Anonymous ID: 0b4601 Oct. 8, 2021, 5:45 p.m. No.14749341   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9359 >>9399 >>9520 >>0035

Afghanistan: Part of The Plan

repost of: >>14748719, with important video link addition as suggested here: >>14749167

 

Anons,

Around this time in 2018, we realized that Ned Price might have been NP from Q's posts. That lead to all kinds of discoveries–one of which was that he was a CIA agent that had trained in Afghanistan.

>>14603474 (PB)

https://archive.is/3rT70

 

2-29-2020 POTUS briefing regarding Afghanistan and COVID:

>“I’ll be meeting personally with Taliban leaders in the not-too-distant future. And we’ll be very much hoping that they will be doing what they say they’re going to be doing: They will be killing terrorists. They will be killing some very bad people. They will keep that fight going”

https://youtu.be/-aJYmuVkVCc?t=186

 

Taliban overran Kabul and Baghram airbase like lightning because the US military exited first, abandoning equipment and ordinance. From the post above, note that the US Embassy in Kabul housed one of the the largest foreign CIA headquarters. That embassy is where the Taliban got hold of the biometric databases.

 

8-30-2021: This is the real story of the Afghan biometric databases abandoned to the Taliban

>As the Taliban swept through Afghanistan in mid-August, declaring the end of two decades of war, reports quickly circulated that they had also captured US military biometric devices used to collect data such as iris scans, fingerprints, and facial images. Some feared that the machines, known as HIIDE, could be used to help identify Afghans who had supported coalition forces.

https://archive.is/q2Wh1

 

Once the Taliban overtook Kabul and Baghram, they formed a gamut around the airbase and ran checks on the people trying to evacuate:

https://youtu.be/DeJH2QXhQJU

 

10-6-2021: Top Secret CIA Cable Admits "Dozens" Of Agents Abroad Are Being Captured, Killed

>The report is an incredibly rare instance of the media getting hold of a fresh, very recent highly classified memo that's also sure to be embarrassing for the agency. "The message, in an unusual top-secret cable, said that the CIAÂ’s counterintelligence mission center had looked at dozens of cases in the last several years involving foreign informants who had been killed, arrested or most likely compromised,"

>The report continues by spelling out, "The large number of compromised informants in recent years also demonstrated the growing prowess of other countries in employing innovations like biometric scans, facial recognition, artificial intelligence and hacking tools to track the movements of CIA officers in order to discover their sources."

https://archive.is/dWXfi

 

So we see:

1) Taliban was screening the people trying to evacuate Afghanistan

2) dozens of CIA agents have being killed in the past few years

3) biometric data has been used to identify them.

 

IMO, this was a hit by /ourguys/ on the Deep State in Afghanistan. There must have been some back-channel deal by which /ourguys/ would give Afghanistan back to the Taliban, along with the weaponry needed to hold it. The Taliban's side of the bargain was that they needed to slaughter every shitbag agent they came across.

 

China was likely in on it as well:

10-3-2021: Reports Of Military Planes At Bagram Air Base Fuel Speculation Of Chinese-Afghan Alliance

https://archive.is/7bWUT

10-7-2021: CIA Announces High Level Unit Focused On China: "Most Important Geopolitical Threat" Facing US

https://archive.is/oXqsM

 

China benefits through their Belt and Road initiative; by eliminating the Deep State middleman, they can deal directly with the Taliban…which is good for China, good for Afghanistan, helps the US (as we no longer need to pay for security), and royally screws the Enemy (which is the Central Banking cartel centered in Switzerland).

>Afghanistan can thank its geographical position for its wealth. It sits at the heart of Central Asia, at the meeting point of ancient trade routes – known together as “The Silk Road” – that go out to all parts of Asia. Some lead east to China; some north to the great cities of Bokhara, Samarkand and Khiva, and then to the nomadic steppe; some south-east into India; and others east into Iran, which then lead to the Mediterranean Sea and Europe. Goods wanting to pass between any of these places had to go through Afghanistan, and thus Afghan cities, strategically placed on these trade routes, were able to benefit massively as places of mercantile exchange.

https://archive.is/wUTfr