Kyiv's Russia incursion plan required Western intel, meaning the U.S. knew in advance what Ukraine was going to do
Washington keeps getting
caught in lies as the Western establishment pretends to not be backing Ukraine with its incursion into Russia.
A senior U.S. intelligence officer acknowledged this week that Kyiv had access to a consortium of satellite imagery that the Zelensky regime used to plan and execute their invasion into Russia's Kursk Region, a claim that Washington denies as false.
According to
the powers that be here in the United States, nobody knew in advance that Ukraine was planning the invasion, even though it has already come out that both the U.S. and Great Britain "provided Ukraine with satellite imagery and other information," to quote a
New York Times report.
The
Times included a caveat claim that the satellite imagery and other intelligence was not meant "to help Ukraine push deeper into Russia, but to allow its commanders to better track Russian reinforcements that might attack them or cut off their eventual withdrawal back to Ukraine" because it was supposedly delivered
after the start of the incursion.
Vice Admiral Frank Whitworth, who directs the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), commented that the
Times may be confused. The paper's sources could have been referring to the commercial satellite imagery that the U.S. has been giving Ukraine access to for years through the Global Enhanced GEOINT Delivery (G-EGD) portal, operated by the space company Maxar.
"There were over 400,000 accounts in that particular portal," Whitworth said at a recent discussion panel hosted by the Intelligence and National Security Alliance. "And so, the availability of commercial imagery is sustained."
"If that is what they are using for purposes of this particular campaign, this limited campaign in Kursk, then I'll defer to them to confirm that. But the availability is always there."
(Related: The U.S. Navy component of the West's military-industrial complex is having to
sideline replenishment ships because there are not enough crew members available – because many Navy servicemen quit or were killed due to Wuhan coronavirus [COVID-19] "vaccine" mandates.)
Ukraine wants control of captured Russian territory "for some period of time"
Speaking at the same event was CIA Deputy Director David Cohen, who revealed that based on the conversations that he and his agency have had with Ukraine, "there seems to be intent on retaining some of that [captured Russian] territory for some period of time."
In other words, Ukraine is using U.S. intelligence to advance its anti-Russia agenda, which crosses the red line that Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke about in his repeated warnings against the U.S. helping Ukraine to take Russian territory.
The purpose of the panel, by the way, mostly centered around discussing how Washington uses commercial solutions to enhance its espionage and military capabilities, as well as how it plans to make even more use of this strategy in the future.
Russia already considers Ukraine's proxy war against Russia to be a product of the U.S. Russia recognizes that Ukraine is less a country and more a de facto private military corporation that is fighting for Washington's interests
an nobody else's, especially not the American people Washington supposedly represents.
Russian officials are making it abundantly clear that they consider the U.S. and other NATO member states to be parties in direct conflict with Russia, which means this is already, in many ways, a world war in motion.
"Isn't that an act of war?" asked a commenter about the U.S. sharing satellite imagery and other intelligence with the Ukrainian military.
"We are way beyond point out individual 'acts of war' nowadays," responded another.
"Russia has ample cause to declare a justified war against the West, from the destruction of Nord Stream to the seizure of financial assets, to the funding, training, and arming of Ukraine, to attacking nuclear early warning radar sites – any single one of these could have started a war. The only reason there is no war is because Russia does not find it convenient at the moment."
If the U.S. is not careful, Russia could retaliate for all the lying and deception. Learn more at
WWIII.news.
Sources for this article include:
NYTimes.com
NaturalNews.com