In a bombshell NBC scoop published Wednesday, the authors of the report alleged that US spy agencies used deliberate and selective intelligence leaks to mainstream news outlets to mount an information warfare campaign against Russia during the latter’s month-long military offensive in Ukraine, despite being aware the intelligence wasn't credible.
The US intelligence assessment that Russia was preparing to
use chemical weapons in the Ukraine War, that was widely reported in the
corporate media and confirmed by President Biden himself, was an unsubstantiated
claim leaked to the press as a tit-for-tat response to the damning Russian
allegation that Ukraine was pursuing an active biological weapons program, in
collaboration with Washington, in scores of bio-labs discovered by Russian
forces in Ukraine in early days of the military campaign.
The crux of the NBC report, however, isn’t what’s being disclosed
but rather what’s still being withheld by the US intelligence community that
the mainstream news outlets are not at liberty to report on.
Despite being aware of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s
major unilateral concession to Kyiv, halting Russian offensive north of the
capital and focusing on liberating Russian-majority Donbas in east Ukraine,
practically spelling an end to Russia’s month-long offensive in Ukraine, US
security officials are still deceptively asserting that Russia’s pullout from
areas around Kyiv “wasn’t a retreat but a strategic redeployment” that signals
a “significant assault on eastern and southern Ukraine,” one that US officials
believe could be a “protracted and bloody fight.”
Regarding the malicious disinformation campaign mounted by
Western media on behalf of NATO powers, the report notes: “The idea is to
pre-empt and disrupt the Kremlin’s tactics, complicate its military campaign, undermine
Moscow’s propaganda and prevent Russia from defining how the war is perceived
in the world, said a Western government official familiar with the strategy.”
It has become clear now the “40-mile-long Trojan Horse” of
battle tanks, armored vehicles and heavy artillery that descended from Belarus
in the north and reached the outskirts of Kyiv in the early days of the war
without encountering much resistance en route the capital was simply a power
projection gambit astutely designed as a diversionary tactic by Russia’s military
strategists in order to deter Ukraine from sending reinforcements to Donbas in
east Ukraine where real battles for territory were actually fought and scramble
to defend the embattled country’s capital instead.
But US security agencies insidiously kept feeding false
information of impending fall of the Ukrainian capital to the mainstream media
throughout Russia’s month-long military campaign in Ukraine. Only two
conclusions could be drawn from this scaremongering tactic: either it was a
massive intelligence failure and Western security agencies weren’t aware the
“40-mile-long Trojan Horse” approaching the capital was a ruse; or the NATO’s
spy agencies had credible intelligence since the beginning of Russia’s military
campaign that real battles for territory would be fought in Donbas in east
Ukraine and the feigned assault on the capital was simply a diversionary tactic
but they exaggerated the threat in order to vilify Russia’s calculated military
offensive in Ukraine, and win the war of narratives that “how the war is perceived
across the world.”
Except in the early days of the military campaign when
Russian airstrikes and long-range artillery shelling targeted military
infrastructure in the outskirts of Kyiv to degrade the combat potential of
Ukraine’s armed forces, the capital did not witness much action during the
month-long offensive. Otherwise, with the tremendous firepower at its disposal,
the world’s second most powerful military force had the demonstrable capability
to reduce the whole city down to the ashes.
By mid-March, after the “40-mile-long” column of armored
vehicles that created panic in the rank and file of Ukraine’s security forces
and their international backers and that didn’t move an inch further after
reaching the outskirts of Kyiv in the early days of the war, it became obvious even
to the lay observers of the Ukraine War that it was evidently a diversionary
tactic.
But Western security agencies and the corporate media kept
propagating the myth that the purported assault on the Ukrainian capital was
stalled by alleged “fierce Ukrainian resistance,” and if it were up to Russian
forces, they would “ransack the capital Kyiv” and “overrun the whole territory”
of the embattled country.
Even a week after the unilateral Russian
peace initiative on March 25, scaling back its blitz north of the capital
and focusing instead on liberating Russian-majority Donbas region in east
Ukraine, a task that has already been accomplished in large measure, Western
intelligence community and the mainstream media kept warning the gullible
audience Russia’s pullout from areas around Kyiv “wasn’t a retreat but a
strategic redeployment” and that Russian forces had withdrawn back into Belarus
and Russia simply to “regroup,
refit and resupply.”
Last week, US officials told reporters they had intelligence
suggesting “Putin was being misled” by his own advisers, who were “afraid to
tell him the truth.” “The degree to which Putin is isolated or relying on
flawed information can’t be verified,” Paul Pillar, a retired career US
intelligence officer, confided to NBC. “There’s no way you can prove or
disprove that stuff,” he said.
Two US officials said the intelligence about whether “Putin’s
inner circle was lying to him wasn’t conclusive” — based more on “analysis than
hard evidence.” Multiple US officials acknowledged that the US had used “information
as a weapon” even when “confidence in the accuracy of the information wasn’t
high.” Sometimes it had used low-confidence intelligence for deterrent effect,
as with chemical agents, and other times, as an official put it, the US was
just “trying to get inside Putin’s head.”
While attempting to play mind games with Putin, the US
intelligence community must’ve overlooked “an inconsequential detail” that before
venturing into politics, Putin himself led the Cold War’s premier Russian
intelligence agency, the KGB, for many years, and the puerile psyops
orchestrated by the CIA and NSA were nothing more than child’s play for the
seasoned Russian strongman.
Based on declassified intelligence, The
New York Times reported last week: “The Russian military’s stumbles have
eroded trust between Mr. Putin and his Ministry of Defense. While Defense
Minister Sergey Shoigu had been considered one of the few advisers Mr. Putin
confided in, the prosecution of the war in Ukraine has damaged the
relationship. Mr. Putin has put two top intelligence officials under house
arrest for providing poor intelligence ahead of the invasion, something that
may have further contributed to the climate of fear.”
Other American officials, as reported in the mainstream
media, had said that “Putin’s rigid isolation during the pandemic” and
willingness to publicly “rebuke advisers who did not share his views” had
created a degree of wariness, or even fear, in senior ranks of the Russian
military. Officials believe that Putin had been getting “incomplete or overly
optimistic reports” about the progress of Russian forces, “creating mistrust
with his military advisers.”
The corporate media’s psychological warfare campaign, in
collaboration with Western intelligence community, after the successful
culmination of Russia’s month-long military offensive in Ukraine must have
upset the Russian leader to the extent that instead of summarily sacking and
court-martialing the military’s top brass, he has decided
to celebrate May 9 as the Victory Day by announcing to organize a Russian
Armed Forces parade in Moscow, and is reportedly considering rewarding
battlefield commanders who valiantly fought in the Russo-Ukraine War with
promotion in ranks and pecuniary benefits.
All the media hype in order to misguide gullible audiences
following the stellar Russian victory in the Ukraine War aside, the fact remains
it’s old wine in new bottles. The intelligence wasn’t declassified last week,
it was declassified a month ago, but nobody paid much attention to the asinine
assertion of an alleged rift between Putin and the Russian military leadership.
The
Politico reported as early as March 8, in an article titled “Putin is angry,”
that the US intelligence heads warned before the House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence during the panel’s annual hearing on worldwide
threats that Russia’s military campaign in Ukraine was not going as planned and
it could “double down” in Ukraine.
“Although it still remains unclear whether Russia will
pursue a maximalist plan to capture all or most of Ukraine, Director National
Intelligence Avril Haines said, such an effort would run up against what the
U.S. intelligence community assesses is likely to be a persistent and
significant insurgency by Ukrainian forces.”
Clearly, DNI Avril Haines spilled the secret before the
House Select Committee on Intelligence that the US intelligence was in dark whether
the Russian forces would overrun the whole of Ukraine, or the Russian blitz
north of the capital was only a diversionary tactic meant for tying up
Ukrainian forces in the north, while Russia concentrated its efforts in
liberating Donbas in the east.
Echoing the “recently declassified intelligence” disclosed
by NYT the preposterous claim that Putin’s rigid self-isolation during the
COVID pandemic allegedly created a rift between him and Russia’s military
leadership, the Politico report from a month ago presciently endorsed the inane
intelligence assessment:
“William Burns, the CIA director, portrayed for lawmakers an
isolated and indignant Russian president who is determined to dominate and
control Ukraine to shape its orientation. Putin has been ‘stewing in a
combustible combination of grievance and ambition for many years. That personal
conviction matters more than ever,’ Burns said.
“Burns also described how Putin had created a system within
the Kremlin in which his own circle of advisers is narrower and narrower — and
sparser still because of the Covid-19 pandemic. In that hierarchy, Burns said,
‘it’s proven not career-enhancing for people to question or challenge his
judgment.’”
The most notable success of the US information warfare
campaign based on misleading declassified intelligence to media outlets, as
claimed by the NBC report, may have been delaying the invasion itself by weeks
or months, which officials believe they did with accurate predictions that
Russia intended to attack, based on definitive intelligence. By the time Russia
moved its troops in, “the West presented a unified front.”
“A former U.S. official said administration officials
believe the strategy delayed Putin’s invasion from the first week of January to
after the Olympics and that the delay bought the U.S. valuable time to get
allies on the same page in terms of the level of the Russian threat and how to
respond.”
Contradicting the NBC claim, however, The
Intercept reported on March 11, citing “credible intelligence sources,”
that despite staging a massive military buildup along Russia’s border with
Ukraine for nearly a year, “Russian President Vladimir Putin did not make a
final decision to invade until just before he launched the attack on February
24,” senior current and former US intelligence officials told the Intercept.
“It wasn’t until February that the agency and the rest of the US intelligence
community became convinced that Putin would invade,” the senior official added.
Last April, US intelligence first detected that “the Russian
military was beginning to move large numbers of troops and equipment to the
Ukrainian border.” Most of the Russian soldiers deployed to the border at that
time were later “moved back to their bases,” but US intelligence determined
that “some of the troops and materiel remained near the border.”
In June 2021, against the backdrop of rising tensions over
Ukraine, Biden and Putin met at a summit in Geneva. The summer troop withdrawal
brought a brief period of calm, but “the crisis began to build again in October
and November,” when US intelligence watched as Russia once again “moved large
numbers of troops back to its border with Ukraine.”
Extending the hand of friendship, Russia significantly
drawdown its forces along the western border before the summit last June.
Instead of returning the favor, however, the conceited leadership of supposedly
world’s sole surviving super power turned down the hand of friendship and
haughtily refused to concede reasonable security guarantees demanded by Russia
at the summit that would certainly have averted the likelihood of the war.
After perusing such contradictory reports, citing “credible intelligence estimates,” it appears the US intelligence community has developed a novel espionage technique of playing both ends against the middle. The world’s leading US spy agencies seem to have this uncanny ability of predicting with absolute certainty that an event is as likely to happen as it is likely that it may not happen. And since the media watchdog has been tamed to the point where it dares not question the authority, therefore security agencies would get the credit whether or not they performed their duties diligently.
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