Peter Dale Scott: The Global Drug Meta-Group: Drugs, Managed Violence, and the Russian 9/11
Posted by Anders den mars 24, 2008
Peter Dale Scott: The Global Drug Meta-Group: Drugs, Managed Violence, and the Russian 9/11
Tajik authorities have claimed repeatedly that neither the US nor NATO exerts any pressure on the drug warlords inside Afghanistan. “There’s absolutely no threat to the labs inside Afghanistan,” said Avaz Yuldashov of the Tajikistan Drug Control Agency. “Our intelligence shows there are 400 labs making heroin there, and 80 of them are situated right along our border … Drug trafficking from Afghanistan is the main source of support for international terrorism now,” Yuldashov pointed out last year.
- Violence and the Political Requirements of the Global Drug Traffic
- A Digression: Drugs, Meta-Groups and the Compradorial Revolution
- The “Russian 9/11″ in 1999: Bombings and Plans for War
- The Meeting in Khashoggi’s Villa, July 1999
- Khashoggi’s Interest in Chechnya
- Dunlop’s Redactions of His Source Yasenev
- The Khashoggi Villa Meeting, Drugs, and Kosovo
- The Role of Anton Surikov: The Dunlop and Yasenev Versions
- Surikov, Muslim Insurrectionism, and Drug Trafficking
- Allegations of Drug-Trafficking and Far West, Ltd
- Far West, Ltd, Halliburton, Diligence LLC, New Bridge, and Neil Bush
- The U.S. Contribution to the Afghan-Kosovo Drug Traffic
- How the U.S. Restored Narco-Barons to Power in Afghanistan, 2001
- U.S. Geostrategic Goals and Chechnya
- The Meta-Group’s Geostrategic Goal: Maintain the War of Terror
- Concluding Question: The Meta-Group and the United States Government
- The False Dilemmas of 9/11 Theories
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. The Meta-Group, the Russian 9/11, and Kosovo
II. The Meta-Group, Drugs, Salafist Islam, and America
III. The Meta-Group, the War on Terror, and 9/11
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Revidert, men oppstykket versjon (revised update):




