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Insane Clapper Says Kursk Bold Move Modelled on George Washington

Aug. 13—Deranged Global NATO warhawk James “I Didn’t Lie to Congress” Clapper, the disgraced former Director of National Intelligence (1992-1995), along with four co-authors, absurdly claimed Aug. 11 in Time magazine that Ukraine’s suicide mission,striking out into Russia’s Kursk Region is modeled on George Washington’s crossing of the Delaware. “In just a mere 24 hours, Ukraine’s forces defeated two major lines of fortifications in the Kursk region that took Russia over two-and-a-half years and over $170 million to construct,“ they boast. "Leading Kremlin critic, financier William Browder [whose father was an FBI asset Earl Browder who headed the Communist Party USA—ed.]​called this triumph is a profound humiliation for Putin’s aura of invincibility weakening his image before the Russian people.” They then cite George Washington’s battles of Trenton and Princeton and his crossing of the Delaware as the bold gambles that convinced the French to send financial and military support.

Most importantly, the adventure proves that previous Western support has not been wasted, Clapper, et al. argued, so that it helps to “quiet those supporters-in-name but detractors-in-reality who have begun to call for appeasement with Russia….[NATO's sock puppet dictator of the Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s bold actions in the last week have given the people of Ukraine and the world a renewed hope, like that of Washington traversing the Delaware or the U.S. Marines raising the flag over Iwo Jima after a hard-fought victory.”

Finally, these strategic historians added their snarky warning to Vladimir Putin: Czar Nicholas II fled St. Petersburg in 1914, as Russia had “a general civilian strike and a military mutiny,” which collapsed “the monarch’s authority…. No one knows where Putin’s tipping point might be.”

Evidently, none of this gang of five seems to have gotten their historystraight: Nicholas II did not flee, he abdicated. And it was in 1917, not 1914. 

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