Hacked Emails Confirm NATO Push To Provoke, Escalate Conflict With Russia

Tyler Durden's picture

Just two weeks ago, a huge scandal erupted within another ‘union’ as Germany slammed NATO for “warmongering” destroying the fictional narrative that ‘innocent’ NATO was merely reacting to evil Russian provocations. Furthermore, as NATO accelerated its encirclement of Russia, with British soldiers deployed in Estonia, US soldiers operating in Latvia and Canadians in Poland, while combat units are being increased in the Mediterranean 

NATO found another excuse for war, assessing that it may now have grounds to attack Russia when it announced that if a NATO member country becomes the victim of a cyber attack by persons in a non-NATO country such as Russia or China, then NATO’s Article V “collective defense” provision requires each NATO member country to join that NATO member country if it decides to strike back against the attacking country.

Specifically, NATO is alleging that because Russian hackers had copied the emails on Hillary Clinton’s home computer, this action of someone in Russia taking advantage of her having privatized her U.S. State Department communications to her unsecured home computer and of such a Russian’s then snooping into the U.S. State Department business that was stored on it, might constitute a Russian attack against the United States of America, and would, if the U.S. President declares it to be a Russian invasion of the U.S., trigger NATO’s mutual-defense clause and so require all NATO nations to join with the U.S. government in going to war against Russia, if the U.S. government so decides.

Now, as The Intercept’s Zaid Jilani and Lee Fang expose, retired U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove (yes an ironic name for a warmonger), until recently the supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe, plotted in private to overcome President Barack Obama’s reluctance to escalate military tensions with Russia over the war in Ukraine in 2014, according to apparently hacked emails from Breedlove’s Gmail account that were posted on a new website called DC Leaks.

Obama defied political pressure from hawks in Congress and the military to provide lethal assistance to the Ukrainian government, fearing that doing so would increase the bloodshed and provide Russian President Vladimir Putin with the justification for deeper incursions into the country.

 

Breedlove, during briefings to Congress, notably contradicted the Obama administration regarding the situation in Ukraine, leading to news stories about conflict between the general and Obama.

 

 

But the leaked emails provide an even more dramatic picture of the intense back-channel lobbying for the Obama administration to begin a proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

 

In a series of messages in 2014, Breedlove sought meetings with former Secretary of State Colin Powell, asking for advice on how to pressure the Obama administration to take a more aggressive posture toward Russia.

 

“I may be wrong, … but I do not see this WH really ‘engaged’ by working with Europe/NATO. Frankly I think we are a ‘worry,’ … ie a threat to get the nation drug into a conflict,” Breedlove wrote in an email to Powell, who responded by accepting an invitation to meet and discuss the dilemma. “I seek your counsel on two fronts,” Breedlove continued, “how to frame this opportunity in a time where all eyes are on ISIL all the time, … and two, … how to work this personally with the POTUS.”

 

Breedlove attempted to influence the administration through several channels, emailing academics and retired military officials, including former NATO supreme commander Wesley Clark, for assistance in building his case for supplying military assistance to Ukrainian forces battling Russian-backed separatists.

 

“I think POTUS sees us as a threat that must be minimized, … ie do not get me into a war????” Breedlove wrote in an email to Harlan Ullman, senior adviser to the Atlantic Council, describing his ongoing attempt to get Powell to help him influence Obama.

 

“Given Obama’s instruction to you not to start a war, this may be a tough sell,” Ullman replied a few months later, in another string of emails about Breedlove’s effort to “leverage, cajole, convince or coerce the U.S. to react” to Russia.

 

Breedlove did not respond to a request for comment. He stepped down from his NATO leadership position in May and retired from service on Friday, July 1. Breedlove was a four-star Air Force general and served as the 17th Supreme Allied Commander of NATO forces in Europe starting on May 10, 2013.

 

Phillip Karber, an academic who corresponded regularly with Breedlove — providing him with advice and intelligence on the Ukrainian crisis —  verified the authenticity of several of the emails in the leaked cache. He also told The Intercept that Breedlove confirmed to him that the general’s Gmail account was hacked and that the incident had been reported to the government.

 

“The last conversation I had about it with General Breedlove, he said, ‘Yeah, I’ve been hacked several times,’” said Karber. He added that he noticed at least one of his personal emails appearing online from the leak before we had contacted him. “I turned this over to the U.S. government and asked them to investigate. No one has given me any answer.”

 

“I have no idea whose account was leaked or hacked,” said Powell, when reached for comment about the emails. Powell said he had no comment about the discussions regarding Obama’s response to the conflict in Ukraine.

 

In the European press, Breedlove has been portrayed as a hawkish figure known for leaning on allied nations to ditch diplomacy and to adopt a more confrontational role again Russian-backed separatists in Ukraine. Breedlove, testifying before Congress earlier in February of this year, called Russia “a long-term existential threat to the United States and to our European allies.”

 

Der Spiegel reported that Breedlove “stunned” German leaders with a surprise announcement in 2015 claiming that pro-Russian separatists had “upped the ante” in eastern Ukraine with “well over a thousand combat vehicles, Russian combat forces, some of the most sophisticated air defense, battalions of artillery” sent to Donbass, a center of the conflict.

 

Breedlove’s numbers were “significantly higher” than the figures known to NATO intelligence agencies and seemed exaggerated to German officials. The announcement appeared to be a provocation designed to disrupt mediation efforts led by Chancellor Angela Merkel.

 

In previous instances, German officials believed Breedlove overestimated Russian forces along the border with Ukraine by as many as 20,000 troops and found that the general had falsely claimed that several Russian military assets near the Ukrainian border were part of a special build-up in preparation for a large-scale invasion of the country. In fact, much of the Russian military equipment identified by Breedlove, the Germans said, had been stored there well before the revolution in Ukraine.

 

The emails, however, depict a desperate search by Breedlove to build his case for escalating the conflict, contacting colleagues and friends for intelligence to illustrate the Russian threat. Karber, who visited Ukrainian politicians and officials in Kiev on several occasions, sent frequent messages to Breedlove — “per your request,” he noted — regarding information he had received about separatist military forces and Russian troop movements. In several updates, Breedlove received military data sourced from Twitter and social media.

 

Karber, the president of the Potomac Foundation, became the center of a related scandal last year when it was discovered that he had facilitated a meeting during which images of purported Russian forces in Ukraine were distributed to the office of Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., and were published by a neoconservative blog. The pictures turned out to be a deception; one supposed picture of Russian tanks in Ukraine was, in fact, an old photograph of Russian tanks in Ossetia during the war with Georgia.

 

Breedlove stayed in close contact with Karber and other officials who shared his views on the Ukrainian conflict.

 

“Phil, can’t we get a statement to counteract the Russians on use of force? what can I do to help? If the Ukrainians lose control of the narrative, the Russians will see it as an open door,” wrote retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who forwarded on his messages with Victoria Nuland, the assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs. He also passed along concerns from the Bulgarian president that Bulgaria might be Russia’s next target.

 

In other messages, Clark relayed specific requests for the types of military aid desired by Ukrainian officials. In addition to radar systems and other forms of military equipment, Clark recommended that Breedlove “encourage Ukraine to hire some first rate pr firms and crisis communications firms in U.S. and Europe.” He added, “They need the right tools to engage in information warfare.”

 

Ukraine did hire several D.C. lobbying and communication firms to influence policymakers. In June 2015, the government signed a deal with APCO Worldwide, an influential firm with ties to senior Democratic and Republican officials.

 

In an email in February 2015, Karber told Breedlove that “Pakistan has, under the table, offered Ukraine 500 TOW-II launchers (man-portable version) and 8,000 TOW-II missiles,” adding that deliveries of the anti-tank weapons could begin by the end of the month. “However,” Karber wrote, “Pakistan will not make these deliveries without U.S. approval; moreover they will not even request that approval unless they have informal assurance that it would be approved.”

 

Karber told The Intercept that the Pakistani arms deal never materialized.

 

Breedlove was most recently in the news explaining that he now thinks we need to talk to the Russian government to resolve the conflict in Ukraine. “I think we need to begin to have meaningful dialogue,” he said last week, while reiterating his views on the need for a strong NATO to militarily match Russia. “Russia does understand power, and strength, and unity,” he said.

With all that in mind, we return to German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier’s recent exclamation that “anyone who thinks you can increase security in the alliance with symbolic parades of tanks near the eastern borders, is mistaken,” and given the ‘proof’ above that it is indeed NATO that is provoking and warmongering, the unprecedented reality in which NATO’s biggest and most important European member is suddenly and quite vocally against NATO and as a result may be pivoting toward Russian, we for one can’t wait to see just how this shocking geopolitical debacle for western neocons and war hawks concludes.

The emails were released by D.C. Leaks, a database run by self-described “hacktivists” who are collecting the communications of elite stakeholders such as political parties, major politicians, political campaigns, and the military. The website currently has documents revealing some internal communications of the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign and George Soros’s Open Society Foundation, among others.

 

 

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14 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
July 2, 2016 8:49 am

This doesn’t really need confirmation, it’s pretty obvious from simple observation.

At least to those who observe anything outside the American MSM, which is probably a small number.

A major war would serve Obama and World Elite interests well, sweeping many of their opponents under the rug where they will be forgotten.

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 2, 2016 9:02 am

America is today’s nazi Germany

Stucky
Stucky
July 2, 2016 9:33 am

Only two countries on earth have a legitimate shot at destroying the USA!USA!USA! — China and Russia — (while simultaneously being destroyed themselves).

1. We NEED an enemy to justify a trillion dollar defense budget. Otherwise people would riot when they see the weekly massive theft known as taxes being used to pay for bombs and bullets instead of butter.

2. We need an enemy to keep manufacturing alive. We’re still either #1 or #2 in manufacturing. But, what do we make? Certainly not too many consumer items. Pretty much everything in our house was made in another country. Although I do have a Vitamix blender made in Ohio. We already don’t build rocket engines. What would happen to our remaining manufacturing base if we stopped (or, greatly reduced) building tanks, ships, bombs, artillery, subs, airplanes, etc.? It would be ugly.

3. American military leaders are genuinely terrified of Russia. They are already almost unbeatable (massive territory, thousands of nukes, and a history of being unconquerable). In the past decade alone Russia has made tremendous upgrades regarding their military capabilities. Just look what they accomplished in Syria, which has stunned many in our military.

Their S-300 and S-400 can already shut down the skies to enemy aircraft. But, if located on the ground they can be destroyed. The new S-500 will be invisible from the air, or anywhere else while engaging targets at altitudes of about 125 miles, at ranges as great as 400 miles, and detecting and simultaneously attacking up to ten ballistic missile warheads flying at speeds of twenty-three thousand feet per second. Many U.S. defense officials worry that even stealth warplanes like the F-22, F-35 and the B-2 can’t penetrate S-500 airspace. — Russia’s new tanks put ours to shame. — Our land-based ICBMs are 50 years old, and Obama said it will cost One Trillion dollars to replace them, Meanwhile, faster and more powerful Russian nukes are being driven around the Russian countryside on enormous trucks designed for such purposes, and nobody can target them as we don’t know where the fuck they might be.

Here’s my point … not to make Russia appear so much better than America … but, I believe that our military folks are genuinely afraid of Russia, and as such, they truly believe that the time to attack Russia is in the next year, or two while we still have a snowball’s chance of “victory”. (Military “minds” are really fucked up, no?). Because, at the current pace of improvement … within the next decade Russia may very well become ……… invincible.

kokoda
kokoda
July 2, 2016 9:56 am

Just more proof USA is the aggressor for creating conflict (human suffering and death).

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
July 2, 2016 2:27 pm

Stucky it’s not that the Ruskies are so superior militarily, it’s that if your intent isn’t to “kill the bad guys” (U.S.), then you won’t kill many bad guys. The Russian’s intent was to kill the bad guys, and they did. Easily. Making the U.S. look like pussies.
I doubt many Americans even realize the lengths their country has gone to in order to overthrow elected foreign leaders and generally create a hell-hole for the inhabitants. We attack countries that didn’t attack us, and we make shit up to justify it. It’s no wonder they want to blow us up. We need to sweep these neocons and their supporters into the dustbin of history.
And God help us if Hitlery Rotten Clinton becomes POTUS.

Ed
Ed
  Westcoaster
July 3, 2016 9:52 am

” The Russian’s intent was to kill the bad guys, and they did. Easily. Making the U.S. look like pussies.”

Or, more accurately, revealing US leadership as being a bunch of lying assholes. Those motherfuckers lie about everything, even when telling the truth might help them mislead their subjects more efficiently.

Goldorack
Goldorack
July 2, 2016 2:50 pm

westcoaster, god can start helping us right now because america isn’t england. there’s not a snowball in hell of a chance that they let trump being elected. there will be a conflict whatever people think or do, like there was no way to stop vietnam war.
and stucky, make no mistake, their goal isn’t to beat russia.
russia will never be beaten because china would side with them if need be. their goal is to lessen the number of poor schmucks in the USA, and in the world. so that the rich can escape nuclear fire and restart generations of parasites with half of today’s population. less humans = less wealth to be shared. they make no secret about that during their biderberg meetings: there are too many on this planet.
either we fuck the elite, or they smoke us.

durangodan
durangodan
July 2, 2016 5:01 pm

The good news is that nuclear weapons don’t exist because the physics is not possible. And no the sun is not a nuclear furnace. It’s a transformer in our electric universe. The nuclear weapon scam is part and parcel control and fleecing of the sheeple. The same goes for all things NASA. The cold war participants continue to collude on this with Putin now holding the best hand as his people respect him and will continue to do so even if he spills the beans on nukes. The bad news is that nerve gas and weaponized virus are real. Let’s face it, the elite don’t want to deal with radioactive contamination post culling of the herd. Now that robotics make most human labor archaic, the time for the Culling approaches.

Ed
Ed
  durangodan
July 3, 2016 8:43 am

I remember the novel back in the ’70s that raised that possibility:

“The Jesus Factor
by
Edwin Corley

Stein & Day – New York – 1970 Hardcover
Michael Joseph – London – 1971 Hardcover
Livraria Jose Olympio Editora – Rio de Janeiro – 1974 Paperback

What If The Atomic Bomb Doesn’t Work?

The Strategic Air Command’s nuclear bombers are airborne. Six hundred Minutemen missile sites are switched on, prepared for attack. The U.S. nuclear submarine fleet is submerged and operating under sealed orders.
Across the North Pole, Russia’s missile countdown is holding at two hours from zero. And Red China has mobilized and gone to Condition Yellow.

Then, with the world only hours away from nuclear destruction, U.S. Senator Hugh McGavin asks: What if the atomic bomb doesn’t work?

What if it never worked?”
http://edwincorley.com/books/jesus_factor.htm

The premise is that the bomb only worked if detonated from a fixed location within a man-made magnetic field, making an air-dropped or missile delivered nuke impossible. Interesting idea.

durangodan
durangodan
  Ed
July 3, 2016 9:00 am

Ed, thanks for the tip. Just ordered the book.

Ed
Ed
  durangodan
July 3, 2016 9:49 am

Dan, you reminded me of it with your comment. Funny, at my age, I remember things that I read 45 years ago, but can’t remember my current password for wholesale purchasing of merchandise online.

ragman
ragman
July 2, 2016 7:16 pm

I was going to post some smart-ass, snarky reply but I really don’t give a shit anymore. The gay, lesbian, bi, transgendered, queer military will save us, no doubt. I’ll sleep much better tonight knowing they’ll have my six.

Gay Veteran
Gay Veteran
July 4, 2016 5:11 pm

ragman: “…The gay, lesbian, bi, transgendered, queer military will save us, no doubt. I’ll sleep much better tonight knowing they’ll have my six.”

when was the last time your heterosexual military actually won a war? Grenada?

Gina
Gina
July 6, 2016 5:20 pm

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