Spooky spy agencies can declassify secret intelligence memos in a big hurry, when they want to, which proves that the whole battle is over control of the narrative. New World Order globalists who tell Joe Biden what he’s supposed to say are playing serious head games with Vladimir Putin. That has at least one rat running around Russia really nervous. It appears that the Kremlin is infested with moles. How else would Volodymyr Zelensky get the intel he needed to thwart multiple assassination attempts. Here at home, the spooks are spooked. By letting the world know about the Russian rats, sources and methods were compromised. Every field agent under deep cover can’t help wondering if they’ll get thrown under the political bus next. The big question is, who are Biden’s handlers trying to convince? It’s certainly not Russia.
Psychological Battle of words
Joe Biden knows better than go head to head with Vlad Putin in a battle of wits but Joe’s handlers don’t mind giving him some intelligence leaks that work great as sound bites. Each one was carefully loaded with weighted words to demoralize Putin into pulling his tanks back out of Ukraine.
Even CNN admits that allied spy agencies are “waging a psychological war.” They say it serves Vlad right, calling him “an expert at the genre, who is now effectively taking a dose of his own medicine.” The thing that really upsets open borders globalists is his “Russia First” nationalism.
The picture Jen Psaki’s team is painting with words envisions “a bogged down, demoralized and dysfunctional Russian military.” The invaders are described as “taking disastrous losses” in battle. Meanwhile, they have viewers at home convinced there’s all sorts of “growing political tension inside the Kremlin.”
Vlad, they say, “is isolated, poorly advised and lacking real intelligence on just how badly the war is going.” Intel officials admit that the whole idea is “preventing Putin from defining the narrative of the war.” They may have prodded him into it by releasing declassified intelligence at a time when “many geopolitical experts” thought he’d never go through with it.
You don’t get to be head of the KGB without learning a thing or two about spy-craft and that was Vlad’s previous position before he became president. CNN notes that the “remarkable detail of the declassified intelligence assessments must also be especially galling to Putin, a former KGB officer and intelligence chief.” In the psychological battle he must be losing sleep over figuring out who the mole is, because it’s crystal clear “western intelligence agencies have the capacity to see deep into the Kremlin’s war effort and internal politics.”
Along with infuriating the big cheese, it makes all the underlings so anxious they walk around on tiptoes. Everyone’s afraid to talk to their co-workers because any one of them might be the rat. Worse, the innocent ones are afraid of being outed by the guilty ones, falsely accused, and sent to Siberia, or worse.
Nervous intelligence professionals
Steve Hall, former chief of Russia operations for the CIA was adamant with CNN that such behavior “makes intelligence professionals, even former ones like me, nervous, because, of course, it’s so ingrained in us to protect sources and methods.”
A really big part of the battle is that “outsiders have no way of independently assessing the full accuracy of the information being pushed into the public view.” Nobody knows where it’s all coming from. It’s pretty obvious that globalist forces of evil have their fingerprints all over this but the ghosts aren’t about to come out of the shadows. The whole point is to keep the Russians guessing.
While Moscow claims that after reassessing their strategy in light of newly uncovered information and backing down from the Ukrainian capital, western propaganda mills report Putin’s forces are “repositioning,” possibly for “an intensified assault in eastern Ukrainian regions where Moscow has been pummeling civilians and razing cities.” The battle of words rages on. Such meme warfare isn’t going unnoticed.
One of Britain’s “top spy chiefs,” Jeremy Fleming, said recently that Putin had “massively misjudged” the war. Also “the resistance of the Ukrainian people and his own military’s capacity, and had been poorly served by his subordinates.”
Things aren’t going so well on the real battle front. “We’ve seen Russian soldiers, short of weapons and morale, refusing to carry out orders, sabotaging their own equipment and even accidentally shooting down their own aircraft.” Those are the kinds of things not normally discussed by a leading espionage agency chief.
He just happens to confirm the leaks from the U.S. “that opened a window into the war and Putin’s inner circle.” Putin is being “misinformed” by advisers “about how badly the Russian military is performing and the impact of sanctions on the Russian economy.” Biden’s communications director Kate Bedingfield followed up on camera saying Putin’s advisers were “too afraid to tell him the truth.“