Posted on 09/03/2015 9:09:50 PM PDT by WonkyTonky
Wikileaks is a Front for Russian Intelligence August 31, 2015
The part played by Wikileaks in the Edward Snowden saga is an important one. The pivotal role of Julian Assange and other leading members of Wikileaks in getting Snowden from Hawaii to Moscow, from NSA employment to FSB protection, in the late spring of 2013 is a matter of record.
For years there have been questions about just what Wikileaks actually is. I know because Ive been among those asking. Over two years ago, little more than two weeks after Snowden landed in Moscow, I explained my concerns about Wikileaks based on my background in counterintelligence. Specifically, the role of the Russian anti-Semite weirdo Israel Shamir, a close friend of Assange, in the Wikileaks circle merited attention, and to anyone trained in the right clues, the Assange group gave the impression of having a relationship with Russian intelligence. As I summed up my position in July 2013, based on what we knew so far:
Its especially important given the fact that Wikileaks is playing a leading role in the Snowden case, to the dismay of some of Eds admirers and even members of his family. Not to mention that Snowden, as of this writing, is still in Moscow. One need not be a counterintelligence guru to have serious questions about Shamir and Wikileaks here. It may be a much bigger part of the story than it appears to the naked eye.
(Excerpt) Read more at 20committee.com ...
The Chinese ran Eddy, then getting what they wanted, gave him the choice - US or Russia. Eddy picked Russia who priced his asylum at what he had stolen. Eddy accepted and so it went. Traitor Eddy see wall, here’s your blindfold, no last cigarette.
What is FSA? Roscosmos?
The GRU is the Red Army's Main Intelligence Directorate. Back in Soviet days, it was above the KGB and was so spooky that even the General Secretary had to go through a security screening to get into its headquarters. It combines the functions of the NSA, CIA, and DIA.
Unlike the KGB, the GRU survived the fall of the Soviet Union intact. After the Gorbachev coup attempt in 1991, the KGB was split into two agencies: the FSB for domestic security and the SVR for foreign political intelligence.
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