Russische diplomaten: 9 verdachte sterfgevallen de afgelopen paar jaar………

Onlangs berichtte ik al over de dood van 4 Russische diplomaten, die in korte tijd na elkaar omkwamen*. ‘Geheel toevallig’ ambtenaren die nodig waren om de spanningen tussen de VS / Rusland en tussen Turkije / Rusland te doen verminderen.

Gisteren ontving ik van Anti-Media een artikel waar men tot een paar jaar eerder teruggaat en waaruit blijkt dat in die tijd tot nu al 9 hoge Russische ambtenaren/diplomaten op toch wel vreemde manier zijn omgekomen. ‘Zeg maar’ iets te toevallig allemaal……

Oordeel zelf:

9
Russian Officials Have Recently Died Suspiciously and Nobody Knows
Why

February
27, 2017 at 10:20 am

Written
by 
Anti-Media
News Desk

9 Russian Officials Have Recently Died Suspiciously and Nobody Knows Why

(ZHE Op-Ed) Six
Russian diplomats have died in the last 60 days. 
As
Axios notes,
 all
but one died on foreign soil. Some were shot, while other causes of
death are unknown. Note that a few deaths have been labeled “heart
attacks” or “brief illnesses.”

1.
You probably remember Russia’s Ambassador to Turkey, Andrei
Karlov
 —
he was assassinated by a police officer at a photo exhibit in Ankara
on December 19.

2.
On the same day, another diplomat, Peter Polshikov, 
was
shot dead in his Moscow apartment. The gun was found under the
bathroom sink but the circumstances of the death were under
investigation. Polshikov served as a senior figure in the Latin
American department of the Foreign Ministry.

3.
Russia’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Vitaly Churkin,
 died
in New York this past week. Churkin was rushed to the hospital from
his office at Russia’s UN mission. Initial reports said he suffered
a heart attack, and the medical examiner is investigating the death,
according to CBS.

4.
Russia’s Ambassador to India, Alexander Kadakin,
 died
after a ‘brief illness’ January 27, which The Hindu said he had
been suffering from for a few weeks.

5.
Russian Consul in Athens, Greece, Andrei Malanin,
 was
found dead in his apartment January 9. A Greek police official said
there was ‘no evidence of a break-in.’ But Malanin lived on a
heavily guarded street. The cause of death needed further
investigation, per an AFP report. Malanin served during a time of
easing relations between Greece and Russia when Greece was
increasingly critiqued by the EU and NATO.

6.
Ex-KGB chief Oleg Erovinkin,
 who
was suspected of helping draft the Trump dossier, was found dead in
the back of his car December 26, according to The Telegraph.
Erovinkin also was an aide to former deputy prime minister Igor
Sechin, who now heads up state-owned Rosneft.”

If
we go back further than 60 days…

7.
On the morning of U.S. Election Day, Russian diplomat Sergei
Krivov
 was
found unconscious at the Russian Consulate in New York and died on
the scene. Initial reports said Krivov fell from the roof and had
blunt force injuries, but Russian officials said he died from a heart
attack. BuzzFeed reports Krivov may have been a Consular Duty
Commander, which would have put him in charge of preventing sabotage
or espionage.

8.
In November 2015, a senior adviser to Putin, Mikhail Lesin, 
who
was also the founder of the media company RT, was found dead in a
Washington hotel room according to the NYT. The Russian media said it
was a ‘heart attack,’ but the medical examiner said it was ‘blunt
force injuries.’

9.
If you go back a few months prior in September 2016, Russian
President Vladimir Putin’s driver 
was
killed too in a freak car accident while driving the Russian
President’s official black BMW  to add to the insanity.”


If
you include these three additional deaths that’s a total of nine
Russian officials that have died over the past two years
that 
WeAreChange.com’s
Aaron Kesel
 knows
of – he notes there could be more.

As
Kesel explains,
 it’s
worth noting that governments, specifically the CIA, have for long
periods of time had chemical concoctions that can induce a full
systematic shutdown of a person’s nervous system and in some cases
cause someone’s’ heart to explode.


Former
CIA employee Mary Embree discusses the infamous heart attack gun and
how she was tasked with finding a chemical concoction that would
cause a heart attack. The weapon was first made public during the
Church Committee hearings in 1975 by former CIA director William
Colby. It was said to be very lethal and untraceable, by using this
weapon a murder is made to look natural while the poison dissolves in
hours.

It
seems highly unlikely and improbable to write off that six Russian
officials would die in under 60 days in such an influx in various
different mysterious ways without a catalyst. And let’s not forget
RT founder and former Putin aide Mikhail Lesin was 
found dead
in 2015 from a blunt weapon that was originally blamed on a 
heart
attack
 so
assassination can’t be taken off the table and ruled out in any of
these cases. Turkey and Russia already accused NATO of a false flag
attack killing Karlov the Russian-Turkish Ambassador. NATO also had a
dead diplomat Yves Chandelon mysteriously 
died of
a gunshot wound to the head in his car a week before the death of
Karlov. Chandelon was the chief auditor in charge of counterterrorism
funding.

Turkey
and Russia have the will not to be deceived by this false flag
attack,”
 they said.


Don’t
forget that on Christmas day, a Russian military jet went down over
the Black Sea, 
killing 60
members of the Red Army choir and 33 others that just adds to the
massive coincidence list.

On
a final note, former acting director of the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA), Michael Morell openly conspired to “covertly” kill
Russians and Iranians in Syria in an August 2016 interview with
Charlie Rose. While Morell was talking about killing Russian and
Iranian soldiers it is definitely a strange piece to add to this
puzzle.

Are
we witnessing a battle between the deep state and Russia in a spy
versus spy plotline or is this all just a freak coincidence?

Opinion
by 
Tyler
Durden
 /
Republished with permission / 
Zero
Hedge
 / Report
a typo

=====================

* Zie: ‘Media stilte over dood 4 Russische diplomaten………

Zie ook:

FBI beweert dat Lesin, de oprichter van RT, zichzelf heeft doodgeslagen……. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

De Russiagate samenzweringstheorie dient de machthebbers………‘ (zie ook de links in dat bericht)

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden.

Media stilte over dood 4 Russische diplomaten………

Mensen, je hebt van die berichten waarvan je onmiddellijk denkt, hoe is ‘t in godsnaam mogelijk? Zo kreeg ik Gisteren van Anti-Media het volgende bericht, over 4 Russische diplomaten die kort na elkaar zijn gestorven, terwijl de media er geen of weinig aandacht voor hadden.

Uiteraard gaat het in dit bericht vooral over de media in de VS. In de EU, althans Duitsland, België, Nederland en Groot-Brittannië, was de moord op de Russische ambassadeur in Turkije, Andrey Karlov, wel degelijk groot nieuws. Ook al besteedde men amper aandacht aan de dader en waarom deze Karlov vermoordde, men lulde gewoon na, wat de Turkse autoriteiten oplepelden………

Karlov was de eerste van 4 Russische diplomaten die om het leven kwam, daarna volgden nog 2 ambassadeurs en een hoge Russische diplomaat……

Toevallig in een tijd, waar diplomatie van ervaren diplomaten hoognodig was, daar de spanningen tussen de VS en Rusland bijna met de dag groeiden (en intussen weer groeien…)…..

In het kader van deze zaken, maar vooral wat  betreft de moord op Karlov, valt ook de zogenaamde suïcide van Yves Chandelon op, een NAVO boekhouder*.

Hier het artikel van Anti-Media:

Media
Silent As 4 Top Russian Diplomats Die 

(MPN) While
few might consider being a diplomat a life-threatening or even
dangerous job, that trend may be quickly reversing — that is, at
least for Russian diplomats.

With
recent media attention squarely focused on Donald Trump’s ascension
to the Oval Office and various controversies swirling throughout the
early days of his presidency, a string of sudden, mysterious deaths
of top Russian diplomats have largely evaded media scrutiny and
public attention.

Further,
public interest in these deaths, at least in the United States, has
been minimized, as much of the negative press Trump has received
along the same timeframe has been related to
 his
allegedly close relationship
 with
the Russian government, tying in with 
months
of anti-Russian propaganda
 relating
to the Syrian conflict and allegations that Russia had a role in
manipulating the U.S. presidential election.

Since
late December, four top Russian diplomats, including three
ambassadors, have died under circumstances that remain unclear.

This
troublesome trend began on Dec. 20, when Andrey Karlov, Russia’s
ambassador to Turkey,
 was
gunned down
 in
Ankara during a photo exhibition event. The assailant, a 22-year-old
off-duty Turkish police officer, took advantage of the bloody
spectacle to yell, “Don’t forget Aleppo!” — a reference to
Russia’s controversial role in helping the Syrian government
reclaim what was once the country’s largest city from U.S.-backed
Al-Qaida terrorists.

Karlov’s
death came at a critical juncture in Russian-Turkish relations, as
the two nations were in the midst of reconciliation efforts following
an incident in which Turkey shot down a Russian fighter jet over
Syria in 2015, damaging diplomatic relations.

Russian
President Vladimir Putin
 called
Karlov’s assassination a clear provocation
 intended
to derail Syrian peace negotiations. Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan echoed these sentiments,
 adding,
“Both Turkey and Russia have the will not to be deceived by this
false flag attack.”

However,
media attention of the assassination was derailed, as it took
place
 on
the same day
 as
a high-profile terrorist attack in Berlin carried out by 
a
Tunisian asylum seeker
 who
had allegedly expressed support for Daesh (an Arabic acronym for the
terrorist group known in the West as ISIS or ISIL).

A
few weeks later, yet another Russian diplomat died suddenly, this
time in Athens, Greece.


Andrey
Malanin, a senior diplomat at Russia’s embassy in the Greek
capital,
 was
found dead
 on
the bathroom floor of his apartment on Jan. 9. After his body was
discovered, Greek police launched an investigation into his death.
Despite an initial statement that Malanin appeared to have died from
natural causes at “first sight,” the investigation has yet to
conclude, leaving the official cause of Malanin’s death still
unestablished.

The
weeks since have seen the deaths of two more Russian ambassadors.

Russia’s
ambassador to India, Alexander Kadakin,
 died
at a hospital in India
 on
Jan. 26 following a “brief,” unspecified illness. 
Indian
leaders mourned
 the
death of Kadakin, who was credited with
 having
played a significant role
 in
promoting Indian-Russian relations, culminating in
 major
defense and energy deals
 between
the two nations in October of last year.

Most
recently, on Feb. 20, Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s ambassador to the
United Nations,
 died
suddenly at work
 in
New York. In its official announcement, Russia’s foreign
ministry 
offered
no details on the circumstances
 of
Churkin’s death, instead offering condolences to his friends and
relatives. Unnamed U.S. government and law enforcement officials,
however,
 told
Reuters
 that
Churkin had apparently died of a heart attack, though the exact cause
of his death
 remains
unknown
.

Churkin’s
deputy, Pyotr Ilyichev, 
said
the late diplomat
 “devoted
his whole life to defending the interests of Russia and was found on
the very front lines and in the most stressful posts.” Indeed,
Churkin drew condemnation from several of his Western colleagues
for 
his
strong defense
 of
Russia’s bombing campaign in the Syrian city of Aleppo, yet
remained steadfast in his support of Moscow’s foreign policy.

Russian
news agencies reported that Putin
 was
deeply upset
 by
the news of Churkin’s death.

The
deaths of these four high-level Russian diplomats came at a time of
uncertainty in U.S.-Russian relations. International attention has
focused heavily on 
the
controversial phone call
 between
Trump’s national security advisor, retired Gen. Michael Flynn, and
a Russian diplomat at Russia’s U.S. embassy, which ultimately led
to Flynn’s resignation.

As
the controversy surrounding Flynn consequently focused attention on
the relationship between the Trump administration and the Russian
government, this string of deaths came at a time when diplomatic
nuance and expertise would be particularly useful.

By Whitney
Webb
 /
Republished with permission / 
MintPress
News
 / Report
a typo

================

* Zie: ‘Yves Chandelon, topfunctionaris NAVO onder verdachte omstandigheden gevonden na ‘suïcide……’

Zie ook: ‘Russische diplomaten: 9 verdachte sterfgevallen de afgelopen paar jaar………

        en: ‘FBI beweert dat Lesin, de oprichter van RT, zichzelf heeft doodgeslagen……. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het voorgaande, klik op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden, dit geldt niet voor de labels: Malanin, Kadakin, Churkin en Ilyichev.