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  • Field reports from the den intelligence network

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say. Part A (Russia)
    February 21, 2005, Monday

    TABLEAU: FIELD REPORTS FROM THE DEN INTELLIGENCE NETWORK


    According to our experts, the favorable coverage given by the
    Washington Post and the New York Times to the Communist Party (CPRF)
    protest rallies on February 12 (including quotes from Gennadi
    Zyuganov: "the Putin regime is teetering") cannot be a coincidence.
    This is evidence that the extensive media pressure being exerted on
    President Putin in the lead-up to the Bratislava summit is reaching
    its peak; and these efforts to squeeze strategic concessions from the
    Kremlin even involve anti-American opposition forces within Russia.
    Thus, Putin is being driven into a position where he is caught in the
    crossfire; then, according to the American strategists, he would have
    to accept all terms for a "nuclear surrender."

    A pre-planned visit to Moscow by Henry Kissinger, former US secretary
    of state and prominent member of global para-Masonic organizations
    (Bilderberg Club, Trilateral Commission, etc.) served as a warm-up
    exercise, viewed by the Washington administration as a key mechanism
    of influencing the Kremlin leadership. Condoleezza Rice, who had
    taken an extremely hardline stance at her meeting with Foreign
    Minister Sergei Lavrov in Istanbul, played "bad cop"; while
    Kissinger, who came to Moscow especially to "work on the target
    directly," played "good cop." However, according to sources close to
    the government, the demands made by Kissinger proved to be even
    harsher than Rice's public attacks. In effect, they come down to
    demanding that Putin should reconcile himself to the "velvet
    revolutions" in Ukraine and Georgia, and make no attempt to counter
    similar processes in Central Asia and the European part of the former
    USSR (Armenia, Belarus, Moldova); Russia should also reduce its arms
    exports and cease cooperating with Iran in nuclear energy and high
    technologies.

    Actually, in relation to the Chinese-Korean "nuclear missle
    maneuver," the iron fist of the "world government" is thoroughly
    encased in a velvet glove: if Russia joins in the American ultimatum
    and supports a return to the six-nation negotiation process (USA,
    Russia, China, Japan, North Korea, South Korea) with the purpose of
    establishing international monitoring for Pyongyang's nuclear
    warheads, then strategic cooperation on safety and security measures
    at Russia's nuclear facilities could become more generous towards the
    Kremlin. And a comprehensive agreement covering this area of
    cooperation could be signed within nine or ten months of a
    "declaration of intentions in Bratislava."

    Insider sources report that the Foreign Ministry secretariat has
    received a directive from the presidential administration: be as
    receptive as possible to American proposals across the full range of
    issues under discussion.

    According to our London sources, Russia's North Caucasus may soon
    witness some large-scale developments capable of starting the process
    of Russia's disintegration. British intelligence agencies have
    prepared some recommendations for Islamic fundamentalists in Russia:
    proposing to take advantage of the people's growing discontent with
    Putin's social policies and Caucasus policy, as an irrefutable cover
    story for terrorist attacks directed against Russian federal
    officials.

    As our experts predicted, despite the very "democratic" reduction of
    the share of votes for Shiite representatives from 76% to 48% by the
    occupational administration in Iraq, control over the government will
    be exerted by the Shiite clergy. Thus, American intervention in Iraq
    actually played up to Iran and enabled Iran to achieve goals not
    achieved during the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, according to our
    sources in Beirut.

    Henceforth a repeated positive verdict of the Texas court on the
    lawsuit of YUKOS against the Russian Federation worth $28 billion
    should be confirmed by the international court in the Hague, which
    might take 12-18 months. If the lawsuit is upheld, sequestration of
    all exports of Russian oil to cover the judicial costs, damages and
    so on is an entirely realistic prospect.

    Source: Zavtra, February 17, 2005, p. 1
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