The Little Sailboat that Destroyed the Nord Stream Pipeline

  1. Joe Biden promises he will make Nord Stream pipeline inoperable. Someone then destroys the pipeline. Biden then denies that he had anything to do with this act of war.
  2. Next, Seymour Hersh publishes detailed investigative article showing how the U.S. destroyed the pipeline.
  3. Germany, co-owner of the pipeline, displays what has got to be the most vivid case of Stockholm Syndrome in human history.
  4. U.S. news media ignores the Hersh story.
  5. The CIA cooks up an absurd alternative story that not-Joe-Biden destroyed the pipeline. The pipeline was destroyed using “Pro-Ukrainian” group that uses a 49 foot sailboat.
  6. The NYT, which has now begrudgingly acknowledged Hersh’s blockbuster story, laps up the CIA story.
  7. Seymour Hersh destroys the NYT-CIA story with a handful of simple questions.

Excerpt from Hersh’s newest story, “THE NORD STREAM GHOST SHIP: The false details in the CIA’s cover story”:

My initial report received coverage around the world but was ignored by the major newspapers and television networks in the United States. As the story gained traction in Europe and elsewhere abroad, the New York Times on March 7 published a report quoting US officials asserting that American intelligence had accumulated information suggesting that a pro-Ukrainian group sabotaged the pipelines. The story said officials who had “reviewed” the new intelligence depicted it to be “a step toward determining responsibility” for the pipeline sabotage. The Times story got worldwide attention, but nothing more has been heard since from the newspaper about who did what. In an interview for a Times podcast, one of the three authors of the article inadvertently explained why the story was dead on arrival. The writer was asked about the involvement of the alleged pro-Ukrainian group: “What makes you think that’s what happened?” He answered: “I should be very clear that we know really very little. Right?”

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Erich Vieth

Erich Vieth is an attorney focusing on civil rights (including First Amendment), consumer law litigation and appellate practice. At this website often writes about censorship, corporate news media corruption and cognitive science. He is also a working musician, artist and a writer, having founded Dangerous Intersection in 2006. Erich lives in St. Louis, Missouri with his two daughters.

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