What is Israel’s role in the destabilization of Pakistan?
By Jeff Gates
Online
Journal Guest Writer
Nov 17, 2009, 00:21
When waging war “by way of deception,” the motto of the
Israeli Mossad, well-timed crises play a critical agenda-setting role by
displacing facts with what a target population can be deceived to believe. Thus
the force-multiplier effect when staged crises are reinforced with pre-staged
intelligence. In combination, the two often prove persuasive.
That duplicity was on display when U.S. lawmakers were
induced to invade Iraq in response to the mass murder of 9-11. That crisis
alone, however, was insufficient. Military mobilization required a “consensus”
belief in Iraqi WMD, Iraqi ties to Al Qaeda, Iraqi mobile biological weapons,
Iraqi meetings in Prague, and so forth. Though all were false, those “facts”
proved sufficient to induce an invasion of Iraq.
Such agent provocateur
operations typically include collateral incidents as pre-staging for the
intended main event. Ongoing incidents suggest a follow-on operation is
underway. Recent history suggests we’ll see an orgy of evidence that plausibly
indicts a pre-staged Evil Doer. Though Iran is an obvious candidate, Pakistan
is also a possibility where outside forces have been destabilizing this nuclear
Islamic nation with a series of violent incidents.
Will it be coincidence if the next war -- like the last -- is
consistent with the expansive goals of Jewish nationalists?
The Indo-Israel alliance
December 2007 saw the murder of former Pakistan Prime
Minister Benazir Bhutto. Mark Siegel, her Ashkenazim biographer and lobbyist,
assured U.S. diplomats that her return was “the only possible way that we could
guarantee stability and keep the presidency of Musharraf intact.”
President Pervez Musharraf had announced that resolution of
the Israel-Palestine conflict was essential to the resolution of conflicts in
Iraq and neighboring Afghanistan. That comment made him a target for Tel Aviv.
During Bhutto’s two terms as prime minister, Pakistani
support for the Taliban -- then celebrated as the freedom-fighting Mujahadin --
enabled her to wield influence in Afghanistan while also catalyzing conflicts
in Kashmir. By fueling tension with India, she also fueled an Indo-Israel
alliance as Tel Aviv provided New Delhi an emergency shipment of artillery
shells during a conflict over the Kirpal region of Kashmir.
In January 2009, Israel delivered to India the first of
three Phalcon Airborne Warning & Control Systems (AWACS) shifting the
balance of conventional weapons in the region. That sale confirmed what Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had earlier announced: “Our ties with India
don’t have any limitation. . . .” That became apparent in April when Israel
signed a $1.1 billion agreement to provide India an advanced tactical air
defense system developed by Raytheon, a U.S. defense contractor.
In August 2008, Ashkenazim General David Kezerashvili
returned to Georgia from Tel Aviv to lead an assault on separatists in South
Ossetia with the support of Israeli arms and training. That crisis ignited Cold
War tensions between the U.S. and Russia, key members of the Quartet (along
with the EU and the UN) pledged to resolve the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Little was said about the Israeli interest in a pipeline
across Georgia meant to move Caspian oil through Turkey and on to Eurasia,
using Israel as an intermediary while undermining Russia’s oil industry.
More game theory warfare?
Bhutto’s murder ensured a crisis that replaced Musharaff
with Asif Ali Zardari, her notoriously corrupt husband. By Washington’s
alliance with Zardari, the U.S. could be portrayed as extending its corrupting
influence in the region.
On August 7, 2008, the Zadari-led ruling coalition called
for a no-confidence vote in Parliament against Musharraf just as he was
departing for the Summer Olympics in Beijing. On August 8, heavy fighting
erupted overnight in South Ossetia. As with many of the recent incidents in
Pakistan, this violent event involved armed separatists.
But for pro-Israeli influence inside the U.S. government,
would our State Department have installed in office the corrupt Hamid Karzai in
Afghanistan, leading to record-level poppy production? Is the heroin epidemic
presently eroding Russian society traceable to Israel’s infamous game theory
war-planners? [See “How Israel
Wages Game Theory Warfare” and “Israel and 9-11.”]
In late November 2008, a terrorist attack in Mumbai, India’s
financial center, renewed fears of nuclear tension between India and Pakistan.
When the attackers struck a hostel managed by Chabad Lubavitch, an
ultra-orthodox Jewish sect from New York, Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni
announced from Tel Aviv, “Our world is under attack.” By early December,
Israeli journalists urged that we “fortify the security of Jewish institutions
worldwide.”
Soon after “India’s 9-11” was found to include operatives
from Pakistan’s western tribal region, Zardari announced an agreement with the
Taliban to allow Sharia law to govern a swath of the northwest frontier province
where Al Qaeda members reportedly reside.
Pakistani cooperation with “Islamic extremists” created the
impression of enhanced insecurity and vulnerability for the U.S. and its
allies. That perceived threat was marketed by mainstream media as proof of the
perils of “militant Islam.”
With the Taliban and Al Qaeda portrayed as operating freely
in a nuclear-armed Islamic state, Tel Aviv gained traction for its claim that a
nuclear Tehran posed an “existential threat” to the Jewish state. Meanwhile
Israel’s election of an ultra-nationalist/ultra-orthodox coalition further
delayed resolution of the Israel-Palestine conflict.
More delay is destined to evoke more extremism and gain more
traction for those marketing the “global war on terrorism.” Israeli Foreign
Minister Tzipi Livni argued after the assault in Mumbai, “Israel, India and the
rest of the free world are positioned in the forefront of the battle against
terrorists and extremism.”
In announcing that list, Islamabad was indicted by its
exclusion even though Pakistan is dominantly Sunni and, unlike Iran’s Shi’a,
abhors theocratic rule. The fact patterns suggest that Pakistan, not India, was
the target of the murderous terrorism in Mumbai.
Advised by legions of Ashkenazim, Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton’s recent mission to Islamabad was a diplomatic disaster. Abrasive and
arrogant, America’s top diplomat reinforced Pakistani concerns that it is
surrounded by hostile forces and that the nation is being set up to fail by
Jewish nationalist advisers to a nation it considered an ally.
In a climate of heightened tensions, Clinton undermined U.S.
interests, boosted the Israeli case for a global war on “Islamo-fascism” and
lent credence to the Clash of
Civilizations.
Destabilization as a prequel
to domination
As Afghanistan and Pakistan join other nations being
destabilized by outside forces, key questions must be answered:
- Was India’s 9-11 a form of
geopolitical misdirection meant to serve both the tactical goals of Muslim
extremists and the strategic goals of Jewish nationalists? Who benefits --
within Pakistan -- from humiliation at the hands of India and the U.S.?
- With Bhutto’s murder and
Musharraf’s departure, the crisis in Mumbai drew Pakistani forces to the
Indian border and away from the western tribal region. Was that the
geostrategic goal of these well-timed crises? What role, if any, did
Israel play?
- Is delay in ending the
occupation of Palestine part of an agent
provocateur strategy?
- Was the latest assault on
Gaza part of this strategy?
Each of these crises incrementally advanced the expansionist
agenda of Colonial Zionists. Do these collateral incidents trace their origin
to a common source? Is that source again using serial events to pre-stage a
main event?
The public has an intuitive grasp of the source of this
oft-recurring behavior. An October 2003 poll of 7,500 respondents in member
nations of the European Union found that Israel was considered the greatest
threat to world peace.
Is terrorism limited to “Islamo-fascists”? Are mass murders
also deployed -- from the shadows -- as a strategy of geopolitical manipulation
by those who Ashkenazim philosopher Hannah Arendt described as “Jewish
fascists”?
Jeff
Gates is author of “Guilt By Association, Democracy at Risk” and “The Ownership
Solution.” See www.criminalstate.com.
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