I posted this because this looks like the fulfilment of some of my prophecies of Russian soldiers on US soil. EJO
Russian Forces to Provide “Security” At US Events
FEMA signs deal with Russian Emergency Situations
Ministry to “exchange experts”
Paul Joseph Watson
As part of a deal signed last week in WashingtonDC
between the Russian Emergency Situations Ministry and FEMA, Russian officials
will provide “security at mass events” in the United States, a scenario
that won’t sit well with Americans wary of foreign assets operating
on US soil.
Russian troops. Image: Wikimedia Commons
According to a press release by the Ministry of the
Russian Federation for Civil Defense and Emergencies, US and Russian officials
met on June 25 at the 17th Joint U.S.-Russia Cooperation Committee on Emergency
Situations.
In addition to agreeing with FEMA to “exchange experts
during joint rescue operations in major disasters,” the Russian Emergency
Situations Ministry will also be providing “security at mass events” in
the United States.
This suggests that events designated as “National
Special Security Events” by the Department of Homeland Security,
which include the Super Bowl, international summits such as the G8 and
presidential inaugurations, will now rely partly on Russian authorities to
provide security.
The meeting last week also agreed on the conclusion that
US and Russian emergency authorities will increase their co-operation, “in
order to respond efficiently to all kinds of disasters.”
The use of foreign troops or other officials in a law
enforcement capacity providing “security” inside theUnited States is
illegal under Posse Comitatus. Capt. William Geddes of the U.S. Army
Reserveacknowledged last year that it is against federal law to use US
troops to conduct police patrols, despite the fact that such occurrences are
becoming increasingly common. The use of foreign troops is an even more clear
cut violation of Posse Comitatus.
Last year we reported on how Russian troops were
invited to the US as part of a Fort Carson, Colorado drill focused around
anti-terror training. Aside from learning how to target terrorists in America,
the Russian soldiers were also out in the local community attending
a baseball game in Colorado Springs.
As Mac Slavo writes, “Rumors have circulated for
years about the possibility of foreign troops being deployed on U.S.
soil in the event of a widespread declaration of a national emergency. For
quite some time there have been anecdotal reports to support the claim that the
U.N., Russia and other nations would be used in a policing
capacity should some critical event befall our nation.”
“The fear should such a scenario take place has been that
these soldiers would act under the banner of their own flags, ignoring the
fundamental protections afforded to our citizens,
leaving Americans under the jurisdiction of people who don’t speak
our language or respect our fundamental rights to self defense, to be secure in
our homes, and to be presumed innocent in the eyes of the law.”
Concerns about foreign troops being used on US soil have
lingered ever since the release of State Department Publication 7277,
which is a blueprint for the harmonization of US and Russian forces under a
framework of United Nations-led global government.
Back in 2008 it was also reported that US
and Canadian authorities had signed an agreement that would pave the
way to using each other’s militaries on both sides of the border “during an
emergency”.
Alex Jones has documented foreign troops being trained on
U.S. soil to deal with “insurgents” since the late 1990?s as part
of “urban warfare drills”.
Back in July 2010, our reporters covered
the Operation Vigilant Guard exercises in Chicago which involved
Polish troops training alongside U.S. National Guard troops in drills
focused around raiding terrorists and drug dealers.
According to SFC Mark Ballard of the
Illinois National Guard, the Polish forces were “integrating into some of
the civil military units that are participating in this exercise” as part of
Illinois’ partnership with the Republic of Poland, a relationship based around
“integrative training” and blending military and civilian forces in the event
of a national emergency, as well as making this process of integration with
foreign troops more “visible”.
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