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"MI6 + CIA KILLED 18 TO PUSH TRUMP START WWIII AGAINST RUSSIA".M.Kryzhanovsky, CIA

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Mikhail Kryzhanovsky, a former KGB and CIA  

kryzhanovsky77@gmail. com  

New York  

 

Why Brits kill people linked to Russia and blame Russian President Putin for the murders? Why they push Trump to start the war?  

 

EXPLANATION : World War III : Russia is the target and the prize.  

 

The sources of energy (oil, gas, uranium, coal) are rapidly coming to an end. At the same time China, India, Brazil, Indonesia are rapidly growing. We have 9 billion people on Earth with energy, food and fresh water supplies coming to an end in the next 25-40 years. That means that 500 million Europeans and 300 million Americans have to lower their standards of living – and they will not accept this! On top of it we have the global financial and economic crisis which is actually killing America. The only way out – to capture resources that still remain to preserve our standards of living. Russia has the world's largest reserves of mineral and energy resources, the world's largest forest reserves and 25% of the world's fresh water. Russia is energy superpower : #1 in the world in natural gas reserves, #8 in oil reserves and #2 in coal reserves.  

Russian President Putin will do everything and will pay anything to postpone the war as long as possible, at least until 2020 when military reform will be completed. Putin is quickly turning Russian army into the strongest army in the world, but he needs 4 more years. That's why Rockefellers are in rush. Hillary hates Putin, though she was working for him, Kissinger, Rockefellers guy, was working with Putin – but these are all political games. The facts are – USA can't wait until Putin's army is ready for the war in 2020, they have to attack. Millions of Americans will die.  

 

MI6+CIA "PUSH TRUMP" OPERATION  

 

1. Alexander Litvinenko was a British naturalised Russian defector and former officer of the Russian FSB secret service who specialised in tackling organised crime. He fled with his family to London and was granted asylum in the United Kingdom, where he worked as a journalist, writer and consultant for the British intelligence services. On 1 November 2006, Litvinenko suddenly fell ill and was hospitalised in what was established as a case of poisoning by radioactive polonium-210; he died from the poisoning on 23 November.. A British murder investigation pointed to Andrey Lugovoy, a former member of Russia's Federal Protective Service, as the prime suspect. Britain demanded that Lugovoy be extradited, which is against the Constitution of Russia, which directly prohibits extradition of Russian citizens. Russia denied the extradition, leading to the cooling of relations between Russia and the United Kingdom.  

2. Matthew Puncher investigated the 2006 poisoning of former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko by determining the levels of radioactive polonium 210 in the deceased’s body. Puncher was then found dead in his home with knife wounds to his neck and chest оn May 4, 2016.  

3. Scot Young Young, a developer, a multimillionaire fixer to the world's super-rich, who had business in Russia and who died on December 8, 2014 after falling from a balcony in a London flat and being impaled on railings, was one of a few people to die in strange circumstances after telling police he was being targeted by Russian hitmen.  

4, 5, 6. A trio of Young's business partners – Paul Castle, Robbie Curtis and Johnny Elichaoff – all died in "suicides" in November 2010 through November 2014. CIA considered their deaths suspicious.  

7. Boris Berezovsky: Berezovsky was found apparently hanged in his bathroom in 2013. Police ruled it a suicide, but U. S. intelligence officials suspected an assassination.  

8. Badri Patarkatsishvili, Georgian oligarch and business partner of Berezovsky's died of an apparent heart attack in 2008, probably caused by a poison.  

9. Yuri Golubev, nother associate of Berezovsky, was found dead in 2007 in London. The oil oligarch and outspoken Putin critic was a known enemy of the Kremlin.  

10, 11. Stephen Moss, a 46-year-old who died of a sudden heart attack in 2003 and Stephen Curtis, killed in a 2004 helicopter crash. The pair was suspected of helping Russian oligarchs funnel money into Britain.  

12. Gareth Williams, a British Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) spy, was found decomposing inside a padlocked sports bag. He had been helping the NSA trace international money-laundering routes used by Moscow-based mafia cells. Yet Scotland Yard called this an accident.  

13. On November 10, 2012, Alexander Perepilichny jogged around the gated community southwest of London where he lived in multimillion-dollar mansion alongside members of the English elite. He collapsed on Granville Road, within 100 meters of the house he was renting for $20, 000 a month. Police and medics were called to the scene, but within 30 minutes, Perepilichny was pronounced dead. Police told the press the death was “unexplained. ” A 44-year-old man of average build and above-average wealth had simply fallen down and died in the leafy suburb he’d recently begun calling home.  

14, 15. Daniel McGrory – a journalist for The Times who reported extensively on Litvinenko’s death – died on February 20, 2017, five days before the airing of a documentary about the case in which he was interviewed. McGrory’s family firmly believe he died of natural causes, telling BuzzFeed News an autopsy found he had a brain haemorrhage due to an enlarged heart. But now the four CIA sources have told that British intelligence officials are so concerned about Russia-sanctioned killings that they have taken a harder look, asking US spy agencies for information about McGrory's death “in the context of assassinations”. A second contributor to the documentary, the US security consultant Paul Joyal, was shot outside his home shortly after it aired by two unknown assailants, and only narrowly survived.  

16. The Russian diplomat Igor Ponomarev died in London two days before Litvinenko was poisoned – and on the eve of a planned meeting with Mario Scaramella, a key associate of the defector who was investigating corrupt activities by the Russian secret services in Italy. Ponomarev complained of extreme thirst and reportedly downed three litres of water just before keeling over after a trip to the opera, raising suspicions that he, too, had been poisoned – but his body was reportedly whisked back to Russia before a postmortem could be performed.  

17, 18. Stephen Curtis, a lawyer, died on March 3, 2004. The strapping, round-cheeked British solicitor had been enlisted before the inception of Project Moscow to route billions of pounds from Russia to Britain for Boris and Badri – without getting it snarled up in UK anti-money-laundering checks. He had succeeded, siphoning the money into a trust called the New World Value Fund, and earning himself commissions of $18 million with which he bought a huge gothic castle on an island off Dorset’s Jurassic Coast.  

Then, shortly after a scheme to move $1. 3 billion was completed in 2003, another British lawyer named Stephen Moss, who had worked alongside Curtis on the transaction, died suddenly of a heart attack on September 22, 2003, at age 46. And, at almost exactly the same time, Curtis himself started receiving death threats. “Curtis, where are you? We are here. We are behind you. We follow you, ” said a man with a thick Russian accent in one of the messages.  

The lawyer hired a team of bodyguards, and at the end of February he told his uncle: “If anything happens to me in the next few weeks, it will not be an accident. ” The following week, on 3 March 2004, his private helicopter nose-dived into a field on the approach to Bournemouth airport, killing him and the pilot in a ball of flames. His inquest, a judicial inquiry to determine the cause of death, ruled the crash was an accident – the helicopter went down in poor weather – though the coroner acknowledged that the case had “all the ingredients for an espionage thriller”.  

Four sources confirmed that CIA had files on both men, stored in classified databases, containing information linking their deaths to Russia.  

 

And these two are still alive.  

 

Sergei Skripal is a former Russian military intelligence (GRU) officer who acted as a double agent for MI6 during the 1990s and early 2000s. In December 2004, he was arrested by Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) and later tried, convicted of high treason, and sentenced to 13 years in prison. He settled in the UK in 2010 following the Illegals Program spy swap.  

On 4 March 2018, he and his daughter Yulia, who was visiting him from Moscow, were poisoned with what the British government claims to be a Novichok nerve agent. As of 22 March 2018, they remain in a critical condition at Salisbury District Hospital. The poisoning is being investigated as an attempted murder.  

 

Now enjoy this bullshit.  

 

Trump, May, Merkel and Macron issue joint statement blaming Russia for Sergei Skripal poisoning  

March 15, 2018  

 

 

We, the leaders of France, Germany, the United States and the United Kingdom, abhor the attack that took place against Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury, UK, on 4 March 2018. A British police officer who was also exposed in the attack remains seriously ill, and the lives of many innocent British citizens have been threatened. We express our sympathies to them all, and our admiration for the UK police and emergency services for their courageous response. This use of a military-grade nerve agent, of a type developed by Russia, constitutes the first offensive use of a nerve agent in Europe since the Second World War. It is an assault on UK sovereignty and any such use by a State party is a clear violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention and a breach of international law. It threatens the security of us all. The United Kingdom briefed thoroughly its allies that it was highly likely that Russia was responsible for the attack. We share the UK assessment that there is no plausible alternative explanation, and note that Russia´s failure to address the legitimate request by the UK government further underlines its responsibility. We call on Russia to address all questions related to the attack in Salisbury. Russia should in particular provide full and complete disclosure of the Novichok programme to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). Our concerns are also heightened against the background of a pattern of earlier irresponsible Russian behaviour. We call on Russia to live up to its responsibilities as a member of the UN Security Council to uphold international peace and security.  

 

ATTENTION: A security consultant who has worked for Christopher Steele and helped him to compile the controversial dossier on Donald Trump that detailed his allegedly corrupt dealings with Putin, was close to the Russian double agent Skripal poisoned in England. The consultant, who The Telegraph is declining to identify, lived close to Col Skripal and knew him for some time. SO, WHAT TRUMP IS GOING TO DO?  

 

Read a full story about Conspiracy of the Century here: https://yapishu. net/book/124508

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