Anonymous ID: c726fd Dec. 18, 2020, 11:03 a.m. No.12081495   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>12081461

you know nothing about the case

 

Deep state Pedowood makes a movie making kyle look like a hero. Kyel lies in his book about even meeting Ventura. Kyle gives a gun to a guy with severe PTSD who kills him.

He didn;t sue Kyle's widow. He sued the publisher of the book and Ventura won. do you know how hard it is to prove that Kyle lied? Ventura proved kyle lied.

 

fucvk you

Anonymous ID: c726fd Dec. 18, 2020, 11:14 a.m. No.12081608   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>12081544

>O'bagy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_O%27Bagy

 

Elizabeth O'Bagy

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Elizabeth Bailey O'Bagy (born 1987) is a former senior analyst at the Institute for the Study of War who was terminated for job fraud.[1][2][3][4][5]

 

Early life and education

O'Bagy is originally from Holladay, Utah, a Salt Lake City suburb,[6] and a 2005 graduate of Olympus High School. She is the daughter of David and Mickey O'Bagy.[1] O'Bagy attended Georgetown University and earned a B.A. in 2009 in Arabic from Georgetown College and M.A. in 2013, in Arab studies from the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies.[7][8][9]

 

Career

Described as a "Syria researcher" in 2013, O'Bagy, who had previously written for The Atlantic, contributed an op-ed to the Wall Street Journal that was cited by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Senator John McCain during a U.S. Senate hearing to support possible United States military intervention into the Syrian civil war.[10] At the time of the hearing, O'Bagy's official biography listed the 26-year-old as "Dr. Elizabeth O'Bagy" and claimed she had received a Ph.D. degree from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Following the hearing, however, the Institute for the Study of War terminated O'Bagy, posting a statement to its website that read "Elizabeth O'Bagy does not in fact have a Ph.D. degree from Georgetown University" as she had previously represented to institute officials.[11]

 

O'Bagy also had an unrevealed affiliation with the Syrian Emergency Task Force, a U.S.-based group advocating the armed overthrow of the government of Syria.[12] In her paid work with that group, done simultaneously with her job at the officially nonpartisan Institute for the Study of War, she had lobbied American political leaders to send heavy weaponry to Syrian insurgent groups.[13]

 

Two weeks after her dismissal from the Institute for the Study of War, O'Bagy was hired as a legislative assistant by U.S. Senator John McCain.[14]

 

The Rise and Fall of Elizabeth O’Bagy

What the fall of the Free Syrian Army’s front woman in Washington tells us about America’s love affair with rebel groups and its ignorance of the Middle East

 

By Jay Newton-SmallSept. 17, 2013

 

Updated om Sept. 19 to add comment from Kim Kagan.

 

It was, in Washington terms, great PR. Questioning Secretary of State John Kerry during a Sept. 3 hearing on Syria, Senator John McCain read extensively from a Wall Street Journal op-ed by “Dr. Elizabeth O’Bagy” about the growing moderate Syrian opposition. The next day, testifying before the House Kerry himself cited O’Bagy’s work in explaining how only 15% to 20% of the 70,000 to 100,000 fighters on the ground Syria were “bad guys.”

 

It would be easy to imagine that Elizabeth O’Bagy was a venerated Syria expert with decades of experience. In fact, O’Bagy turned out to be a 26-year-old who had first begun to research Syria 20 months ago as an intern at the Institute for the Study of War, a hawkish Washington non-profit. Over the summer, O’Bagy had become the celebre of the Syrian rebel cause. Cable television bookers were ecstatic: an attractive young woman who could talk eloquently about Syria. She was everywhere, doing multiple appearances a day on Fox News, CNN, MSNBC, PBS, NPR, to name just a few outlets. Washington has a long history of love affairs with motley rebels who look like a better bet for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness than whatever autocrat is in U.S. disfavor at the time.

https://swampland.time.com/2013/09/17/the-rise-and-fall-of-elizabeth-obagy/