'Regime change plot in UK โ Dark times ahead' with The Duran
Will Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer be installed as Prime Minister by the deep state?
I am grateful to my father who used to get into heated discussions about politics with my parentโs friends. The gift in this was that I have been apolitical all my life as a result. This stance makes it much easier to sit back and watch the show unfold.
What has and is going on in the UK is most certainly an orchestrated train wreck.
Please listen to The Duranโs discussion about the apparent current manipulation of the political (and economic) situation in the UK.
During the discussion it was mentioned that Starmer will be the deep stateโs choice to replace Truss as Prime Minister.
I canโt stand the lot of them, but Starmer? Alexander says itโs all about control.
Other reasons for Starmer being positioned apparently lurk in the shadows.
A quick search pulled up this interesting article with five loaded questions for Keir Starmer.
Five questions for new Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer about his UK and US national security establishment links
By Matt Kennard โข Published June 5, 2020 by The Grayzone
The public deserves answers about the UKโs new opposition leader and his relationship with the British national security establishment, including the MI5 and the Times newspaper, his former role in the Julian Assange case and his membership in the intelligence-linked Trilateral Commission.
Dear Sir Keir,
Congratulations on being elected the new leader of the Labour Party. I have been researching your former role as the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) for England and Wales. I wrote to you with some questions recently but received no reply, so I am now writing you an open letter to pose five critical questions which I believe are in the public interest:
1. Why did you meet the head of MI5, the domestic security service, for informal social drinks in April 2013, the year after you decided not to prosecute MI5 for its role in torture?
2. When and why did you join the Trilateral Commission and what does your membership of this intelligence-linked network entail?
3. What did you discuss with then US Attorney General Eric Holder when you met him on 9 November 2011 in Washington DC, at a time you were handling the Julian Assange case as the public prosecutor?
4. What role did you play in the Crown Prosecution Serviceโs irregular handling of the Julian Assange case during your period as DPP?
5. Why did you develop such a close relationship with the Times newspaper while you were the DPP and does this relationship still exist?
1. Why did you meet with MI5 chief for social drinks the year after you decided not to prosecute MI5 for its role in torture?
As Britainโs Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) from November 2008 to October 2013 you had the ultimate decision on which criminal cases should be prosecuted. The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) is intended to be independentย of the police and government, including the security services.
In 2010 and again in 2012, you made the controversial decision not to charge an MI5 officer for his role in torture. The following year, your register of hospitality while head of the CPS included an entryย from 16 April 2013 noting โdrinksโ with Sir Jonathan Evans, who was then director-general of MI5.
The value of the hospitality you received is listed as โunknownโ and MI5 is not mentioned, indicating this was a social meeting. Formal meetings for the DDP are registered by the CPSย separately under โmeetings with external organizations,โ which would include MI5.
Such social drinks appear to be unusual for the DPP. I analyzed the three years of hospitality records for the period after you stood down from the CPS. They clearly show your successor as DPP received such no hospitality from a sitting intelligence chief โ or any formal meetings with them.
In that yearโs register, your meeting with Evans was the only hospitality you received which you left blank in the section that asks whether it was accepted or not. It is not known if your hospitality drinks were covered by MI5 or Evans personally. Evans has not responded to questions I posed about this meeting.
In November 2010, youย concludedย as the DPP that there was โinsufficient evidenceโ to prosecute an MI5 officer, known as Witness B, for his role in the torture of British resident Binyam Mohamed.
Jonathan Evans then released aย statement declaring: โI am delighted that after a thorough police investigation the CPS has concluded that Witness B has no case to answer in respect of his interviewing of Mr. Binyam Mohammed.โย He added: โI regret that he has had to endure this long and difficult process.โ
Mohamed had been arrested in Karachi, Pakistan in April 2002 and interrogated for a week allegedly with various torture techniques. Mohamed said that as well as being interrogated by his American captors, Witness B had alsoย taken part. It was laterย revealedย that MI5 knew he was being mistreated before an officer was sent to Karachi to question him.
Mohamed was then transported to Morocco by the CIA and again interrogated by Witness B, despite MI5 claiming itย did not knowย his whereabouts in the north African country.
Mohamed eventually spent seven years at Guantanamo Bay, the detention facility run by the US on Cuba, before being released without charge and receiving a secret payout from the US.
Your decision not to prosecute was surprising: it was reported, for example, that MI5ย telegramsย to the CIA demonstrated that British intelligence officers fed the US information on Mohamed when he was allegedly being tortured in Morocco.
Evansโ relief was understandable. The CPSโ role also involved attempting toย trace responsibilityย for Witness Bโs actions further up MI5โs chain of command. It is likely that Evans, who joined MI5 inย 1980, played a role in the Mohamed case as it unfolded. In September 2001 Evans had becomeย directorย of international counter terrorism at MI5 and was in this position when Mohamed was snatched, tortured and rendered by the CIA, with MI5 involvement.
It is not known if Evans would have been criminally liable if the prosecution had gone ahead, but he later had to defend MI5 from accusations of aย cover-upย in the Mohamed case after Lord Neuberger, then President of the Court of Appeal, said there was a โculture of suppressionโ in the agency.
Allegations made by Mohamed concerning the role of MI6, Britainโs external intelligence service, meant a โwider investigationโ continued after your 2010 decision. This included new allegations by another detaineeย about British involvement in torture at Bagram air base in Afghanistan.
In January 2012, however โ after 30 months of investigation โ you decidedย against prosecuting anyone from MI5 or MI6 for their role in torture. Youย said at the time that there was evidence showing that MI5 โprovided information to the US authorities about Mohamed and supplied questions for the US authorities to put to Mr Mohamed while he was being detained.โ But you also concluded that there was โinsufficient evidence to prove to the standard required in a criminal courtโ that any spies provided information when they โknew or ought to have known that there was a real or serious risk that Mr Mohamed would be exposed to ill-treatment amounting to torture.โ
Evans left MI5 aย weekย following his drinks with you. The day after Evans left the service, youย announcedย you would also leave the CPS. You went on to become a Labour MP at the 2015 general election, while Evans is now Baron Evans of Weardale after prime minister David Cameron made him a life peer in 2014.
2. When and why did you join the Trilateral Commission?
You are aย member of the Trilateral Commission, an organization which was set up in 1973 by American billionaire David Rockefeller, who was then chairman and chief executive of Chase Manhattan Bank. Its stated aim was to be a โdiscussion groupโ to โfoster closer cooperation between Japan, Western Europe and North Americaโ. Today, its membership rolls include senior figuresย from the US national security establishment such as former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger and former US director of national intelligence, John Negroponte.
Other members are John M. Deutch, former head of the CIA and Jami Miscik, a former deputy head. Declassified documents reveal that Rockefeller hadย closeย tiesย to the CIA. Many titans of the American business world such as Andrew Liveris, former chief executive of Dow Chemical Company, are alsoย members.
The Trilateral Commission also includes several high-profile British figures such as Lord Kerr, a former ambassador to the US, who sits on its executive committee. Another prominent member is Vivienne Cox, who is on the board of BG Group, the oil and gas multinational, and who previously served on the board of Britainโs Department for International Development. The former head of MI5, Stella Rimington,ย previously satย on the board of BG Group. Brian Gilvary, chief financial officer at BP, and Sir John Kingman, chairman of Legal & General, are also members.
According to the Trilateral Commissionโs membership list from last year, you are the only serving British member of parliament who belongs to the commission. The same list, however, notes four โformer membersโ who are now in โpublic serviceโ, one of whom is also British: the Conservative MP, Rory Stewart, who a security source toldย theย Daily Telegraphย was an MI6 officer before he moved into politics.
The Trilateral Commission clearly has access to the highest level of the British intelligence establishment. At a Commission meeting in London in 2017, Eliza Manningham-Buller โ Sir Jonathan Evansโ predecessor as head of MI5 โย chairedย a discussion onย โcyber securityโย with Sir David Omand, former director of GCHQ, the UKโs surveillance agency. In 2018, Sir John Scarlett, former head of MI6,ย spokeย at the Trilateral Commissionโs plenary meeting in Singapore.
The Trilateral Commission is a secretive organization whose meetings are strictly off-the-record. I have been unable to find any public mentions you have made of your membership of it.
3. What did you discuss with US Attorney General Eric Holder when you met him on November 9, 2011 in Washington DC?
Analysis of your available business expenses at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) in the 22 months from January 2012 to when you left in October 2013, shows you undertook five international work trips, two of which were to the US.
In November 2012, you spentย ยฃ6,807.59ย on a first-class plane ticket to Washington DC for an โofficial meetingโ but the register does not indicate how long you spent in Washington or who this meeting was with.
In September 2013, the month before you left the CPS, you spentย ยฃ4,085.15 on another first class flight to Washington DC for a โconference.โ For three nights in the US capital you expensed ยฃ1,050.73 for accommodation and food. I could find no evidence of what this conference was or who you met with on this trip.
I have also obtained US government files revealing that you were also in Washington DC on November 9 2011 when you met with US Attorney General Eric Holder and five other officials from the US Department of Justice. Also present was Gary Balch, UK Liaison Prosecutor to the United States.
At this time the CPS which you headed was handling the complex legal case surrounding WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange.
The year previous to your meeting, Holder hadย stated that he had given the go-ahead for a number of unspecified actions as part of a criminal investigation into WikiLeaks. โI personally authorized a number of things last week and thatโs an indication of the seriousness with which we take this matter and the highest level of involvement at the Department of Justice,โ he said.
Three weeks after your meeting with Holder, the attorney general met with the then British home secretary, Theresa May, alongside three other DOJ personnel, two of whom had been in the meeting with you.
4. What role did you play in the CPSโs irregular handing of the Julian Assange case?
Under your leadership, the CPSโs handling of Assangeโs proposed extradition to Sweden to face questioning about sexual assault allegations was marred by irregularities. Italian investigative journalist Stefania Maurizi hasย spent yearsย in a protracted legal process with the CPS to access information on its handling of the case.
The CPS hasย admittedย destroying key emails relating to the Assange case, mostly covering the period when you were director.
A CPS lawyer working under you alsoย advisedย the Swedish authorities not to visit London in 2010 or 2011 to interview Assange. An interview in the UK at that time could have prevented the long-running embassy standoff. An email from a lawyer in the CPS extradition unit on 25 January 2011ย cautioned: โMy earlier advice remains, that in my view it would not be prudent for the Swedish authorities to try to interview the defendant in the UK.โ
Documents from the CPS also show that Swedish prosecutorsย attempted to drop extradition proceedings against Julian Assange as early as 2013 when you were still the DPP. A CPS lawyer handling the case commented on a 2012 article which suggested that Sweden could drop the case, saying: โDonโt you dare get cold feet!!!.โ
Your personal role in these deliberations is not known. Neither is the relationship, if any, between the US and the CPS in the Assange case.
The CPS has been less than forthcoming about the information it possessed. In April 2013, the same month that you and Sir Jonathan Evans went for drinks, the CPS rejected Assangeโs request for the personal data it had on him โbecause of the live matters still pending.โ Even GCHQ, the UKโs largest intelligence agency, had granted Assangeโs request for the personal information it held on him; this revealed one of its officers calling the Swedish case a โfit-upโ.
5. Why did you develop such a close relationship with the Times newspaper while you were the Director of Public Prosecutions and does this close relationship still exist?
During your time at the CPS, you developed a particularly close relationship with theย Times,ย a paper owned by Rupert Murdoch. In the space ofย two monthsย in 2011, you accepted hospitality from three of its journalists, meeting for lunch or interviews withย Francis Gibb,ย Sean OโNeill, andย David Leppard. In December of the same year, youย attendedย Christmas drinks at theย Times.
There is no record that you accepted hospitality from any other newspaper during your time at the CPS. In April 2012, you alsoย metย withย Timesย editor James Harding to discuss CPS media prosecution guidelines, and the following month with John Witherow, editor of theย Sunday Times.
You met Leppard โ the journalist who broke the notorious fraudulent story on former Labour leader Michael Foot being a Soviet agent of influence โ for lunch at Le Pain Quotidien on 2 June 2011. Six weeks before, on 14 April 2011, you had lunch with Sean OโNeill.
While you were in Jeremy Corbynโs shadow cabinet, theย Times played a key role in sabotaging his attempt to become prime minister, functioning as a key publication for leaks from serving intelligenceย andย military officials presenting the Labour leader as a threat to national security. The former head of MI6, John Scarlett, joinedย the board of theย Timesย in 2010, the year after he left the Secret Intelligence Service.
Oneย Times scoop on which your lunch partner Sean OโNeill was lead reporter was published on 27 February 2016 and titled, โHow leadership is taking its toll on โparanoidโ Corbynโ.
OโNeill and his co-author deployed anonymous briefings from shadow cabinet members to paint a picture of an overwhelmed Corbyn unable to handle the job of leader. โShadow cabinet members complain that their meetings lack structure, discipline and direction,โ they wrote. One shadow cabinet member told them of Corbyn: โHe just lets people talk, but it often meanders pointlessly. If thereโs a row it ends up in the media but more often the discussion just wanders offโ.
Four months after this article appeared in theย Times, you resigned from Corbynโs shadow cabinet, citingย the โneed for a much louder voice on the critical issuesโ and airing your โreservationsโ about Corbynโs leadership and the need for a change of leader.
To the surprise of many, you wrote your first national media articleย after being elected Labour leader in theย Sundayย Times, which was behind a paywall.
Related post:
This story about the UK regime change plot needs to be spread and read far and wide! Starmer would be a danger to our people as PM.
I have posted a link to this on the Locals discussion of the video which you can find here -
https://theduran.locals.com/post/2882166/regime-change-plot-in-uk-dark-times-ahead