Understanding
the Olympic terror threat
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
What and who is behind the current terror threat at the Olympic games in Sochi? I was asked this question last night in an interview with George Noory on Coast to Coast AM for their news segment. After I explained the reasons and origins, I received an off-air telephone call from a nationally syndicated talk show host who heard my answer. “I never expected that explanation, but I must admit that it makes perfect sense,” was his response.
The Winter
Olympics in Sochi will begin on February 7, 2014 and last for 17 days. Many
news organizations have said that Russia’s President Vladimir Putin’s
reputation is on the line as the upcoming games will be the most expensive in
the history of the Olympics—$50 billion and rising, compared to the 2008 winter
games in Beijing that cost an estimated $40 billion. Putin’s detractors have
suggested that billions are “missing” and cannot be accounted for, which is
something to keep in mind as you consider the “back story.” Here is what you are
not being told by an obedient American press and their paid pundits.
It was last
August when Saudi intelligence chief Prince Bandar bin Sultan visited Putin in
Moscow in his capacity as the “Prince of the Mujahideen” in Syria, including
those who hail from Chechnya, Dagestan, and the Caucasus in Russia’s backyard,
according to FARS News Agency. You might recall Bandar bin Sultan as the
infamous “Bandar Bush”
in earlier times, but that’s another column.
Last August,
Bandar was in Moscow to specifically discuss the Syrian issue. At that time,
Bandar tried to bribe Putin into changing his policy on Syria by promising him
“a safe and secure winter Olympics in Sochi” if he would stop the material
support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. He offered Russia other incentives
in exchange for withdrawing his support for Assad, “including a major arms deal
and a pledge not to challenge Russian gas sales if Moscow scales back support
for the Syrian government,” as noted by the FARS News Agency.
The future of
Syria, in the eyes of Putin, is not negotiable. I have written many times that
Syria is Putin’s red line in the sand and that Syria, not Iran, will be the
tripwire for World War III. Yet, the U.S., Saudi Arabia, Israel and others are
hell-bent on toppling Assad by all available means, which leads back to the
September 11, 2012 attacks in Benghazi. It’s interesting how we can see a
pattern emerging, and how the Benghazi attacks suddenly make sense when the
truth is exposed.
The Saudis fund
and support the various terrorist groups in Syria and elsewhere. Bandar is
personally in charge of all matters related to Syria and the initiatives to
oust Assad in favor of a Muslim Brotherhood leadership. He also openly states
that he can control terrorist actions in Sochi, meaning that he can either give
them an operational green or a red light. His reach is also said to include the
Chechen terrorists, which should cause a number of pundits on both sides of the
theoretical political divide to rethink what we were told about the April 15,
2013 Boston Marathon bombings and the Saudi national, visited by Mrs. Obama,
who quietly disappeared into the night. That, however, is reserved for another
column.
If Putin does
not acquiesce to the Saudi’s demands, all possibilities will remain on the
table. Also, the U.S. and Israel have been squarely on the side of the Saudis
in this matter, reminding us all that Middle Eastern politics make strange
bedfellows.
We should take
note of the October 2013 bus bombing in Volgograd, Central Russia by female
suicide bomber Naida Asivalova of Dagestan. In context, terrorist threats and
bombings such as this are real evidence that such terrorist activity is
actually a proxy war by another means. While many will consider this bombing
the act of a crazed, brainwashed killer acting under religious motivation, few
will see it as part of an asymmetrical war with larger implications. That
bombing, and other less recent acts and threats, have been done to remind Putin
of who controls the terrorists and what demands need to be met to avoid further
terrorist acts. It is also important to note the timing of the bus bombing. It
was done far enough in advance to cause Olympic participants to rethink their
participation, thus causing Putin economic backlash and to perhaps lose face on
the international stage. Truly, we are seeing a game of chess at three levels
on the geopolitical stage.
In the end, the
Olympic terror threat is directly related to Putin’s stance on backing Assad
and Syria against the wishes of the Saudis and by extension, the U.S. and the
Israelis. If the deaths of four Americans in Benghazi was insufficient to
expose the covert fight for Syria, perhaps the deaths of more in Sochi will
awaken people to the real world game of Risk that’s taking place on the world
stage.
From Benghazi
to Sochi, perhaps via Boston, it’s all about a larger global realignment of
power where the Muslim Brotherhood is installed in countries across the Middle
East to destabilize the region. Whether it’s Sochi, Benghazi or even Boston,
the lie is bigger, the stakes are higher, the agenda is much deeper than most
can imagine. Terrorism is a nation-state proxy war by other means.
Source(s)
The post Understanding the Olympic terror
threat appeared first on Northeast Intelligence Network.Source: http://www.homelandsecurityus.com/archives/10388
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