NYTimes | For decades, most Israelis have considered Palestinian terrorism the country’s biggest security concern. But there is another threat that may be even more destabilizing for Israel’s future as a democracy: Jewish terrorism and violence, and the failure to enforce the law against it.
Our yearslong investigation reveals how violent factions within the Israeli settler movement, protected and sometimes abetted by the government, have come to pose a grave threat to Palestinians in the occupied territories and to the State of Israel itself. Piecing together new documents, videos and over 100 interviews, we found a government shaken by an internal war — burying reports it commissioned, neutering investigations it assigned and silencing whistle-blowers, some of them senior officials. It is a blunt account, told in some cases for the first time by Israeli officials, of how the occupation came to threaten the integrity of the country’s democracy.
Lawbreakers Become Lawmakers Officials told us that once fringe, sometimes criminal groups of settlers bent on pursuing a theocratic state have been allowed for decades to operate with few restraints. Since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition government came to power in 2022, elements of that faction have taken power — driving the country’s policies, including in the war in Gaza.
The lawbreakers have become the law. Bezalel Smotrich, the finance minister and the official in Netanyahu’s government with oversight over the West Bank, was arrested in 2005 by the Shin Bet domestic security service for plotting road blockages to halt the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. He was released with no charges. Itamar Ben-Gvir, Israel’s national security minister, had been convicted multiple times for supporting terrorist organizations and, in front of television cameras in 1995, vaguely threatened the life of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was murdered weeks later by an Israeli student.
Settler Violence Protected, and Abetted All West Bank settlers are in theory subject to the same military law that applies to Palestinian residents. But in practice, they are treated according to the civil law of the State of Israel, which formally applies only to territory within the state’s borders. This means that Shin Bet might probe two similar acts of terrorism in the West Bank — one committed by Jewish settlers and one committed by Palestinians — and use wholly different investigative tools.
After the Arab-Israeli War of 1967, Israel controlled new territory in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights and East Jerusalem. In 1979, it agreed to return the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt.
The job of investigating Jewish terrorism falls to a division of Shin Bet known commonly as the Jewish Department. But it is dwarfed both in size and prestige by the Arab Department, the division charged mostly with combating Palestinian terrorism.
Jews involved in terror attacks against Arabs over the past decades have received substantial leniency, which has included reductions in prison time, anemic investigations and pardons. Most incidents of settler violence — torching vehicles, cutting down olive groves — fall under the jurisdiction of the police, who tend to ignore them. When the Jewish Department investigates more serious terrorist threats, it is often stymied from the outset, and even its successes have sometimes been undermined by judges and politicians sympathetic to the settler cause.
roburie |While the Washington Post has long been considered the mouthpiece of the CIA,
the New York Times has been more effective at carrying water for it in
recent years. The recent longish Times article entitled The Spy War: How the C.I.A. Secretly Helps Ukraine Fight Putin
contains recitation of CIA-friendly talking points that portrays it as
indispensable to ‘our’ ability to commit pointless, petty atrocities
against Russia as the US sacrifices more Ukrainians in its misguided
war. Missing from the piece is any conceivable reason for the US to
continue the war.
The oft ascribed motive (and here)
for the CIA’s existence is to act as the US President’s secret army
abroad. The wisdom of this arrangement has been debated over the years.
Former US President Harry Truman, who oversaw the founding of the CIA
from its predecessor, the OSS (Office of Strategic Services), later regretted the decision
and argued that the CIA should be brought to heel. Later, the Cold War
presented cover for the CIA to act badly under the cover of national
defense.
In Stephen Kinzer’s book, All the Shah’s Men,
the CIA paid people to pretend to be communists so as to convey the
fiction that the CIA’s effort was about ‘fighting communism’ rather than
stealing Iran’s oil. Similarly, in the US coup that ousted
Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz for daring to raise the minimum wage
paid by foreign-owned industries in Guatemala, also featured fake
communists intended to convince the American press that the CIA was
fighting for freedom and democracy rather than to steal wages from poor
people for the benefit of rich Americans.
Together, these
imply that fake communists had been more effectively demonized by
Federal agencies than other available out groups because of the threat
they didn’t pose to American capital. Recall, in 1919 Woodrow Wilson
sent the American Expeditionary Force to join the Brits, French, and
Japanese in trying to reverse the Russian Revolution. Later, through the
Five Eyes Alliance, ‘the West’ spent the post-War era attacking the
Soviets while alleging that they were responding to political violence
that they (Five Eyes) started.
Oddly, given recent history,
the claim that the CIA is the President’s secret army still appears to
be the received wisdom in Washington and New York. This is odd because
while the CIA appears to be acting as Joe Biden’s secret army
in Ukraine and Israel, it went to war with (the duly elected President
of the US) Donald Trump for his entire four years in office. While Mr.
Trump played the victim of the US intelligence agencies to perfection,
he didn’t do what many normal humans would have done in his
circumstance--- clear out the top few levels of management at CIA, the
FBI, and NSA and see where this leaves ‘us.’
Implied
is a reversal of political causality whose proof can only be deduced. Is
Biden directing the CIA, or is the CIA directing Biden? For instance,
while Biden was Barack Obama’s point-man in Ukraine before, during, and
after the US-led coup there in 2014, Mr. Obama was publicly arguing
that Ukraine was of no strategic value to the US. With Donald Trump
following Mr. Obama as President, the CIA likely saw its 2014 coup in
Ukraine going to waste. This interpretation sheds a different light on
the Hunter Biden laptop fraud perpetrated by 51 current and former CIA employees.
(FBI informant Alexander Smirnov has been convicted of nothing
related to the new charges of ‘Russian interference.’ As was proved
with Russiagate, charges are easy to make, difficult to prove. No one---
not a single person, was convicted on the now antique charges of
Russian collusion. Those who were convicted were convicted on process
charges unrelated to the collusion charges. This use of the law as a
political weapon is called lawfare).
The view in this piece
is that Donald Trump was elected in 2016 because Barack Obama threw
several trillion dollars at the malefactors on Wall Street who blew up
the global economy while he pissed on the unemployed, the foreclosed
upon, and every working person in the US. In so doing, an income and
wealth chasm was rebuilt between the public welfare recipients who run
Wall Street and Big Tech and the former industrial workers whose jobs
were sent abroad as the final solution to the ‘problem’ of organized
labor.
With the current panic in the US over the rise of the BRICS
(China and Russia), the same politicians and economists who thought it
wise in 1995 to gut the industrial base with NAFTA are now busy
launching WWIII. These people never learn from their mistakes. For
instance, it apparently never occurred to them that outsourcing military
production might come back to bite when geopolitical tensions
inevitably flared again. Likewise, just-in-time production and inventory
management produced economic brittleness / fragility that created
problems when the Covid-19 pandemic hit.
So,
where is this going? With the CIA’s and FBI’s undermining of the
elected President’s (Trump) political agenda and its open efforts to rig
the 2020 election in favor of his opponent (Biden), it certainly
appears that the CIA is now running the US. Biden’s foreign policy
team---Antony Blinken, Jake Sullivan, and Victoria Nuland emerged from
the Clintonite death cult buried deep within the bowels of the American
foreign policy establishment, That they appear to be as uninformed and
arrogant as their policy outcomes to date suggest they are is only a
surprise inside Washington and New York.
However, this is at best a
partial explanation. What is surprising about US foreign policy is how
ignorant of world history, US history, basic diplomacy, military
tactics, economic relations, and basic human decency the American
political leadership is. It’s almost as if the answer to every foreign
policy conundrum of the last century has been to bomb civilian
populations, kill a whole lot of people, and then pretend it never
happened. Vietnam? Check. Nicaragua? Check. Syria? Check. Iraq? Check.
Ukraine? How can the body counts be hidden from beleaguered, clueless,
citizens so effectively?
Some recent history: the US launched a war against Russia when it (the US) invaded Ukraine in an unprovoked coup there in 2014 (see here, here, here)
and ousted its elected government. The Russians had taken issue with
the US / NATO surrounding it with NATO-allied states (maps below). Years
earlier, as Russian President Vladimir Putin stated in his recent interview
with Tucker Carlson, Mr. Putin had approached former US President Bill
Clinton about Russia joining NATO. Mr. Clinton ‘spoke with his people’
before telling Mr. Putin no to joining NATO as he reneged on George H.W. Bush’ s promise to keep NATO away from Russia’s border.
A
bit of additional history is needed here. The USSR was dissolved in
1991 to be replaced by non-communist Russia surrounded by former Soviet
states. Ukraine is one such state. The political – economic reference
point of post-Soviet Russia was an anachronistic form of neoliberalism.
Recall, Americans had been told since at least the early twentieth
century that ‘communism’ was the ideological foe of Western liberalism.
Current Russian President Vladimir Putin is proudly anti-communist. But
the US MIC (military-industrial complex), of which the CIA is a part,
needs enemies to justify its existence.
Following the
dissolution of the USSR (1991), there was discussion inside the US
regarding a ‘peace dividend,’ of redirecting military spending inflated
by the Cold War towards domestic purposes like schools, hospitals, and
civilian infrastructure. However, the CIA had been so hemmed in by
Federal budget constraints that it had inserted itself into
the international narcotics trade forty years prior in apparent
anticipation of just such an event. With the (George H.W.) Bush
recession of 1991, an election year, the peace dividend was rescinded.
pacemaker | I've been waiting for today, knowing it was pre-planned and coming. Today in Riyadh at the China-Arab Summit President Xi of China formally invited the Arab nations to trade oil and gas in yuan on the Shanghai Exchange. Now the way diplomacy works (because it seems to have been forgotten in the West) is that Xi would not have made the invitation unless all the Arab states gathered in Riyadh - and particularly Saudi Arabia as host - had already agreed as a matter of joint policy to take action accordingly. Oil and gas will price in Shanghai and in yuan, breaking the dollar monopoly the US has imposed and enforced since 1974. Since the dollar-for-oil monopoly was the lynchpin of Bretton Woods II stability, it follows Bretton Woods II ended today.
To
refresh memories, President Nixon unilaterally repudiated the US treaty
obligation under the 1944 Bretton Woods Agreement to redeem dollars for
gold in 1972. The chaos in foreign exchange markets that followed led
to instability, made worse with the inflationary OPEC oil embargo of
1973-74.
In July 1974 the US Treasury Secretary William Simon and US Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger made a top-secret flight to Riyadh to meet
King Fahd. They offered a deal: sell Saudi oil exclusively for US
dollars and buy US Treasuries with the proceeds, or we kill you, your
entire family, and occupy the oil fields with the US military. Unsurprisingly, they left with a secret agreement.
The
same deal was more or less extended to all of OPEC. Leaders like Saddam
Hussein of Iraq and Muammar Gaddafi of Libya who strayed from the US
dollar were killed, their countries destroyed and destablilsed, as an
example to others. Iran, Syria, and Venezuela have resisted more
successfully, but have been badly destabilised by US occupation, oil
theft, attempted coups, attempted assassinations, and economic
sanctions.
So today marks a big and admirably brave shift. After sending all the
weaponry it could spare to Ukraine all year, ending oil and gas trade
with Russia under sanctions, weakening allies with surging inflation,
and depleting the Strategic Petroleum Reserve of a record amount of oil
to blunt inflation before the midterm elections, the US is not in an
ideal position to launch wars in every Arab state at once. In fact, it
probably can't launch a war or coup even in Saudi Arabia because Saudi
Arabia will have prepared and provided for that risk. In any event, a
new war in the Middle East would make the inflationary shock of the
Ukraine war pale in comparison.
Signs of a shift have been in the wind all year. The fist bump and
low-key reception of President Biden compares poorly to the lavish state
reception of President Xi. Then Biden's attempt to get GCC states to
sanction Russia was unanimously rejected.
And
OPEC's outright refusal to defer oil production cuts until after the
American midterm elections was a further sign Saudi and OPEC+ no longer
take orders from Washington. Saudi took the unusual step of officially
rejecting the US request in public.
When
a presidential state visit by Xi to Saudi began leaking in the fall I
began to watch for confirmatory signs of OPEC moving East. There were
quite a few, but nothing as momentous as the extravagant welcome for
President Xi to Riyadh and the China-Arab Summit. President Xi and King
Salman signed a 30-year Strategic Partnership Agreement for cooperation
on virtually all forward economic plans yesterday: energy, telecoms,
investment, trade, infrastructure, regional development, Belt & Road
Initiative, etc. Significantly, the Agreement bars interference in
domestic affairs by either nation, a principle China has urged widely
for many years.
ttbrown | First Joe Rogan, now David Grusch. Ol’ TTB does seem to be getting around these days…
By now you have probably heard of David Grusch, the former military intelligence officer who testified before Congress on the U.S. Government’s secret UFO – oh, excuse me, we’re supposed to call them unidentified aerial phenomena
now – initiatives. His appearance and subsequent notoriety has caused
quite a stir, though it’s not clear the testimony shed any really clear,
fresh light on what’s been happening off the public record for the past
80 years.
The centerpiece of this production is a series of conversations with
David Grusch, the military/intelligence veteran who testified before
Congress in July about what the U.S. has been keeping under wraps about
UFOs, crash retrievals and recovered (i.e. dead) alien ‘biologics.’
I really don’t know what to make of Grusch. I don’t doubt the
veracity of his testimony, but it seems to me he goes right the edge of
new revelations without really getting there.He
is billed as a “whistleblower” but I keep getting the impression of guy
who puts the whistle in his mouth but for whatever reason doesn’t quite
blow on it.I get that he
is constrained by external forces and NDA commitments, but too much of
the discussion between he and Jesse (and Jesse’s crew) dwells on pure
speculation.
On the
other hand, that speculation is quite comprehensive. In the course of
two hours they manage to cover just about every possibility re: what the
hell is really going on out-and-up there.Extraterrestrial visitors?Top secret domestic (or foreign) military research?Time travelers?Take your pick – or maybe it’s all of the above.
About
46 minutes in, Jesse neatly segues into a discussion of Townsend Brown
and how his story dovetails into the mysteries David Grusch has exposed.Jesse has graciously given me permission to extract that portion of the documentary, so here’s that segment:
globaltimes | The humanitarian crisis in Gaza is exacerbating. US Secretary of State
Antony Blinken has made four visits to Israel since October 7, but what
he talked about was the US support for Israel instead of a ceasefire.
With
each day that a ceasefire is delayed, Palestinians' animosity toward
Israel deepens. It will definitely create a longer-term and more
devastating disaster in the region already plagued by decades of war.
When
the conflict between Palestine and Israel first broke out, China
immediately expressed its stance, emphasizing that the top priority is
to prevent a broader humanitarian disaster and that the fundamental way
out is to implement the "two-state solution." On many occasions since
then, China has repeatedly stressed the importance and urgency of
returning to the "two-state solution."
However, the US and
European countries have not actively responded to this call of
conscience. Instead, they have been constrained by domestic politics and
wavered, preventing major countries from reaching an immediate
consensus.
It was not until Israel's military operations in Gaza
had caused tens of thousands of casualties, including scores of women
and children, and displaced hundreds of thousands of people that leaders
in the US and European countries seemed to realize the need to return
to the two-state solution. US President Joe Biden and some European
leaders have expressed their stance on this recently.
Although
the current suffering in the Middle East is not directly caused by the
US and Europe, as countries deeply involved in the geopolitical game
there since World War II, they bear a heavy responsibility for the
resumption of the war.
It is precisely because of the US'
unlimited support for Israel and the cowardice of the US and Europe that
led to the failure to take action to maintain peace. Israel marched
into Gaza without any scruples, carrying US-made weapons and equipment.
So
far, the US has not called for shifting the focus to a ceasefire.
Instead, it supported Israel's retaliatory strikes against Gaza and
enhanced the deployment of force to restrain the involvement of other
forces in the Middle East.
Counterpunch | Entitled Future Strategic Issues/Future Warfare [Circa 2025],
the PowerPoint presentation anticipates: a) scenarios created by U.S.
forces and agencies and b) scenarios to which they might have to
respond. The projection is contingent on the use of hi-technology. According to the report
there are/will be six Technological Ages of Humankind: “Hunter/killer
groups (sic) [million BC-10K BC]; Agriculture [10K BC-1800 AD];
Industrial [1800-1950]; IT [1950-2020]; Bio/Nano [2020-?]; Virtual.”
In the past, “Hunter/gatherer” groups fought over “hunting grounds”
against other “tribal bands” and used “handheld/thrown” weapons. In the
agricultural era, “professional armies” also used “handheld/thrown”
weapons to fight over “farm lands.” In the industrial era, conscripted
armies fought over “natural resources,” using “mechanical and chemical”
weapons. In our time, “IT/Bio/Bots” (robots) are used to prevent
“societal disruption.” The new enemy is “everyone.” “Everyone.”
Similarly, a British Ministry of Defence projection to the year 2050 states: “Warfare could become ever more personalised with individuals and their families being targeted in novel ways.”
“KNOWLEDGE DOMINANCE”
The war on you is the militarization of everyday life with the
express goal of controlling society, including your thoughts and
actions.
A U.S. Army document
on information operations from 2003 specifically cites activists as
potential threats to elite interests. “Nonstate actors, ranging from
drug cartels to social activists, are taking advantage of the
possibilities the information environment offers,” particularly with the
commercialization of the internet. “Info dominance” as the Space
Command calls it can counter these threats: “these actors use the
international news media to attempt to influence global public opinion
and shape decision-maker perceptions.” Founded in 1977, the U.S. Army
Intelligence and Security Command featured an Information Dominance Center, itself founded in 1999 by the private, veteran-owned company, IIT.
“Information Operations in support of civil-military interactions is
becoming increasingly more important as non-kinetic courses-of-action
are required,” wrote two researchers for the military in 1999. They also
said
that information operations, as defined by the Joint Chiefs of Staff JP
3-13 (1998) publication, “are aimed at influencing the information and
information systems of an adversary.” They also confirm that “[s]uch
operations require the continuous and close integration of offensive and
defensive activities … and may involve public and civil affairs-related
actions.” They conclude: “This capability begins the transition from
Information Dominance to Knowledge Dominance.”
“ATTUNED TO DISPARITIES”
The lines between law enforcement and militarism are blurred, as are
the lines between military technology and civilian technology. Some
police forces carry military-grade weapons. The same satellites that
enable us to use smartphones enable the armed forces to operate.
In a projection out to the year 2036, the British Ministry of Defence says that “[t]he clear distinction between combatants and non-combatants will be increasingly difficult to discern,” as “the urban poor will be employed in the informal sector and will
be highly vulnerable to externally-derived economic shocks and illicit
exploitation” (emphasize in original). This comes as Boris Johnson
threatens to criminalize Extinction Rebellion and Donald Trump labels
Black Lives Matter domestic terrorists.
In 2017, the U.S. Army published The Operational Environment and the Changing Character of Future Warfare. The report reads:
“The convergence of more information and more people with fewer state
resources will constrain governments’ efforts to address rampant
poverty, violence, and pollution, and create a breeding ground for
dissatisfaction among increasingly aware, yet still disempowered
populations.”
thegrayzone |Caroline Dinenage served as the UK
government’s Digital and Culture minister from February 2020 to
September 2021, making her de facto chief of the Department for Culture,
Media and Sport (DCMS).
In this capacity, she was personally responsible for overseeing construction of the repressive, World Economic Forum-endorsed Online Safety Bill, which has been criticized
by rights groups for threatening the rights to free expression, and
privacy. For her leading role in crafting the speech-muzzling bill,
Dinenage was honored by Princess Royal with the title of Dame Commander of the British Empire.
Moreover, during this period, the DCMS was home to the shadowy, intelligence official-run Counter-Disinformation Unit (CDU), which policed “COVID-19 disinformation narratives” online.
Investigations
by the civil liberties organization Big Brother Watch have revealed
that instead of suppressing content that posed risks to public health,
the CDU was preoccupied with censoring and deplatforming reasonable
online criticisms of the British government’s Covid-19 response,
including opposition to lockdowns and vaccine passports.
According to an official fact sheet,
the CDU’s focus turned to the Ukraine proxy war in 2022, and
particularly to targeting content suggesting “the Bucha massacre and the
bombing of the maternity hospital in Mariupol, Ukraine, were both
hoaxes.”
Dinenage’s husband is Mark Lancaster,
a fellow information warrior dedicated to advancing the propaganda
goals of the British government. Lancaster reportedly left his wife
and four-month-old daughter in 2013 when he began dating Dinenage, who
was herself married at the time to a British Naval officer.
A former Conservative MP and Armed Forces minister, Lancaster helped lead London’s blitz on pandemic dissent as deputy commander of the British Army’s 77th Brigade between June 2018 and July 2022.
Specialized in
“behaviour and attitudinal change,” the 77th Brigade maintains a vast
militia of real, fake, and automated social media accounts to
disseminate and amplify pro-state messaging, and discredit domestic and
foreign enemies.
During the pandemic, the 77th Brigade
targeted people within Britain and across the West with advanced
psychological manipulation strategies honed on battlefields against
enemy militaries. Theonline profile
of a 77th Brigade veteran notes they were deployed straight from a tour
of the Middle East – where they “successfully implemented behavioral
change strategies against ISIS” – to “countering dis- and misinformation
during the Covid-19 crisis.”
However, in January,
an ex-Brigade whistleblower revealed how the Ministry of Defence and
RRU routinely circumvented British law to advance the government’s
crusade against pandemic dissent:
“To skirt the legal difficulties of a
military unit monitoring domestic dissent, the view was that unless a
profile explicitly stated their real name and nationality, they could be
a foreign agent and were fair game. But it is quite obvious that our
activities resulted in the monitoring of the UK population…These posts did not contain information that was untrue or coordinated [emphasis added].”
As The Grayzone revealed in June
2023, British journalist Paul Mason had attempted to submit a “formal
complaint” about The Grayzone to DCMS, believing it would trigger a
government investigation into this outlet’s “funding and activities,”
and ultimately its deplatforming. Mason’s handler, a British
intelligence agent named Andy Pryce, boasted in leaked emails of his personal role in YouTube’s banning of “Russian stuff” in Britain. The CDU has been confirmed as the government body responsible for these censorship demands.
Now, this shadowy, intelligence-linked entity appears to be the spearhead of the campaign to silence Russell Brand.
CTH |The US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) has contracted New York-based Accrete AI to deploy software that detects “real time” disinformation threats on social media.
The company’s Argus anomaly detection
AI software analyzes social media data, accurately capturing “emerging
narratives” and generating intelligence reports for military forces to
speedily neutralize disinformation threats.
“Synthetic media, including
AI-generated viral narratives, deep fakes, and other harmful social
media-based applications of AI, pose a serious threat to US national
security and civil society,” Accrete founder and CEO Prashant Bhuyan said.
“Social media is widely recognized as
an unregulated environment where adversaries routinely exploit reasoning
vulnerabilities and manipulate behavior through the intentional spread
of disinformation.
“USSOCOM is at the tip of the spear in
recognizing the critical need to identify and analytically predict
social media narratives at an embryonic stage before those narratives
evolve and gain traction. Accrete is proud to support USSOCOM’s
mission.”
But wait… It gets worse!
[PRIVATE SECTOR VERSION]
– The company also revealed that it will launch an enterprise version
of Argus Social for disinformation detection later this year.
The AI software will provide
protection for “urgent customer pain points” against AI-generated
synthetic media, such as viral disinformation and deep fakes.
Providing this protection requires AI
that can automatically “learn” what is most important to an enterprise
and predict the likely social media narratives that will emerge before
they influence behavior. (read more)
Now, take a deep breath…. Let me explain.
The goal is the “PRIVATE SECTOR VERSION.” USSOCOM is the mechanical
funding mechanism for deployment, because the system itself is too
costly for a private sector launch. The Defense Dept budget is used to
contract an Artificial Intelligence system, the Argus anomaly detection AI, to monitor social media under the auspices of national security.
Once the DoD funded system is created, the “Argus detection protocol”
– the name given to the AI monitoring and control system, will then be
made available to the public sector. “Enterprise Argus” is then the
commercial product, created by the DoD, which allows the U.S. based tech
sectors to deploy.
The DoD cannot independently contract for the launch of an operation
against a U.S. internet network, because of constitutional limits via
The Posse Comitatus Act, which limits the powers of the federal
government in the use of federal military personnel to enforce domestic
policies within the United States. However, the DoD can fund the
creation of the system under the auspices of national defense, and then
allow the private sector to launch for the same intents and purposes. See how that works?
theintercept |While perception management
involves denying, or blocking, propaganda, it can also entail advancing
the U.S.’s own narrative. The Defense Department defines perception
management in its official dictionary
as “[a]ctions to convey and/or deny selected information and indicators
to foreign audiences to influence their emotions, motives, and
objective reasoning.” This is the part that has, historically, tended to
raise the public’s skepticism of the Pentagon’s work.
The term “perception management” hearkens back to
the Reagan administration’s attempts to shape the narrative around the
Contras in Nicaragua. The Reagan administration sought to kick what his
Vice President George H.W. Bush would later call the “Vietnam syndrome,”
which it believed was driving American public opposition to support for
the Contras. Ronald Reagan’s CIA director, William Casey, directed
the agency’s leading propaganda specialist to oversee an interagency
effort to portray the Contras — who had been implicated in grisly
atrocities — as noble freedom fighters.
“An elaborate system of inter-agency committees was eventually formed
and charged with the task of working closely with private groups and
individuals involved in fundraising, lobbying campaigns and
propagandistic activities aimed at influencing public opinion and
governmental action,” an unpublished draft chapter of Congress’s
investigation into Iran-Contra states. (Democrats dropped the chapter in
order to get several Republicans to sign the report.)
The Smith-Mundt Act, passed in 1948 in the wake of the Second World
War, prohibits the the State Department from disseminating “public
diplomacy” — i.e., propaganda — domestically, instead requiring that
those materials be targeted at foreign audiences. The Defense Department
considered itself bound by this requirement as well.
After the invasion of Iraq, the Pentagon triggered backlash after
U.S. propaganda was disseminated in the U.S. In 2004, the military signaled that it had begun its siege on Fallujah. Just hours later, CNN discovered that this was not true.
But in 2012, the law was amended to allow propaganda to be circulated
domestically, under the bipartisan Smith-Mundt Modernization Act,
introduced by Reps. Adam Smith, D-Wash., and Mac Thornberry, R-Texas,
which was later rolled into the National Defense Authorization Act.
“Proponents of amending these two sections argue that the ban on
domestic dissemination of public diplomacy information is impractical
given the global reach of modern communications, especially the
Internet, and that it unnecessarily prevents valid U.S. government
communications with foreign publics due to U.S. officials’ fear of
violating the ban,” a congressional research service report said
at the time of the proposed amendments. “Critics of lifting the ban
state that it may open the door to more aggressive U.S. government
activities to persuade U.S. citizens to support government policies, and
might also divert the focus of State Department and the BBG
[Broadcasting Board of Governors] communications from foreign publics,
reducing their effectiveness.”
The Obama administration subsequently approved a highly classified
covert action finding designed to counter foreign malign influence
activities, a finding renewed and updated by the Biden administration,
as The Intercept has reported.
The IPMO memo produced for the academic institution hints at its role
in such propagandistic efforts now. “Among other things, the IPMO is
tasked with the development of broad thematic messaging guidance and
specific strategies for the execution of DoD activities designed to
influence foreign defense-related decision-makers to behave in a manner
beneficial to U.S. interests,” the memo states.
As the global war on terror
draws to a close, the Pentagon has turned its attention to so-called
great power adversaries like Russia and China. Following Russia’s
meddling in the 2016 election, which in part involved state-backed
efforts to disseminate falsehoods on social media, offices tasked with
combating disinformation started springing up all over the U.S.
government, as The Intercept has reported.
The director of national intelligence last year established a new
center to oversee all the various efforts, including the Department of
Homeland Security’s Countering Foreign Influence Task Force and the
FBI’s Foreign Influence Task Force.
The Pentagon’s IPMO differs from the others in one key respect:
secrecy. Whereas most of the Department of Homeland Security’s
counter-disinformation efforts are unclassified in nature — as one
former DHS contractor not authorized to speak publicly explained to The
Intercept — the IPMO involves a great deal of highly classified work.
That the office’s work goes beyond simple messaging into the rarefied
world of intelligence is clear from its location within the Pentagon
hierarchy. “The Influence and Perception Management Office will serve as
the senior advisor to the USD(I&S) [Undersecretary of Defense for
Intelligence and Security] for strategic operational influence and
perception management (reveal and conceal) matters,” the budget notes.
When asked about the intelligence community’s counter-disinformation
efforts, Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier, director of the Defense Intelligence
Agency, told Congress this month, “I think DIA’s perspective on this,
senator, is really speed: We want to be able to detect that and it’s
really with our open-source collection capability working with our
combatant command partners where this is happening all over the world —
and then the ability to turn something quickly with them, under the
right authorities, to counter that disinformation, misinformation.”
amidwesterndoctor |Reducing global population has been a consistent goal of the ruling class for centuries. While many support the abstract idea of population control, no one wants to volunteer to be the ones who are culled. The business of population control has hence been a very messy subject.
When
the COVID vaccine program began, I—and likely many others—suspected the
COVID vaccines would have an “unexpected” side effect of reducing
fertility. Early in their development, Mike Yeadon (and others) at
great personal risk publicly warned regulators of a clear fertility
danger inherent to the vaccine (found in section IX of their petition).
Subsequent
regulatory document leaks from the European FDA revealed Pfizer
exempted themselves from testing the key areas of concern (infertility,
autoimmunity and cancer) in animals. This highly unusual moved further
suggested serious problems existed in these three areas (as you can’t
find something if you don’t officially test for it).
Despite
repeated denials, signs of each of these key complications from the
vaccine have now emerged. While I do not have every piece of the
puzzle—there are likely many “population control initiatives” I’ve never
heard of—I know enough to paint a clear picture of this dirty
business.
The first half of this two-part article
will lay out the historical precedent of using any means necessary to
reduce the population, while the second part will examine how this has
been attempted with vaccinations.
Cruel Philosophies
As
best as I can tell, there are three overlapping schools of thought that
have created the zealous belief in a need for population control.
1. Many governments, especially those in the East, have adopted the
viewpoint that periodic wars are necessary for the stability of the
society. This viewpoint primarily arises from social instability caused
by too many young adult males in the state coupled with the issues that
occur when there is insufficient food available to the population. In
turn, many wars have been fought specifically for this reason. (I am
most familiar with this being a common theme in China, as they have
observed over the centuries the one thing that will cause rebellions are
famines.)
Following World War 2, the Western ruling elite came to
a consensus that the war approach was no longer tenable due to the
extreme collateral infrastructure and environmental damage modern
weaponry (ie. nukes) created. I only know of two exceptions to this
rule:
Wars in third-world nations lacking advaced weaponry
where the collateral damage those wars caused was inconsequential to
first-world nations.
Talks that occurred within the Chinese
military leadership, but have so far not materialized, over starting a
war with India so both countries could mutually alleviate their
challenging population burden. For context, China has attempted
population control with their “one-child” policy, but it has been met
with mixed success and widespread social resistance.
The
alternative to war is a multi-pronged attack that seeks every possible
avenue to reduce fertility and accelerate aging, which many argue is the
more humane option of the two. One of the curious facts I have
observed over the decades is how frequently an odd policy or
environmental agent always seems to converge on the common pathway of
reducing population. Once or twice, you can write it up as a
coincidence, but at a certain point, you have to wonder if it is all
intentional.
When I studied the early history of infectious diseases (discussed in my previous articles
on smallpox), one of the most striking things to me was the absolute
squalor the serfs were forced into as the feudal lords kicked them off
the land to live in the early cities. It was much worse than most
people of this modern era can even conceive of.
When I
first learned of this, I guessed the suffering that move caused for the
lower class must have been viewed as a necessary trade off by the
European rulership to facilitate the Industrial Revolution, something
vital for national development. After I learned about the Malthusian
philosophy, I realized those abhorrent living situations was likely the
goal in of itself.
In 1798, Rev. Thomas R Malthus published the influential work An Essay on the Principle of Population,which
argued that human populations tend to increase at a geometrical
(exponential) rate, but the means of subsistence (food) grows at only an
arithmetic (linear) rate. "The power of population is indefinitely greater than the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man,"
according to Malthus, who therefore believed the standard of living of
the masses could not be improved without the checks of war, famine, or
disease. In their absence, population would increase by a geometric rate
and lead to a catastrophic “Malthusian” food supply collapse.
While
there are numerous errors in his theory, Malthus was appointed to
multiple important positions, and his ideas appear to have gradually
become a prevailing conviction among members of the ruling classes in
the 19th century. These ideas also influenced other key figures, such as
Charles Darwin while he created his theory of evolution and natural
selection.
Numerous groups were founded over the
decades, which emphasized birth control and increasing mortality of the
poor. These groups included Dr. George Drysdale's Elements of Social
Science in 1854, the Malthusian League in
1877, and Margret Sanger’s National Birth Control League in 1915, which
became the Planned Parenthood Federation of America in 1942. Initially
these groups were domestic, but gradually they became global, at which
point, they tied international aid and development to population control
measures.
The Malthusian and Darwinian ideals gradually
gave birth to Social Darwinism and Eugenics, which were both widely
adopted by the ruling elite. Social Darwinism argued that class
divisions were the will of nature and that this form of natural
selection, rather than being evil, was necessary. The most extreme
version of this ideology, eugenics, appears to have arisen from two key
factors:
1. The tribal nature of human beings and the tendency
to view all other tribes as inferior (the ruling class felt this way
towards the poor).
2. The advances of society were
making it possible for many of the weaker members of society, who
previously would have died off, to survive long enough to reproduce and,
over time, significantly weaken the gene pool.
Eugenics
in turn advocated preventing those who were less “fit” from breeding.
This has been responsible for horror upon horror since its inception,
and it provided the theoretical foundation for why, among other things,
the Nazis forcibly sterilized the mentally-ill. When the Nazis
eventually were tried at Nuremberg for their crimes against humanity,
few know that that many cited the fact similar actions were first
conducted by the “Great United States” as part of their defense.
RAND | The U.S. government is responsible for an estimated 5.3 million
square miles of domestic airspace and 24 million square miles of oceanic
airspace. The February 2023 downing of a Chinese surveillance balloon
after it had flown across the country raised questions about the degree
to which the U.S. government knows who is flying what over its
territorial skies. The United States has finite resources to monitor
objects flying through its airspace. At the same time, advances in
technology allow the general public, private companies, and civilian
government agencies to operate ever-smaller commercially available
drones that intentionally or unintentionally capture and contribute to
activity in the skies. This trend could make public reports of
unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs) an important source of information
for U.S. government officials.
In this report, RAND researchers present a geographic analysis of
101,151 public reports of UAP sightings in 12,783 U.S. Census Bureau
census designated places. Specifically, they provide findings on U.S.
locations where UAP reports are significantly more likely to occur and
offer recommendations to increase awareness of the types of activities
that might be mistaken for unexplained phenomena or that point to
potential threats. The data were collected by the National UFO Reporting
Center (NUFORC), one of the nongovernmental entities that the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) has referenced in official documents for
where to report unexplained phenomena. The analyses of these data should
not be interpreted as an endorsement of any individual reports to
NUFORC or of the accuracy of the database.
Key Findings
A review of 101,151 public reports of UAP sightings in the
United States from 1998 to 2022 found an inconsistent relationship
between the nearest military and weather installations and self-reports
of UAP sightings.
The models used to conduct the analysis showed that reports of UAP
sightings were less likely within 30 km of weather stations, 60 km of
civilian airports, and in more–densely populated areas, while rural
areas tended to have a higher rate of UAP reports.
The most consistent and statistically significant finding was that
reports of UAP sightings were more likely to occur in areas within 30 km
of military operations areas, where routine military training occurs.
Recommendations
Government authorities should conduct outreach with civilians
located near military operations areas. Many civilians may not be aware
that they are located near areas where military operations occur. If the
results of the analysis are correct — that is, if being located within
30 km of military operations areas is significantly associated with
reports of UAPs, and if some of these reported objects are authorized
aircraft — then communicating that such activities are being conducted
nearby could reduce the likelihood that the public will report these
aircraft as UAPs.
Government authorities should conduct additional outreach to notify
nearby civilians when there is airspace activity near a military
operations area. According to the FAA, not all military operations areas
are in use by authorized aircraft. When appropriate, notifying local
populations of activities in military operations areas could reduce the
number of reported UAPs that are in fact authorized aircraft.
An evaluation should be conducted to inform the design of a detailed
and robust system for public reporting of UAP sightings. Such an
evaluation would inform the use of various technologies, reporting on
location types, sighting features, criteria for validating these
reports, and who is best equipped to independently manage such a
reporting system. Such a system would be useful in minimizing hoaxes and
reports of misidentified objects.
twitter | The Department of Homeland security is officially out of their fucking mind.
Check out the “reasons” they’re labeling Americans as right wing extremists now:
• Combat veterans who are quote unquote “disgruntled about the takeover of their country.” (Well, at least they’re saying the quiet part out loud now.)
• Anyone that opposes war…because as you know, nothing is more “extreme” than not wanting to drone bomb kids and fight by proxy wars for Lindsay Graham and the rest of the murderers over at the banks and the military industrial complex.
• People that don’t think they should be paying income taxes because Congress violated the Constitution in the first place to push it through by lying to everyone…which is actually 100% accurate. They did the same thing with the Federal Reserve.
• Anyone that opposes the Feds restricting their 2nd amendment rights, even though it’s literally within our rights to.
• Anyone with a better explanation to all these mass shootings and domestic terrorist attacks than our lying ass government who blatantly committed some of them and allowed others to happen while poorly covering it up. (9/11, Oklahoma Bombing, Ruby Ridge, Las Vegas shooting, anyone?)
• Anyone who opposes open borders, which is most people…so good luck with that.
• Anyone against abortion because hey…Planned Parenthood isn’t buying off politicians for nothing.
• Anyone that considers themselves a “Patriot” because….well, you’re getting in the way of them destroying the country you love, silly!
• Anyone that brings up the US Constitution, you know…that thing that restricts these assholes from doing the exact same things they’re doing now.
• Supports a 3rd party candidate, because how dare you not vote for the useless, shit candidates the parties shove down our throats every election cycle! These people need to maintain their privileged status quo!
• Anyone that wants to audit the Federal Reserve… because how dare you want to know how they keep losing track of trillions of dollars! (Meanwhile they hired 87,000 IRS agents to nickel and dime the rest of us about what we sell on EBay.)
• Anyone that opposes a carbon tax to a World Bank. (Yes, that’s literally how they word it too, but I’m glad that was also considered just a “conspiracy theory.”)
• And finally…anyone that opposes the United Nations or the WHO, even though the UN has been raping women and children in 3rd world countries for decades and the WHO just tried to kill everyone with a poisoned shot over a virus they also illegally made in a lab to kill and control everybody.
If I had been a war veteran…I would have dinged for all 13 out of 13 of these. Read between these lines and it becomes clear that our country has been taken over by bad actors, and this is the “defense” against honest Americans and patriots from being vocal in wanting to take it back.
No one is coming to save us and we’re not voting our way out of this. A war of misinformation and manipulation can only be won with the truth…and with FOX dead in the water between firing Tucker and apparently donating money to literal Satanists…we must defend alternative sites like Twitter, Bitchute, Rumble, and GAB with everything we have.
Stop complying to tyranny, stop paying taxes to the people trying to kill you and rape your kids, and stop letting these people get away with doing whatever the hell they want.
They only have “power” because we let them…and I no longer consent to this illegitimate, out of control government that hates me.
After all, a good deal
of evidence suggests that the administration’s real—if only
semi-acknowledged—objective is to topple Russia’s government. The
draconian sanctions that the United States imposed on Russia were
designed to crash its economy. As the New York Times reported, these sanctions have
ignited questions in Washington and in European capitals over whether
cascading events in Russia could lead to “regime change,” or rulership
collapse, which President Biden and European leaders are careful to
avoid mentioning.
By repeatedly labeling Putin a “war criminal” and a murderous
dictator, President Biden (using the same febrile rhetoric that his
predecessors deployed against Noriega, Milošević, Qaddafi, and Saddam
Hussein) has circumscribed Washington’s diplomatic options, rendering
regime change the war’s only acceptable outcome.
I counted 30 Patriot PAC-3 MSE launches here.
The FY2024 costs of these per missile is about $$5,275,000
That was $158,250,000 fired in about two minutes. And as we see, the battery or something else likely got blown up. So it failed in its mission. pic.twitter.com/9rwPnHkNGu
Diplomacy requires an
understanding of an adversary’s interests and motives and an ability to
make judicious compromises. But by assuming a Manichaean view of world
politics, as has become Washington’s reflexive posture, “compromise, the
virtue of the old diplomacy, becomes the treason of the new,” as the
foreign policy scholar Hans Morgenthau put it, “for the mutual
accommodation of conflicting claims . . . amounts to surrender when the
moral standards themselves are the stakes of the conflict.”
Washington, then, will not entertain an end to the conflict until
Russia is handed a decisive defeat. Echoing previous comments by Biden,
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin declared in April 2022 that the goal
is to weaken Russia militarily. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has
repeatedly dismissed the idea of negotiating, insisting that Moscow is
not serious about peace. For its part, Kyiv has indicated that it will
settle for nothing less than the return of all Ukrainian territory
occupied by Russia, including Crimea. Ukraine’s foreign minister Dmytro
Kuleba has endorsed the strategy of applying enough military pressure on
Russia to induce its political collapse.
Of course, the same momentum pushing toward a war in pursuit of
overweening ends catapults Washington into pursuing a war employing
unlimited means, an impulse encapsulated in the formula, endlessly
invoked by Washington policymakers and politicians: “Whatever it takes,
for as long as it takes.” As the United States and its NATO allies pour
ever more sophisticated weapons onto the battlefield, Moscow will likely
be compelled (from military necessity, if not from popular domestic
pressure) to interdict the lines of communication that convey these
weapons shipments to Ukraine’s forces, which could lead to a direct
clash with NATO forces. More importantly, as Russian casualties
inevitably mount, animosity toward the West will intensify. A strategy
guided by “whatever it takes, for as long as it takes” vastly increases
the risk of accidents and escalation.
The proxy war embraced by Washington today would
have been shunned by the Washington of the Cold War. And some of the
very misapprehensions that have contributed to the start of this war
make it far more dangerous than Washington acknowledges. America’s NATO
expansion strategy and its pursuit of nuclear primacy both emerge from
its self-appointed role as “the indispensable nation.” The menace Russia
perceives in that role—and therefore what it sees as being at stake in
this war—further multiply the danger. Meanwhile, nuclear
deterrence—which demands careful, cool, and even cooperative monitoring
and adjustment between potential adversaries—has been rendered wobbly
both by U.S. strategy and by the hostility and suspicion created by this
heated proxy war. Rarely have what Morgenthau praised as the virtues of
the old diplomacy been more needed; rarely have they been more abjured.
Neither Moscow nor Kyiv appears capable of attaining its stated war
aims in full. Notwithstanding its proclaimed annexation of the Luhansk,
Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson administrative districts, Moscow is
unlikely to establish complete control over them. Ukraine is similarly
unlikely to recapture all of its pre-2014 territory lost to Moscow.
Barring either side’s complete collapse, the war can end only with
compromise.
Reaching such an accord would be extremely difficult. Russia would
need to disgorge its post-invasion gains in the Donbas and contribute
significantly to an international fund to reconstruct Ukraine. For its
part, Ukraine would need to accept the loss of some territory in Luhansk
and Donetsk and perhaps submit to an arrangement, possibly supervised
by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, that would
grant a degree of cultural and local political autonomy to additional
Russian-speaking areas of the Donbas. More painfully, Kyiv would need to
concede Russia’s sovereignty over Crimea while ceding territory for a
land bridge between the peninsula and Russia. A peace settlement would
need to permit Ukraine simultaneously to conduct close economic
relations with the Eurasian Economic Union and with the European Union
(to allow for this arrangement, Brussels would need to adjust its
rules). Most important of all—given that the specter of Ukraine’s NATO
membership was the precipitating cause of the war—Kyiv would need to
forswear membership and accept permanent neutrality.
Washington’s endorsement of Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky’s
goal of recovering the “entire territory” occupied by Russia since 2014,
and Washington’s pledge, held now for more than fifteen years, that
Ukraine will become a NATO member, are major impediments to ending the
war. Make no mistake, such an accord would need to make allowances for
Russia’s security interests in what it has long called its “near-abroad”
(that is, its sphere of influence)—and, in so doing, would require the
imposition of limits on Kyiv’s freedom of action in its foreign and
defense policies (that is, on its sovereignty).
Such a compromise, guided by the ethos of the old diplomacy, would be
anathema to Washington’s ambitions and professed values. Here, again,
the lessons, real and otherwise, of the Cuban Missile Crisis apply. To
enhance his reputation for toughness, Kennedy and his closest advisers
spread the story that they forced Moscow to back down and unilaterally
withdraw its missiles in the face of steely American resolve. In fact,
Kennedy—shaken by the apocalyptic potentialities of the crisis that he
had largely provoked—secretly acceded to Moscow’s offer to withdraw its
missiles from Cuba in exchange for Washington’s withdrawing its missiles
from Turkey and Italy. The Cuban Missile Crisis was therefore resolved
not by steadfastness but by compromise.
But because that quid pro quo was successfully hidden from a
generation of foreign policy makers and strategists, from the American
public, and even from Lyndon B. Johnson, Kennedy’s own vice president,
JFK and his team reinforced the dangerous notion that firmness in the
face of what the United States construes as aggression, together with
the graduated escalation of military threats and action in countering
that aggression, define a successful national security strategy. These
false lessons of the Cuban Missile Crisis were one of the main reasons
that Johnson was impelled to confront supposed Communist aggression in
Vietnam, regardless of the costs and risks. The same false lessons have
informed a host of Washington’s interventions and regime-change wars
ever since—and now help frame the dichotomy of “appeasement” and
“resistance” that defines Washington’s response to the war in Ukraine—a
response that, in its embrace of Wilsonian belligerence, eschews
compromise and discrimination based on power, interest, and
circumstance.
Even more repellent to Washington’s self-styling as the world’s sole
superpower would be the conditions required to reach a comprehensive
European settlement in the aftermath of the Ukraine war. That
settlement, also guided by the old diplomacy, would need to resemble the
vision, thwarted by Washington, that Genscher, Mitterrand, and
Gorbachev sought to ratify at the end of the Cold War. It would need to
resemble Gorbachev’s notion of a “common European home” and Charles
de Gaulle’s vision of a European community “from the Atlantic to the
Urals.” And it would have to recognize NATO for what it is (and for what
de Gaulle labeled it): an instrument to further the primacy of a
superpower across the Atlantic.
WaPo | In the long contest ahead with Russia and China, U.S. military power
will be of greatest importance, but non-military instruments of power
will be essential to our ability to compete and win as well. The most
crucial such instrument is economic, the importance of which is widely
recognized, as both the executive branch and Congress work to promote
strong growth and technological superiority.
We have, however, seriously neglected other instruments of power that were fundamental to winning the Cold War: telling our story to the world, telling the truth to populations of countries ruled by authoritarian governments and exposing disinformation spread by those same governments.
Strategic communications and engagement with foreign publics and leaders are essential to shaping the global political environment in ways that support and advance American national interests. In this crucial arena of the competition, however, Russia and China are running rings around us.
Russia’s militarized bid to reverse the Cold War verdict and resurrect its empire has relied heavily on propaganda and disinformation to spread false narratives among its own people and those outside its borders, as well as to undermine the West’s coherence and resolve. Because Russia has no positive narrative to offer, its strategic communications aimed at other countries mainly attack the United States and the West, and serve as spoilers intended to disrupt and divide.
China has taken a far more comprehensive approach. It has built an extraordinary global strategic communications and foreign influence operation, committing huge sums of money to building a modern media apparatus aimed at domestic and world audiences. China’s Xinhua News Agency has nearly 180 bureaus globally (and there is not a single country on the planet that is not reached by one or more Chinese radio, television or online outlets). Chinese companies buy stakes in domestic media outlets in numerous countries, especially in Africa, Latin America and parts of Asia. Chinese TV and radio broadcasts, websites and publications are readily available in the United States, but there is no reciprocity in China. More than 500 Confucius Institutes, ostensibly established to promote Chinese language and culture, spread China’s message around the world. The scale of the overall endeavor — and multiple mechanisms used — is without parallel.
In stark contrast, the United States after the Cold War largely dismantled its strategic communications and engagement capabilities. The U.S. Information Agency, our primary instrument to engage foreign publics throughout the Cold War, with a presence in 150 countries, was eliminated in 1999. Parts of it were parceled out to the State Department, and most of our know-how and key structures for engaging foreign publics were left to atrophy. The lack of priority attention to American strategic communications and engagement over the years is demonstrated most vividly by the fact that the undersecretary position in the State Department charged with overseeing these efforts has not had a Senate-confirmed occupant 40 percent of the time since it was created in 1999 and 90 percent of the time under Donald Trump and President Biden.
U.S. strategic communications and public diplomacy are fragmented among 14 agencies and 48 commissions. Yet, the State Department, which ought to be driving this train, lacks not just necessary resources in dollars and people but also, importantly, the authority to coordinate, integrate and synchronize these disparate and unfocused efforts. Further, there is no government-wide international communications and engagement strategy, and certainly no sense of urgency. In short, the country that invented public relations is being out-communicated around the world by an authoritarian Russia and increasingly totalitarian China.
Our approach must be different from theirs. Our advantage over the Soviet Union in strategic communications during the Cold War was that the USIA and our radio broadcasters such as Voice of America simply told the truth. We must continue to do so. However, in those days we had eager audiences in the U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe. The global audience today is more skeptical, so we must develop new approaches to effectively deliver our message.
The solution is not to re-create the USIA — the world has moved on. But a number of measures can be taken to dramatically improve the current lamentable state of affairs, some strategic, others operational. Many of them the president could implement immediately, while others would require congressional action.
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