The secret attempt to rewrite history blew up in Democrat faces, thanks to well connected whistleblower Colonel Earl Matthews. On January 6, he was top lawyer for Major General William Walker, who was the commanding general of D.C.’s National Guard during the barbarian invasion. Nancy Pelosi’s hand picked team of Q-Anon Shaman-hunting inquisitors accidentally asked the right questions to the right people and now they’re scrambling to control the political damage the answers did. Ranking generals flat out lied to Congress, then, to cover it up, carefully crafted a “closely held revisionist document about the Capitol riot” that’s worthy of the best Stalinist. The Inspector General needs to get with the program, too. His report was “inaccurate” and “sloppy work.”
Army’s ‘alternate’ history
Army Staff ultimately sought “to create an alternate history which would be the Army’s official recollection of events,” Colonel Earl Matthews writes. Politico calls the 36-page memo they got their hands on, “blistering.” The Army, “has created its own closely held revisionist document about the Capitol riot.
The document surfaced as “officials involved in the response that day try to explain their decision-making.”
When top officials testified before the House oversight panel, they lied through their teeth. To back up their perjury, Army officials “referenced but never fully revealed, a ‘Report of the Army’s Operations on January 6 2021.'”
Matthews says “it lays out a fabricated timeline in a bid to burnish the Army’s reputation.” They want to change history to show that the National Guard weren’t told to sit on their hands for hours, but they were. “In March 2021, MG Walker was told by a friend that LTG Piatt was so upset with MG Walker that he directed the development of an Army ‘White Paper’ to retell events of 6 January in a light more favorable to LTGs Flynn, Piatt, Secretary McCarthy and the Army Staff,” Matthews revealed.
The Army Staff ultimately sought “to create an alternate history which would be the Army’s official recollection of events,” Matthews continues, adding: “The end product, a revisionist tract worthy of the best Stalinist or North Korea propagandist, was close held, kept secret from the public.”
General Michael Flynn’s brother, General Charles Flynn, who is now the commanding general of the U.S. Army Pacific, and Army Staff Director Lieutenant General Walter Piatt “lied to Congress about their response to pleas for the D.C. Guard to quickly be deployed” The toothless watchdog of an Inspector General inaccurately misleads the public by reporting that “Ryan McCarthy had to call Walker twice on January 6 to order him to deploy the D.C. Guard.” That is “an outrageous assertion” and “as insulting as it is false” because McCarthy himself was “incommunicado or unreachable for most of the afternoon.”
2:30 p.m. phone call
The Army falsely denied Flynn’s participation in the 2:30 p.m. phone call virtually ordering the guard to stand down. The memo spells out that “every D.C. Guard leader was desperate to get to the Capitol to help.” Then, “stunned by the delay in deployment.”
Responding “to civil unrest in Washington is ‘a foundational mission, a statutory mission of the D.C. National Guard,’ Their attitude was ‘This is What We Do.’ ‘Send Me.'” Democrat’s version of history says the opposite. Everyone on the call was “astounded” except Piatt and Flynn.
Lieutenant General Walter Piatt lied when he “denied to Congress that they had said the Guard shouldn’t deploy to the Capitol.” He wrote in a written response to House Oversight Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney at “no point on January 6 did I tell anyone that the D.C. National Guard should not deploy directly to the Capitol.”
That statement, Matthews flatly declares, is “false and misleading.” General Charles Flynn lied in an attempt to alter history when he claimed he “never expressed a concern about the visuals, image, or public perception of” sending Guardsmen to the Capitol Building. That answer, Matthews insists officially in his memo, is “outright perjury.”
During the call in question, he and Walker both “heard Flynn identify himself and unmistakably heard him say that optics of a National Guard presence on Capitol Hill was an issue for him. That it would not look good.” He also testified in the memo that “either Piatt or Flynn mentioned ‘peaceful protesters.'” The generals lied when they told Congress the Guard wasn’t ready to “respond to the chaos that day.”
Matthews calls what they did say to re-write history “the willful deception of Congress.” The way Matthews remembers it, “then-Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund ‘pleaded’ on the call for the immediate deployment of the National Guard to the Capitol.” Rioters had already “breached the building’s perimeter. Piatt and Flynn “suggested instead that Guardsmen take over D.C. police officers’ traffic duties so those officers could head to the Capitol.”