Thursday, September 04, 2008

September Surprise
Justin Raimondo said ...
While the rest of the pundits opine about the meaning and implications of Sarah Palin's ascension from small town mayor to prospective vice president – and whether or not her daughter's private life is fair game for any media outlet other than the National Enquirer – those of us whose job it is to stand watch on the ramparts and report the real news are wondering when – not if – the War Party will pull a rabbit out of the proverbial hat. For months, I've been warning in this space that an American attack on Iran is imminent, and now I see that the Dutch have reason to agree with my assessment. Their intelligence service reportedly has pulled out of a covert operation inside Iran on the grounds that a U.S. strike is right around the corner – in "a matter of weeks," according to De Telegraaf, a Dutch newspaper.

As the story goes, the Dutch had infiltrated the purported Iranian weapons project and were firmly ensconced when they got word that the Americans are about to launch a missile attack on Iranian nuclear facilities. They wisely decided to close down the operation and pull out.

Remember, the Israelis have been threatening to strike on their own for months: what's changed is that now, apparently, the U.S. has caved in to what is a blatant case of blackmail and has agreed to do the job for them.

3 comments:

All-Mi-T [Thought Crime] Rawdawgbuffalo said...

wish i was flyin that shit
drop the bomb on the white house crew

Anonymous said...

A year ago I was certain the neocons would attack Iran, but now I'm not so sure. The anti-Iranian propaganda has died down a little. My guess is they looked at the impact the attack would have on gas prices and decided that the American public would not support it. They probably figured that they could trick the stupid public about 98% of things, but not that gas issue.

Anonymous said...

the United States is in such a sad state of decline. Attacking people is the only way to accelerate that decline which is perhaps what the people at the top want in their effort to create a centralized northamerican currency and one step closer to world government.