Saturday, February 26, 2022

Things To Come:

Russian Defector Warned What Would Happen Right Before WWIII: 'The Overture' - 'Grey Terror' Hits America's Food Supply System, Another Reason Food Prices Will Keep Skyrocketing




There is no way food prices don’t go up. A lot. I know I’ve mentioned this before, probably a few times, but it’s super important. When food prices rise to a point where they exceed 30% of disposable income, civil unrest and revolution become highly probable. Maybe not 2022, but at some point in the next few years we’re almost guaranteed a revolution, maybe more than one in countries which you’d never have thought such a thing possible.

And quite interestingly, only days before Russia issued that ban on exporting ammonium nitrate, a massive fire struck the Winston Weaver Company Fertilizer Plant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, with CBS News reporting "a massive amount of ammonium nitrate within the burning facility is at risk of an explosion. At the beginning of this incident there was enough ammonium nitrate on hand for this to be one of the worst explosions in U.S. history." 

Sounding just like what former Soviet Union Intelligence Officer Viktor Suvorov, who defected to the UK back in 1978, had called 'grey terror' in his book "Spetsnaz's First World War", we're going to be taking a look in the next section of this story at what Suvorov called the period of 'the overture' in what he believed would be the build up to World War III, what's unfolding now before our eyes. 

With the globalists pushing America and the world closer to a World War 3 every day that they're insanely pushing to turn 'nuclear' as Susan Duclos had reported in this new ANP story, let's take an extended look at what Russian intelligence officer Viktor Suvorov had written many years ago

Warning that while he didn't know EXACTLY how World War Three would start, but the leadup to it would bring about a series of covert actions carried out by its secretive and highly trained special forces, imagine World War 3 in 2022, with America's 'woke military' going up against this. From Viktor Suvorov before we continue.: 

I do not know how or when World War Three will start. I do not know exactly how the Soviet high command plans to make use of spetsnaz in that war: the first world war in which spetsnaz will be a major contributor. I do not wish to predict the future. In this chapter I shall describe how spetsnaz will be used at the beginning of that war as I imagine it. It is not my task to describe what will happen. But I can describe what might happen.  

The last month of peace, as in other wars, has an almost palpable air of crisis about it (ANP: Sound familiar?) Incidents, accidents, small disasters add to the tension. Two trains collide on a railway bridge in Cologne because the signaling system is out of order. The bridge is seriously damaged and there can be no traffic over it for the next two months. 

In the port of Rotterdam a Polish supertanker bursts into flames. Because of an error by the captain the tanker is far too close to the oil storage tanks on the shore, and the burning oil spreads around the harbor. For two weeks fire brigades summoned from practically the whole country fight an heroic battle with the flames. The port suffers tremendous losses. The fire appears to have spread at a quite incredible speed, and some experts are of the opinion that the Polish tanker was not the only cause of the fire, that the fire broke out simultaneously in many places


In the Panama Canal the Varna, a Bulgarian freighter loaded with heavy containers, rams the lock gates by mistake. Experts reckoned that the ship should have remained afloat, but for some reason she sinks there and then. To reopen the canal could well take many months. The Bulgarian government sends its apologies and declares itself ready to pay for all the work involved. 

In Washington, as the President's helicopter is taking off, several shots are fired at it from sniper's rifles. The helicopter is only slightly damaged and the crew succeed in bringing it down again safely. No one in the craft is hurt. Responsibility for the attack is claimed by a previously unknown organization calling itself 'Revenge for Vietnam'. 

There is a terrorist explosion at Vienna airport. 

A group of unidentified men attack the territory of the British military base in Cyprus with mortars. 

A serious accident takes place on the most important oil pipeline in Alaska. 

The pumping stations break down and the flow of oil falls to a trickle. 


All these operations — because of course none of these events is an accident — and others like them are known officially in the GRU as the 'preparatory period', and unofficially as the 'overture'The overture is a series of large and small operations the purpose of which is, before actual military operations begin, to weaken the enemy's morale, create an atmosphere of general suspicion, fear and uncertainty, and divert the attention of the enemy's armies and police forces to a huge number of different targets, each of which may be the object of the next attack

The overture is carried by agents of the secret services of the Soviet satellite countries and by mercenaries recruited by intermediaries. The principal method employed at this stage is 'grey terror', that is, a kind of terror which is not conducted in the name of the Soviet Union. The Soviet secret services do not at this stage leave their visiting cards, or leave other people's cards. The terror is carried out in the name of already existing extremist groups not connected in any way with the Soviet Union, or in the name of fictitious organizations. 

The GRU reckons that in this period its operations should be regarded as natural disasters, actions by forces beyond human control, mistakes committed by people, or as terrorist acts by organizations not connected with the Soviet Union. 

The terrorist acts carried out in the course of the 'overture' require very few people, very few weapons and little equipment. In some cases all that may be needed is one man who has as a weapon nothing more than a screwdriver, a box of matches or a glass ampoule. Some of the operations can have catastrophic consequences. For example, an epidemic of an infectious disease at seven of the most important naval bases in the West could have the effect of halving the combined naval might of the Soviet Union's enemies. 



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