Strange Messages From The Middle East: Part Two: Iraq

finjanJoseph Farrell – Yesterday, you’ll recall, I blogged about the strange statement of Russian Major General Igor Konshenkov, a statement that was clearly directed to the war party in Washington. Konshenkov, you’ll recall, stated that the Russian air and missile defense systems in Syria were now fully operational, and that they had an operational range that would be a “surprise” to Washington and to any and all “unidentified flying objects” entering Syrian airspace.

As I pointed out, the more prosaic and probable meaning of that statement was simply “any unknown” object entering Syrian airspace not supplying proper electronic “ident” or identification from transponders or in response to commands from Russian and/or Syrian authorities to identify itself (or be shot down). But, as in the case of Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova’s use of “tectonic consequences” should Washington pursue its war path, General Konshenkov’s message carried deeper and undeniable implications, for “unidentified flying objects,” he would know, carries a certain colloquial meaning in American English which is unavoidable.

That colloquial meaning is simply “flying saucer,” i.e., a nuts-and-bolts advanced technology not originating from earth or humans, and a nuts-and-bolts technology that originates from advanced human black projects. Interpreted with this in mind, General Konshenkov’s remarks take on a whole new and much deeper, mysterious, and more profound set of meanings and implications, meanings and implications that imply some “off-world, outer-space” connection to Middle Eastern geopolitics.

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