Tuesday, February 2, 2010

US military responsibilities to expand to internet

If there was one single factor responsible for destroying the climate eugenics agenda, for exposing the swine flu hoax, for undermining healthcare "reform" or outing the criminal banksters who destroyed the economy on purpose - and made a hefty profit on it at that, it's the internet. They made great progress in the pre-internet age, taking control over our media, our worthless education system, our religious institutions, and our government itself, but the internet has stifled their advance, and they're beginning to lose ground.

So make no mistake: when they talk about a fake cybersecurity threat - when has there ever - EVER - been an attack on the internet that was viable? (cue next false flag attack) - what they're really talking about it shutting down the internet so that they can have total control over the flow of information we receive - the creation of an Orwellian Ministry of Truth, which is responsible for lies.

    (Bilderberg member-owned) Financial Times -

    The US will take on a broader range of military responsibilities, including defending space and cyberspace, in spite of growing pressure on budgets, a long-awaited administration report is set to conclude on Monday.

    Robert Gates, US defence secretary, is due to unveil the Obama administration’s Quadrennial Defense Rev­iew, which shifts emphasis from the post-cold war doctrine that the US is able to fight two “major regional conflicts” at one time.

    According to a December draft, the US military will restructure its forces to “prevail in today’s wars” and buy more of the helicopters and unmanned drones that have proved their worth in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the draft also highlights “a multiplicity of threats”, including cyber­attacks and anti-satellite weapons, as well as terrorist groups and the prospect of more nuclear weapon states.

    “It is no longer appropriate to speak of ‘major regional conflicts’ as the sole or even the primary template for sizing, shaping and evaluating US forces,” the draft says. “Rather, US forces must be prepared to conduct a wide variety of missions under a range of different circumstances.”

    In an apparent nod to Iran, it says that within the next decade the US’s adversaries could include “regional powers armed with modest numbers of nuclear weapons, as well as larger more powerful states”. Despite President Barack Obama’s emphasis on beginning a drawdown in Afghanistan in July 2011, the draft also envisages 75,000 US troops will remain in the country for the “near and mid-term future”.

    The prospect of increased demands on the military comes as the administration releases its 2011 budget proposals on Monday, which analysts expect will underline growing strains on defence spending.

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