Army Whistleblower to Mum “Prepare for the End of the World." Arrested by NSA/FBI..!
(Non Official Story)
NSA attempt Army Whistleblower Arrest
November 5, 2011
An Alaska military police soldier was put in protective custody after a FBI strike team tried to enter a Alaska military base to arrest him on suspicion of espionage.
According to Army Times.com 22 year old Army Specialist William Millay, a military policeman from Owensboro, Kentucky, stationed at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska was the target of the FBI Strike Team.
The alleged charges stem from National Security Agency (NSA) wire taps of the United States military and all US soldiers. The NSA turned over wire tap intercepts to the FBI which sent a FBI strike team to Alaska to arrest Millary.
The Army refused to give up Millary and immediately put him under protective custody until after the NSA and the FBI explains their actions to the US Army – eavesdropping and intercepting United States military personnel communications.
The attempted FBI arrests reveals that the NSA has been spying (espionage) on the US military and military personnel. Why are they now spying on the United States’ own military?
They have been ordered by the White House to look for whistle blowers – people who are leaking information concerning ongoing illegal CIA false flag operations against the United States. They have been put on high alert by the White House and have been ordered to pay particular attention to information being leaked about imminent 'False Flag Attacks' by the United States government against the United States people.
Late last month NSA data snooping computers flagged Army Specialist William Millay emails and phone calls to his mother, and other family members living in Kentucky, warning them of a imminent threat and that they should “Prepare for the End of the World.”
The NASA notified the FBI and they immediately sent a FBI strike team to Alaska to attempt to arrest Millay but left empty handed after the US Army Military Police challenged the NSA and the FBI charge of espionage. Being the US Army’s military police they issued their own red flag because of how the NSA and FBI became aware of what was emailed or uttered by Millay. It was clear to the US Military Police that the NSA is engaging in espionage against the US military. Espionage is the practice of spying or using spies to obtain information. The National Security Agency was set up to spy on foreign nationals and foreign governments, to collect and analyze foreign communications and foreign signals intelligence, not United States military communications.
The Monday edition of the US Army Times (posted on the Army Times website on Tuesday Nov. 1/11) reported that Specialist Millay was arrested for “espionage” and held by the US Army. They would not allow Millay to be charged by the United States government.
What was Millay so concerned about that he warned his mother and family to “Prepare for the End of the World.”? On Nov. 9, the federal government will conduct the first nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System.
Also on November 9, 2011 (November 9/11) the Medical Reserve Corps will be conducting community medical exercises . Hospital personnel and various first responder agencies from the MidSouth region will participate in community medical exercises. The official government storyline is that these exercises will provide practical training experience to prepare for medical response during a large scale event.
On Wednesday November 9/11, hospital personnel will work with volunteer patients playing the role of injured victims to provide a realistic and practical experience in treatment and response. Volunteers must be at least 18 years of age and preregistration is required. In order to participate in this drill you must be a member of the Medical Reserve Corps.
Also beginning Nov 9/11 Exercise Pacific Wave 11 will take place. PacWave11 will be held on November 9/11 as a multi-scenario exercise that will allow all PTWS (Pacific Tsunami Warning and Mitigation System) countries to exercise using a destructive local or regional tsunami scenario.
Exercise Pacific Wave 2011 begins November 9/11
http://prasutagus.wordpress.com/2011...blower-arrest/
(Versus Official Story)
UCMJ charges expected in espionage case
By Joe Gould - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Nov 1, 2011
An Alaska soldier arrested on suspicion of espionage will face military charges, but he is not expected to be charged in federal criminal court, according to an Army spokesman.
Spc. William Colton Millay, a 22-year-old military policeman from Owensboro, Ky., is expected to be charged under the Uniform Code of Military Justice within the week, according to Lt. Col. Bill Coppernoll, a spokesman for U.S. Army Alaska.
Spc. William Millay is assigned to the rear detachment of the 164th Military Police Company, 793rd Military Police Battalion, 2nd Engineer Brigade, which deployed to Afghanistan earlier this year
“We are preparing to prefer charges against Spc. Millay,” Coppernoll told Army Times.
Millay is assigned to the rear detachment of the 164th Military Police Company, 793rd Military Police Battalion, 2nd Engineer Brigade. The unit, known as the Arctic Enforcers, deployed to Afghanistan in the spring, leaving at Millay at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.
Coppernoll said Millay was arrested at Elmendorf-Richardson on Oct. 29 as the result of an ongoing FBI and Army Counterintelligence investigation, but declined to explain the circumstances that led to Millay’s arrest.
The Army has been taking a hard line on information security violations following the arrest last year of former intelligence analyst Pfc. Bradley Manning, who is accused of leaking hundreds of thousands of documents to the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks.
“The Army is very serious about prosecuting any types of espionage, or leaks or any type of mishandling of sensitive material,” said Greg Rinckey, an attorney who specializes in courts-martial but is not connected to Millay’s case.
Rinckey said that it is possible Millay had access to sensitive information as a military policeman, but the case does not appear to be as serious as Manning’s. Nevertheless, the Army seems to be sending a message by getting tough with Millay, he said.
“The Army wants to send a message to other soldiers that this is not acceptable, and it will be dealt with extremely harshly,” Rinckey said.
Friends from Millay’s hometown were “shocked” to hear of his arrest and said the charges were uncharacteristic of Millay. One friend, Janssen Payne, said Millay is “as loyal to his country as he is to his best friends.”
“I just don’t see it,” Payne, 25, said of the Army’s accusations. “I just don’t see the motivation for him to do it.”
Payne said Millay’s brother was a soldier and that Millay was a supporter of the wars and then-President George W. Bush when the two of them were in high school.
“He was really patriotic and really loved his country,” Payne said.
At the time, Payne, Millay and their friends were part of a tight-knit group that filmed a several humorous shorts for YouTube. In a spoof of the “Die Hard” movies, Millay played a buffoonish “Bruce Willis” character.
Payne recalled Millay getting in some minor trouble as a teenager, but said he had straightened out since joining the Army. However, Millay had not been in contact with many of his friends for several months.
“Everybody’s really worried about what will happen to him, and we all just want him to come home, but I know that would just kill him,” Payne said.
Millay remains in pre-trial confinement at the Anchorage Correctional Complex.
Mary Frances Rook, special agent in charge of the FBI in Alaska, said after the arrest that it was the result of the “close working relationship between the FBI and its military partners in Alaska.”
Representatives of the FBI and Department of Justice in Alaska declined to comment further and deferred to the Army and Defense Department.
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2011/1...arges-110111w/
PS - Mmmm - I Wonder which of the 2 Stories 'above' you find more credible..?
jackovesk
http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?34179-Army-Whistleblower-to-Mum---Prepare-for-the-End-of-the-World.-Arrested-by-NSA-FBI..-
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Friday, March 11, 2011
Ralph Lopez
War is a Crime
As Obama's crime of the destruction of Bradley Manning continues to unfold before our very eyes, Manning friend David House now tells us that over 8 months in isolation with movement and sleep restrictions placed on him have been having their intended effect. House has told MSNBC that by the end of January Manning appeared "catatonic" and that he had "severe problems communicating," with it having taken House nearly 45 minutes on a recent visit to engage in any meaningful way (video below.) House said Manning's demeanor was as "if he had just woken up and didn't know what was going on around him." Manning was "utterly exhausted physically and mentally...it was difficult to have any kind of social engagement."
Also, a full month after Congressman Dennis Kucinich formally requested a visit, the Army has stalled on the request.
All for the crime of reporting war crimes and criminal behavior even among the highest-ranking military officials in Iraq.
In 2005, General Peter Pace, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said: “It is absolutely the responsibility of every U.S. service member [in Iraq], if they see inhumane treatment being conducted, to try to stop it.”
Chase Mader writes in HuffPo that soon after deployment to Iraq, Manning:
"soon found himself helping the Iraqi authorities detain civilians for distributing “anti-Iraqi literature” -- which turned out to be an investigative report into financial corruption in their own government entitled “Where does the money go?” The penalty for this “crime” in Iraq was not a slap on the wrist. Imprisonment and torture, as well as systematic abuse of prisoners, are widespread in the new Iraq. From the military’s own Sigacts (Significant Actions) reports, we have a multitude of credible accounts of Iraqi police and soldiers shooting prisoners, beating them to death, pulling out fingernails or teeth, cutting off fingers, burning with acid, torturing with electric shocks or the use of suffocation, and various kinds of sexual abuse including sodomization with gun barrels and forcing prisoners to perform sexual acts on guards and each other...
Like any good soldier, Manning immediately took these concerns up the chain of command. And how did his superiors respond? His commanding officer told him to “shut up” and get back to rounding up more prisoners for the Iraqi Federal Police to treat however they cared to..."
Manning also found a video and an official report on American air strikes on the village of Granai in Afghanistan’s Farah Province (also known as “the Granai massacre”). According to the Afghan government, 140 civilians, including women and a large number of children, died in those strikes.
War crimes? What war crimes? This is the point of view of the Pentagon as it destroys Bradley Manning.
On the Haditha killings (found to be "collateral damage" by the Army despite an American officer's unearthing and handing up the chain of command a video showing close up bullet wounds) a recent Counterpunch article by Medea Benjamin and Charles Davis recounts:
“ Consider what happened to the U.S. soldiers who, over a period of hours – not minutes – went house to house in the Iraqi town of Haditha and executed 24 men, women and children in retaliation for a roadside bombing. I watched them shoot my grandfather, first in the chest and then in the head,” said one of the two surviving eyewitnesses to the massacre, nine-year-old Eman Waleed. “Then they killed my granny." Almost five years later, not one of the men involved in the incident is behind bars. And despite an Army investigation revealing that statements made by the chain of command “suggest that Iraqi civilian lives are not as important as U.S. lives,” with the murder of brown-skinned innocents considered “just the cost of doing business,” none of their superiors are behind bars either."
Massacres of civilians in retaliation for IEDs seems to have been standard fare in Iraq. Ethan McCord says his unit was ordered to engage in "360 rotational" fireand "kill every mother&* in the street" in the event of an IED. The officer who gave the order was Col. Ralph Kauzlarich, "the lost Kauz" who is featured in David Finkel's book "The Good Soldiers." Col. K is also the executive officer who led the first investigation into the death of Pat Tillman.
Josh Stieber, a McCord unit-mate who also witnessed the order, said the logic was to get residents to be "pro-active" in preventing the planting of roadside bombs. Brass knew that the people in the houses nearest probably saw it planted and didn't say anything.
"Yeah, it was an order that came from Kauzlarich himself, and it had the philosophy that, you know, as Finkel does describe in the book, that we were under pretty constant threat, and what he leaves out is the response to that threat. But the philosophy was that if each time one of these roadside bombs went off where you don't know who set it ... the way we were told to respond was to open fire on anyone in the area, with the philosophy that that would intimidate them, to be proactive in stopping people from making these bombs ..."
Now nine Afghan children have been killed after what the Army says was mistaken identity after a nearby rocket attack on American forces. These boys could have been the boys some on this site got to know well in the New Year's Global Call for Peace (they weren't, but they were just as precious.)
Defense Secretary Robert Gates once said people like Bradley Manning have "blood on their hands" for releasing documents which might identify Afghan informants. But look down Robert, and don't flinch. They are dripping.
Commander-in-Chief Obama, order Bradley Manning released!
The White House
Phone Numbers
Comments: 202-456-1111
Switchboard: 202-456-1414
FAX: 202-456-2461
Webform for email: www.whitehouse.gov/contact
Phone Numbers
Comments: 202-456-1111
Switchboard: 202-456-1414
FAX: 202-456-2461
Webform for email: www.whitehouse.gov/contact
Also demand your congressman speak up and castigate this administration for the treatment of Bradley Manning, leave a voicemail if it is after-hours (24/7):
Capitol switchboard: 202-224-3121
Capitol switchboard: 202-224-3121
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