Written by Tyler Durden
It is. many years besides lateand alternate and independent media have already done so much work to uncover reality, including 600+ pages of bookswhich have been published, but New York Times on Sunday he published an extended study on The Partnership: The Secret past of America's function in the Ukraine War).
Until recently, mainstream media guards would not even admit that War replacement developing from the very beginning of the conflict in Ukraine. This happened even after in February 2024 the alleged historical paper admitted that the CIA had built 12 "secret spy bases" in Ukraineto wage a shadow war against Russia as of 2014
Again, it comes besides late, but now that Ukrainian forces are clearly losing the fight, Times acknowledges that Biden's erstwhile administration was much more active in the military and intelligence level with Ukraine, than they had previously published authoritative sources.
The study is simply a deep immersion in the "unordinary partnership of intelligence, strategy, planning and technology" that has become Zelenski's secret weapon in the fight against Russia. It begins with a description that within 2 months of Putin sending his army across the border, Ukrainian generals in civilian clothes were secretly exported to high-level war planning sessions at American bases in Germany.
"Passagores were top-ranking Ukrainian generals" — describes NY Times men taken by convoy of unmarked cars from the Ukrainian capital to Western Europe. Their mark was Clay Kaserne, the U.S. Army Europe and Africa office in Wiesbaden, Germany. Their mission was to aid forge what became 1 of the most urgent secrets of the war in Ukraine.
The study clearly shows that American commanders were much more active in Ukrainian operations than they thought, to the degree that they "shocked" any NATO allies. Indeed, many anti-Russian operations taking place in Ukrainian battlefields were simply conducted from the base in Germany.
"But the fresh York Times investigation reveals that America was active in the war much more closely and extensively than previously thought," we read further. "In critical moments the partnership was the basis of Ukrainian military operationsWhich according to American calculations killed or injured over 700,000 Russian soldiers. (Ukraine estimates casualties at 435,000). Arm in arm at the mission command center in Wiesbaden American and Ukrainian officers planned Kiev's counteroffensive. A massive American effort to collect intelligence both led the conflict strategy in a broader context and provided precise information on the objectives of Ukrainian soldiers in the field".
It is worth noting that this is fundamentally the fact that American officials and the NY Times besides admit that The Kremlin was right all along., insisting that it was never just Moscow versus Kiev – but that NATO countries militarized Ukraine and utilized it as weapons against Russia. president Putin and the Kremlin officials continued to complain harshly about American intervention, but in the West it was rejected as a specified "propaganda".
Below are any key fragments very Long NY Times report..with subtitles and emphasis on ZeroHedge..................
Americans overseeing "the chain of killing"
One of the heads of European intelligence said he was Surprised to learn how profoundly his N.A.T.O. colleagues active into Ukrainian operations. "They're part now killing chain"He said.
The main thought of the partnership was that this close cooperation could let Ukrainians to execute the most improbable feat – the task of invaders of the Russian crushing blow.
The top feats on the battlefield belonged to CIA/Pentagon
Early proof of the concept's legitimacy was a run against 1 of Russia's most terrifying combat groups, the 58th Army of the Joint Forces. In mid-2022, utilizing American intelligence and mark information, Ukrainians fired rockets at the office of the 58th Infantry Regiment in the Kherson Oblast, By killing the generals and staff officers within it. Over and over again, the group set up in another place; every time Americans found him, and Ukrainians destroyed him.
Further south, the partners focused on the Crimean port of Sevastopol, where the Russian Black Sea Fleet loaded on warships and submarines missiles intended for Ukrainian purposes. At the highest of Ukrainian counteroffensive in 2022. Before dawn, the sea drone swarm, with the support of the Central Intelligence Agency, attacked the port, damaging respective warships and forcing the Russians to begin to retreat them.
Excessive coverage
Ukrainians sometimes saw Americans as bossy and controlling – prototypic patronized Americans. Americans sometimes could not realize why Ukrainians simply did not take good advice.
Where Americans focused on measurable, attainable goals, Ukrainians they saw as constantly grasping a large win, a bright, shiny prize.
The failed counter-offensive in 2023 actually hatched in the American staff
However, at most likely a crucial minute of war – in mid-2023, erstwhile the Ukrainians conducted a counteroffensive to build the winning momentum after the successes of the first year – strategy developed in Wiesbaden was the victim of an unstable interior policy of Ukraine: president Volodymyr Zelenski versus his military commander (and possible election rival), and a military chief versus a stubborn subordinate commander. erstwhile Volodymyr Zelenski sided with the subordinate, Ukrainians threw immense amounts of people and resources into a yet futile run to recapture the devastated city of Bachmut. Within a fewer months The full controversy has failed..
Biden banned secret operations in public places while crossing red lines in secret
Again and again the Biden administration She authorized secret operations that she had previously prohibited. American military advisers were sent to Kiev and were later allowed to travel closer to fighting. Military and CIA officers in Wiesbaden helped plan and support the run of Ukrainian strikes on Russia's annexed Crimea. Eventually, the military, and then the CIA received a green light to let precise blows into Russia.
In any respects Ukraine was, looking from a broader perspective, a rematch in the long past of American-Russian substitute wars – Vietnam in the 1960s, Afghanistan in the 1980s, Syria 3 decades later.
Dragon Operational Formation
Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III and General Milley entrusted the 18th Airborne Division with the work of delivering weapons and advising Ukrainians on how to usage it. erstwhile president Joseph R. Biden Jr. signed for M777, Tony Bass Auditorium became the full headquarters.
The Polish general was succeeded by General Donahue. A British general would manage a logistics hub on an old basketball field. A Canadian would oversee training.
Underground Auditorium became a alleged fusion center, producing intelligence on Russian positions, movements and intentions on the battlefield. According to intelligence representatives, officers of the Central Intelligence Agency, the National safety Agency, the Defence Intelligence Agency and the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency were joined by coalition intelligence officers.
The 18th Airborne Division is known as the Dragon Corps; the fresh operation was to be Task Force Dragon. All it takes to put everything together is reluctant Ukrainian command.
Debate on credible negativity.
Soon Ukrainians began arriving in Wiesbaden, a full of nearly 20 – intelligence officers, operational planners, communications specialists and fire management. all morning, as officers recall, Ukrainians and Americans gathered to analyse Russian weapons systems and land forces and specify the most mature and valuable targets. The precedence lists were then transferred to the intelligence merger center, where officers analyzed data streams to indicate the location of the targets.
W The European U.S. leadership has sparked a wonderful but tense language debate: whether, given the sensitivity of the mission, Calling targets "targets" was overly provocative?
Some officers felt that "targets" were appropriate. Others called them "intelligence dumpers" due to the fact that the Russians frequently moved and information required on-site verification.
The dispute was settled by Dyw. Gen. Timothy D. Brown, Head of European Command Intelligence: The locations of the Russian forces will be "points of interest". Intelligence data on air threats would be "signs of interest".
"If always you are asked a question, 'Have you given the intent to the Ukrainians?', you can legally not lie, saying, 'No, I didn't do it'." explained 1 American official.
CIA and attacks on Russia's highest officers
The White home besides banned the sharing of intelligence on the location of "strategic" Russian leaders specified as Chief of Armed Forces Gen. Walerij Gierasimov. "Imagine what it would be like for us if we knew that the Russians had helped any another country execution our president," another high-ranking U.S. authoritative said. – For example, we would go to war. Similarly, Task Force Dragon could not share intelligence that would identify the locations of individual Russians.
The way the strategy worked was that Task Force Dragon informed Ukrainians where the Russians were. But to defend sources and intelligence from Russian spies, he refused to tell us how he knew what he knew.
The U.S. Operations Center straight supervised HIMARS attacks
Wiesbaden supervised all hit by the HIMARS... HIMARS attacks resulting in more than 100 Russians were killed or injured, happened almost all week. Russian forces were stunned and confused. Their morale fell rapidly, and with him the will to fight. And as HIMARS' arsenal grew from 8 to 38, and Ukrainian attackers became more proficient, the number of casualties increased fivefold.
"We have become a tiny part, possibly not the best part, but a tiny part of your system," General Zabrodski explained, adding, "Most countries have done so in 10 years, 20 years, 30 years. However, we were forced to do so in a fewer weeks."
Associates Together they perfected the killing machine.
Below: The editor-in-chief of Russian tv RT responds to these fresh detailed revelations...
Tensions as Ukrainians effort to cross Putin's red lines
In the erstwhile year, the Russians unreasonablely placed command posts, ammunition depots and logistics centers within a 50-mile radius of the front line. However, fresh intelligence has shown that the Russians have moved critical installations beyond HIMARS' reach. Therefore, Generals Cavali and Aguto recommended another mile leap, giving the Ukrainian army tactical rocket systems – missiles known as ATACMS, which can decision up to 190 miles – to impede Russian forces in Crimea to aid defend Melitopol.
ATACMS were a peculiarly delicate subject for Biden's administration. The Russian military commander, General Gierasimov, indirectly referred to them in May of the erstwhile year erstwhile he warned General Milley that everything that would fly 190 miles would cross the red line. There was besides a question of supply: The Pentagon has already warned that it will not have adequate ATACMS if America has to wage its own war.
The message was clear: Stop asking for ATACMS.
Biden's administration continued to submit to Zelensk
So far, Ukrainians, with the assistance of the CIA and the U.S. and UK Navy, have utilized naval drones along with British long-range Storm Shadow missiles and French SCAPP missiles to strike the Black Sea Fleet. Wiesbaden's input was intelligence.
However, the Ukrainians would request much more rockets to conduct a wider Crimean campaign. They'd request hundreds of ATACMS..
W The Pentagon's old warnings are not gone. But after General Aguto informed Mr Austin of everything Lunar Hail could accomplish, 1 of his advisors mentioned, "OK, there is simply a truly crucial strategical goal here. It's not just about hitting something."
Mr. Zelenski will get his long awaited ATACMS. Nevertheless, 1 American authoritative said, "We knew that in his heart he inactive wanted to do something else, something more."
The Allies have fought to invade Kursk
On 10 August, the head of the CIA facility besides left to work in headquarters. In the course of changes in command, General Syrski made his move, sending troops across the southwest Russian border in the Kursk region.
For Americans, trespassing was a serious abuse of trust. It wasn't just that the Ukrainians kept them in ignorance again; They secretly crossed a mutually agreed line by carrying equipment supplied by the coalition to Russia covered by the operating field, breaking the rules established at the time of its creation.
The box was created to prevent the humanitarian disaster in Kharkov, not to let Ukrainians to usage it to occupy Russian land. "It wasn't almost blackmail, it was blackmail." said a high-ranking Pentagon official.
The Americans could have pulled the plug out of the operating box. However, they knew that specified action, as the administration authoritative explained, "could lead to disaster": Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk would die without protection from HIMARS missiles and American intelligence.
American intelligence behind attacks on a immense bridge over the Kerchen Strait
Of the about 100 targets in Crimea, the bridge in the Kerchen Strait, connecting the peninsula to continental Russia, was most desirable. Putin saw the bridge as strong, physical evidence of Crimea's connection to the matara. The overthrow of the Russian President's symbol became an obsession with the Ukrainian President.
It was besides an American red line. In 2022 Biden's administration banned helping Ukrainians to combat it; even approaches on the Crimean side were to be treated as sovereign territory of Russia. (Ukrainian intelligence services tried to attack him alone, causing any damage).
But after the partners agreed to lunar hail, The White home authorized the military and the CIA to cooperate secretly with the Ukrainians and the British on an attack plan to demolish the bridge: The ATACMS was to weaken the delicate points on board, while sea drones would blow up next to its bow.
But while the drones were being prepared, the Russians reinforced their defenses around the bow.
Lloyd Austin seen as the "godfather" of secret operations
In early January, Generals Donahue and Cavali visited Kiev to meet with the Syrian general and make certain that he agrees to plans to supplement the Ukrainian brigades and strengthen their lines. From there, they went to Ramstein Air Base, where they met with Mr. Austin at the last gathering of the coalition's chiefs of defence before things changed.
When the door was closed to the press and the public, Austin's counterparts hailed him "Godfather" and "architect" Partnerships that, despite all of their disappointed trust and betrayal, sustained the revolt and hope of the Ukrainians, began for the good of that spring day of 2022 erstwhile Generals Donahue and Zabrodskyi first met in Wiesbaden.
Read Full secret past of America's function in the war in Ukraine Here..