Source: Infowars
Kurt Nimmo
Kurt Nimmo
The Obama administration has launched a major propaganda offensive in
the war on terror. On Thursday, they unveiled details of a new strategy
to battle homegrown terrorism by fostering coordination between local
authorities and teaching officials to better recognize violent
extremism, according to ABC News.
Obama claims to have killed a number of top al-Qaeda operatives, but has provided no evidence. |
“Protecting our nation’s communities from violent extremist
recruitment and radicalization is a top national security priority. It
is an effort that requires creativity, diligence and commitment to our
fundamental rights and principles,” reads a report entitled, “Strategic Implementation Plan for Empowering Local Partners to Prevent Violent Extremism in the United States.”
The report equates domestic terrorism with crime. “Just as we engage
and raise awareness to prevent gang violence, sexual offenses, school
shootings and other acts of violence, so too must we ensure that our
communities are empowered to recognize threats of violent extremism and
understand the range of government and nongovernment resources that can
help keep their families, friends and neighbors safe,” the report said.
“What we have to do is be prepared for these different types of
approaches that al Qaeda is pursuing,” Obama’s chief counterterrorism
adviser, John Brennan, told NPR. “The large attacks, the small attacks,
the groups that are operating together and the individuals who may be
vulnerable to these types of entreaties.”
Obama claims that during his tenure 22 of the top 30 al-Qaeda
operatives have been killed. The administration has claimed bragging
rights over the alleged assassination of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan
despite the fact the government has yet to provide conclusive evidence of this. Additionally, there is also no evidence the U.S. killed Pentagon dinner guest Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen.
The Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee is also
engaged in creating a fanciful mythology for public consumption in the
war on terror, designed to last generations. It says there have been 33 plots involving homegrown terrorists uncovered since 2009.
With three exceptions, all of the high-profile domestic terror plots of the last decade were FBI frame-ups,
according to a recent report by Mother Jones. The government is making
its dubious claim based on the fact that terrorism-related charges are
so difficult to beat in court, even without evidence, that defendants
often don’t risk a trial.