Air Force strips 34 launch officers of certifications following the
termination of the nation’s top two nuke commanders
Anthony Gucciardi
Infowars.com
January 16, 2014
A few short months after two
of the top nuke commanders in the United States were removed for minor
offenses, an additional 34 nuclear missile launch officers have now been
stripped of their certification following a ‘cheating scandal’ in which the Air
Force says
some officers were ‘texting answers’ to each other during a monthly test on
missile operation.
This round of terminations in regards to nuclear launch commanders follows
the original termination of the second highest nuclear commander (Navy Vice Adm.
Tim Giardina) back on September 3rd of last year — the same date that Alex Jones
and I released
exclusive high level intel revealing a covert nuclear arms transfer from
Texas’ Dyess Airforce base to South Carolina. And subsequently, the same day
that Senator Lindsay Graham would hours later appear in a press statement to warn
against a ‘nuclear attack’ on South Carolina in the event that we did not
pursue war with Syria (the agenda being pushed at the time).
In a summary of these events, I spoke with Alex on his Nightly News program
in which we broke it all down in depth:
But the government, of course, had no intention of telling you that Giardina
was suspended on that same day. It would later come out through leaked emails
acquired by the Daily
Mail that, despite the military announcement of Giardina’s suspension weeks
later, he was indeed suspended on the exact same day as the transfer:
“Kunze said Strategic Command did not announce the Sept. 3 suspension because
Giardina remains under investigation and action on Kehler’s recommendation that
Giardina be reassigned is pending. The suspension was first reported by the
Omaha World-Herald.”
It is also revealed in the mainstream media reports that the government did
not want these suspensions and firings to go on record, and that it was an
anonymous government insider who provided leaked emails to the Associated
Press:
“An internal email obtained by the AP on Friday said the allegations against
Carey stem from an inspector general probe of his behavior while on an
unspecified ‘temporary duty assignment.’ The email said the allegations are not
related to the operational readiness of the ICBM force or recent failed
inspections of ICBM units.”
When we look back at the ’2007 United States Air Force nuclear weapons
incident’, where nukes were
reported missing from the Minot Air Force Base with no official suspect, the
media went into turmoil and investigations were launched immediately. Even CNN
covered the event in depth and continued to investigate what was going on. The
CNN reporter even stated that “this kind of thing is not supposed to happen” in
response to the event:
Yet where is the media on this subject now?
Whether or not the latest nuke commander purge is related to the missing nuke
report and previous terminations is yet to be determined as research continues
to be directed into this topic. What is certain, however, is the reality that
numerous red flags point to the validity of the unsigned, black ops nuclear arms
transfer from Texas’ Dyess Airforce base to South Carolina. And had we not
received our high level military intelligence on the subject that spread like
wildfire across various news organizations and communities, we may never know
what could have happened.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
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