Based on an idea, I did a lil' bit of an experiment with
our dearest buddy Mike.
I just needed the latest, fresh video with his talking head visible.
We will see the results soon,
if any.
[for reference, this post is]
Published on Apr 20, 2020 - The U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a statement on Guyana Tuesday morning said the U.S. government looks forward to working with the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) and the international observer community on the recount of votes cast on March 02, 2020. Pompeo made his statement as he also addressed the situation in Venezuela. "Time for Maduro to go!"
Another U.S. Coup in Venezuela has been simmering on the back burner for some time now. They might decide on a Military invasion in the next few days,
but stop and think - why the grand pronouncements in front of media cameras? Why the BIG advertisement? What I sense Pompeo is doing -
is setting up a decoy - Hey, look over here?
In the last 24 hours, I see this sudden development, ( compliments via CNN ) as another staged decoy? I also want to mention - when I see the words, "Coronavirus or pandemic", I view them as smoke screens covering up the main topic.
And while all eyes are fixated on Venezuela or North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's health ... the real focus should be directed towards what is happening in and around Syria, (on the ground, air and sea) and Syria's Capital, Damascus. Attention needs to focus on Turkish Erdogan's military moves in Idlib, due to his NATO involvement, the increased Israeli activity in the Golan Heights and near the Lebanon Border into Syria, especially since "a Devil's Pack" has just been forged between Netanyahu and Gantz in a Unity Government. U.S. and NATO Troop movement from Afghanistan into Iraq and near the Syrian Border where the U,S. has established bases on both sides. Below is reports on other activity including a joint venture between the Penagon/U.S. Air Force and
SpaceX Starlink satellites on April 8
that linked up with multiple armed forces systems in a “massive” live fire exercise.
April 21, 2020 - Exclusive: Venezuela Socialists, opposition leaders begin secret talks amid pandemic - sources
Allies of both Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his bitter foe, opposition leader Juan Guaido,
have secretly begun exploratory talks as concerns grow about the possible impact of coronavirus, according to sources on both sides.
Exactly 18 Years After US Coup Against Venezuela, Pompeo and Abrams Warn Another is Coming
18 Years After Coup Against Venezuela, US Warns Another is Coming
Apr 13, 2020 - On the eighteenth anniversary of the U.S.-backed coup against the government of Venezuela, senior American officials announced that the people should prepare for another imminent push. “The goal is to replace [President Nicolas] Maduro’s illegitimate dictatorship with a legitimate transitional government that can hold free and fair elections to represent all Venezuelans. It is time for Maduro to go,”
announced Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
On Saturday the eleventh, exactly 18 years after the U.S. supported a briefly successful coup against Hugo Chavez, American envoy for Venezuela and coup specialist Elliott Abrams
warned that if Maduro resisted the implementation of said “transitional government” his departure would be far more “dangerous and abrupt,” effectively threatening him with another assassination attempt, like the one the U.S.
tacitly supported in 2018.
The U.S. has recently
upped its sanctions against Venezuela and sent warships to the region to enforce a blockade. The phrase “transitional government” has been used a great deal of late; the White House describing Bolivia’s Añez administration as such. Añez came to power in November thanks to a
U.S.-supported coup against President Evo Morales. That “transitional government” has since
massacred protestors, pulled Bolivia out of multiple international treaties and indefinitely
suspended elections. Thus, it came as no surprise when Maduro rejected the same fate as his ally, Morales. “We will take care of Venezuela,” he
replied, “Mr. Abrams, cool your jets.”
Maduro is well aware of the history of U.S. coups in his country, having been part of a counter-demonstration that successfully overturned the April 2002 putsch. Documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act
show that coup leaders at the time traveled back and forth to Washington D.C. several times in the months leading up to the event, where they received counsel and training from American officials. NED and USAID funding for the groups who carried it out quadrupled in 2002 and then quadrupled again in 2003. The U.S. government incontrovertibly knew by at least April 6 that a coup carried out by those they were funding and training was about to occur. But instead of alerting the government, they immediately endorsed events, falsely claiming that President Chavez had massacred his own people and then resigned.
Since then, Washington has never stopped attempting to remove the United Socialist Party from power, refusing to accept the validity of widely-lauded presidential elections in 2013 and 2018, funding virtually the entire spectrum of the domestic opposition for two decades.
Abrams’ life’s work has been to use the power of the U.S. government – overtly and covertly – to overthrow sovereign states through coups, sanctions and genocides. On his first day as Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs under Ronald Reagan in 1981, he jumped into action,
covering up the now-infamous El Mozote massacre in El Salvador, conducted by a death squad created, armed and trained by Washington. Since then he has been an architect of “dirty wars,” genocides and regime change in Guatemala, Nicaragua, Colombia and Panama, among others.
April 17th, 2020 - As US Shale Oil Plunges, Trump Admin Takes Aim at Venezuela
A confluence of factors suggests that such a Panama-style invasion of Venezuela is not only a possibility, but increasingly likely.
Apr 1, 2020 - This Venezuelan Patrol Ship Sunk Itself After Ramming A Cruise Liner With A Reinforced Hull
A Venezuelan Navy offshore patrol vessel recently sank after ramming a cruise liner in the Caribbean Sea. The cruise ship, which had no passengers on board at the time and has
a reinforced hull to sail through ice-filled waters, suffered only minimal damage in what the operating company, Columbia Cruise Services, has called an "act of aggression ... in international waters."
The incident occurred in the early hours of Mar. 30, 2020, but Columbia Cruise Services only
released an official statement on Apr. 1. The company, which is headquartered in Germany, said the
RCGS Resolute was drifting just over 13 miles off the coast of Isla La Tortuga, a Venezuelan island situated some 60 miles off the country's northern coast, when
ANBV Naiguatá, also known by its hull number GC-23, approached it.
The Venezuelan Navy ship ordered the cruise ship to follow it to Puerto Moreno on Isla De Margarita, located to the east, accusing it of violating the country's territorial waters.
"While the Master was in contact with the head office [in Germany], gun shots were fired and, shortly thereafter, the navy vessel approached the starboard side at speed with an angle of 135° and purposely collided with the RCGS Resolute," the statement continued. "The navy vessel continued to ram the starboard bow
in an apparent attempt to turn the ship’s head towards Venezuelan territorial waters."
The ship had been in Buenos Aires since November 2019 after it was blocked from leaving due to
an apparent legal dispute over unpaid debts between One Ocean Expeditions, a Canadian cruise operator, and another company. As noted, the Germany-based Columbia Cruise Services was operating the ship at the time of the incident off Venezuela.
April 21, 2020 - Two U.S. warships in South China Sea amid China-Malaysia standoff
Two U.S. warships are operating in the South China Sea, the Navy said on Tuesday, with three regional security sources saying
they were near an area of a standoff between China and Malaysia.
Apr 11, 2020 - Fire Breaks Out On China's Massive New Type 075 Amphibious Assault Ship
China's first big-deck amphibious assault ship, a huge vessel that was built in a miraculously short amount of time,
caught fire on Saturday, April 11th, 2020. Photos and video showing the ship billowing larg clouds of black smoke hit Chinese social media earlier in the day. The warship, which is the first of the new Type 075 class, was resting alongside the pier at its birthplace,
Hudong–Zhonghua Shipbuilding in Shanghai, when the blaze broke out.
It is unclear how much damage has been done to the amphibious assault ship at this time, although it appears the fire emanated from, or at least involved, its well deck. A well deck is a
floodable garage-like space that is used on amphibious assault ships for launching and recovering ship-to-shore transport boats and hovercraft, as well as amphibious fighting vehicles.
The second ship in the Type 075 class is wrapping up construction in the drydocks next to where the first is tied up.
Some speculate that it could be launched very soon.
As such,
the fire couldn't have come at a worse time and it could end up being an embarrassing setback for one of the People's Liberation Army Navy's banner shipbuilding programs, but just how big of a setback is still yet to be seen.
April 21, 2020 - Netanyahu and rival Gantz clinch Israel power-sharing deal
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his centrist election rival Benny Gantz
signed a deal on Monday to form a national emergency government, ending a year of unprecedented political deadlock.
Apr 1, 2020 - Army Apache Attack Helicopters Deploy To The Navy's Giant Sea Base In The Arabian Gulf
The Navy's new hulking
Expeditionary Sea Bases, also referred to as Afloat Forward Staging Bases, are amazingly versatile motherships that can rapidly set up shop in the most troubled of neighborhoods. Their big flight-decks can be used by any helicopter in the Pentagon's inventory. Although their primary mission is to support lumbering
MH-53E Sea Dragon mine-hunting helicopters, they also regularly play host to submarine hunting and utility helicopters, and even attack choppers. Case in point, late last March, U.S.
Army AH-64E Apache Guardians flew out to
USS Lewis B. Puller (ESB-3) in the Arabian Gulf to work on clearing the waters of enemy small boat swarms with the help of other assets forward-deployed to the region.
Mar 26, 2020 - Nukes Drive Germany's Plan To Replace Tornados With Typhoons, Super Hornets, and Growlers
Germany is reportedly getting close to settling on split purchase of
Eurofighter Typhoons and Boeing
F/A-18E/F Super Hornets and
EA-18G Growlers to replace its aging fleet of
Panavia Tornado swing-wing combat jets. A key driving factor behind the compromise proposal
is the need for the German Air Force to have an aircraft that could deliver American nuclear gravity bombs
under a NATO agreement. It has become
increasingly clear that the process for getting the Super Hornets certified to carry these weapons is significantly less complex than doing the same for the Typhoon.
Mar 20, 2020 - The Army And Navy Have Conducted The First Joint Test Of Their New Hypersonic Weapon
The U.S. Army and the U.S. Navy, in cooperation with the Missile Defense Agency, have conducted their first joint test launch of a new hypersonic warhead in the Pacific. The two services plan to eventually deploy this common
hypersonic boost-glide vehicle on top of
land-based and
submarine-launched missiles, respectively.
A launch took place at the Pacific Missile Range Facility in Kauai, Hawaii at approximately 10:30 PM local time on Mar. 19. A ground-launched rocket booster propelled the Common Hypersonic Glide Body vehicle, or C-HGB, to the desired speed and altitude, after which it "flew at hypersonic speed to a designated impact point," according to
a Pentagon statement. The announcement did not say how fast the vehicle flew or how far, but hypersonic speed is defined as being above Mach 5 and the Pentagon said that
the new weapons could enable the Army and the Navy to quickly "strike targets hundreds and even thousands of miles away."
Mar 16, 2020 - Warning To Iran: AC-130W Gunship Practices Slaying Boats With U.S. Navy In The Persian Gulf
A U.S. Air Force
AC-130W Stinger II gunship recently conducted a first-of-its-kind training exercise in the Persian Gulf with U.S. Navy
P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol planes and
Cyclone class patrol boats. These assets working together could provide a formidable means of defeating swarms of small boats, such as the ones that Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
operates in significant numbers. The exercise came just days before Iranian-backed militias killed two U.S. troops and a British service member, and wounded more,
in a rocket attack that has led
to retaliatory American airstrikes and a spike in tensions in the region.
The exercise took place between Mar. 8 and 9, 2020, but the Navy's top command in the Middle East
only publicly announced that it had occurred on Mar. 15. It's not clear how many AC-130Ws, P-8As, and
Cyclones took part in total, but video and images Naval Forces Central Command (NAVCENT) subsequently released show at least one Stinger II gunship and three of the patrol boats, including the USS
Monsoon.
Mar 13, 2020 - Space Force Just Received Its First New Offensive Weapon
U.S. Space Force has begun operating a new offensive weapon system, an upgraded version of a ground-based satellite communications jamming system, for the first time in its short history. The first iteration of the Counter Communications System entered U.S. Air Force service in 2004 and the program has now gotten transferred to the newest branch of the American military. The Space Force declared it had reached initial operational capability with the
Counter Communications System Block 10.2, or CCS B10.2, on Mar. 9.
Mar 13, 2020 - https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/32574/heres-everything-we-know-about-america-airstrikes-on-iranian-related-targets-in-Iraq
Mar 11, 2020 - Navy Filmed Russian Maritime Patrol Planes Buzzing Their Arctic Submarine Base Camp
The U.S.-Canadian North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, has released a video, which U.S. Navy personnel down below captured, showing a pair of Russian
Tu-142 Bear maritime patrol aircraft flying at relatively low altitude over a site off the coast of northwest Alaska being used to support the latest iteration of the Navy's
ICEX submarine exercise. The U.S. military says that the Tu-142s loitered over the area for some time as part of a 12-hour-long patrol earlier this week.
U.S. Air Force General Terrence O’Shaughnessy, head of U.S. Northern Command,
offered the additional details about the Tu-142s and their activities during a hearing before Congress on Mar. 10, 2020. The actual Russian patrol
had taken place the day before. Air Force
F-22 Raptor stealth fighters and Royal Canadian Air Force
CF-18 Hornets escorted the maritime patrol planes while they flew through the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ). Russian aerial patrols near Alaska
are not uncommon and routinely end without incident.
Mar 6, 2020 - The Navy's Arleigh Burke Class Destroyers To Be Armed With Hypersonic Weapon Interceptors
The U.S. military is developing an interceptor intended to knock down
hypersonic boost-glide vehicles specifically for deployment on U.S. Navy
Arleigh Burke class destroyers equipped with the
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense system. This comes as that service says it expects to soon send two more of those destroyers to Spain, where they would join four other ships of that class that are forward-deployed there to, among other things, provide
regional missile defense coverage.
U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Jon Hill, head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency (MDA),
offered the new details on what is formally known as the Regional Glide Phase Weapon System (RGPWS) program at the annual McAleese Defense Programs Conference in Washington, D.C. on Mar. 4, 2020. U.S. Navy Admiral Michael Gilday, the Chief of Naval Operations, the service's top officer,
discussed plans for the additional forward-deployed
Arleigh Burkes while testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Mar. 5.
Mar 5, 2020 - Marines Set To Be The First To Bring Back Land-Based Tomahawk Missiles Post-INF Treaty
The U.S. Marine Corps is on track to be the first branch of the U.S. military to re-introduce
a ground-launched version of the
Tomahawk cruise missile following the collapse of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty,
or INF, with Russia last year. Though this weapon
is most often associated with strikes
against targets on land, the Marines plan to primarily employ them as land-based anti-ship weapons.
U.S. Marine Corps Commandant General David Berger
offered details on his service's anti-ship missile plans while testifying before Congress on Mar. 5, 2020. The Pentagon's budget proposal for the upcoming 2021 Fiscal Year revealed that the service had requested $125 million
to purchase 48 Tomahawks, but details about the exact purpose of the acquisition were kept classified initially, according to
official budget documents and a report from
Task and Purpose.
Feb 25, 2020 - The Air Force And SpaceX Are Teaming Up For A 'Massive' Live Fire Exercise
Just last week, Air Force acquisition chief William Roper told reporters at the Pentagon that
the Air Force and SpaceX will conduct an event on April 8, together with other branches of the U.S. military, that will see
SpaceX Starlink satellites link up with multiple armed forces systems in a “massive” live fire exercise.
The demonstration will reportedly involve
shooting down a drone and a cruise missile and will take place at several different sites including Marine Corps Air Station Yuma in Arizona to Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.
The massive tests will also include ground forces, submarines, ships, and a variety of space-based assets.
SpaceX's potentially game-changing Starlink concept involves launching large volumes of satellites – dozens at a time – that circle the earth providing broadband data-connectivity.
The live fire exercise will be part of a larger test of the
Advanced Battle Management System (ABMS), a new communications ecosystem
designed to enable Joint All-Domain Command and Control (JADC2), allowing U.S. forces and allies to coordinate military operations in real-time across all domains, such as sea, land, air, space and cyber operations.
Published on Jun 15, 2019 (15:40 min.)