Anonymous ID: aac1aa Sept. 15, 2021, 11:34 p.m. No.14592672   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14592667

>>>14592662 (You)

>

>OK that's the only thing, she's gonna have a pretty good idea when you're gonna blow. But it will make her go wild if you don't. Though admittedly that's only for advanced users.

thanx for the advanced tips …

Anonymous ID: aac1aa Sept. 15, 2021, 11:46 p.m. No.14592704   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2738 >>2791

>>14592674

>You didn't think the plea deal was the end did you?

>

>Q

HRC tried to cut a deal today.

WE SAID NO.

Q

 

HRC was a puppet but her strings were recently cut.

She's now on her own and fighting for her life.

Q

Anonymous ID: aac1aa Sept. 15, 2021, 11:56 p.m. No.14592734   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2758

Trump's war with his generals

 

Former President Donald Trump's last-minute bid to pull U.S. forces from Afghanistan and swaths of the Middle East, Africa and even Europe ahead of Joe Biden's inauguration — and why he blinked.

 

John McEntee, one of Donald Trump's most-favored aides, handed retired Army Col. Douglas Macgregor a piece of paper with a few notes scribbled on it. He explained: "This is what the president wants you to do."

 

  1. Get us out of Afghanistan.

 

  1. Get us out of Iraq and Syria.

 

  1. Complete the withdrawal from Germany.

 

  1. Get us out of Africa.

 

It was Nov. 9, 2020 — days after Trump lost his re-election bid, 10 weeks before the end of his presidency and just moments after Macgregor was offered a post as senior adviser to acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller.

 

As head of the powerful Presidential Personnel Office, McEntee had Trump's ear. Even so, Macgregor was astonished. He told McEntee he doubted they could do all of these things before Jan. 20.

 

"Then do as much as you can," McEntee replied.

 

In Macgregor's opinion, Miller probably couldn't act on his own authority to execute a total withdrawal of U.S. military forces from Afghanistan because he was serving in an acting capacity. If this was for real, Macgregor told McEntee, then it was going to need an order from the president.

 

The one-page memo was delivered by courier to Christopher Miller's office two days later, on the afternoon of Nov. 11. The order arrived seemingly out of nowhere, and its instructions, signed by Trump, were stunning: All U.S. military forces were to be withdrawn from Somalia by Dec. 31, 2020. All U.S. forces were to be withdrawn from Afghanistan by Jan. 15, 2021.

 

What the fuck is this? Miller wondered.

 

A former Green Beret, Miller had directed the National Counterterrorism Center and was accustomed to following process. Trump had tapped him to run the Pentagon after his unceremonious firing-by-tweet of Mark Esper. It was Miller's third day on the job.

 

News of the memo spread quickly throughout the Pentagon. Top military brass, including Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley, were appalled. This was not the way to conduct policy — with no consultation, no input, no process for gaming out consequences or offering alternatives.

 

A call was quickly placed to White House Counsel Pat Cipollone. In turn, Cipollone notified the national security adviser, Robert O'Brien. Neither Cipollone nor O'Brien had any idea what the order was or where it had come from.

 

Neither did the office of the staff secretary — whose job it was to vet all the paper that reached the president's desk. Yet the paper bore Trump's distinctive Sharpie signature.

 

The U.S. government's top national security leaders soon realized they were dealing with an off-the-books operation by the commander in chief himself.

 

Many would rally to push back — sometimes openly and in coordination, at other times so discreetly that top Trump administration officials had to turn to classified intercepts from the National Security Agency for clues.

 

https://www.axios.com/off-the-rails-trump-military-withdraw-afghanistan-5717012a-d55d-4819-a79f-805d5eb3c6e2.html