The psychological operation behind Julian Assange – the guy who fooled many (17)

It goes without saying that nobody could expect Wikileaks, Julian Assange, and his gang of cypherpunks to be aware of what people might be doing on their computers. More so when they offer up another “leak” involving the US government.

Assange and Wikileaks would like you to think otherwise, but his stay at Belmarsh is not some random injustice. It is because he disregarded the terms of his bail in relation to the rape charges, for which he received a 50-week sentence. “There’ll now be no competing extradition request to the one from the U.S.” as a result of these accusations being withdrawn in November 2019.

After serving his 50-week term, Assange remained in Belmarsh, where he pursued an appeal for extradition to the United States following his indictment in May and June of 2020. Again, despite the claims made by Wikileaks and his supporters, even his own attorney declined to request bail on his behalf because of his lengthy history of evading capture.

Even in 2020, Assange attempted to use his fear of getting Covid as justification for his release; however, the judge was not persuaded and cited his prior remarks in which he stated he would prefer kill himself than be extradited to the United States.

Again contrary to what Wikileaks would have you believe, Assange is charged with espionage, hacking, and assisting Snowden flee to the United States—as he has acknowledged on record—in addition to publishing.

The indictment also names the Chaos Computer Club by name, alleging that in 2009, Assange presented at their 26th annual conference (26C3).

This presentation wasn’t short, as originally claimed by Daniel Schmidt, but it was one hour long, and he, together with Assange, even got a standing ovation for it.

We all know that up till May of this year, Assange was still in Belmarsh appealing for extradition while he, Wikileaks and his supporters continued and continue to tell you that he is only a persecuted journalist for publishing leaks that has committed no crimes. But here’s some information for you.

Are you aware of the name Philip Agee? He was a CIA case officer who from the early 1970s leaked classified information in books and magazines: CovertAction Information Bulletin and CounterSpy. He revealed information about CIA covert activities in Latin America, including the names of informant recruits and the identities of 250 of the agency’s undercover agents. He concealed himself under the first amendment, much like Assange. He authored Inside The Company in 1975 while seeking refuge in London, and he acknowledges that members of the Cuban Communist Party urged him to write more.

Agee was deported in 1977 from the United Kingdom and again from other European nations. Before relocating to Germany and Cuba, he was granted a Nicaraguan passport by the left-wing Sandinista administration.

Similar to Wikileaks, CoverAction magazine released material that it had obtained on the CIA. Eliminate the agency and impose “a pro-soviet, communist government in Washington.”

Agee approached the KGB resident in Mexico City and promised “a treasure trove of information,” but they were too suspicious to accept, according to General Oleg Kalugin, the former head of KGB counterintelligence. Rather, Cuba embraced Agee and proceeded to provide intelligence with the Russians.

Agee on the far left meeting Fidel Castro

Vasili Mitrokhin, a KGB activist, claims that the KGB kept in touch with Agree via a London correspondent for Novosti, the state news organization that functioned as the equivalent of RT in those days. In Mitrokhin’s files, it is stated that KGB headquarters put together a team to provide CovertAction with materials and Cuban intelligence that were deliberately meant to undermine the CIA. Furthermore, he stated that the journal was “founded on the initiative of the KGB.”

Vasili Mitrokhin

Agee learned how to use computers for research in the 1980s from Daniel Brandt, the creator of the NameBase database, which maintained online records focusing on people involved in US foreign policy, crime, and the international intelligence community.

It was in 2008 in a Havana hospital that Philip Agee passed away. His wife, Giselle Roberge, said “he was a friend of the Cuban revolution.” “Granma, Cuba’s Communist Party newspaper, published a small story describing Agee as “a loyal friend of Cuba.”

What is the relativity with Julian Assange? I let the readers figure it out:

Philip Agee
Julian Assange

Julian Assange is another puppet, in yet another psychological operation and he is the guy that fooled many.


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