Anonymous ID: 198c49 June 22, 2019, 4:46 p.m. No.6819044   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9060

>>6819031

 

FSB reports contained in these files further state that the over $18 Billion in gold and US Dollars transferred to Obama’s personal account in October, 2008, was the “crucial factor” in his winning the American Presidential contest as it was used to payoff the Bush-Cheney Drug Cartel who in turn allowed the “electronic” US election to swing in his, Obama’s, favor.

 

It is interesting to note about this vast fortune that Iran’s Central Bank is now openly questioning the transfer of the estimated $18.5 Billion ($7.5 billion in cash and 20 metric tons of gold) from their Nation to Turkey by Iranian arms dealer, Esmael Safarian-Nasab, and who, Russian Intelligence reports state, was the “facilitator” of the “arms for hostages” deal between the United States and Iran who met with former US President George Bush upon his secret arrival in the Persian Nation prior to President Ronald Reagan’s election and is known as the “October Surprise”.

 

Also interesting to note is that upon Iran’s Central Bank’s questioning of this massive transfer of wealth, the Iranian Intelligence Ministry Public Relations Department, under the direction of President Ahmadinejad, dismissed the reports and ordered a blackout of further information from being released.

 

But, what brings these reports from being shocking, to downright chilling, are the GRU files on Obama stating that he is a Muslim “secreted” into the US Presidency for the “sole purpose” of igniting an American “Holy War” which has been designed to destroy the United States and enslave its once free peoples.

 

The GRU’s assertion of Obama’s Muslim religion has, also, been confirmed by former CIA agent and deputy director in the U.S. State Department's Office of Counter Terrorism, Larry Johnson, who states that “Obama was named Barry on his original birth certificate and that his surname was likely later changed to Soetoro after he was adopted by Lolo Soetoro, his mother's second husband.”

Anonymous ID: 198c49 June 22, 2019, 4:58 p.m. No.6819121   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>6819031

 

In October 2008, an Iranian businessman named Esmael Safarian-Nasab shipped four containers full of cash and gold worth $18.5 billion from Iran to Turkey, its next door neighbor, via Germany without declaring the wealth at German customs nor upon delivery at Ankara. Why?

 

According to his Turkish attorney, Senol Ozel, Safarian-Nasab failed to declare the value of the shipment because he had "worries that he would be bothered." Two business partners, or "couriers" as Turkish television reports called them, were scheduled to pick up the containers at the airport, but "ran away" when Turkish customs officers stopped the containers for a security check. The Turkish customs agents discovered cash and gold worth nearly the total GDP of the 20 poorest countries in the world.

 

Akin to a Hollywood thriller, these are the yet-to-be-proven claims of Nasab's lawyer, who has taken up a considerable amount of airtime in national Turkish news channel, Kanal D, last week.

 

According to Turkish journalist Ibrahim Yazici who first broke the story, what made Ozel's claims even more intriguing was a recent speech by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minister.

 

Erdogan victoriously spoke of the amount of foreign investment his country received in 2008, despite the global economic downturn. This amount, as he pronounced, was close to $18.5 billion, a number that seems to match Ozel's claims at the outset.

 

For many critics of the ruling party, this seemed to provide a great leverage to press hard on AKP's economic policies.

 

However, earlier in the week, Hayati Yazici, a Turkish State Minister, dismissed the claims as "false and baseless," according to Turkish state news agency. He firmly denied that the so-called containers of cash and gold entered Turkey.

 

Soon after, the Iranian government followed suit, and the Intelligence Ministry "urged media outlets to avoid disseminating unconfirmed reports," according to Tehran Times, an Iranian newspaper.