This is a black 'blowback' day for the criminal cartel's war machine, which relies heavily on it's Manas base there. Not only for the transfer of armed 'errand boys' aka 'troops' for the illegal occupation, but also for Big Pharma's billion dollar drug industry in Afghanistan.* To make matters worse: apart from their Kant base, Moscow also wants a second base.
Henk Ruyssenaars
April 8th 2010 - Five years after the global criminal cartel* via their front; the U.S. administration and with armed 'gofers' from the NSA/CIA and their 'Tulip Revolution' - with war criminal and speculator George Soros financing a lot - their 'president' Bakiyev was deposed the same way as he came to power: in a bloody uprising.* Bakiyev by the way - who now has fled - symbolically named the building where his totalitarian adminstration was seated on it's bloody throne the same as in Washington: the 'White House.' Usurped by the criminal cartel here as there...
The battle among those gory and Gargantuan giants, has as always absolutely nothing to do with human beings. They are - in the eyes of the profiteers - only 'colletaral damage.' This is about power and profit from the wars and the drugs.
The latest US TIME magazine: "In a March 5 interview with TIME, an Obama Administration senior official said it had been a close call for the U.S. "That we have the Manas base in Kyrgyzstan is a great achievement," he said. "Russia didn't want to allow us to have that. They put down $2 billion to get us out. But Obama had very frank discussions with [Russian President Dmitri] Medvedev.
He said, If you believe we have a common enemy in Afghanistan, then this is going to help us fight that common enemy. Had we lost that, it would have been a major blow. It is a major hub for getting our soldiers in and out of there." - [end quote]*
It's all a battle about power and profit for the war criminals in Central Asia, and Al Jazeera* - which years ago turned into a propaganda broadcaster for the cartel's war machine, justifying more or less the illegal invasions - writes today about the Kyrgyz opposition which 'seizes power' - and because al Jazeera is advocating the cartel - it's written in brackets:
Kyrgyz opposition 'seizes power'
Opposition leaders in Kyrgyzstan say they have seized power after taking control of security headquarters, state television and other government buildings following a day of deadly unrest. "The security service and the interior ministry, all of them are already under the management of new people," Rosa Otunbayeva, a former foreign minister, told the Russian-language Mir TV channel on Thursday.
The opposition claim came after Kurmanbek Bakiyev, the president, fled the capital Bishkek amid violent clashes between anti-government protesters and riot police on Wednesday. Reports said that Bakiyev is currently in the southern city of Osh." - [end quote]*
But Soros' role in the criminal cartel's 'Tulip Revolution' disaster is evident. Website encyclopedia Wikipedia - which also is managed by Soros' 'Brethren in the Faith' - writes this about him:
"George Soros (pronounced /ˈsɔroʊs/ or /ˈsɔrəs/,[3] Hungarian IPA: [ˈʃoroʃ]; born August 12, 1930, as Schwartz György) is a Hungarian-American currency speculator, stock investor, businessman, philanthropist, and political activist. The [jewish] family changed its name in 1936 from Schwartz to Soros, in response to growing anti-semitism with the rise of Fascism."*
Soros, who is part and parcel of the criminal actions globally going on, is always up-front, albeit often 'covered'. Soros, like the rest of those humanoids, makes money out off the blood, sweat and tears of human beings everywhere.
The treacherous 'Soros Foundation' - which through those so called 'colored revolutions' only 'helps' itself, the CIA and the criminal cartel - also had an official office at 55A, Logvinenko St. in Bishkek, 720040, Kyrgyzstan. - Url.: http://www.soros.kg/?lang=en
You can imagine what Soros and his collaborators did to these 5 million people too. No wonder the Soros collaborators are silent now... And run...
The best analysis of the situation in Kyrgyzstan - and the general battle for power and profit in Central Asia - appeared today in Australia.to News, and is written by Rick Rozoff:
'KYRGYZSTAN AND THE BATTLE FOR CENTRAL ASIA"
Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev was deposed five years after and in the same manner as he came to power, in a bloody uprising. Elected president two months after the so-called Tulip Revolution of 2005 he helped engineer, he was since then head of state of the main transit nation for the U.S. and NATO war in Afghanistan.
The Pentagon secured the Manas Air Base (as of last year known as the Transit Center at Manas) in Kyrgyzstan shortly after its invasion of Afghanistan in October of 2001 and in the interim, according to a U.S. armed forces publication last June, "More than 170,000 coalition personnel passed through the base on their way in or out of Afghanistan, and Manas was the transit point for 5,000 tons of cargo, including spare parts and equipment, uniforms and various items to support personnel and mission needs. "Currently, around 1,000 U.S. troops, along with a few hundred from Spain and France, are assigned to the base." [1]
The White House's Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke paid his first visit in his current position to Kyrgyzstan - and the three other former Soviet Central Asian republics which border it, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan - in February and said "35,000 US troops were transiting each month on their way in and out of Afghanistan." [2] At the rate he mentioned, 420,000 troops annually.
The U.S. and NATO also established military bases in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan for the war in South Asia, but on a smaller scale. (U.S. military forces were ordered out of the second country following what the government claimed was a Tulip Revolution-type armed uprising in its province of Andijan less than two months after the Kyrgyz precedent. Germany maintains a base near the Uzbek city of Termez to transit troops and military equipment to Afghanistan's Kunduz province where the bulk of its 4,300 forces is concentrated.)
In February of 2009 the Kyrgyz government announced that it was also evicting U.S. and NATO forces from its country, but relented in June when Washington offered it $60 million to reverse its decision.
Kyrgyzstan borders China.
It not only borders China, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, but is only separated from Russia by a single nation, Kazakhstan. To gain an appreciation of Russian and Chinese concerns over hundreds of thousands of U.S. and NATO troops passing through Kyrgyzstan, imagine a comparable amount of Chinese and Russian soldiers regularly passing through Mexico and Guatemala, respectively. For almost nine years and at an accelerating rate.
It is not only a military "hard power" but also a "soft power" threat that the Western role in Kyrgyzstan poses to Russia and China. The nation is a member of the post-Soviet Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) along with Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan - seen by many as the only counterpart to NATO on former Soviet space - and of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) with China, Russia and the three above-mentioned Central Asian nations.
According to U.S. officials, during and after the Tulip Revolution of 2005 not a single U.S. or NATO flight into the Manas Air Base was cancelled or even delayed. But a six-nation CSTO exercise scheduled for days afterward was cancelled.
The uprising and the deposing of standing president Askar Akayev in March of 2005 was the third self-styled "color revolution" in the former Soviet Union in sixteen months, following the Rose Revolution in Georgia in late 2003 and the Orange Revolution in Ukraine in late 2004 and early 2005.
As the Kyrgyz version was underway Western news media were asking the question "Who's next?" Candidates included other former Soviet states like Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Moldova and Uzbekistan. And Russia. Along with Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan those nations accounted for ten of the twelve members of the post-Soviet Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).
As Agence France-Presse detailed in early April of 2005: "The CIS was founded in December 1991 on the very day the Soviet Union disappeared....But over the past year and a half, three faithful Kremlin allies were toppled in...revolutions: Eduard Shevardnadze in Georgia, Leonid Kuchma in Ukraine, and, last week, Askar Akayev in Kyrgyzstan....Even though Kyrgyzstan’s new interim leaders have vowed to continue their deposed predecessor’s Moscow-friendly policies, the lightning toppling of the government there has spawned speculation that the CIS would soon collapse." [3]
The leader of the "color revolution" prototype, Georgia's Mikheil Saakashvili, gloated over the Kyrgyz "regime change," attributing the "brave" actions of the opposition in Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan "to the Georgia factor," and added, "We are not waiting for the development of events, but are doing our best to destroy the empire in the CIS." [4]
Shortly after the uprising former Indian diplomat and political analyst M.K. Bhadrakumar wrote of the then seemingly inexorable momentum of "color" revolts in the former Soviet Union: "[A]ll the three countries [Georgia, Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan] are strategically placed in the post-Soviet space. They comprise Russia's 'near abroad.'
"Washington has been expanding its influence in the arc of former Soviet republics — in the Baltics...the Caucasus, and Central Asia — in recent years with a tenacity that worries Moscow. "Ever since 2003 when Mr. Akayev decided on allowing Russia to establish a full-fledged military base in Kant he knew he was on the American 'watch list.' The political temperature within Kyrgyzstan began to rise.
"The Americans made it clear in many ways that they desired a regime change in Bishkek....The 'revolution' in the Central Asian state of Kyrgyzstan has already thrown up surprises. A comparison with the two earlier 'colour revolutions' in Georgia and Ukraine will be a good starting point. "First, the striking similarities between the three 'revolutions' must be duly noted. All three are meant to signify the unstoppable spread of the fire of liberty lit by the United States in Afghanistan and Iraq in the aftermath of 9/11.
"But behind the rhetoric, the truth is that the U.S. wanted regime change in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan because of difficulties with the incumbent leadership. The leaders of all the three countries — Eduard Shevardnadze in Georgia, Leonid Kuchma in Ukraine, and Askar Akayev in Kyrgyzstan — had enjoyed the support of the U.S. during most of their rule. Washington had cited them repeatedly as the beacons of hope for democracy and globalisation in the territories of the former Soviet Union. "Their trouble began when they incrementally began to edge towards a resurgent Russia under Vladimir Putin." [5]
The two Georges - Bush and Soros - were not alone in fathering the "color" geostrategic transformations from the Balkans to the former Soviet Union and the Middle East. They received generous assistance from the likes of Freedom House, the National Endowment for Democracy, the National Democratic Institute, the International Republican Institute and other alleged non-governmental organizations." - [end excerpt]
You should do yourself a favor and read the rest here at: Australia.to News - Article Url.: http://tinyurl.com/yznjzqe
RELATED:
* HR articles concerning Afghanistan, the opium drug business, and the "Lotus Eater." - Url.: http://tinyurl.com/ydspatd
* Google search: HR & the criminal cartel - Url.: http://tinyurl.com/ya84asq
* HR: "David Frost 'front man' at al-Jazeera International?" - Dec. 27, 2005 - Url.: http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-28-05/discussion.cgi.31.html
* CIA and the criminal cartel's 'blowbacks' - Url.: http://tinyurl.com/y9xyu3b
* TIME - "Kyrgyzstan: Did Moscow Subvert a U.S. Central Asian Ally? - Url.: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1978590,00.html
* Google search: HR & George Soros - Url.: http://tinyurl.com/yjrkku2
* Wikipedia about George Soros - Url.: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Soros
* Quote: "New Initiative of the Soros Foundation - Kyrgyzstan - 'Forum of Reforms Project' focused on infilling vacuum in country development scenarios resulted from the take-over of a country after the events in March, 2005." - Url.: http://www.eurasianet.org/resource/kyrgyzstan/links/sfk_reform.shtml
* Al Jazeera - tekst + video - CIA crash in Kyrgyzstan - Url.: http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2010/04/20104833448686852.html
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1 comment:
Soros is still ahead: His stooge Obama is still in power in DC.
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