Gwenyth Todd, Government Coverup
Update: Sept 21- I have not fully validated this source, VT, yet. I see that Kerry Cassidy, formerly of Project Camelot, is a “source” for Gordon (although not for this story) so this is suspect for the moment as Cassidy was suspected by Dr. Steven Greer as being part of the Industrial Military Complex. So then, this article is suspect in it’s entirety (We know a lot about Todd otherwise) until I can verify.
Todd thought the report was fishy. Although Bahrain’s Shiites did oppose the U.S.-backed Sunni monarchy, they’re Arabs, eternal enemies of the Persian Iranians.
And Qassim himself, it happened, had warned Todd just the previous day that anti-monarchy demonstrators might attack places frequented by U.S. personnel.
The report “looked like a fabrication by someone trying to kill two birds with one stone, by making the Bahraini Shia appear to be anti-U.S. terrorists who also happened to be taking orders from Iran,” Todd said.
“I knew, really knew, that the Bahraini Shia were trying to ensure U.S. personnel were nowhere near the possible violence.” She suspected the intelligence report was cooked up by Bush administration hawks.
Cosgriff “asked me if I could go out and verify the information at the source — an informant in Dirza, a Shia village — saying that he realized it was dangerous,” Todd said. Cosgriff declined to answer questions for the record about his meeting with Todd; a retired senior naval officer familiar with his thinking said he did not issue an order.
Todd’s boss, Martin Adams, recalled the event. “I saw the incoming report,” Adams said. “Someone — I do not remember who, but it was a junior officer — brought it to the office I shared with Gwenyth and showed it to her and to me.
Subsequently, Gwenyth got a call, asking her to go down and see Cosgriff — an unusual event in itself. When she returned, she said she had to work that evening, as Cosgriff had asked her to go out to confirm the information in the report.”
The picture above is the former Navy Admiral meeting with Zhandarbek Zhanzakov, the head of Kazakhstan’s Navy. What does Kazakhstan and this guy have to do with it? Not surprising, oil. Check it out:
Kazakhstan, which is the size of Western Europe, has “the largest oil and gas reserves in the Caspian Sea basin, and is producing 1.5 million barrels of oil a day today. It is projected to produce 2.5-3.5 million barrels of oil a day by 2015, surpassing today’s output by Qatar or Iraq,” Ariel Cohen wrote September 27, 2006, in the Washington Times.