Tulsi Gabbard is currently assigned to the 351st Civil Affairs Command (351 CACOM), an Army Reserve psyop unit. This same unit was once headed by psyop guru Maj. Gen. Paul E. Vallely, a major Qanon proponent and co-author of "From PSYOP to MindWar" with Michael Aquino.
The Vallely-Aquino paper advocates for aggressive psychological warfare on both the enemy and the American people, primarily by "seizing" the US media as well as by employing "atmospheric electromagnetic activity, air ionization, and extremely low frequency waves."
The invocation of these latter techniques was, I suspect, a psyop in itself. Nevertheless, not long after the paper was circulated among the military brass (in 1980), Vallely was appointed head of the Army's major psyops unit, 351 CACOM (in 1982).
Vallely, like Gabbard, later became a regular Fox News contributor. During the Iraq War, Vallely was part of a notorious DOD program, he routinely appeared on Fox to boost the war and penned a WSJ op-ed, partially ghostwritten by the Pentagon, to boost the war effort.
Vallely also ran interference for the Bush administration on torture at Guantanamo and Joe Wilson's debunking of the phony yellowcake story while promoting regime change in Syria, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Iran.
Originally, 351 CACOM was set up to perform elaborate military occupation exercises. Early officers included a reporter, a bank manager, an IBM salesman, the exec director of Big Brothers, the Palo Alto assistant police chief, the mayor of Sonoma and ~12 college professors.
In the Vietnam era, 351 CACOM was introduced to psyop techniques through training exercises in which Reservists set up fake SE Asian governments, which were then targeted by poisoning their water supply, dropping leaflets, and blasting defection pleas via loudspeaker.
In the 80s, during war games, 351 CACOM practiced "messing with" North Koreans by playing an audio "porno tape" over a loudspeaker and dropping leaflets warning that local squirrels carried deadly disease.
"You have to be crazy to be in a PSYOP unit," the unit's sergeant said.
However, 351 CACOM's work has often been subtler, burnishing the US war machine's image with a "humanitarian" gloss: Handing out teddy bears in NATO-ravaged Sarajevo, pumping up Afghan orphans' soccer balls, playing with Philippine kids, giving eye exams to Thai peasants, etc.
In her role at 351 CACOM, Gabbard has engaged in similarly gauzy photo ops, such as this one with some young Qawalangin tribe staff during an IRT program.
In the '70s, 351 CACOM ran ads explicitly recruiting "creative types" to do psyop work in the Army Reserves such as illustrating, news writing, translating, radio, and movie projection. It was, the ad promised, a stepping stone to an "exciting civilian lifetime career."
Given that, it's perhaps notable (or perhaps not) that when Gabbard ran for the Hawaii state legislature in 2002 at the age of 21, she was studying TV production at Leeward Community College. Only a few months after winning the seat, she enlisted in the Hawaii Army Nat'l Guard.
Another maybe-notable item: In 2002, Tulsi's father, Mike Gabbard, founded a war-mongering patriotic organization called Stand Up For America, for which Tulsi worked. A few years later, Vallely started his own org with an eerily similar name, the Stand Up America US Project.
A few people have chimed in to dispute my description of 351 CACOM as a "psyop unit." I give my rationale for that designation here. However...
I'll acknowledge there's a distinction within the military between CA and PSYOP. CA & PSYOP work closely together (and sometimes overlap), but they are separate, with CA focused more on "soft power" techniques. "Influence operation" may be a better term here.
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The pagers Israel exploded were made by Taiwanese company Gold Apollo. The pagers were reportedly imported 5 months ago (mid-April 2024), which lines up closely with a Knesset delegation visit to Taiwan during which Tsai pledged to "deepen" partnership between the 2 countries.
Gold Apollo denies involvement in the attacks, claiming sales & manufacturing of AR-924 pagers are handled by a Hungarian company, BAC Consulting. Gold Apollo president Hsu Ching-kuang further notes "strange" remittances that came through the Middle East. reuters.com/world/middle-e…
Hungary now denying that the pagers were ever in the country. The Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs says BAC is only a middleman and has no manufacturing site in Hungary.
🧵Interesting moment from the Covid Select Subcommittee's interrogation of Peter Daszak I'd like to unpack.
Daszak claims DARPA didn't reject DEFUSE due to safety concerns but rather over its cost. (He's previously made this claim to The Intercept, but now does so under oath.)
Daszak says "the only information we received from DARPA about the reasons for turning us down" came during an exit interview. Daszak previously described this interview as an apparently voluntary process for those who didn't receive funding. theintercept.com/2022/03/11/cov…
This begs the question (previously raised by @Rossana38510044) as to whether the unsigned, undated DARPA rejection letter released by DRASTIC is completely authentic. And, if authentic, was it ever sent to EcoHealth or was it only a draft?
The talking point from lab-leak proponents is that DARPA rejected EcoHealth's DEFUSE proposal because it was too risky. (If you read the letter closely, it's not clear this is true.) However, in a March 2, 2018 meeting, DARPA reviewer Jim Gimlett did not raise any risk concerns.
Gimlett did, however, note that DARPA was not able to fund all proposals and may partially fund proposals or fund later stages of proposals. This gibes with the letter written (though not signed) by Gimlett which noted "several components" of DEFUSE were "potentially fundable."
Gimlett also noted in his 3/2/18 meeting with Daszak that one of the primary issues with DEFUSE was validation. Lack of validation was one of the reasons cited for rejecting DEFUSE.
Last month, @emilyakopp of @USRightToKnow published an article about the infamous DEFUSE proposal based on documents obtained from USGS, a DEFUSE partner. However, USRTK uploaded only a portion of those records.
@emilyakopp @USRightToKnow Scientist and natural-origin proponent @flodebarre also appears to have obtained the same cache of documents. She too has refused to publish the full batch, instead plucking out small excerpts in support of this thread:
I do not in any way agree with GoFundMe taking down the Grayzone's fundraiser, but, since I've yet to see anyone else mention it, I do think it's worth putting on the record that Max Blumenthal has reportedly agitated for such takedowns in the past. observer.com/2016/01/its-on…
The Observer article reports that Max "pressured" GoFundMe to remove a fundraiser by (virulently pro-Israel pseudo-rabbi) Shmuley Boteach to buy a NYT ad tying then-presidential candidate Hillary Clinton to Max via his dad, long-time Clinton consigliere Sidney Blumenthal.
However, the Observer's only apparent source is Boteach himself who merely said he "believes" Max contacted GoFundMe directly, just as he had written to Huffington Post editor Ryan Grim to decry an op-ed attacking him written by Boteach.
Two months after dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the US military began drafting a secret plan to nuke 20 Soviet Cities in a "prevenative" surprise attack without provocation or warning. https://t.co/0glssyr2Jparchive.org/details/isbn_0…
This plan, known as JIC 329 (or "Strategic Vulnerability of the USSR to a Limited Air Attack") acknowledged that the Soviets posed no immediate threat to the US. Decimated by WWII and lacking a navy, the USSR was in a dire position relative to the largely unscathed US military.
Knowing this, JIC 329 recommended a surprise barrage of nuclear strikes if it appeared that the Soviets "would eventually gain the capability of either attacking the US or rebuffing a US attack." (Kaku/Axelrod)