Saturday, August 10, 2019

The Maduro's Revenge: The Counterintelligence - Venezuelan - New Abwehr Hypothesis of the political events in Puerto Rico of July 2019: Maduro decided to get back at Rossello for calling to oust him, and turned the tables: he ousted Rossello himself instead... - 7:51 AM 8/10/2019

The Maduro's Revenge

The Counterintelligence - Venezuelan - New Abwehr - "Special Operation Retaliation" Hypothesis of the political events in Puerto Rico of July 2019

Maduro decided to get back at Rossello for calling to oust him, and turned the tables: he ousted Rossello himself instead, by complaining to the New Abwehr cum New Nazi Socialist International, which includes Schroeder, Putin, and Netanyahu. The New Abwehr hatched its Special Intelligence and Revenge operation plan, under the code name The Great Hell Knows What Kind Of Socialist Nazi Trumpian Revolution in Puerto Rico, of July 2019. The most poignant and pungent point is that all the players were and are just the New Abwehr's pawns and tools in this plan and game. They used them as their cat paws. 

They incited the conflict, on purpose, beween Rossello and Trump, and used their leftist connections (anti-Keleher "Teachers Revolt"), for the well organized demonstrations, interspersed with the Telegramgate revelations. 

Only very limited number of players have the capability to hack Telegram chats; in order of likelihood: Mossad, CIA, Russians, Gemans, Others. 

Who leaked the transripts to the "Investigative Journalists"? Leff? FBI? Others?

Without a doubt the local FBI played a key role in all these affairs, and the degree to which the cases of the governmental corruption were manufactured, to suit the anti-Rossello political needs at the moment, has to be determined by the careful new investigations and examinations. 

The role of the Generalissimo Schatz The Queenmaker in these events also has to be evaluated and determined. 



BDO In Puerto Rico case, with its shredding of documents, appears to be the direct link and probably  the expendable conduit in this game, conducted by the New Abwehr, and indicating the "German Connection", probably with the BND, as one of the New Abwehr's operational arms. 

All this above is just a working investigative hypothesis. The accurate investigations are absolutely needed, it seems to me. 

Michael Novakhov
_____________________________________


7:00 AM 8/10/2019

Their men in Caracas and their men in San Juan. And who could that be, Mr. Leff? Are you supposed to be in charge of these issues? Maybe, you are one of them?

See also: 


The Big San Juan Show: Puerto Rico demonstrations of July 2019 and their Counterintelligence aspects - 8:36 AM 7/26/2019


The Big San Juan Show: Puerto Rico demonstrations of July 2019 and their Counterintelligence aspects - 8:36 AM 7/26/2019

The Big San Juan Show

In my humble opinion, these "investigative leaks" and the demonstrations were absolutely obviously: staged, 
pre-orchestrated and pre-planned
carefully and artfully filmed and photographed with the distinctive style
reported in the arranged and well organised fashion. 

Does it give you a taste of things to come? 


Michael Novakhov


8:36 AM 7/26/2019


Puerto Rico demonstrations of July 2019 - Google Search


Related image

M.N.: Comments: Quite well fed demonstrators. They are "hungry for the truth and the politically correct (Pro-Trumpian?) vocabulary". Does it sound credible enough to you? 

Rossello and regime change in Venezuela



Oct 9, 2018 - Aggression- Puerto Rico governor Ricardo Rossello is hosting Venezuelancounterrevolutionaries for a regime change summit ...

It would be an error of omission, I think, not to consider the counterintelligence aspect of this affair, and namely the issues around the "regime change" whatever it is, in Venezuela: 




_________________________________________________

“The free nations of the world, which include the United States of America, of which Puerto Rico is a part of, have made compelling expressions so that democracy will be reinstated in Venezuela as soon as possible,” the governor said.
Rosselló added that “based on the responsibility to protect fundamental human rights and the principles of international law, the countries that want the return to democracy in Venezuela are committed to opening humanitarian channels of support to that country, by land, air, and sea.”
According to the governor’s news release, Venezuela’s humanitarian crisis and instability has had “great repercussions throughout the region; this includes Puerto Rico,” which is about 500 miles away from Venezuela.
“Puerto Rico has a population of Venezuelans who, not only are committed to the values of a democratic government, but actively contribute to the economic life of the Island, as well as to its richness and cultural diversity,” the release further says.
According to the joint declaration, Puerto Rico, “as part of the United States—has the guarantees and legitimacy offered by a democratic government that respects human rights and shares with the people of Venezuela a Hispanic tradition and geographical proximity, which results in a cultural and linguistic convergence.

“Faced with this historical-political reality, the Island is the propitious place to articulate a plan that aims at the reconstruction of Venezuela, with full and active participation of the Government of the United States.”"
In retrospect, it seems to me, the prospective Venezuelan  "eliminees" took it too closely to their sensitive socialist hearts, and decided to become the "eliminators" themselves, and to eliminate Mr. Rossello as the political force, a quite common line of thought about the actions and the reactions. 

The "Discounted Venezuelan Oil in Puerto Rico" issue, reported consistently, and just as consistently ignored by those suspected, remains valid, and  it apparently is from the same or the closely related opera, namely: the Venezuelan presence in Puerto Rico, sponsored by the certain figures for their own certain purposes, just like other ethnic minority groups. 

Ziz iz zi Ztreet with many different and various directions. To put it simpler: Who is subverting whom, and how?  
The related bouquet of issues is the forms and ways of finding the conceptual understanding between Trump, his Administration and operatives, and their counterparts in Venezuela and Russia, which takes the protection of Maduro very close to her heart also. And also, possibly in many other places. 

I wish, someone of the Specialists would handle this bouquet. And I also wish that some day we will learn the truth. 

Another recommendation, or the "tip" as they are called, in this regard: 

Investigate Carlos Cases, a former chief of Puerto Rico FBI. 
He and Pesquera are the two related boots of the same pair. 

Me zinkz that you may find a lot of interezting zinkz in hiz heroic exploitz, bezidez being a regular village idiot, who trained the other village idiotz.

The possible roles of the FBI and the related structures of Puerto Rico in this Rossello Resignation Affair, or the Puerto Rico Coup D'Etat of July 2019, as I call it, are highlighted by the fact that the hair apparent to Rossello isWanda Vazquez, who possibly is the ally of the others, involved in this Coup. 

22 hours ago - Vázquez's close political ties to Rosselló, along with her own political history, have many people here viewing her as only a temporary solution. 

Investigate all of them, and many others. 

Michael Novakhov 

10:01 AM 7/26/2019

Links
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Michael Novakhov – SharedNewsLinks℠
Venezuela and Cuba Intelligence Services – Google Search

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Venezuela and Cuba Intelligence Services – Google Search
Venezuela and Cuba Intelligence Services – Google Search
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Rossello and Venezuela – Google Search
Rossello and Venezuela – Google Search
Rossello and Venezuela – Google Search
Rossello and Venezuela – Google Search
Rossello and Venezuela – Google Search
Rossello and Venezuela – Google Search
Rossello and Venezuela – Google Search
corruption network behind the Telegram chat – Google Search
The pillage of public funds in Puerto Rico going on behind the chat
corruption network behind the Telegram chat – Google Search
Text processing glitch cleared way for hackers on chat app Telegram – Axios
corruption network behind the Telegram chat – Google Search
Activists say Russian telecoms group hacked Telegram accounts
corruption network behind the Telegram chat – Google Search
The pillaging of Puerto Rico public funds behind the chat – Caribbean Business
Trump plays ‘troops withdrawal’ card against Germany
Unsealed documents detail alleged Epstein victim’s recruitment at Mar-a-Lago
Cuba’s Intelligence Masterstroke In Venezuela – Analysis – Eurasia Review
Fear of retribution prevents hundreds of thousands of crimes being reported every single year
Unsealed documents show allegations against Jeffrey Epstein and his inner circle
Vázquez is governor because of me – Caribbean Business
Michael Novakhov – SharedNewsLinks℠
Venezuela and Cuba Intelligence Services – Google Search

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Cuba’s Intelligence Masterstroke in Venezuela | Geopolitical Monitor


https://www.geopoliticalmonitor.com/cubas-intelligence-masterstroke-in-venezuela/
14 hours ago – The many accomplishments of Cuban intelligence in Venezuela stand as an instructive example of how a smaller agency can punch far above …

Everything has to be done to ERADICATE corruption, nepotism, governmental incompetence and dysfunctions. But these efforts should not be phony, for the show and masking of the same things on the much larger scales, and not for the personal benefits, as it appears to be with Douglas Leff, his FBI, and the overwhelming majority of the Puerto Rican politicians on all levels.

M.N.: My criticism of FBI does not mean the objection to anti-corruption measures in Puerto Rico. Not at all. Just the opposite. Everything has to be done to ERADICATE corruption, nepotism, governmental incompetence and dysfunctions. But these efforts should not be phony, for the show and masking of the same things on the much larger scales, and not for the personal benefits, as it appears to be with Douglas Leff, his FBI, and the overwhelming majority of the Puerto Rican politicians on all levels. They all look like the incorrigibly and the immutably corrupt bunch, to their core. They simply should be gradually replaced with the naturally selected in new conditions, the new brands, and the new generations of the politicians, very much including from the mainland, as the pre-State, and as the State. The corrupt bunch should be thrown into the garbage. 

Michael Novakhov

4:55 AM 8/10/2019

Thursday, August 8, 2019

Wanda Vázquez was installed by Trump, Leff The Mamabicho, and the FBI. The Puerto Rico Nazi Trumpian Coup D’Etat continues and it is in progress! M.N.: If this is not the Coup D’Etat, then what is it?! | Puerto Rico Supreme Court Ousts New Governor, and Another Is Sworn In – NYT – 1 hour ago – 9:58 AM 8/8/2019 This case should be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. How and by whom?




It also looks like Douglas Leff The Mamabicho, of the FBI Grand Army of Mamabichos, shut down all my websites which covered these events, on one of the servers, through his Chinese-Russian friends. He did this on purpose, for the informational blockade during this period. 

Stupid Mamabicho! He cannot even suck dicks properly. Practice, idiot! 
The only things that this stupid Mamabicho is capable of is to scheme, to organize coups, and to launder money for his Russian-Israeli Mafia. 

GO BACK TO YOUR MOSSAD SCHOOL, STUPID!
______________________

This case should be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. How and by whom?

Image result for baloney

Cheap Puerto Rican BALONEY!

Produced, packaged and sent by Trump in the Puerto Rico Supreme Court Envelope, with Douglas Leff The MAMABICHO as the mailman. 

This only confirms that Puerto Rico is a Banana Republic, and now Trump will try to turn the Island into the one of his geopolitical WHORES.

“The summer of 2019 will be remembered as an unprecedented moment in which Puerto Ricans — of all ages, ideologies, backgrounds and creeds — threw themselves into the street to demand more from their government,” she wrote in a concurring opinion issued along with the court’s ruling.

M.N. With all due respect to the authors of this statement, I must say that ziz iz the cheap PR (both Puerto Rican and the Public Relations) BALONEY!

It is obvious that these demonstrations were very well prepared in advance, well organized, paid for, staged, filmed, and publicized by the Trumpian propaganda machine. 

M.N.: If this is not the Coup D’Etat, then what is it?!

Wanda Vázquez was installed by Trump, Leff The Mamabicho, and the FBI. 

The Puerto Rico Nazi Trumpian Coup D’Etat continues and it is in progress! 

It is not Ricardo Rossello who acts like king, not at all; it is Trump, who does. He simply appointed his Viceroy, or more exactly, his ViceRegina. 

________________ 

Puerto Rico Supreme Court Ousts New Governor, and Another Is Sworn In – NYT – 1 hour ago – Post Link – 9:58 AM 8/8/2019

Puerto Rico Supreme Court Ousts New Governor, and Another Is Sworn In

Video

0:40Wanda Vázquez Is Sworn In as Puerto Rico’s New Governor
The former secretary of justice Wanda Vázquez was sworn in by Chief Justice Maite D. Oronoz Rodríguez in San Juan, P.R., on Wednesday.CreditCreditErika P. Rodriguez for The New York Times
By Alejandra RosaPatricia Mazzei and 
SAN JUAN, P.R. — The uneasy calm that had settled over Puerto Rico after huge protests brought down one governor and a second one was installed in his place ended on Wednesday when its Supreme Court ruled that the only way to maintain the constitutional order was to swear in the island’s third governor in a week.
In short order after the high court ruling, Pedro R. Pierluisi, who had filled the position since Friday, stepped down. Wanda Vázquez, the former secretary of justice, took the oath as governor, just the second woman to hold the office.

And Puerto Rico was thrust into a new period of political tumult over how long the unpopular Ms. Vázquez might remain on the job — and what machinations might be underway to prepare for her possible succession.

After a dizzying month full of remarkable moments, Wednesday’s turn of events might have given Puerto Ricans confidence in their rule of law, but the continuing saga offered little certainty over what the leadership of their troubled government might look like in the coming months.

Chief Justice Maite D. Oronoz Rodríguez called the past few weeks “the most important juncture” in Puerto Rico’s history as a democracy.

“The summer of 2019 will be remembered as an unprecedented moment in which Puerto Ricans — of all ages, ideologies, backgrounds and creeds — threw themselves into the street to demand more from their government,” she wrote in a concurring opinion issued along with the court’s ruling.
The nine-member court ruled unanimously that Mr. Pierluisi was sworn in on unconstitutional grounds on Friday. The 29-page ruling ordered that a new governor, this time following the constitutional line of succession, assume the office by 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Because the secretary of state post is vacant, the job fell to Ms. Vázquez, 59. With her husband and daughter by her side, she raised her right hand and took the oath inside the Supreme Court in San Juan, the capital.
“We will work together on all that unites us, and we will look for consensus where we disagree,” Ms. Vázquez said in a televised speech late on Wednesday in which she promised to meet with diverse sectors of society to chart a path forward. “The times demand that.”
A career prosecutor with no experience in elective office, she had previously said she did not want the job but would fulfill her constitutional duties. “I will remain focused on resuming the course for our people in an orderly and peaceful fashion,” she added.


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But Ms. Vázquez brings her own baggage. She was suspended from office last year after being accused of intervening in a case involving her daughter. When she was the head of the women’s affairs office, feminist groups accused her of being an obstacle to real improvements for women.





ImagePedro R. Pierluisi made no major decisions and issued no executive orders in his brief tenure as governor of Puerto Rico.
CreditErika P. Rodriguez for The New York Times
When Ms. Vázquez arrived at La Fortaleza, the governor’s mansion, in a dark S.U.V., protesters who had gathered not far from the gates could be heard loudly yelling.
“She’s not qualified to be the new governor,” said Yanira Arias, a 47-year-old organizer who demanded Ms. Vázquez’s resignation. “What’s happening now is an expression of discontent over the corruption and lack of authentic answers from a government that is not legislating in favor of the Puerto Rican people.”
In a videotaped message on Facebook, Mr. Pierluisi emphasized that the law he cited to take office had been presumed constitutional until the high court ruled otherwise on Wednesday.
“I want to be clear that the only motivation I have had during this time, as always, has been the well-being of Puerto Rico,” he said, wishing Ms. Vázquez well in her new role. “This is a time when we must all unite for Puerto Rico, leaving behind any partisan, ideological or personal agendas.”
Mr. Pierluisi, a 60-year-old lawyer and the island’s former nonvoting resident commissioner in Congress, said he would continue to serve Puerto Rico, though he did not lay out specific plans.


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He had become governor on Friday even though as a new nominee he had not previously been confirmed as secretary of state by both chambers of the Legislative Assembly. Only the House of Representatives approved his recess appointment.
Mr. Pierluisi and his predecessor as governor, Ricardo A. Rosselló, 40, whose resignation became effective at 5 p.m. Friday, had cited a 2005 statute that said the secretary of state did not require legislative confirmation to step in as governor. The Senate sued.
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court declared that the portion of the law cited by Mr. Pierluisi was unconstitutional. The rest of the law regarding the line of succession is valid, the court found.
In a concurring opinion, Justice Ángel Colón Pérez likened the way in which Mr. Rosselló had handed over power to Mr. Pierluisi to how a king turns over his throne.
“If a country’s ruler were empowered to choose his successor, or possible successor, without a minimal guarantee of democratic consensus, there would not be much difference between our system of government and a monarchy,” he wrote. “We do not live in a monarchy.”
Legal scholars who had questioned Mr. Pierluisi’s ascent to the governor’s seat from the start praised the ruling and said the fact that it came so quickly signaled that the justices considered the issue clear-cut.


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“The Constitution requires the advice and consent of both chambers,” said Yanira Reyes Gil, a constitutional scholar and associate law professor at the Interamerican University of Puerto Rico. “It is a basic principle of constitutional law that the Constitution takes precedence.”





Image
The Puerto Rico Supreme Court in San Juan. Its nine justices ruled unanimously in favor of the Puerto Rico Senate, which asked for a preliminary injunction against Mr. Pierluisi.
CreditErika P. Rodriguez for The New York Times
Mr. Pierluisi’s 120 hours in office made him the shortest-serving governor in modern Puerto Rican history. Andrés González Muñoz, a Cuban military general who was named governor in 1898 while Puerto Rico was under Spanish rule, died the same day he arrived to take over the job.
Mr. Pierluisi’s lawyers argued that the Senate could have voted on his nomination but chose not to do so before Mr. Rosselló’s resignation became effective on Friday. Mr. Rosselló was forced out of office by massive public protests prompted by the leak of hundreds of pages of private messages in which he and his aides insulted politicians and everyday Puerto Ricans.
Even before he took office, Mr. Pierluisi struggled to overcome questions about the conflicts of interest he could face as governor. Lawmakers asked him whether he might find himself having to assert attorney-client privilege in matters relating to the federal oversight board created by Congress to oversee Puerto Rico’s finances because of its more than $70 billion in public debt.
Court filings show that Mr. Pierluisi earned about $20,000 doing legal work for the fiscal control board, according to the Public Accountability Initiative, a nonprofit group that conducts research on Puerto Rico.
The group found that he even billed the board for meetings with his former chief of staff, who now works for the control board. The president of the board is Mr. Pierluisi’s brother-in-law.
Mr. Pierluisi, the group said, did legal work for the board relating to the restructuring of the electric company’s debt while at the same time serving as a lobbyist for the AES Corporation, one of the electric company’s creditors.


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Mr. Pierluisi, like Mr. Rosselló, is a member of the ruling New Progressive Party, which supports statehood for Puerto Rico. He is also a Democrat when it comes to national politics, though political parties on the island do not match up with those on the mainland. The national political affiliation of Ms. Vázquez is unclear.
In his brief time as governor, Mr. Pierluisi made no major decisions but tried to give off an air of stability, holding meetings with agency heads and discussing matters such as hurricane preparedness and the new school year.
But the political crisis has paralyzed much of the government for a month and has hurt Puerto Rico’s credibility in Washington, where the Trump administration has already delayed more than $8 billion in federal disaster prevention funds pending more oversight.
If Ms. Vázquez does not wish to remain governor, she could appoint a new secretary of state and then resign. If that were to occur, one possible candidate would be Jenniffer González-Colón, Puerto Rico’s resident commissioner in Congress, who has been talked about as running for the seat in 2020.
Thomas Rivera Schatz, the powerful Senate president, made clear on Wednesday that he would have preferred Ms. González-Colón in the governor’s seat. She is a Republican and a chair of President Trump’s Latino coalition, and her broad popularity on the island could help the New Progressive Party hold on to power next year.
But the crisis has revealed serious rifts among New Progressives, and protesters have made clear that they do not trust most institutions — especially not the party in government.



Correction: 
Because of an editing error, an earlier version of a capsule summary for this article misspelled the surname of Puerto Rico’s new governor. She is Wanda Vázquez, not Vásquez.
Alejandra Rosa reported from San Juan, Patricia Mazzei from Miami and Frances Robles from Key West, Fla. Susan C. Beachy contributed research.
A version of this article appears in print on , Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Ruling Topples New Governor Of Puerto Rico. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe