The Guardian could tell the truth about the series of wars in The Middle East and North Africa, that they were planned decades ago but needed "a new Pearl Harbor" to provoke support.
The Guardian could tell the truth about the cutthroat Jihadis in Iraq and Syria, now calling themselves Islamic State, that Israel, the USA and Saudi Arabia supported by Qatar and NATO member Turkey supported the insertion of these cutthroats into Syria because the aforementioned series of wars was behind schedule. The truth could also be told that Great Britain began planning smuggling these cutthroat Jihadis into Syria as early as 2009.
The Guardian could tell the truth that the event at Ghouta last year was a false flag run by Prince Bandar of headchopping Saudi Arabia to provoke an overt large scale military intervention by NATO in the Syrian conflict on the side of the cutthroats. But because that plan failed, the cutthroats being chased out of Syria into Iraq by the SAA were allowed to take portions of Iraq after officers in the Iraqi Army were either bribed or sympathetic to order their units to stand down, so now the cutthroats have tanks and bank accounts which they otherwise could not have obtained legally.
And The Guardian could tell the truth that the war in Syria is about a pipeline to transport Qatari natural gas to Europe through Syria, which Assad did not agree to, and that NATO supports this pipeline because it will reduce Europe's dependence on Russia for energy. This in turn will reduce Russia's income and reduce the effectiveness of the new BRICS Development Bank that could destroy the parasitic Federal Reserve/IMF system that has condemned humanity to underdevelopment.
But The Guardian has decided not to tell you this.
Instead, The Guardian prepares us for boots on the ground.
Today we have Alan Henning’s brother calls for British troops to join the fight against Isis. The headline is self-explanatory and needs no comment from me.
But the next disturbing article is In the Californian desert, UK and US forces crave 'a crack at the headcutters'. Again, the headline is self-explanatory: UK and US marines are currently training in the Mojave Desert (the keyword is desert, not jungle, or urban area), and they can't wait to have a crack at the cutthroats.
Last weekend the newspapers here were full of calls for boots on the ground. Yesterday Kurdish leaders were quoted that airstrikes aren't working. And today Alan Henning's brother is being cited for his call for boots on the ground, which is suspiciously accompanied by an article on British and American marines currently training in the Mojave Desert who state that they can't wait to put their boots on the ground over there.
I mean, is that preparing us for boots on the ground, or is that preparing us for boots on the ground?
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