IMRAN KHAN |
February 25, 2011 posted by Gordon Duff
RIGHT FOR AMERICA, RIGHT FOR PAKISTAN
By Gordon Duff STAFF WRITER/Senior Editor
The standoff between the United States and Pakistan over the arrest of contractor Raymond Davis is not going to be solved unless both nations take a step into that “no man’s land” of trust and honesty. There is no question about diplomatic status, this was a clumsy mistake made by State Department officials in Washington who had little or no understanding of the legal and political issues at stake. Recent admissions that Davis is “CIA” mean nothing. Nobody knows what “CIA” means anymore, not since the wave of privatization that has spread to many of America’s critical security functions.
Were America honest in this, it would admit the truth. The CIA and State Department leaders had no idea Davis was in Pakistan or what he was doing. During the Bush era, duplicate lines of command were created that are still in place. Projects are “green lighted” and funded without oversight, projects that were and are not in the best interests of the United States. Evidence thus far gives a strong indication that Raymond Davis was employed in such a capacity. Moreover, he was obviously ill suited for his task and is dangerously unstable. There is little question of this anymore.
There are several ways to look at this. The one I gravitate to is toward finding those who sent Davis to Pakistan in the first place, a highly dysfunctional combat veteran, exorbitantly paid and obviously answerable to an equally dysfunctional organization. Davis was a ticking time bomb. The proof of his phone contacts with Taliban terrorists who have been attacking, not just the Pakistani army but civilians, is well established. What kind of spy keeps “sim cards” in his pocket when arrested? Aren’t supposed to be swallowed?
Davis was arrested as a criminal, a murderer. Truth is, he is simply the one caught “holding the bag.” Davis, now held in custody, those said to be rushing to his aid, his “friends” who killed a cyclist and fled, were actually his.accomplices.
They have fled Pakistan and are being sequestered somewhere in the United States, protected from extradition. More like Davis are out there. Working with them are corrupt members of Pakistan’s government and police organizations, enticed by money, some of it from drug operations in Afghanistan.
DRUG POWER
The $65 billion a year in narcotics being exported from Afghanistan hasn’t just destabilized the region. Some of these drugs, formerly opium paste, not fully processed heroin produced with equipment and chemicals brought into Afghanistan by American businessmen with key political connections, are trucked into Russia and are slowly destroying that nation. Most, however, is being flown west, Europe, America mostly, flown from airports controlled by the United States, airports where no uninspected and unapproved cargo ever leaves.
If America’s divided “chain of command” was “confused” before, billions in drug money has left it devastated and has made some aspects of America’s security, intelligence and special operations capabilities analogous with organized crime.
America’s “special operation commands” are a hodgepodge of duchies, some answerable to traditional command and control and some are not. Some may well have fallen under the influence of Afghanistan’s drug trade or the globalist cabal that is trying to take down Iran and Pakistan as part of the globalist agenda oft spoken of by Council on Foreign Relations Director Zbigniew Brzezinski.
Terrorist operations by Americans inside Pakistan, operations against Pakistan itself, under the “cover” of “counter-terrorism” would be part of that agenda. That agenda is real. That agenda is “front burner” in Washington, New Delhi, Tel Aviv and Zurich. Davis is little more than a tiny “cog” in that agenda, a tiny cog that unhinged and may well take the entire mechanism down.
IMRAN KHAN, THERE IS NO ONE ELSE
About a year ago, Veterans Today staffers, Jeff Gates, Raja Mujtaba and I spent a long evening with Pakistan’s reformist political leader and world famous cricketer, Imran Khan. The discussion was “no holds barred,” very much so, and Jeff and I were in clear agreement. We left the meeting with the basis for a friendship in place, but there was more. This was the only man we know of who could bridge the gap, not just between Christians, Jews and Islam but provide a voice Americans would respect.
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