SNB

Someone explain to China the meaning of “chutzpah”: China, the current occupier of Tibet, is telling Israel that adding new apartments to Gilo is an obstacle to peace. Because it’s not like they’re not occupying an entire nation that was really a nation before China took it over. Unlike the fictional nation of “Palestine.”

Erekat: Israel is not a partner for peace. Meryl: The record’s stuck. The record’s stuck. The record’s stuck.

State-sponsored British anti-Semitism: Britain’s Channel 4 just ran an “expose” on the influence of The Israel Lobby (da-da-DUM!). Wow, what state moneys can buy in Jew-hatred. They were charged with racial hate (or whatever that charge is in Britain) when they ran an expose on terrorists recruiting in British mosques. Any guesses on whether they’ll get charged with inciting racial hatred on this one? Shyeah.

Oh, no way this goes wrong: The CIA is launching a campaign to recruit Arab-Americans. If their screening is as strenuous as the FBI and the Army, we can expect a lot more Major Hasan incidents.

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3 Responses to SNB

  1. I’m sure that if the CIA ends up recruiting a trigger-happy double-agent that pulls a Hasan or 9/11, the only thing they’ll be charged with is failing to properly file an income tax return for the dayjob at ISI, Saudi Intel, Hamas, or Soros Foundation.

    -ls

  2. Sabba Hillel says:

    Actually, the CIA is setting up an equivalent of the “20 committee” during World War II. This committee actually ran all the German agents in Great Britain (Which is why it was called the “double cross” (XX) committee). This is the group that ran the “agents” who reported that Patton was actually in charge of the invasion of Europe from the south of England and kept many German troops away from Normandy. The CIA will “recruit” as many Al Q’aida members as it can and feed them the information that we want them to have. Meanwhile, they will actually have to perform real missions in order to “prove” that they are loyal to the U.S.

    Boy, spy novels really do come in handy. Now if only I could believe that the C.I.A was as good as the novels make them out to be. After all, they wouldn’t follow the Obama administration off the cliff.

  3. Michael Lonie says:

    The CIA hasn’t been competent at counterespionage since its management fired Angleton in 1975. It would not surprise me in the least to find that Langley was riddled with agents of our fiends, the Saudis, whose product went straight to our enemies from the higher ups in Saudi intel.

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