Flag narrative to be
cartoon-level nonsense.
Why would Russia
go to the trouble of ginning up a fake false flag accusation in order to cover
up their use of a dirty bomb—an incredibly ineffective weapon that serves no
military purpose in an active combat situation? What conceivable Russian
military objective would be advanced by perpetrating such an elaborate and
strategically useless plot? Would they use the dirty bomb and its aftermath to
justify . . . continuing their military operation in Ukraine? But they're
already there. It just makes no sense.
But to examine the
False Flag False Flag plot rationally would
be to miss the point. These accusations and counter-accusations are not about a
sincere attempt to understand and accurately convey the truth about what is
happening in the world. They are about something else entirely: weaponizing
information itself in the ongoing, never-ending, ever-intensifying fifth-generation war on us.
And the ultimate
goal of this weapon
is to obliterate the concept of truth altogether.
WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN?
I have often
remarked that one of the "wins" of the 9/11 Truth Movement is that
the truthers have succeeded in educating the public about the existence of
false flag attacks.
Two decades ago,
most people would react to the suggestion that 9/11 was an inside job with
genuine bewilderment: "Why would the government attack itself?" But
today, the vast majority of the public understands the utility of staging
spectacular terror attacks in order to blame those attacks on their
enemies—thanks in no small part to the tireless efforts of those valiant conspiracy
realists who have worked to inform the public about the history of such operations.
But now that false
flag accusations have become so much a part of political discourse that they
are being bandied back and forth at the international level, a significant
shift has taken place. Henceforth, no event of any significance will ever be
taken at face value.
Think about it
this way: if a dirty bomb were to
go off in Ukraine next week, it would instantly become Schrödinger's bomb.
If you think
Russia Good/NATO Bad, then when the dirty bomb goes off it will be obvious to you
that it was a
Ukrainian false flag. Every fact about the incident that gets reported to you
(via the media, naturally) will confirm your suspicions. Even if the evidence
suggests that the Russians were responsible,
you'll know that
the evidence isn't trustworthy. It's a psyop! It's fake news! It's a deep fake
video! It's not real!
And if you think
NATO Good/Russia Bad, then when the dirty bomb goes off it will be obvious to you
that it was a
Russian attack. Every fact about the incident that gets reported to you (via
the media, naturally) will confirm your suspicions. Even if the evidence
suggests that the Ukrainians were responsible,
you'll know that
the evidence isn't trustworthy. It's a psyop! It's fake news! It's a deep fake
video! It's not real!
In the house of
mirrors that is the False Flag False Flag psyop, whatever happens will only
ever enforce our existing beliefs.
And it isn't hard
to imagine how things could get even
more insane. What if the Russians were to point to the US
State Department's False Flag False Flag theory as a False Flag False Flag
False Flag—an attempt to cover up a false flag operation by portraying the
enemies' warnings about your false flag operation as a false flag
operation?
And then we could
have a False Flag False Flag False Flag False Flag and a False Flag False Flag
False Flag False Flag False Flag and . . . etc., etc., ad infinitum.
Yes, this is it,
folks. Pandora's box has been opened. We have truly entered the
"post-truth world" that the elitists have been warning us about.
But as it turns out, their warning about the post-truth world wasn't a warning
at all; it was a promise.
In a world of deep
fakes and false flags and fake whistleblowers and completely mediated
"reality," what is truth,
anyway?
That, my friends,
is a question for another day. All I know is that the False Flag False Flag
hypothesis and the uncorking of the bottle that it entails is, in a sense,
even more dangerous
than a mere nuclear conflagration.
After all, in the
event of global thermonuclear war, the worst case scenario is that we get
bombed back to the stone age and have to start human civilization from scratch.
But hey, at least in that case the Fourth Industrial Revolution would have to
be postponed a milennium or two!
But when
Schrödinger's bomb goes off, we run the risk of losing our ability to determine
truth altogether.
Buckle up,
everyone. Regardless of what happens in Ukraine in the coming weeks, we have
just started our descent into a new geopolitical era and it's going to be a
much wilder ride than even the most battle-hardened conspiracy realists can
imagine.
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