US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operatives

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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jan 12, 2017 4:30 pm

seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 2:55 pm wrote:
JackRiddler » Thu Jan 12, 2017 2:43 pm wrote:


No kidding! Who are you trying to persuade with that one, SLAD?



oh I am totally an equal opportunity PsyOPs :P

whatever it takes

#GOLDENSHOWERS

FOREVER

lovely to see Jebby's revenge


It has completely backfired, along with the entire Russian Coup 2016 hysteria stoked by your false friends -- McCain/Graham, CIA, neocons, WaPo, Clintonists, and now we also see the Bush family itself involved.

The Steele memo served as nothing more than an opportunity for Trump to stage his press conference as a triumphant body-slamming exhibition in which he bullied and threatened all of the journalists, let them know that some would get carrot if they played along, appeared "strong," and got to lie about how he will lower health care and drug costs and bring jobs to America without worrying that anyone was going to ask him any questions about that boring stuff. Also, he got to immunize against all the Nazi shit he is about to do by declaring his unseen opponents to be as bad as Nazi Germany.

FIGURE IT OUT!

Not all strategies and tactics are equally good, and some clearly are beyond counterproductive. This is backfiring, and will become epic if it goes on.

Anyway, the people pushing the Russian Coup 2016 hysteria all have their own agendas.

THEY DON'T CARE ABOUT YOU.

.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 4:34 pm

we shall see

there is a second source

you are under the impression the whole dossier is false....right now I am not so sure

these are NOT FRIENDS OF MINE

McCain/Graham, CIA, neocons, WaPo, Clintonists, and now we also see the Bush family itself involved.

quit trying to harsh my buzz :)



Trump is trash with this or without
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jan 12, 2017 4:49 pm

seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 3:34 pm wrote:Trump is trash with this or without


Correct, so you should be asking: What defeats him, not makes him stronger.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 4:57 pm

you seem to be under the impression I have any power whatsoever in these matters at all...I am but a lowly bystander watching the show

sorry if I missed it but what are you suggesting I personally do boycott LL Bean? :)



I do however still wear my Bernie button on my purse
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jan 12, 2017 7:15 pm

Orbis Business Intelligence site.
https://orbisbi.com/

Here's FT with the most in-depth report on Steele so far.


https://www.ft.com/content/47244462-d8e ... eb37a6aa8e

Former MI6 officer lies low after unmasking as dossier’s author
Compiler of explosive Trump claims was UK intelligence’s top Russia expert


Orbis Business Intelligence, set up by Christopher Steele, is based in Grosvenor Gardens, Belgravia, near Victoria Station © EPA

4 HOURS AGO by: Tom Burgis in London

The author of the dossier of sensational allegations against Donald Trump disappeared from view on Wednesday, slipping away from his home to an unknown destination in a manner befitting his past as an intelligence agent.

The dossier by Christopher Steele, including allegations of bizarre sexual exploits and international political conspiracies at the highest levels, has been strongly condemned by Mr Trump and the Kremlin. It presents no conclusive proof and nobody has independently verified its claims.

Yet some of those who worked with Mr Steele are prepared to vouch for his previous work. He is a British former intelligence officer who operated in Moscow in the early 1990s, later served as MI6’s chief expert on Russia in London, and resigned in 2009 to set up his own company, Orbis Business Intelligence.

In his early fifties and quietly spoken, Mr Steele has a reputation among colleagues for integrity, discretion and for selecting his clients with care. Always keen to keep a low profile, he left his Belgravia office and Surrey home after his dossier on Mr Trump was published and he was unmasked as the author. His present whereabouts are not known and attempts to reach him were unsuccessful.

Related article
The Trump-Russia dossier: what we know so far
What latest revelations reveal about president-elect and Putin


Orbis is part of London’s lucrative business intelligence industry — a shadowy sector that stretches from dry political-risk analysis and due diligence research to digging dirt on competitors and, in its murkiest corners, a few operators who go as far as hacking, bugging and intimidating a client’s rivals. There is no suggestion that Orbis used any illegal methods to conduct its research.

The former MI6 agent and Cambridge graduate was hired in June to investigate the ties between Mr Trump and the Russian regime by Fusion GPS, a Washington DC research firm he had worked with previously, according to a person who knows Mr Steele.

To conduct his research, Mr Steele drew on a longstanding network of contacts in Russia. As the work developed, the person who knows him said, Mr Steele became increasingly alarmed. He even believed that what he was being told could be potentially bigger than Watergate, the scandal which brought down President Richard Nixon. This was especially so against a backdrop of what was believed to be extensive Russian hacking — not just in the Democratic National Committee but across Washington.

By early August, Mr Steele had handed some of his report to a senior FBI official with whom he had worked previously, including on an investigation into bribery at Fifa, football’s governing body.

The FBI contact also appeared taken aback by the allegations in the dossier, according to associates. If the intelligence was true — and no conclusive proof was offered — it meant that the presidential nominee for the Republican party had been cultivated by Russia for at least five years.

The sources quoted in the full dossier, a collection of reports put together by Mr Steele between June and December last year, alleged that Mr Trump and his associates were engaged in intelligence exchanges with Russian officials. Mr Trump’s stays in Moscow hotels had allegedly provided the Russian security services with compromising material, the sources quoted in the reports claimed.

Mr Trump angrily rejected the allegations as “fake news” and the product of “sick people” at a news conference on Wednesday, adding that it would be a “tremendous blot” on the reputation of US intelligence agencies if they had allowed the details to leak into the public domain. “A thing like that should never have been written,” he said. “It is all fake news. It is phoney stuff. It didn’t happen.”

The Russian government was equally emphatic. “The information is not true and is nothing other than a total fabrication,” Dmitry Peskov, a Kremlin spokesman, told reporters on Wednesday.

“It’s a complete fake. It’s a complete fabrication. It’s total nonsense.”

On Thursday, Mr Trump tweeted that James Clapper, director of US national intelligence, had called him to denounce the dossier, a summary of which had been presented to the president-elect and to President Barack Obama in recent classified intelligence briefings.

Trump’s nominees in the spotlight
A series of confirmation hearings for Donald Trump’s controversial cabinet nominees began in the Senate this week, with Democrats eager to grill candidates


But Mr Clapper’s own assessment of that call was less categorical and he focused on press leaks rather than the dossier. “I expressed my profound dismay at the leaks that have been appearing in the press, and we both agreed that they are extremely corrosive and damaging to our national security,” he said in a statement released on Wednesday.

Mr Clapper also said he had told the president-elect that the dossier had not been prepared or vetted by US intelligence agencies. US intelligence “has not made any judgment that the information in this document is reliable, and we did not rely upon it in any way for our conclusions,” Mr Clapper said he told Mr Trump.

Mr Steele was acutely aware that his sources for the dossier could be feeding him disinformation. But he trusted them because he had worked with most of this network before and they had been reliable in the past, the person who knows him said.

One British private investigator who has worked with Mr Steele called him “totally solid; very, very good” and pointed to his record as MI6’s chief Russia analyst.

A senior US official said Mr Steele was “a person of complete professionalism, integrity, diligence and precision”.

Mr Steele’s reports were also handed to several senior officials in the White House last year, according to the US official and a person familiar with the situation. John McCain, the US senator, sent an envoy to London to receive Mr Steele’s dossier in December, according to the person familiar with the situation.

Comment
What Putin really wants from Trump
The Kremlin craves a world in which national interests replace international rules


Mr Trump’s political enemies, who had funded Mr Steele’s work, were keen that it should reach the media, so the dossier’s contents were also shared with investigative journalists at a number of publications, including the Financial Times. All tried to corroborate some of the contents, but none has so far proved any of them.

In Washington, the dossier took on an almost mythic quality as talk of its supposed contents spread first among news organisations, then congressional staffers, before finally reaching lobbying firms and think-tanks.

While the circle of people in Washington who had seen the dossier remained small, a group who had heard something about the supposed existence of a compromising Trump video was much larger.

As the US presidential election drew near, Mr Steele and his colleagues grew increasingly anxious, fearing that their identities could be disclosed. After the election, they continued to gather information on Mr Trump from the sources until the new year — even though they were no longer being paid to do so — because they considered it of great importance, the person familiar with the situation said.

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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 7:25 pm

US intelligence “has not made any judgment that the information in this document is reliable


so what if some of the dossier are proved to be true...or at least US intel believe or want to believe apparently they already do...US intel telling mossad not to give Trump secrets fearing he would pass them along to Russia or Iran by way of Russia


ON EDIT

Trump lied today saying Clapper told him the dossier was NOT true
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby liminalOyster » Thu Jan 12, 2017 8:39 pm

C-SPAN Temporarily Disrupted by RT Broadcast

At approximately 2:30 PM Eastern Standard Time on 12 January 2017, C-SPAN's online stream was disrupted by a broadcast from RT (formerly Russia Today)

...

The broadcasting glitch occurred at a time of debate and scrutiny pertaining to Russia, the President-Elect, and ongoing assertions the country had "meddled" in the 2016 election. On the day of the interruption alone, retired Marine Corps general James Mattis asserted during a confirmation hearing that Russia raised "grave concerns on several fronts" and maintained Russian President Vladimir Putin was "trying to break the North Atlantic alliance [NATO]." Concurrently, a former spy credited with assembling a controversial report claiming the "Kremlin held lurid blackmail material as leverage over Trump" went into hiding, fearing retribution from the parties it implicated.

Against the backdrop of several ongoing news events involving the United States' relationship with Russia, some viewers implied that the disruption was potentially nefarious and "disturbing."

...

However, other sources reported the strange streaming incident in more neutral terms. Approximately an hour and a half later, C-SPAN confirmed the glitch on Twitter but did not indicate malfeasance was a likely cause.

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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 9:16 pm

thanks liminalOyster


also Trump lied ....FBI Comey says he told Trump last Friday about the dossier

you can tell when Trump is lying...his lips are moving
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby Morty » Thu Jan 12, 2017 9:35 pm

The Guardian is vying for the title of producing the most in-depth report on Steele so far. He's a stand up guy who nabbed Russia for Litvinenko's murder. He probably hasn't been to Russia in 20 years, but is a former top Russia expert. He probably didn't talk to any Kremlin workers himself to compile the report, but the report has a high likelihood of being substantially accurate, because Steele is such a stand up guy and the CIA/FBI are taking it seriously and have not rejected its findings.

They've certainly got their finger on the pulse over at the Guardian. Compelling stuff.

Donald Trump dossier: intelligence sources vouch for author's credibility

Ex-MI6 officer Christopher Steele, named as writer of Donald Trump memo, is ‘highly regarded professional’

Nick Hopkins and Luke Harding

Friday 13 January 2017 05.01 AEDT
First published on Friday 13 January 2017 02.15 AEDT

His denials – at least some of them – were emphatic, even by the standards that Donald Trump has come to be judged by. The dossier, he said, was a confection of lies; he compared it to Nazi propaganda; it was fake news spread by sick people.

At his press briefing on Wednesday, the president-elect dared the world’s media to scrutinise the 35 pages of claims, before throwing down a challenge – where’s the proof? Nobody had any. Case closed.

But in the rush to trample all over the dossier and its contents, one key question remained. Why had America’s intelligence agencies felt it necessary to provide a compendium of the claims to Barack Obama and Trump himself?

And the answer to that lies in the credibility of its apparent author, the ex-MI6 officer Christopher Steele, the quality of the sources he has, and the quality of the people who were prepared to vouch for him. In all these respects, the 53-year-old is in credit.

On Thursday night, as the former spy was in hiding, having fled his home in the south-east of England, former colleagues rallied to defend him. One described him as “very credible” – a sober, cautious and meticulous professional with a formidable record.

The former Foreign Office official, who has known Steele for 25 years and considers him a friend, said: “The idea his work is fake or a cowboy operation is false – completely untrue. Chris is an experienced and highly regarded professional. He’s not the sort of person who will simply pass on gossip.”

The official added: “If he puts something in a report, he believes there’s sufficient credibility in it for it to be worth considering. Chris is a very straight guy. He could not have survived in the job he was in if he had been prone to flights of fancy or doing things in an ill-considered way.”

That is the way the CIA and the FBI, not to mention the British government, regarded him, too. It’s not hard to see why.

A Cambridge graduate, Steele was one of the more eminent Russia specialists for the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6). The Guardian understands that he focused on Soviet affairs after joining the agency, and spent two years living in Moscow in the early 1990s.

This was a period when Russia and the breakup of the eastern bloc were still the prime focus for Britain’s intelligence agencies, and a successful spell in the region was a good way to get on.

By all accounts, that’s exactly what Steele did. And his interest in Russia did not diminish as he continued to rise up the ranks, a friend and contemporary of Alex Younger – now head of MI6.

Over a career that spanned more than 20 years, Steele performed a series of roles, but always appeared to be drawn back to Russia; he was, sources say, head of MI6’s Russia desk. When the agency was plunged into panic over the poisoning of its agent Alexander Litvinenko in 2006, the then chief, Sir John Scarlett, needed a trusted senior officer to plot a way through the minefield ahead – so he turned to Steele. It was Steele, sources say, who correctly and quickly realised that Litvinenko’s death was a Russian state “hit”.

As good as he was, Steele was unlikely to get the top MI6 job, perhaps because his specialisms were not a priority in that period – Russian espionage was taking a back seat to Islamic terrorism and non-state threats. And, of course, there is money to be made in the private sector – lots of it, particularly in the past two years. He decided to quit the service in 2009.

As the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, exerted influence in all kinds of spheres, so Steele’s background made him hot property. Though he could not travel to Russia, he appears to have maintained his contacts and made new ones, using old-school techniques: going out, meeting people, shaking hands, making friends – and paying for information.

With his business partner, Chris Burrows, he set up the London-based company Orbis Business Intelligence, which was busy and expanding. Their operation would have been a good choice for anyone trying to gather intelligence about Russia and Trump.

It is unlikely that Steele would have had direct contact with the unnamed Kremlin officials who allegedly gave sensitive information on the president-elect. In fact, it’s believed the former spy hasn’t been able to visit Russia for more than 20 years. Rather, Steele would have tapped up his network of sources deep inside the country, some of them dating from his time there and others cultivated later, British officials suggested.

In turn, these individuals will have had sources of their own. Steele would likely have subcontracted some of his Trump investigation to trusted intermediaries in Moscow, who will have reported back to him via secure channels.

This method of intelligence collection may explain the odd language anomaly in the Trump dossier that emerged into the public eye late on Tuesday. In a September briefing note, Steele mentions the Alpha-Group, a reference to the consortium headed by the powerful oligarch Mikhail Fridman. The more usual English spelling is Alfa.

Almost certainly, a native Russian speaker wrote the original material, correctly transliterating the Russian “f” as “ph”. It was Steele’s job to collate, evaluate and verify this material before passing it to his American client Fusion GPS, a Washington-based political research firm. The company had been hired originally by one of Trump’s early Republican opponents before the contract was taken up by senior Democrats.

The Foreign Office official who spoke to the Guardian on Thursday acknowledged that the Steele dossier was not perfect. But he pointed out that intelligence reports always came with “gradations of veracity” and included phrases such as “a high degree of probability”. “You aren’t dealing with a binary world where you can say this is true and this isn’t,” the official said.

He added: “The strongest reason for giving this report credence is that intelligence professionals in the US take it seriously. They were sufficiently persuaded by the author’s track record to find the contents worth passing to the president and president-elect.”

The CIA and FBI will have taken various factors into consideration before deciding on its credibility. They could include Trump’s public comments during the campaign, when he urged Russia to hack Hillary Clinton’s emails. The agencies may also have classified, intercepted material provided by the National Security Agency and Britain’s GCHQ.

They must, equally, have considered whether some of the claims in the report might have been part of an elaborate Russian disinformation exercise. “This is unlikely. The dossier is multi-dimensional, involving many different people, and many moving parts,” the official suggested.

Steele’s personal views on Russia are unlikely to be very different from those of his former employers – or from those of a former UK ambassador to Moscow, who is understood to have passed the dossier to the Republican senator John McCain, who in turn passed it to the FBI.

MI6 has been privately warning that Putin, unchallenged by the west, has grown in confidence and, of course, that the Kremlin has targeted Trump. It would be odd if it hadn’t. The consensus among British securocrats is that “Putin is a wolf … and he preys on the weakest sheep.”

But intelligence is not evidence, and Steele would have known, better than anyone, that the information he was gathering was not fact and could be wrong. In the smoke-and-mirrors world of counterespionage, there are few certainties.

Those caveats do not appear on the documents – but they are given by Steele as a warning to prospective new clients.

Whether he could have imagined that a summary of his work would be used in this way is a moot point; Steele did not go to ground in the weeks before Christmas as US media outlets tried to stand up some of the claims against Trump. He was in London, thinking about where to take Orbis next, eating his favourite tapas and pottering around Victoria, the home of his newly refurbished office.

From Moscow’s perspective, the report’s publication can hardly be counted as a success. As a former KGB agent, Putin understands the first rule of intelligence: that special operations should remain secret. “In the world in which Putin operates, if people can see the strings, you’ve failed,” the Foreign Office official said. “The Russians will be asking: ‘How the hell did it get out?’”

The spotlight is certainly not something Steele was looking for. He is mainly distrustful of the media – he chooses who to speak to, having been let down, so he has confided to friends, by reporters working for a Sunday newspaper.

After a career in MI6, anonymity is something he has prized. He once asked a journalist if he had ever heard of him. The reporter’s reply was a decisive no. Steele was relieved: “That’s the way I like it.”

Now that his cover has been blown, his next steps are uncertain. The fact that Steele is a British citizen and an outed former MI6 officer makes him relatively secure from any act of Russian revenge. At the moment, the situation may look bleak for Steele. But things can change.

“This will eventually blow over,” Steele’s friend said. “What you are left with is a effective marketing campaign. He’s a very sober guy, but he also has a sense of humour.”

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/201 ... ier-author
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jan 12, 2017 9:46 pm

They could get this straight. He didn't compare the leak of the leak-dossier to "Nazi propaganda." He compared it to "Nazi Germany." On Twitter and then twice at his press conference. That is a big tonal difference. I get that nuance is not his thing, but:

Nazi Germany is what U.S. presidents must destroy so that humanity can survive.

Nazi Germany is what Trump will be compared to soon enough given some of his policies. Not to say he will go to (domestic) genocide (international is almost synonymous with U.S. foreign policy), or can. But rounding up the first 3 million people and making a registry of millions more based on imputed religion may evoke certain unfortunate parallels. So this is not a "Godwin" violation. It is not (only) an outrageously insensitive comparison. It's an immunization and, given American rhetoric, close to a declaration of war. On reporters and sources, basically. He's a fool, of course, doesn't remember what he said half the time, always talks trash, etc. etc. etc. So he's pre-immunized for all that he says - and does. This is one of the most disturbing pieces of rhetoric he's brought out yet.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 9:56 pm

Morty » Thu Jan 12, 2017 8:35 pm wrote:The Guardian is vying for the title of producing the most in-depth report on Steele so far. He's a stand up guy who nabbed Russia for Litvinenko's murder. He probably hasn't been to Russia in 20 years, but is a former top Russia expert. He probably didn't talk to any Kremlin workers himself to compile the report, but the report has a high likelihood of being substantially accurate, because Steele is such a stand up guy and the CIA/FBI are taking it seriously and have not rejected its findings.

They've certainly got their finger on the pulse over at the Guardian. Compelling stuff.




yep
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jan 12, 2017 9:57 pm

“The Russians will be asking: ‘How the hell did it get out?’”

Could be. Either that or admiring (or laughing at or otherwise reviewing) his talents for making shit up.

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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 10:04 pm

viewtopic.php?f=8&t=9355&p=627097&hilit=Christopher+Steele#p627097


Ex-MI6 Officer Christopher Steele Named As British Spy Behind Donald Trump Dossier
52-year-old has fled Surrey home.
11/01/2017 23:18 | Updated 3 hours ago

Graeme Demianyk
Night News Editor and US-Based Reporter, The Huffington Post UK
Steven Hopkins
Assistant News Editor

The former British spy at the heart of the sensational story about Russia holding compromising details of Donald Trump’s private life is now in hiding after his name was made public.

Christopher Steele, 52, is said to be the ex-MI6 officer who produced - at least in part - the 32-page dossier that makes lurid claims about the President-elect’s private life and business interests. The property tycoon damned the allegations as “fake news” during a dramatic news conference in New York.

British newspapers, broadcasters and websites were prevented from making public his details after a government-issued “D-notice” was published. The ‘gentleman’s agreement’ between the state and the media was lifted at 10pm GMT.


The Daily Telegraph reported that Steele, 52, fled from his gated home in Surrey on Wednesday morning fearing his name would soon be made public.

He is said to have left his cat with neighbours telling them he would be away “for a few days”, and left in such a hurry that he left most of the lights on.

A source close to Steele told the newspaper that he was “horrified” when his nationality was published and is now “terrified for his and his family’s safety”.

It quoted a source close to Steele saying that he now fears “a prompt and potentially dangerous backlash against him from Moscow”.

The Telegraph said Steele’s wife and children were not at home on Wednesday night and quoted a neighbour as saying: “I’m not sure where he’s gone or how to contact him. I don’t really know much about him except to say hello.

“We’re all pretty secretive round here to be honest. All I know is he runs some sort of consultancy business.”

Steele served MI6 for nearly two decades in Moscow and security sources say he once worked with murdered Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko.

Litvinenko’s wife Marina told The Times she did not recognise the name Steele but added that MI6 agents often have a number of different identities.

Details were first published earlier in the day by the Wall Street Journal, which said Steele was the co-founder of London-based Orbis Business Intelligence Ltd - a private security and investigations firm founded in 2009 by former British intelligence professionals. The company is said to be employed by corporations to carry out research on business partners, and according to its website, Orbis has a “global network” of experts and “prominent business figures”.

The Journal suggested he has a good reputation in the intelligence community and spent years stationed in Russia.
Image
BBC News (UK) ✔@BBCNews
Thursday's Mirror: "Trump Dirty Dossier Brit Named" (via @AllieHBNews) #bbcpapers #tomorrowspaperstoday
5:06 PM - 11 Jan 2017
33 33 Retweets 45 45 likes

Image
BBC News (UK) ✔@BBCNews
Thursday's Mail: "Trump Rocked By British Spy" (via @AllieHBNews) #bbcpapers #tomorrowspaperstoday
5:05 PM - 11 Jan 2017


During an ill-tempered press conference earlier, Trump lashed out at CNN - which broke the original story claiming the documents were being circulating in Washington - as a “fake news” organisation. He also labelled BuzzFeed News, which published the full unverified dossier, as a “failing pile of garbage”.

The President-elect dismissed suggestions he had engaged in a graphic sex act detailed in the dossier by quipping he was a “germaphobe”. He also suggested US intelligence services “may” have been involved in leaking the documents, and likening the situation to Nazi Germany.
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/b ... dc83e80cec




and no explanation yet on what happened at CSPAN today
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jan 12, 2017 10:46 pm

seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 9:04 pm wrote:and no explanation yet on what happened at CSPAN today


RT has been showing a card all day reading "SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE, GMT 9:00 PM - 7 AM." I expect that's true, and some wrong switch was thrown in broadcast testing that intruded on the CSPAN signal. If it's NOT that, then there would already be a WaPo story that "PUTIN HACKS CABLE CHANNELS, CANCELS WALKING DEAD." Or "KGB HIJACKS CONGRESS, MURDERS McCAIN'S KITTENS." Or whatever.

I'm more impressed that they're so effectively blacking out the deployments of NATO troops at the Russian border.

.
Last edited by JackRiddler on Thu Jan 12, 2017 11:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: US Punishes Russia for Election Hacking Ejecting Operati

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jan 12, 2017 10:53 pm

shhh don't telll Mac about the tanks :)

he will probably accuse me of actually driving one of them

it was probably Bannon that did the CSPAN :P

oh I just heard 4ch is taking responsibility :D
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But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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