NATO preparing vast disinformation campaign [Voltaire Network]
In a few days, perhaps as early as Friday, June 15, at noon, the Syrians wanting to watch their national TV stations will see them replaced on their screens by TV programs created by the CIA. Studio-shot images will show massacres that are blamed on the Syrian Government, people demonstrating, ministers and generals resigning from their posts, President Al-Assad fleeing, the rebels gathering in the big city centers, and a new government installing itself in the presidential palace.
This operation of disinformation, directly managed from Washington by Ben Rhodes, the US deputy national security adviser for strategic communication, aims at demoralizing the Syrians in order to pave the way for a coup detat. NATO, discontent about the double veto of Russia and China, will thus succeed in conquering Syria without attacking the country illegally. Whichever judgment you might have formed on the actual events in Syria, a coup detat will end all hopes of democratization.
NATO preparing vast disinformation campaign [Voltaire Network]
Ventura County Reporter - A Radioactive Nightmare
Millions of Southern Californians and tourists seek the region's famous beaches to cool off in the sea breeze and frolic in the surf. Those iconic breezes, however, may be delivering something hotter than the white sands along the Pacific.
Buckyballs.
According to a recent U.C. Davis study, uranium-filled nanospheres are created from the millions of tons of fresh and salt water used to try to cool down the three molten cores of the stricken reactors. The tiny and tough buckyballs are shaped like British Association Football soccer balls.
Water hitting the incredibly hot and radioactive, primarily uranium-oxide fuel turns it into peroxide. In this goo buckyballs are formed, loaded with uranium and able to move quickly through water without disintegrating.
Blunt claims leaks have made U.S. more vulnerable to cyber-attacks - St. Louis Beacon
WASHINGTON - Echoing other Senate cybersecurity experts, Sen. Roy Blunt argued Wednesday that alleged White House leaks about a U.S. cyber attack on Iran make this country more vulnerable to similar attacks on critical infrastructure such as utilities.
It would seem to me that the president actually heightened our potential to have a cyber problem by pointing out to the world, through the administration, that ... we'e doing it,Blunt, R-Mo., told reporters.
Blunt , a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee and member of a working group on cybersecurity %u2013 joined critics ranging from former GOP presidential nominee Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., to Intelligence Committee chair Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., in questioning the leaks behind a New York Times report that President Barack Obama tried to derail Iran's nuclear program by secretly ordering cyberattacks.
Asserting that "laws have apparently been broken," McCain demanded a Senate investigatory hearing into the alleged leaks, and Senate Armed Services chair Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said he has agreed to hold a hearing.
Blunt claims leaks have made U.S. more vulnerable to cyber-attacks - St. Louis Beacon
Illinois State Representative Erupts in Fury Over Government Tyranny - YouTube
Illinois state representative Mike Bost loses his cool on the House floor Tuesday afternoon after lawmakers call for a quick vote on a new pension reform proposal.
The UN Wants Complete Control Over The Internet :: Pakalert Press
One of the fastest ways to ruin the Internet would be to put the United Nations in charge of it. Unfortunately, that is exactly what the United Nations wants. The United Nations is now pushing very hard for complete control over the Internet. A proposal that has the support of China, Russia, India, Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Iran would give control of the Internet to the UN's International Telecommunication Union. This is perhaps the greatest threat to the free and open Internet that we have seen yet.
US diplomat: Israel is right to be concerned about time running out on nuclear Iran
In an unusual briefing to reporters in Tel Aviv, Saturday, May 26, the unnamed US official, described as having intimate knowledge of the Baghdad talks, said: Israel's concerns are justified and we are doubtful it is possible to reach an agreement with Iran, but we must exhaust the diplomatic path because the alternative, whether a nuclear Iran or a regional war, is very serious.DEBKAfile: This was a paraphrase of the contention by Israeli officials that an attack is preferable to a nuclear Iran. The official went on to say that the US would continue to pressure Iran with sanctions until it ceased enriching uranium.
US diplomat: Israel is right to be concerned about time running out on nuclear Iran
Israel revives military option after Obama rejects its nuclear demands of Iran
Israel has withdrawn its pledge to US President Barack Obama not to strike Iran%u2019s nuclear sites before the November presidential election after he rejected its minimal demands for nuclear negotiations with Iran. This is reported exclusively by debkafile's Washington sources.
In public, Israeli ministers still talk as though they believe in results from the Six-Power talks with Iran, which Thursday May 24 limped into their second day in Baghdad with the parties still miles apart. But the presidential veto has essentially cast Israel outside the loop of influence on the outcome of diplomacy.
Israel revives military option after Obama rejects its nuclear demands of Iran