Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
The attempted Clinton-CIA coup against Donald Trump
Why I fear Britain will pay a lethal price if MI6's meddling with Donald Trump backfires

By PETER OBORNE FOR THE DAILY MAIL

PUBLISHED: 01:12, 14 January 2017

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/articl...fires.html

Quote:Over the years, many American presidents have found themselves at odds with their spy chiefs. John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton are three notorious examples.

But there's never been anything like the current open warfare between President-elect Donald Trump and the Central Intelligence Agency.

Weeks of simmering hostility exploded into the open on Wednesday when he accused intelligence chiefs of licensing the publication of false claims about his allegedly depraved sexual practices.

Trump is now engaged in a fight to the death with the CIA, the independent agency responsible for providing national security intelligence to the White House and senior U.S. policy-makers.

Only one side can win. For either the CIA will be humbled or Trump will be humiliated and destroyed.

Crucially, this isn't just an issue that affects the United States it is one of global importance whose outcome will affect all of us.

Also, it is a high-stakes drama which directly involves Britain, and in particular our foreign intelligence service, MI6.

We have learnt that Christopher Steele, a former MI6 officer who reportedly once headed the agency's Russian desk at MI6 headquarters in Vauxhall Cross, South London, was the mastermind behind the dossier of lurid accusations about Trump's activities in a Moscow hotel suite.

Whether true or not, the material suggests that the Kremlin has other documentation which it could use to blackmail Trump.

Meanwhile, the American tycoon-turned-politician is accused of being too friendly with Russian businessmen and Kremlin power-brokers.

Either way, this is an unprecedented position for an American president to be in.

As for the Steele dossier, it was undoubtedly calculated to stop Trump being elected leader of the most powerful country in the Western world.

Being unproven, it may not be the bombshell it was intended to be. But it is still a thermo-nuclear weapon dropped into the U.S. political system. If Mr Steele were a rogue private operative, that would be troubling enough. But the evidence strongly suggests otherwise.

I have no doubt that MI6 must have had full knowledge of his role in researching and then assembling his dossier, before offering it to Trump's political enemies.

More damning still, it has been reported that Mr Steele sought the approval of Whitehall before showing his report to the FBI, America's domestic intelligence agency.

In other words, British spy chiefs gave the green light to a scheme intended to destroy the man who would be President of the United States of America.

Like most people, I find it very hard to comprehend this. But it is the only interpretation which makes any sense of the facts as we know them.

If so, what on earth did MI6, a highly respected organisation, think that it was doing?

MI6 is licensed by the British government to break the law and carry out illicit acts on the assumption that it always acts in the British national interest. This is allowed under the Intelligence Services Act 1994.

But why meddle mischievously with Washington? As always, it is overwhelmingly in Britain's interest to develop and maintain excellent relations with the American government particularly as we negotiate Brexit.

As we leave the EU, we urgently need to strike a trade deal with the U.S., the largest economy in the world and historically our closest ally.

So why does it seem that MI6 decides to risk destroying that relationship by interfering in U.S. domestic politics? Here is what I think happened. MI6 has an exceptionally close and strong relationship with the CIA (an organisation which British intelligence officers helped to create in the immediate aftermath of World War II).

So when, as now, MI6 chiefs believe, with considerable justification, that their transatlantic counterparts are being sidelined, they feel sympathetic and want to help.

For there is little question that the CIA has two massive concerns about Trump as president.

First, it fears he is mentally unbalanced and therefore could pose a threat to American national security.

Second, the CIA is appalled at his determination to seek a rapprochement with Vladimir Putin.

For these two reasons, there are people inside the CIA who would love to see the unpredictable tycoon replaced by vice-president-elect Mike Pence, a man who they feel they can work with.

Of course, it is well-known that the CIA has an infamous record of plotting coups d'etats against democratically elected governments in other countries for example, in the early-Fifties when it helped the Iranian military overthrow premier Mohammad Mosaddeq and reinstate the Shah, and the ousting of Chile's president Salvador Allende in 1973.

The atmosphere is currently so feverish in Washington that there are well-informed people who now believe that the CIA is contemplating a version of the same thing in America itself.

This would be a truly appalling and stupid course of action. It would be incredibly foolish for MI6 even to be seen to be part of it.

Of course President Trump may not last four years and Mr Pence may take over.

If so, MI6 and its dirty tricks department will have secured the gratitude of its sister agency in the U.S.

But what if Donald Trump faces down the CIA?

Then, he will never forgive or forget the fact that Britain played such a squalid role in trying to stop him getting to the White House.

The damage to Britain's standing in the world would be permanent, and Christopher Steele's dossier of sexual depravity will go down as an MI6 catastrophe on the same scale as the agency's fabricated dossier on Iraq's supposed weapons of mass destruction.

Alex Younger, the head of MI6 and a former officer in the Scots Guards, is by all accounts a decent and sensible man. But does he know what his spy agency has unleashed? Is he in control?

One thing is certain. MI6 should never have approved Christopher Steele's dossier on Donald Trump.

2016 was certainly a remarkable year. But the first days of 2017 have been yet more extraordinary.

We are entering times in which fact and fiction merge.

There is good reason today to feel more afraid than at any time since the Thirties.
"There are three sorts of conspiracy: by the people who complain, by the people who write, by the people who take action. There is nothing to fear from the first group, the two others are more dangerous; but the police have to be part of all three,"

Joseph Fouche
Reply


Messages In This Thread
The attempted Clinton-CIA coup against Donald Trump - by Paul Rigby - 14-01-2017, 11:12 PM

Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Trump dossier Doug Fisher 237 231,685 19-07-2020, 07:41 PM
Last Post: Lauren Johnson
  Half-coup in Venezuela: The CIA Frames Trump Paul Rigby 0 3,186 08-05-2020, 11:06 PM
Last Post: Paul Rigby
  Trump Impeachment, The 2020 Election And The Deep State James Lateer 3 3,952 06-01-2020, 07:56 AM
Last Post: Richard Booth
  The US-backed & planed coup in Venezuela Peter Lemkin 1 4,903 20-03-2019, 04:34 PM
Last Post: James Lateer
  Ongoing neo-Fascist Coup In Brazil with Imprisonment of Lula Peter Lemkin 3 6,407 10-04-2018, 12:52 AM
Last Post: James Lateer
  Trump Executive Order and the Latest National Emergency Lauren Johnson 1 5,329 28-12-2017, 07:58 AM
Last Post: Peter Lemkin
  An actual coup in america: Democrats in 1944 Paul Rigby 3 8,370 29-10-2017, 07:03 PM
Last Post: Paul Rigby
  Russia Sees Multi-Polar World as It's Future -- Not Trump David Guyatt 55 121,208 28-03-2017, 07:36 PM
Last Post: Cliff Varnell
  Is Trump's "Unpredictability" A Kissinger Strategy? David Guyatt 3 5,811 13-02-2017, 11:03 AM
Last Post: Magda Hassan
  Atlantic-Bridge: A Fox in Trump's Henhouse David Guyatt 0 4,334 05-02-2017, 11:14 AM
Last Post: David Guyatt

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)