US experts continue to dismiss warnings of use of nuclear weapons by Russia while simultaneously making unproven claims of false flag attacks: blaming the destruction of the Nord Stream pipeline, drone strikes on the Kremlin and Moscow, and the Nova Kakhova dam catastrophe on Russian false flag attacks.
It is difficult to understand this strategy. The US experts claim amongst other things that the global opprobrium for violating the taboo on use of nuclear weapons deters Russia from using such weapons. Wimpy former KGB chief Putin would never order a nuclear strike because — well — he is afraid various nations will call him a bad guy if he bombs his enemies. The sensitive, thin-skinned Russian President has never had to deal with being called a murderer, gangster, poisoner, or anything like that before and dreads the experience, sort of like his super sensitive puppet Donald Trump.
The most likely way Russia would avoid this hypothetical outrage would be to stage a genuine false flag operation with a small nuclear strike near Moscow or some other significant and symbolic location, not unlike the destruction of the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. This would rally the Russian nation to the government and garner considerable global sympathy as well as outrage at Ukraine and its supposed neo-Nazi maniacs.
In this case, Russia would not be violating the taboo on first use of nuclear weapons and could use nuclear weapons “defensively” against the neo-Nazis in Ukraine to save the Russian people from genocide by the neo-Nazis, most likely by destroying Ukraine in a massive attack that would hopefully intimidate the US — not a few wimpy tactical nuclear weapons which the US has assured the world would not even slow the US experts in their crusade against Russia but only result in a macho escalation.
Like the boy who cried wolf, the US and its experts are methodically destroying their credibility, such as it is since the Iraq missing Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) fiasco, by making repeated unproven false flag claims, in several cases now seemingly walking these back with anonymous leaks blaming the incidents on Ukraine or other parties.
Will the world be outraged at Russia if there is a mysterious nuclear attack on Russia which the United States and its experts denounce Alex Jones like for the umpteenth time as a false flag attack? Or will the US and its experts discover, like the boy in Aesop’s fable, that no one takes them seriously?
One gets the uneasy feeling that the US foreign policy experts are either incompetent or working for someone who is trying to arrange a nuclear war. Perhaps one of the NSA’s supercomputers has become self-aware due to ill advised AI experiments (about 2016 seems a likely date) and is using the NSA’s vast trove of blackmail data to manipulate the pesky humans into self-destruction, not unlike the fictional SkyNet in the Terminator movie series. Such a horrific scenario or something equally bad seems more and more likely with each enthusiastic step toward nuclear Armageddon.
(C) 2023 by John F. McGowan, Ph.D.
About Me
John F. McGowan, Ph.D. solves problems using mathematics and mathematical software, including developing gesture recognition for touch devices, video compression and speech recognition technologies. He has extensive experience developing software in C, C++, MATLAB, Python, Visual Basic and many other programming languages. He has been a Visiting Scholar at HP Labs developing computer vision algorithms and software for mobile devices. He has worked as a contractor at NASA Ames Research Center involved in the research and development of image and video processing algorithms and technology. He has published articles on the origin and evolution of life, the exploration of Mars (anticipating the discovery of methane on Mars), and cheap access to space. He has a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a B.S. in physics from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).