FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES-- FRENCH PRESIDENT NICOLAS SARKOZY HAS PLENTY
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France's new right-wing president, Nicolas Sarkozy, has shown himself to be a willing puppet of the Bush Regime. He'll be in DC next week for discussions with his puppeteers. In France, they call him, disparagingly "Sarko the American" and many Europeans are disappointed in his Bush-oriented political stands, especially at a time when the entire Bush agenda is circling the bowl in an historical flush.
Earlier today, something far scarier came out than Sarkozy's snuggling up to the Bush Regime. A scattershot hit piece from Global Research reports that he has been accused of working for the Mossad! Sarkozy is Catholic but his maternal grandfather was Jewish and Sarkozy has had very strong political connections with the French Jewish community, especially as mayor of Neuilly-sur-Seine, a wealthy Jewish nieghborhood. He does not have strong political connections with the French Muslim community (which is approximately 10 times the size of the Jewish community in France).
As if his marital challenges were not enough cause for concern, "Sarco the Sayan" has suddenly emerged as the most infamous accolade of French President Nicolas Sarkozy. The influential French daily Le Figaro last week revealed that the French leader once worked for-- and perhaps still does, it hinted-- Israeli intelligence as a sayan (Hebrew for helper), one of the thousands of Jewish citizens of countries other than Israel who cooperate with the katsas (Mossad case-officers).
A letter dispatched to French police officials late last winter-- long before the presidential election but somehow kept secret-- revealed that Sarkozy was recruited as an Israeli spy. The French police is currently investigating documents concerning Sarkozy's alleged espionage activities on behalf of Mossad, which Le Figaro claims dated as far back as 1983. According to the author of the message, in 1978, Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin ordered the infiltration of the French ruling Gaullist Party, Union pour un Mouvement Populaire. Originally targeted were Patrick Balkany, Patrick Devedjian and Pierre Lellouche. In 1983, they recruited the "young and promising" Sarkozy, the "fourth man."
Ex-Mossad agent Victor Ostrovsky describes how sayanim function in By Way Of Deception: The Making and Unmaking of a Mossad Officer. They are usually reached through relatives in Israel. An Israeli with a relative in France, for instance, might be asked to draft a letter saying the person bearing the letter represents an organisation whose main goal is to help save Jewish people in the Diaspora. Could the French relative help in any way? They perform many different roles. A car sayan, for example, running a rental car agency, could help the Mossad rent a car without having to complete the usual documentation. An apartment sayan would find accommodation without raising suspicions, a bank sayan could fund someone in the middle of the night if needs be, a doctor sayan would treat a bullet wound without reporting it to the police.
And, a political sayan? It's rather obvious what this could mean. The sayanim are a pool of people at the ready who will keep quiet about their actions out of loyalty to "the cause", a non-risk recruitment system that draws from the millions of Jewish people outside Israel.
I'm not saying Sarkozy's visit to Washington is related to this but there are rumors afoot that Bush has given Israel the green light for a massive attack on Hamas. Yeah... let's roil up the Muslim world some more and get them even more paranoid about American intentions. And this is exactly the right time, seein' as Pakistan has nuclear weapons-- and plenty of crazies-- and Bush and Condi have
2 Comments:
Love medicated Laura's body language to George...get the f*** away from me!
As Tom Hartmann pointed out this week, Sarkozy also took issue with 'the excesses' of Wall Street this week, and a fiscally irresponsible Bu$h regime...didn't see this in the broadcast media?? Be prepared for even more corporate media control, as the final FCC hearing today in Seattle will soon follow with more regulations promising less media diversity.
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