The Other Face of Ukrainian Democracy: Chechen Terrorism Made in the USA

The more I read the news about the war in Ukraine, the clearer the link seems with the dynamics of the wars that shook Russia and other ex-U.S.S.R. countries in the 90s. But most of all, it is clear that the Dark Empire, or rather the United States of America, is in such a tight spot that it is throwing all the terrorist reserves it has at the barricades, creating an inconceivable union between Ukrainian, Latvian, Estonian, Lithuanian and Polish neo-Nazis, between mercenaries from far and wide and Wahhabi terrorists of various origins.

Yesterday both the Novorussian and Ukrainian news agencies announced the death of the Chechen Wahhabi terrorist Isa Munayev. He was at the head of a battalion of international pro-Ukrainian mercenaries, largely made up of Chechen Wahhabis. It comes right back to me how some of our journalists bombarded Italian public opinion with false news for months, recounting how Chechen terrorists had invaded Ukraine along with the Russian army. It appears it is the exact opposite. Chechen terrorists are fighting for the Ukrainian-Nazi government in Kiev, but strangely, no one talks about this. Isa Munayev’s battalion was participating, along with the Ukrainian army, in the punitive operation in Donbass. A faithful ally of the U.S.A. and Ukraine, he was felled by shots from the Novorussian partisan militia.

To help you better understand who Isa Munayev was, all I remember is that he was wanted in Russia for having committed crimes against humanity during the war in Chechnya. He found refuge in Europe; in this way, like other members of al-Qaida, he was protected and supported by non-governmental networks in the pay of ultra-liberal oligarchs such as George Soros.

Munayev was linked to the Chechen terrorist cells who had tarnished themselves with crimes against humanity, like the bloodshed at the Dubrovka Theatre in Moscow (October 2002) and the Beslan school massacre (September 2004).

When, in my books dedicated to the war in Chechnya, I explained that the United States created Islamic terrorism in the Caucasus in order to destabilize Russia, some advocates of Atlanticist politics* “democratically” accused me, to put it mildly, of not being credible. Today, a few years from the publication of my book “Free Fall” about the war in Chechnya, we are all part of a very similar war taking place in the heart of Europe. Yet again, an obscene spectacle is unfolding in front of us: death, desperation, pain and anger, so much anger. However, if we leave feelings to one side and try to analyze the situation, what comparisons do we find with the Chechen conflict? Neo-Nazis from various European countries, Chechen Wahhabi terrorists exiled for years in the West, the United States of America with the Nobel Peace Prize in their sights and our Prime Minister Renzi too, amongst others, with his faithful Democratic Party — they govern Italy, so they are responsible for having sent military vehicles into Ukraine, with which Atlanticist terrorists will kill ever more civilians — they are all committing genocide against the Ukrainian population, trying to involve Russia in the war and in doing so save the American economy, backwards and speculative for decades, from an inevitable collapse. All as it happened in Chechnya: With part of the population turned against their brothers through propaganda and money, provocations and terrorism have unleashed a ferocious war, and behind this terrible conflict some of the most significant business negotiations on the planet are unfolding.

I ask myself, how many more tests does the modern world need in order to understand the full danger of Atlanticist neo-Nazism? How much more innocent blood must flow before the blind and deaf of the various parties who call themselves “democratic” realize that they are being taken advantage of by corrupt politicians and bloodthirsty tyrants, and being used by ultra-liberal powers who embody the worst expression of feudal capitalism the world has ever seen?

*Editor’s note: Atlanticism is a belief that emphasizes the importance of cooperation between Europe and North America.

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