Guantanamo Jewish Mafia-U.S.Military Drug Trafficking: New push at OAS for US to alter anti-drug approach,Mayan Holocaust
U.S.Secretary of State,John Kerry, who presided over Iran-Contra investigations of the early 1990's that had a lot to do with using Cenrtal America to traffic drugs and arms for U.S.and Israel,is now Hillary Clinton's replacement as Secretary of State.We can presume he knows all about the use of Guantanamo as a base or trampaline for cocaine from South America to the U.S. and just who it is bennefitting but so far he has done and said nothing just as he used his position as Senator from Masssachussetts to cover up for Israelis of ICTS International including convicted money launderer Menachem Atzmon with his connections to the highest politicians of Israel,who 'guarded' Logan Airport Boston on 9/11/01.The Jewish Russian mafioa seems to control both the U.S.government as well as Putin's Russia and Palestine or Israel all the while using the historic lie that they are 'Semites' rather than white Europeans,many more reprehensible than the Nazis who they supported and who helped found the Irsaeli religious police state..
http://www.stowsentry.com/ap%20international/2013/06/04/new-push-at-oas-for-us-to-alter-anti-drug-approach
New push at OAS for US to alter anti-drug approach
SONIA PEREZ DIAZ
Associated Press
Published:
ANTIGUA, Guatemala (AP) -- Latin American
countries frustrated by the United States' refusal to change its drug
war strategy are pushing the U.S. government to look at alternatives to a
fight that has killed tens of thousands in a region beset by drug
cartels.Guatemalan Foreign Relations Secretary Fernando Carrera said the subject of drugs will top the agenda at the Organization of American States' General Assembly, which began its three-day session in Antigua on Tuesday evening.
"We have already reached a consensus and agreed that our final declaration will include changes to the current anti-drug model," Carrera said. "We already have some ideas on how to change drug-fighting policies."
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs William R. Brownfield were attending the meeting, which comes two weeks after the OAS released a report calling for a serious discussion on legalizing marijuana..........
...........................................................
I wonder why the OAS is afraid to confront the fact that Guantanamo was used by the hypocritical U.S.government fascists themselves and their Jewish Russian-Israeli allies as a base to fly cocaine from Colomnbia and Venezuela to the U.S. -even when at least to of those planes have been captured in Mexico previously with tons of cocaine on board ?I guess for the same reason that the Israeli role in the Guatemalan Mayan holocaust is censored as well...
http://extrados.mforos.com/606888/6391401-avion-cia-con-coca-mafia-ruso-judia-giuliani-cardoen/
extrados.mforos.com/606888/6391401-avion-cia-con-coca-mafia-ruso-judia-giuliani-cardoen/
[cia-drugs] Hillary Clinton flew on plane owned by company linked to
CIA renditions and organized crime
roadsend
Tue, 16 Oct 2007 09:10:13 -0700
waynemadsenreport:
Hillary Clinton flew on plane owned by company linked to CIA
renditions and organized crime publication date: Oct 15, 2007 Previous
| Next October 15, 2007 — Hillary Clinton flew on plane owned by
company linked to CIA renditions and organized crime On September 24,
2007, a Gulfstream II (tail number N987SA) crashed landed in Yucatan,
Mexico with 3.3 metric tons (3.7 tons) of cocaine on board.
The plane had recently been sold to Donna Blue Aircraft, Inc. of
Coconut Creek, Florida, a firm owned by two Brazilians, and re-sold,
shortly before the crash, to two Florida businessmen. N987SA had also
flown patterns to and from Guantanamo Bay similar to those flown by
CIA rendition aircraft Before being sold to Donna Blue, the Gulfstream
had been owned by Air Rutter International, a firm with offices in
Garden City, New York; Long Beach and Irvine, California, whose owner
is Arik Kislin, the son of Sam Kislin. N987SA was owned by Kislin’s
business partner, William Achenbaum, an owner, along with Arik Kislin,
of Manhattan’s Hotel Gansevoort.
Air Rutter leased out the aircraft. WMR has learned that another Air
Rutter Gulfstream II (tail number N216RR) has flown presidential
candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, including a January 2007 stop in Des
Moines, Iowa. The plane, which has a crew of 3, including a jump seat
for a flight attendant, and can handle up to 13 passengers, has a
fully galley, a private lavatory, plush leather seats, conference
seats and table, CD/DVD entertainment system, a 21 inch monitor,
satellite telephone system, and even an espresso machine.
On October 9, 2007, WMR reported: Arik’s uncle, Semyon (Sam) Kislin, a
member of the New York City Economic Development Board and immigrant
from Odessa, has poured substantial political donations into the past
campaigns in New York of Hillary Clinton and [Rudolph] Giuliani. He
has also contributed to past campaigns of New York Senator Charles
Schumer, former Republican Senator Alphonse D’Amato, and President
Bill Clinton. The Center for Public Integrity has previously reported
that a 1996 Interpol report connected Sam Kislin’s Trans Commodities,
Inc. to two reputed Uzbek mobsters, Lev and Mikhail Chernoy.
The Interpol connected Kislin’s firm to the Chernoys’ fraud and
embezzlement schemes. Kislin confirmed that Mikhail Chernoy had been
employed by his Trans Commodities firm. The Chernoy brothers are
citizens of Israel. [The Chenoys have been linked to a worldwide
empire of front companies and corporate shells in Monaco, the Bahamas,
Cyprus, Switzerland, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Israel, the Cayman Islands,
Western Samoa, London, Isle of Man, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands,
Brighton Beach (Brooklyn), Liechtenstein, and Vanuatu].
Between 1994 and 1997, Sam Kislin and his wife Ludmila, gave Giuliani
$14,250 in contributions. In 1997, after Giuliani maxed out on his GOP
contributions, $9.7 million, Kislin donated $30,000 to Giuliani
through the Liberal Party, the other ticket on which Giuliani was
running for re-election as mayor. In May 1999, Sam Kislin co-chaired a
Giuliani Senate race fundraiser at the Sheraton Hotel and Towers in
New York. The gathering raised $2.1 million for Giuliani’s aborted
senate campaign. Arik Kislin contributed $1000 to Giuliani’s 1995
mayoral campaign and his Blonde Management shared office space with
Sam Kislin’s Trans Commodities. Sam Kislin, his wife Ludmila, their
son David, and daughter Regina gave $2000 to Schumer’s 1998 Senate
campaign.
Sam also gave Schumer’s opponent, D’Amato, $1000. Sam Kislin is also a
prominent supporter of the United Jewish Appeal and Israel. Arik
Kislin gave Hillary Clinton $4000 in 2006, specifically on Sept. 12,
2006. That same day an Olya Kislin also donated $4000 to Hillary
Clinton. On October 1, 2007, the New York Post reported that an
ex-employee of Air Rutter, Mark Billey, subsequently arrested on
federal child sex charges, said he noted a number of armed U.S.
Marshals at Air Rutter’s facilities in Long Beach, however, given the
connection between the firm and Clinton, the federal agents may have
been part of Senator Clinton’s Secret Service detail.
Clinton has made several fundraising visits to the Los Angeles area
over the past year. On October 9, WMR also reported that Arik Kislin
is associated with another airline company, Skookum Air, Inc.
Government records indicate that Clinton’s N216RR was owned by Skookum
Air, as well as Air Rutter International, with the actual registered
owner listed as GS-II Holdings, LLC, a firm registered in Delaware
with offices listed at 35 E. 21st St. Suite 500, New York, NY. On
October 4, 2007, when Senator Clinton visited Chicago to attend a
“Republicans for Hillary” fundraiser at the Hyatt Regency, N216RR was
parked at Chicago Midway Airport.
Recently, N216RR has been put up for sale.
wolfblitzzer0: Guantanamo Cocaine Trafficking,Titan Corp.,CIA,DEA ...
wolfblitzzer0.blogspot.com/.../guantanamo-cocaine-traffickingciarussia.h...
wolfblitzzer0: ,HillaryClinton State Dept.,U.S. Ambassador Arnold ...
wolfblitzzer0.blogspot.com/.../us-ambassador-arnold-chacon-owes.html
wolfblitzzer0: March 2012
wolfblitzzer0.blogspot.com/2012_03_01_archive.html
Dual Citizenship -- Loyal to Whom? - page 25 - War Without End
www.warwithoutend.co.uk/.../dual-citizenship-loyal-to-whom-page-25.p...
..................................
http://www.stowsentry.com/ap%20international/2013/06/04/new-push-at-oas-for-us-to-alter-anti-drug-approach
New push at OAS for US to alter anti-drug approach
SONIA PEREZ DIAZ
Associated Press
Published:
ANTIGUA, Guatemala (AP) -- Latin American
countries frustrated by the United States' refusal to change its drug
war strategy are pushing the U.S. government to look at alternatives to a
fight that has killed tens of thousands in a region beset by drug
cartels.
Guatemalan Foreign Relations Secretary Fernando Carrera said the subject of drugs will top the agenda at the Organization of American States' General Assembly, which began its three-day session in Antigua on Tuesday evening.
"We have already reached a consensus and agreed that our final declaration will include changes to the current anti-drug model," Carrera said. "We already have some ideas on how to change drug-fighting policies."
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs William R. Brownfield were attending the meeting, which comes two weeks after the OAS released a report calling for a serious discussion on legalizing marijuana.
The OAS study doesn't make specific proposals and found there is "no significant support" among the OAS's 35 member states for legalizing cocaine, the illegal drug with the greatest impact on Latin America, or other harsher drugs.
The study was commissioned after some Latin American leaders called on President Barack Obama to rethink the war on drugs at last year's Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia.
It urges "assessing existing signals and trends that lean toward the decriminalization or legalization of the production, sale and use of marijuana. Sooner or later decisions in this area will need to be taken."
The Obama administration, however, believes it has already adopted a comprehensive counter-narcotics approach that melds cutting demand for drugs and treatment with law enforcement and interdiction of supply.
A senior U.S. official traveling with Kerry said the OAS would endorse that multi-pronged strategy and pointed out that there is no consensus either within the hemisphere or in individual countries on legalization.
This is true even in the United States, where several states have legalized marijuana, said the official, who was not authorized to preview Kerry's discussions publicly. The U.S is open to discussing ideas, but will not as a federal government support decriminalization.
Human Rights Watch urged the OAS countries to explore legal regulation as a way to help stem the violence of organized crime and drug traffickers inflicted on many Latin American countries. The international human rights group said that criminalizing personal drug use "undermine" basic human rights.
"The 'drug war' has taken a huge toll in the Americas, from the carnage of brutal drug trafficking organizations to the egregious abuses by security forces fighting them," the group's Americas director, Jose Miguel Vivanco, said in a statement. "Governments should find new policies to address the harm drug use causes, while curbing the violence and abuse that have plagued the current approach."
Dozens of human rights organizations from Canada to Argentina signed a letter Monday asking for leaders "to discuss and rethink the existing initiatives with a view to place human rights in the center of the debate."
Among those countries pushing for a dialogue on drugs in the Western Hemisphere are many who have been close allies of the United States' fight against drugs, including Colombia and Guatemala.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos was among those urging a discussion of legalization. He said that while his country extradites hundreds of alleged drug traffickers for trial in the U.S., criminals turn to other countries where law enforcement is weaker. Central America and Mexico in particular have been hit hard as traffickers shifted operations there.
President Otto Perez Molina of Guatemala, a hard-hit cocaine transit country along with neighboring Honduras, made headlines shortly after taking office last year when he proposed legalizing drugs.
"The message has been sent that the hemisphere wants to look at alternative approaches and wants the United States to be part of that discussion," said Cynthia Arnson, director of the Latin American program at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
Arnson said Latin American leaders will use the meeting to spur a discussion that can be sustained as countries try to go forward with a new strategy.
"Latin American countries will mostly be looking for ways to diminish the violence and the negative effects on their societies and their economies posed by organized crime and they may increasingly diverge with the United States over what policies to adapt," she said.
While the OAS meeting promises to serve as a forum to begin discussing the legalization of marijuana, talking about harder drugs like cocaine, heroin and methamphetamines may be harder to bring to the table, Arnson said.
"It's one thing to say, 'Let's break the ice on talking about these issues,' and it's another thing to come forward with concrete proposals for dealing with harder drugs that many countries can sign on to, including the United States," she said.
___
Associated Press writer Matthew Lee contributed to this report.
......................
Guatemalan Foreign Relations Secretary Fernando Carrera said the subject of drugs will top the agenda at the Organization of American States' General Assembly, which began its three-day session in Antigua on Tuesday evening.
"We have already reached a consensus and agreed that our final declaration will include changes to the current anti-drug model," Carrera said. "We already have some ideas on how to change drug-fighting policies."
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs William R. Brownfield were attending the meeting, which comes two weeks after the OAS released a report calling for a serious discussion on legalizing marijuana.
The OAS study doesn't make specific proposals and found there is "no significant support" among the OAS's 35 member states for legalizing cocaine, the illegal drug with the greatest impact on Latin America, or other harsher drugs.
The study was commissioned after some Latin American leaders called on President Barack Obama to rethink the war on drugs at last year's Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia.
It urges "assessing existing signals and trends that lean toward the decriminalization or legalization of the production, sale and use of marijuana. Sooner or later decisions in this area will need to be taken."
The Obama administration, however, believes it has already adopted a comprehensive counter-narcotics approach that melds cutting demand for drugs and treatment with law enforcement and interdiction of supply.
A senior U.S. official traveling with Kerry said the OAS would endorse that multi-pronged strategy and pointed out that there is no consensus either within the hemisphere or in individual countries on legalization.
This is true even in the United States, where several states have legalized marijuana, said the official, who was not authorized to preview Kerry's discussions publicly. The U.S is open to discussing ideas, but will not as a federal government support decriminalization.
Human Rights Watch urged the OAS countries to explore legal regulation as a way to help stem the violence of organized crime and drug traffickers inflicted on many Latin American countries. The international human rights group said that criminalizing personal drug use "undermine" basic human rights.
"The 'drug war' has taken a huge toll in the Americas, from the carnage of brutal drug trafficking organizations to the egregious abuses by security forces fighting them," the group's Americas director, Jose Miguel Vivanco, said in a statement. "Governments should find new policies to address the harm drug use causes, while curbing the violence and abuse that have plagued the current approach."
Dozens of human rights organizations from Canada to Argentina signed a letter Monday asking for leaders "to discuss and rethink the existing initiatives with a view to place human rights in the center of the debate."
Among those countries pushing for a dialogue on drugs in the Western Hemisphere are many who have been close allies of the United States' fight against drugs, including Colombia and Guatemala.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos was among those urging a discussion of legalization. He said that while his country extradites hundreds of alleged drug traffickers for trial in the U.S., criminals turn to other countries where law enforcement is weaker. Central America and Mexico in particular have been hit hard as traffickers shifted operations there.
President Otto Perez Molina of Guatemala, a hard-hit cocaine transit country along with neighboring Honduras, made headlines shortly after taking office last year when he proposed legalizing drugs.
"The message has been sent that the hemisphere wants to look at alternative approaches and wants the United States to be part of that discussion," said Cynthia Arnson, director of the Latin American program at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
Arnson said Latin American leaders will use the meeting to spur a discussion that can be sustained as countries try to go forward with a new strategy.
"Latin American countries will mostly be looking for ways to diminish the violence and the negative effects on their societies and their economies posed by organized crime and they may increasingly diverge with the United States over what policies to adapt," she said.
While the OAS meeting promises to serve as a forum to begin discussing the legalization of marijuana, talking about harder drugs like cocaine, heroin and methamphetamines may be harder to bring to the table, Arnson said.
"It's one thing to say, 'Let's break the ice on talking about these issues,' and it's another thing to come forward with concrete proposals for dealing with harder drugs that many countries can sign on to, including the United States," she said.
___
Associated Press writer Matthew Lee contributed to this report.
......................
Hillary Clinton travels to Mexico for day-long visit to reinforce ties ...
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U.S.Resident Barack Obama,Secretary of StateCocaineTrafficker ...
twincities.indymedia.org/.../usresident-barack-obamasecretary-statecocai...Feb 26, 2011 – Check out Hillary Clinton's comments on drugs and Mexico. ... from South America with that coke after doing a rendition flight to Guantanamo.You've visited this page many times. Last visit: 7/31/12
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British Comedian Donates to Guantanamo Prisoner Slandered and ...
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Daily Kos: CIA Torture Jet wrecks with 4 Tons of COCAINE
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Reason.tv: The Dumbest Thing Ever Said!...by Hillary Clinton, about ...
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