President Trump makes plenty of hostile moves toward Russia of his own
accord. This is compounded, however, when members of his cabinet, like
CIA Director Gina Haspel start conniving to mislead Trump into taking
even more hostile moves.
When the alleged Novichok poisoning happened in Salisbury in March of 2018, President Trump was not inclined to go along with recommendations within his cabinet to take a “strong option” to move against Russia.
Haspel was somehow “tasked” with convincing Trump to accept this move, and in doing so she showed Trump fake photographs of dead ducks, claiming that the ducks were poisoned in the “sloppy” Russian action.
This narrative centered on the fact that the poisoned Sergei Skripal was
feeding ducks ahead of showing symptoms. He also interacted with some
children at the time, and Haspel even had photos of “sick children.”
There is no record that any children were sickened in the Novichok
incident, and likewise there was never a single report of even one duck
dying.
But fake photos work better than facts, ultimately, and Trump was
quickly sold on taking the “strong option,” expelling a large number of
Russian diplomats and closing a Russian consulate. This made 2018 a
continuation of worsening US-Russia ties, which apparently was the goal
of Haspel and others, but which they were only able to sell Trump on by
lying about what actually happened.
CIA Chief Used Duck Photos to Trick Trump Into Anti-Russia Move
Haspel tricked Trump into thinking Russia poisoned British ducks
Jason Ditz is Senior Editor for Antiwar.com. He has 20 years of experience in foreign policy research and his work has appeared in The American Conservative, Responsible Statecraft, Forbes, Toronto Star, Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Providence Journal, Washington Times, and the Detroit Free Press.
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