Potus Air X x2 vid
Elon Musk
@elonmusk
From
SMX 🇺🇸
1:52 AM ·Apr 8, 2025
·
24.1M
Views
Potus Air X x2 vid
Elon Musk
@elonmusk
From
SMX 🇺🇸
1:52 AM ·Apr 8, 2025
·
24.1M
Views
>Potus Air X x2 vid
> https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1909484451958341667
Points to X
Ex
Ex
Q1091
Exact Location
Exact
1091
Q !xowAT4Z3VQ04/08/2018 17:47:12 ID: 198500
8chan/qresearch: 955902
1090
Q !xowAT4Z3VQ04/08/2018 17:39:06 ID:198500
8chan/qresearch: 955760
>>955656
Pictures leaked for this very moment.
Who/what is not pictured?
What forces shadowed No Name?
Contractors.
Special contractors.
What was delivered?
Smiles.
Exact location.
Exact.
Buildings E of spider web.
Spider web marker.
Open source.
Q
>>955760
https:// www.politico.com/blogs/laurarozen/1209/Report_Blackwater_CEO_Eric_Prince_was_CIA_asset.html
Think Double.
Why are we confirming this publicly?
Why now?
Q
>Potus Air X x2 vid
Think Double.
Double X
>Points to X
>Ex
>Ex
>Q1091
>Exact Location
>Exact
Don't Panic
no ExEx Panic
No name panic
Q1087
No name panic
Elon Musk
@elonmusk
Don’t Panic
Quote
SMX 🇺🇸
@iam_smx
·
21h
Elon Musk's Starman, who is currently in space, also urges you not to panic: "Don't Panic!"
Image
Image
2:01 AM · Apr 8, 2025
·
10.8M
Views
1087
Q !xowAT4Z3VQ04/08/2018 16:44:21 ID: f685ca
8chan/qresearch: 954903
1086
Q !xowAT4Z3VQ04/08/2018 16:40:57 ID:f685ca
8chan/qresearch: 954819
>>954786
No name in Syria.
Timeline.
Purpose?
Who attended?
No name panic.
Health cover.
Fast.
Q
>>954819
You have more than you know.
Spider web.
Q
>Potus Air X x2 vid
Think Double.
Double X
>Points to X
>Ex
>Ex
>Q1091
>Exact Location
>Exact
>Don't Panic
>no ExEx Panic
>No name panic
>Q1087
>No name panic
Blackwater renamed toXeafter Hussein threw Prince under the bus. Semi Random Tiger Woods reference in Politico article.
Report: Blackwater CEO Erik Prince was CIA asset
Tired of Tiger Woods and the Salahis?
Go read this Vanity Fair profile ofBlackwater CEO (until today – he reportedly has resigned) Erik Prince which says he was a CIA asset for the past six years, before, he claims, he "was thrown under the bus."
But the truth about Prince may be orders of magnitude stranger than fiction. For the past six years, he appears to have led an astonishingdouble life.Publicly, he has served as Blackwater’s C.E.O. and chairman. Privately, and secretly, he has been doing the C.I.A.’s bidding, helping to craft, fund, and execute operations ranging from inserting personnel into “denied areas”—places U.S. intelligence has trouble penetrating—to assembling hit teams targeting al-Qaeda members and their allies. Prince, according to sources with knowledge of his activities, has been working as a C.I.A. asset: in a word, as a spy. While his company was busy gleaning more than $1.5 billion in government contracts between 2001 and 2009—by acting, among other things, as an overseas Praetorian guard for C.I.A. and State Department officials—Prince became a Mr. Fix-It in the war on terror. His access to paramilitary forces, weapons, and aircraft, and his indefatigable ambition—the very attributes that have galvanized his critics—also made him extremely valuable, some say, to U.S. intelligence. [… ….]
By focusing so intently on Blackwater, Congress and the press overlooked the elephant in the room. Prince wasn’t merely a contractor; he was, insiders say, a full-blown asset. Three sources with direct knowledge of the relationship say that the C.I.A.’s National Resources Division recruited Prince in 2004 to join a secret network of American citizens with special skills or unusual access to targets of interest. As assets go, Prince would have been quite a catch. He had more cash, transport, matériel, and personnel at his disposal than almost anyone Langley would have run in its 62-year history.
The C.I.A. won’t comment further on such assertions, but Prince himself is slightly more forthcoming. “I was looking at creating a small, focused capability,” he says, “just like Donovan did years ago”—the reference being to William “Wild Bill” Donovan, who, in World War II, served as the head of the Office of Strategic Services, the precursor of the modern C.I.A. (Prince’s youngest son, Charles Donovan—the one who fell into the pool—is named after Wild Bill.) Two sources familiar with the arrangement say that Prince’s handlers obtained provisional operational approval from senior management to recruit Prince and later generated a “201 file,” which would have put him on the agency’s books as a vetted asset. …
(And who sanctified the alleged relationship? Worth considering that the CIA executive director appointed by Porter Goss in 2004, Kyle Dusty Foggo, is now serving a prison term for throwing CIA contracts to his friend contractor Brent Wilkes. Among the contracts he tried to throw Wilkes? One for covert air operations.)
And according to Vanity Fair, the terrorist assassination program that Blackwater was allegedly authorized by the CIA to undertake (but did not ultimately carry out) would have involved killing targets in Germany:
Among the team’s targets, according to a source familiar with the program, was Mamoun Darkazanli, an al-Qaeda financier living in Hamburg who had been on the agency’s radar for years because of his ties to three of the 9/11 hijackers and to operatives convicted of the 1998 bombings of U.S. Embassies in East Africa. The C.I.A. team supposedly went in “dark,” meaning they did not notify their own station—much less the German government—of their presence; they then followed Darkazanli for weeks and worked through the logistics of how and where they would take him down. Another target, the source says, was A. Q. Khan, the rogue Pakistani scientist who shared nuclear know-how with Iran, Libya, and North Korea. The C.I.A. team supposedly tracked him in Dubai. In both cases, the source insists, the authorities in Washington chose not to pull the trigger. Khan’s inclusion on the target list, however, would suggest that the assassination effort was broader than has previously been acknowledged.
The article says Blackwater now Xe is paying $2 million a month in legal fees. (A former CIA official said several of the article's assertions strike him as stretched, including by Prince.)