2011-01-31

Wayne Madsen says, "Viktor Bout knows too much about 9-11,"

Vatic Note: When I saw Wayne Madsen had done a piece on this on video, I was immediately intrigued as to who this person was causing American officials (Khazars/Israel) so much grief and then I dug further and sure enough, he was Israel's biggest competitor in the arms sales race, which was cutting into their illicit and questionable profits. Also on this blog we published proof of Israel doing 9-11, titled "......ALL THE PROOF IN THE WORLD".   So that made sense. What was interesting is the fact that Thailand has succumb to our foreign occupiers advancements to them and gave in without a peep, so we know that Thailand is gone as an independant and ethical country. So many dictators and so many leaders we control now, or I should say "Israel/Khazars" bankers control now. It makes it somewhat discouraging after seeing the deep and close relationship Rockefeller had with Chile's President. It seems no matter where we look, they are all put in power by our foreign occupying country. No wonder they got kicked out of Mongolia. Its my fervent wish they get kicked out of here as well. Enjoy Wayne and his take on this about 9-11 and also the article that follows giving us a very good look into who Viktor Bout really is and why he would be tied into 9-11.


Wayne Madsen says, "Viktor Bout knows too much about 9-11," http://mikephilbin.blogspot.com/2011/01/wayne-madsen-says-viktor-bout-knows-too.html
January 25, 2011, By Russian TV

Wayne Madsen says, "Viktor Bout knows too much about 9-11," therefore he had to be RENDITIONED from the Thailand which is a 'military dictatorship US-stooge' according to Madsen.




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rHwhDZKbTrA&feature=player_embedded

VN: SO, WHO IS VIKTOR BOUT AND HOW DID HE GET INVOVLED IN 9-11, AND WHY DO WE CARE?

Alleged Arms Dealer, Viktor Bout Whisked to America - CS Monitor.com
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2010/1116/Alleged-arms-dealer-Viktor-Bout-whisked-to-America
By Fred Weir, Correspondent / November 16, 2010, Christian Science Monitor
Alleged arms dealer Viktor Bout (r.) escorted by Thai police commando, arrives at Don muang airport in Bangkok on Tuesday, Nov. 16., AP

Viktor Bout, a former Russian Air Force officer accused of being one of the world's biggest illicit arms traffickers, was handed over to the US by Thai officials. (VN: The government hates competition....)

Moscow

Russia reacted furiously Tuesday to news that former Soviet air force officer Viktor Bout, dubbed the "Merchant of Death" for his alleged global arms dealing, was hastily plucked from the maximum security Bangkok prison from which he's been fending off extradition efforts for more than two years, and bundled onto a plane bound for the United States.

Mr. Bout's extradition had been imminent since August, when a Thai court ruled  that he could be sent to the US to face charges of gun running and abetting terrorism.

But Russian officials appeared blindsided by the sudden operation, in which the accused arms dealer was put on a special plane sent from Washington just hours after the Thai government issued final approval for his extradition.

RELATED: Who is Viktor Bout?
Russia, which decries the prosecution of Bout as "politically motivated," had been pressing Thailand behind the scenes to resist US demands for Bout's extradition.

"Undoubtedly, the illegal extradition of Bout is a result of the unprecedented political pressure on the Thai government and the judicial authorities by the United States," Russia's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

"This is nothing other than an intrusion into [proper] legal procedures. This makes questionable the independence of the Thai judicial system and decisions made by Thai authorities," it added.

Russian media on Tuesday broadcast an interview http://rt.com/news/viktor-bout-extradition-us/ with Bout's wife Alla, who said she and Russian officials were deceived about the Thai government's intentions toward her husband.

"The operation [to send him to the US] was secret," Mrs. Bout told the Russia Today network. "The cabinet ordered the extradition of Viktor Bout, even though the prime minister of Thailand had said that while court proceedings are ongoing, he wouldn’t be extradited.... He was shipped to the United States as if he was just a thing, without his documents and without the Russian embassy being informed. The operation was so quick because it is illegal under Thai law. I plan to appeal," she said.

Bout sting

The diplomatic tug-of-war over Bout began in March 2008, after he was arrested in a joint sting operation by the Royal Thai Police and the US Drug Enforcement Administration. Bout had allegedly agreed to sell $5 million worth of weaponry, including shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles, to people he believed were agents of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, which the US considers a terrorist group.

An earlier attempt to extradite Bout failed last year when a Thai court ruled in his favor, but the US appealed to a higher court, which decided to turn him over in August.

Bout denies being a weapons merchant and claims that he ran an air cargo business that specialized in delivering goods to difficult places. But the US says that the multilingual former Soviet officer made a huge fortune shipping arms from eastern Europe into conflict zones in the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America.

Viktor Baranets, a military columnist for the Moscow daily Komsomolskaya Pravda, says that US authorities never attempted to cooperate with their Russian counterparts to bring Bout to justice.

"The Russian reaction to the prosecution of Bout might have been different if the Americans had come to our side and spelled out the case against him," says Mr. Baranets, who has interviewed Bout and says he appears to have many strong arguments in his own defense.

"As it is, we have a lot of questions. Many people in Russia believe that Bout is being framed. Some think that Bout was removed because he's a competitor of American arms interests, or otherwise crossed them. The case against him contains a lot of strong accusations, but the substance looks thin."

Andrei Klimov, deputy chair of the State Duma's foreign relations committee, says the issue is unlikely to derail US-Russian relations, but says it sets a dangerous precedent.

"Bout is not a citizen of the US, nor do the Americans have any evidence of him breaking the law on US soil, so why are they doing this?" he says. "It appears the US is acting like a global prosecutor, and a world judge. But who gives them this power? This looks something like Guantanamo," where people fall into legal limbo, he says. "The principle is wrong."

RELATED: Who is Viktor Bout?

Related stories

Who is Viktor Bout?
Extradite Viktor Bout? Russia counters US pressure.
'Merchant of Death' arrested in Thailand



The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.

No comments: