Saturday, 28 February 2015

Who killed Boris Nemtsov?



By Moti Nissani
A few hours ago, on the evening of February 27, 2015, Boris Nemtsov (1959-2015), former deputy prime minister of the Russian Federation and a leader of the Russian opposition, was murdered, some 200 meters away from the Kremlin. According to a CIA-sponsored publication that lost no time in updating its Nemtsov's biography, he had been "an outspoken critic of Vladimir Putin."

Was President Vladimir Putin behind this murder, or was it someone else?

To begin with, everyone agrees that Putin is a brilliant strategist and politician.  Against all odds, Putin has so far brought Russia from the brink of utter poverty, disintegration, and disaster.  One has just to watch him improvising a press conference, calmly, competently, and tirelessly, to realize that one is dealing here with a real, almost forgotten, specimen of a lost art: superb statesmanship.

So, we need to ask ourselves:  What could Putin gain from the killing of Nemtsov?  On first sight, it might appear that he had plenty to gain, for the two were clearly at odds about the future direction of Russia.  But with an 85% popularity rating-by far the highest of any politician on our war-ridden planet-Putin has no need to assassinate his opponents.

Moreover, according to the facts put forward by a CIA-sponsored publication, and despite attempts to lionize the likes of Kasparov and Nemtsov in the Western captive media, Nemtsov was a political small potato who posed no threat whatsoever to the immensely popular Putin. Thus, Wikipedia tells us: "In the parliamentary elections of December 2003 the Union of Rightist Forces, whose list was headed by both Nemtsov and Chubais, received just 2.4 million votes, or 4% of the total, thus falling short of the 5% threshold necessary to enter Parliament and losing all of its seats in the State Duma."  Nemtsov didn't even manage to get elected as mayor of Sochi, winning a mere 14% of the vote in the 2009 mayoral elections of that city.  Putin would have to be not only ruthless but insane to order the killing such an obviously unpopular fifth columnist.

Putin likewise must have been aware of the assassination of the late Alberto Nisman (1963-2015), the chief prosecutor of the 1994 car bombing of the Jewish Center in Buenos Aires.  Did President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner benefit from that probable assassination?  Did she gain anything at all from Nisman's death?  The obvious answer is that she did not.  Nisman was a mere irritant to begin with, a confidant of the American government in charge of investigating a tragic event that took place many years before the Kirchners assumed power.  Moreover, owing to Nisman's death, Cristina's position has weakened considerably.  The murder has led, among other things, to demonstrations by hundreds of thousands of gullible Argentines who listen, watch, and believe their CIA-owned mass media. 

Given the Argentine experience, would an acknowledged grandmaster of political strategy shoot himself in the foot by ordering the killing of a minor irritant?  Does Putin need to kill a man who says that Crimea should effectively belong to Russia's enemies and would be disintegrators -despite the overwhelming votes of the people of Crimea, despite the arbitrariness of Crimea ever belonging to Ukraine, despite Crimea's critical importance to Russian security?  Could a former advisor to Ukraine's IMF-owned former President Yushchenko  ever pose a threat to the patriotic and popular Putin?

As well, and contrary to everything we hear in the Western CIA-owned media, it would be totally out of character for Vladimir Vladimirovich to order the assassination of political opponents.  Over the years, Putin had to put up with any number of home-grown traitors, who had deliberately or naively forgotten the entire history of Western crimes against Russia, and who had been dead-set on resurrecting the disastrous, servile, Yeltsin era.   And yet there is no evidence, solid or circumstantial, that Putin had ordered the assassination of dissenting voices. 

Or to give another of many example:  In 2008, one suspects, Putin would have liked to continue serving as president of the Russian Federation.  And yet, despite his probable wishes, despite the fact that Russia needed him, he chose to play by the rules and ceded the presidency-and at least some powers-to Medvedev.  Does that sound like a man who would assassinate a misguided or bribed unpopular opponent?

So, even if no candidates presented themselves for the role of Nemtsov's would-be assassin, it would appear highly unlikely that President Putin would have been stupid enough, and heartless enough, to serve in that role. 
But our story does not merely end in the exoneration of President Putin, for a likelier assassin readily presents itself: America's shadow government.  That government is either directly involved in Nemtsov's assassination, or used one of its proxies to carry it out (the list of proxies is certainly as long as it is hideous, and includes MI6, Mossad, the Saudi dictatorship, Ukrainian Nazis, Muslim henchmen such as Al Qaeda and ISIS-none of which would have hatched such a plan without the knowledge and sponsorship of the CIA).

So let us begin our indictment by asking:  Who could possibly expect to benefit from Nemtsov's assassination?  We have seen already that this murder could on balance harm President Putin and his project for Russia.  On the other hand, the men in the shadows who constitute the real government of the USA (one of these of men alone, David Rockefeller, has certainly more power, by far, than the combined executive, legislative, and judicial branches of the American government).  These bankers, generals, and spooks, are clearly pursuing world domination.  For them, Russia is what Carthage was to Rome's Cato the Elder.  Russia under Putin's leadership is acting forcefully, fearlessly, and yet moderately in world affairs, and has recently stopped the conquest of Syria and the transformation of Crimea into an American military base. 

These shadowy figures clearly want Putin out of the way.  If nothing else works, sooner or later they will surely assassinate him, but such a step would involve some unwelcome risks.  After all, unlike Chile's Allende, Italy's Moro, Congo's Lumumba, Venezuela's Chavez, Indonesia's Sukarno, America's Franklin Roosevelt, Walter Reuther, at least six members of the Kennedy clan, and thousands of other friends of the people everywhere, Russia has an impressive arsenal of nuclear weapons and delivery vehicles.   Given this bloody, incontestable history of assassinations of world leaders, given moreover Russia's nuclear arsenal, is it not likely that the masters of the CIA would try to bring Putin down in a more subtle way? 

And the Men in the Shadows have nothing to lose from such a gambit.  Nemtsov's assassins were almost certainly top professionals.  In the unlikely case of exposure, they could be readily liquidated.  And, in the still more improbable event of tracing the plot to the CIA, there will be no outrage in the West-because virtually all sources of information in that part of the world are controlled by the CIA and its allies.

To continue our exploration of Boris Nemtsov's death, we can next turn to history.  Is America's shadow government capable of killing their friends, agents, and servants when such cold-blooded murders serve its long-term objectives?  The entire historical record is chockfull of precisely such examples.  Here, let us focus on just three recent incidents.

With much fanfare, the American government and its servile media (and Boris Nemtsov of course) immediately-and with no trace of supporting evidence--blamed Russia or Novorossiya freedom fighters for the tragic downing of a Malaysian airplane and its 298 passengers over Novorossiya airspace.  Following an extensive and immediate baseless media barrage, it gradually came to light  that this was a CIA-orchestrated false-flag event,  leading the western media to drop the subject.  If the CIA can order their Ukrainian puppets to kill 298 innocent men, women, and children to advance their agenda of world conquest, couldn't they kill their Russian agent Nemtsov to advance that very same agenda?

Then we have another CIA success story, the so-called Maidan coup of 2014.  Everyone knows by now that this was a CIA-sponsored event.  We even know the price tag: 5 billion dollars (we may note in passing that CIA fascist coups d'état are subject to inflationary pressures too-in 1953, it only cost $100,000 to overthrow Iranian democracy).  As well, to remove the elected president of Ukraine from power, the CIA had Ukrainian snipers killing their own paid protesters in order to successfully turn Ukraine into a fascist dictatorship-and a thorn in Russia's side.  If they can kill their comrades in Kiev, can't they likewise kill comrade Nemtsov in Moscow?

For another example of American spooks' subtlety and willingness to kill their own agents in order to smear their enemies, let us again recall recent events in Argentina.  In the 1970s and 1980s, the CIA had successfully installed or strengthened vicious dictatorships in Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Bolivia.  The list of atrocities of these American-sponsored thugs is chillingly long.  Besides tortures, censorship, and fake nationalism, the Southern Cone's dictators ceded everything to Western interests and brought misery and unemployment to ordinary citizens.  By the turn of the present century, Argentines had enough and managed to kick out the lackeys, oligarchs, and traitors who ruled over them. By 2003 these imperial collaborators were replaced, first, with President Nestor Kirchner.  After Kirchner's untimely death at age 60, his wife, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner won the presidential elections and continued her husband's policies.  Despite vicious Western-owned media campaigns against the Kirchners, despite oligarchic opposition at home, the Kirchners have managed to partially defy the Men in the Shadows, pursue semi-independent policies, and bring greater prosperity and liberty to their countrymen. 

Things got really ugly when Cristina balked an American judge who ordered her, the head of a sovereign nation, to pay an odious debt to politically powerful American vulture funds.  Another example of Cristina's defiance is provided by the renationalization of YPF, an oil company.  She crossed the line, and had to be removed from power by any means necessary.

So, to protect herself, to make her assassination a bit less likely, President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner wisely gave an emotional speech in late 2014, telling her countrymen and the world that her defiance of America might cost her life.  That of course made it a bit difficult for her would-be assassins to do her in. 

No one should ever underestimate the professionalism and tenacity of the Central Institute of Assassinations, who most likely came up with a diabolically ingenious stratagem to overcome Cristina's disobedience.     

The full story of this sordid Nisman affair must and will be told elsewhere.  For now, suffice it to say that it is highly probable that the CIA solved that quandary creatively and professionally by killing one of their collaborators and a minor irritant for Cristina, a prosecutor of events that took place decades before.  And as we have mentioned, that killing had the desired effect-aided by the Argentine prostitute media-of bringing hundreds of thousands of cynical or ignorant protesters to the streets of Buenos Aires. 

Needless to say too, unscrupulousness is entirely in character for the American government.  Rulers that killed, say, over one-quarter of a century, 2.5 million Iraqis on false pretenses, brought total chaos to this ancient and proud civilization, and left behind, forever, an environmental wasteland, are capable of any crimes whatsoever.  They would kill 1,000,000,000 Nemtsovs to achieve their goals, without once blinking an eye or suffering a single sleepless night.

So, in my view, the probability that the Russian government is behind the killing of Boris Nemtsov is close to zero, while the probability of involvement of the CIA and its allies and stooges is well over 90%.

And this, right here and now, before the dust of the bullets that terminated the life of Boris Nemtsev settles, allows us to make two predictions. 

The first prediction is this.  The captive Western media will go out of their way to demonize Putin and attribute Nemtsov's assassination to him.  Day and night we shall be bombarded with stories of the defiant and heroic Nemtsov and the perfidious and murderous Putin.  By the time they are done, the average Westerner or Japanese will be almost as familiar with Boris Nemtsov as she had been with Lee Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan, Patricia Hearst, or Osama Bin Laden.  No real evidence will be presented against Putin, for these villains understand human psychology far better than their opponents-repeat a lie often enough and you would have succeeded in smearing your opponent and justifying your plan of murdering him.

The second prediction is this.  The CIA will orchestrate anti-Putin demonstrations the world over.  We shall have anti-Putin concocted marches not only in the port city commanded by Wall Street, not only in the river city commanded by the City of London, not only in the ancient city commanded by the Vatican, but everywhere the CIA can stir up trouble.  More importantly-and this is one probable reason Nemtsov was killed - there would be demonstrations by traitorous, naïve, ignorant, or misinformed Russians.

If these predictions come true, they would lend further support to the assertion that, most likely, the CIA is behind the assassination of Boris Nemtsov.

Moti Nissani
_____________
Dr. Moti Nissani is Professor emeritus, Wayne State University, Michigan, USA and the author of Lives in the Balance: The Cold War and American Politics, 1945-1991.  His recent postings include analyses of recent false-flag events and of the state-sponsored assassinations or attempted assassinations of Aaron Swartz, Lucia and and Leo Krim, Michael Hastings, and Imran Kahn.

Source: English Pravda 28-02-2015

Friday, 27 February 2015

Cyprus Opposes Sanctions against Russia



Issues should be resolved exclusively through diplomatic channels and through dialogue, while respecting the territorial integrity, President Nicos Anastasiades believes

MOSCOW, February 26 (TASS) - Cyprus is against the European Union imposing sanctions on Russia over events in Ukraine, President Nicos Anastasiades said on Thursday.

"It is impossible to achieve a positive result by military means or through sanctions," Anastasiades told a TASS news conference. "Issues should be resolved exclusively through diplomatic channels and dialogue, while respecting the territorial integrity."

"We do not come into conflict with the European Union. Each EU member state has the right to express its opinion freely. It is not forbidden," he said. "Cyprus is against sanctions on Russia. And we are not the only ones among European countries who have taken such a stance. There is a whole group of other states opposing the sanctions."

"It is necessary to respect the rights of citizens in any country," the Cypriot leader said, noting the importance of internal dialogue in Ukraine to prevent a civil war there.

Source: Russia Insider 27-02-2015

Thursday, 26 February 2015

Ukraine begins artillery pullout from contact line under OSCE supervision



According to the acting head of Ukraine Defense Ministry's press service, the pullout of 100-mm artillery guns is taking place along the whole stretch of the contact line

KIEV, February 26. /TASS/. Ukrainian military began pullout of its artillery from the contact line with the self-proclaimed south-eastern region under the supervision of observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Colonel Oleksandr Motuzyanik, acting head of the press service of Ukraine’s Defense Ministry, said on Thursday.

He said that the pullout of 100-mm artillery guns is taking place along the whole stretch of the contact line and the troops are in particular withdrawing MT-12 Rapira anti-tank guns to new places of deployment located at least 25 kilometers away from the line of contact.

The OSCE, which has been tasked with monitoring the process, expressed concerns on Wednesday that Kiev forces were not pulling out their heavy armaments, Russia’s envoy to the organization, Andrey Kelin, said.
Denis Pushilin, Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) envoy to the Contact Group, said earlier in the day that in contradiction to the Minsk accords on the Ukrainian conflict settlement Kiev authorities were not pulling out its heavy weaponry from the contact line.

Also earlier in the day Igor Plotnitsky, the leader of the self-proclaimed Lugansk People’s Republic (LPR) said that his republic withdrew almost 80% of heavy weaponry in line with the Minsk agreements and OSCE monitors confirmed that fact.

However, Plotnitsky said that Kiev troops withdrew only 15 or 20% of its military hardware adding that "they are not fulfilling the Minsk agreements."

 

Heavy weapons pullout in eastern Ukraine

The pullout of all heavy weapons by both sides, one of the key points of the agreements reached by the Normandy Four leaders in the Belarusian capital on February 12, was to start no later than the second day after the February 15 ceasefire and finish within two weeks.

The joint center for control and coordination of the ceasefire earlier reported that the Donetsk and Luhansk militias had initiated the weaponry pullout on February 18.

Kiev's military spokesman Andriy Lysenko said two days ago that Kiev would start heavy weaponry withdrawal from the contact line if the "silence regime" was observed for two days.

The OSCE, which has been tasked with monitoring the process, expressed concerns on Wednesday that Kiev forces were not pulling out their heavy armaments, Russia’s envoy to the organization, Andrey Kelin, said.

Source: ITAR-TASS 26-02-2015

Russians Say External Military Threat Has Grown



A new poll suggests that Russians are acutely aware of Western aggression on its borders

This article originally appeared at Russia Beyond the Headlines



Sixty-eight percent of Russian citizens recently interviewed by the All Russian Center for Public Opinion Studies (VTsIOM) believe that their country faces a real military threat from outside, as compared with 52 percent of respondents in 2014, and 49 percent in 2000.

Twenty-eight percent of those polled took the opposite view (42 percent in 2014).

The survey was conducted in 46 Russian regions on February 14-15 and involved 1,600 people.

At the same time, 49 percent of respondents gave positive assessments of the Russian Armed Forces, as compared with 24 percent in 2014, and 14 percent in 2009. A mere 6 percent of those polled spoke negatively of the Russian army (14 percent in 2014), and 40 percent of respondents described the current condition of the country's Armed Forces as satisfactory.

However, respondents appeared divided over the need to increase the numerical strength of the Armed Forces.
Forty percent of respondents said that such a measure was necessary (30 percent in 2014), and 42 percent expressed the opposite opinion. Seven percent of those surveyed even called for a significant reduction of the army's numerical strength.

Forty-seven percent of respondents said they want their son, brother or husband to serve in the Armed Forces, 47 percent took the opposite view, and 6 percent were unable to answer this question.

Source: Russia Insider 26-02-2015