Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WTF is wrong with Matt Lee? "Show us your classified intel that would expose the inside source!"
Don’t be an imbecile and listen to the clip. jFC you people are stupid.
Anonymous wrote:WTF is wrong with Matt Lee? "Show us your classified intel that would expose the inside source!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Classified considerations aside, American intelligence - as evidenced by the Iraq and Afghanistan record - is a clusterschmuck. I mean if it was a washing machine, it would be pulled from the shelves. That’s how unreliable it is.
Yep.
Cia wanted to hire me! They gave me an offer!
I s**t post on dcum.
You know cia is down bad when they have to offer jobs to people like me.
Anonymous wrote:Classified considerations aside, American intelligence - as evidenced by the Iraq and Afghanistan record - is a clusterschmuck. I mean if it was a washing machine, it would be pulled from the shelves. That’s how unreliable it is.
Anonymous wrote:
Seems as if when a journalist does his job, he becomes "Putin's puppet."
Washington Post reporter:
One tweet in her thread:
It's the job of reporters to ask for proof to back up government statements. Doing so does not mean one believes propaganda put out by U.S. adversaries. I imagine these officials know that. Are they simply throwing out these accusations in an effort to deter further Qs?
The plan — which the United States hopes to spoil by making public — involves staging and filming a fabricated attack by the Ukrainian military either on Russian territory or against Russian-speaking people in eastern Ukraine.
Russia, the officials said, intended to use the video to accuse Ukraine of genocide against Russian-speaking people. It would then use the outrage over the video to justify an attack or have separatist leaders in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine invite a Russian intervention.
Officials would not release any direct evidence of the Russian plan or specify how they learned of it, saying to do so would compromise their sources and methods. But a recent Russian disinformation campaign focused on false accusations of genocide and efforts in the Russian Parliament to recognize breakaway governments in Ukraine lent credence to the intelligence.
If carried out, the Russian operation would be an expansion of a propaganda theme that American intelligence officials and outside experts have said Moscow has been pushing on social media, on conspiracy sites and with state-controlled media since November.
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. They said the video was also set to include faked Ukrainian military equipment, Turkish-made drones and actors playing Russian-speaking mourners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the reality of this thing. My mom has told me that they might not get the city heating for hours as they are trying to conserve the gas supplies. In the Balkans.Because they get their gas from Russia via Ukraine.
Balkan people were better off under Russian rule.
Independence has not been good for all of the small Balkan states.