The CIA has a long history of assassination
Kurt Nimmo, Prison Planet.com October 16, 2015
The former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy in
the Reagan administration, Paul Craig Roberts, told Alex Jones on Thursday he
believes Russian President Vladimir Putin is in danger of being assassinated by
the CIA.
“I think Putin is in substantial danger of assassination,” Roberts said.
“I hope he stops walking around the streets unprotected.”
He said the likely assassins will be from the CIA or a rogue group.
The CIA has assassinated and attempted to assassinate leaders and
political figures in numerous countries, including Korea, China, Indonesia,
Iran, Cambodia, Iraq, Costa Rica, Cuba, South Vietnam, Dominican
Republic,
Libya, Lebanon, Panama, Afghanistan, Pakistan and elsewhere.
According to author William Blum, who wrote a definite book on the CIA,
“Killing Hope: U.S. Military and C.I.A. Interventions since World War II,” the
agency has made more than 50 assassination attempts.
In the 1970s, the Church Committee, formally known as the Senate Select
Committee to Study Governmental Operations, spent more than 60 days questioning
75 witnesses about CIA plots in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
The New York Times reported on May 5, 2011:
Back in the darkest days of the cold war, the agency had devoted
significant resources and creativity to devising unhappy ends for unsavory or
inconvenient foreign leaders. Among those listed for assassination were Patrice
Lumumba of the Congo, Ngo Dinh Diem of South Vietnam, Rafael Trujillo of the
Dominican Republic and, most famously, Fidel Castro of Cuba, who survived no
fewer than eight C.I.A. assassination plots.
More recently, the CIA has characterized its assassination program as
part of the war on terror. Instead of assassination, alleged terrorists are
part of a program of “targeted killing.”
“Times have changed,” opines the Times. “Our president now interrupts
regularly scheduled broadcasting to announce the news of an assassination
himself.”
If Putin falls victim to an assassination, however, Obama and the CIA
will not take credit. Blame will be placed on a rogue group, as Roberts
indicates, and possibly a terrorist organization.
Prior to the Russian operation in Syria, the Islamic State’s Chechen
military commander, Umar al-Shishani, threatened to target Putin and
Russia.
In 2014 a former CIA official suggested the removal of
Putin, by assassination if necessary, should be the primary objective of the
Obama administration in its strategy for Ukraine.