Connecting the Dots w/Dan Happel
News:Politics
https://danhappel.com/is-russia-our-natural-enemy/
If we identify our friends by their enemies and enemies by their friends, we usually find ourselves on the wrong side when we listen to establishment Politian's and (celebrities?).
As we jump from one failed globalist fiasco to another, the question becomes; who are our real enemies, and what level of manipulation are we willing to accept from those telling us who we must hate?
Guest: Dennis Young joined a Canadian light infantry unit shortly after high school in 1983. After basic training, he was posted to Baden Baden West Germany during the cold war where he was trained in special forces operations.
In 1991, Dennis joined the Military Police and was part of a 12 man MP detachment in Gander Newfoundland where he became the Canadian equivalent (actually a subordinate) of the U.S. NSA known as 770 Communication Research Squadron. This unit was assigned to clandestinely intercept signals between Russia and China from Gander and decrypt the messages.
He was trained in photography and shortly thereafter, was teamed up with another surveillance specialist and assigned to screen Russian aircraft in a counter intelligence operation. They became Intelligence Specialists during Operation Template.
When Russian and Cuban flights left Moscow on route to Havana, they refuelled in Shannon Ireland, then refuelled again in Gander. These flights using cargo and passenger jets were often equipped as surveillance missions.
The ultimate Russian/Cuban game was to link a targeted voice intercept with a photo of the speaker as they flew near the east coast of the US. Operation Template required Dennis and his partner to hide in an RCMP airport police car that was assigned to guard visiting aircraft while the plane was being refueled and when the crew disembarked for lunch the Mounties would give Young the all clear sign and he headed to the cockpit to take pictures of flight plans while his partner examined the exterior for wires antennae and cameras.
This went on for 2 years until Dennis was caught when the Russians left a counter intelligence operator hidden on board and a confrontation occurred.
In 1994 Dennis was sent to Petawawa, Ontario, home of the Canadian Airborne Regiment. There, he policed in a very violent environment, but was soon detached to surveil a native uprising in Ipperwash, Ontario just Northeast of Detroit.
Shortly after Dennis returned to Petawawa, Ipperwash exploded. One of the natives (Dudley George) often carried a walking stick. There were countless photos of this, but on that day, an Ontario Provincial Police officer (OPP) fired several bursts from his MP5 submachine gun into George while no other officers even considered using their weapons because all knew Dudley as a non violent pest.
Whether it was coordinated or not is unknown, but immediately after the murder, an unarmed young boy named Ugga tried to start a yellow bus to flee the assault. He was shot full of holes as he tried to turn the engine over, but he survived. A native elder approached the police to stop the carnage. He was beaten with batons until his heart stopped and the police fled like criminals. All phone services had been cut off, along with electricity and water.
Some of the natives loaded Ugga and the elder into a car and took them to a nearby hospital where the natives were arrested for attempted murder. A phony commision ensued, but it was like so many other phony government commissions that found the state to be not guilty of any wrongdoing.
This affected Dennis deeply and it radically changed his views on government. He almost instantly aligned with men like Patrick Henry and had a certain amount of contempt for not only what his peers were, but what he himself had become. He had become a cog in a very evil wheel. His greatest life lessons came from introspection.
Christmas 1995 saw Dennis sitting in a Canadian Air Force Base waiting to be flown to Bosnia on a C-130 cargo plane. On New Years Day 1996 he landed in Bosnia as part of a NATO/UN peacekeeping operation in his role as an Intelligence Operative. His intuition said it would be the worst time of his life and it was.
His time in Bosnia led to him accidentally walk through minefields, discover mass graves, meet with and threaten local officials into seeing things NATOs way, and being part of a human intelligence operation that was set up to exploit Muslim locals for information regarding the Mujahadeen.
The Mujahadeen were flown into Bosnia by the CIA to fight for the Bosnian Muslims, but Sarajevo airport had been badly damaged, which made their off loading impossible. Shipping them back home became a problem, when few could be found. These CIA assets were found at a huge personal cost to Dennis.
He had befriended a local and knew him well to put the last piece of the puzzle into place. Dennis fought with his superiors to protect the informant, his wife, and kids. In the end, the informant was murdered along with Dennis' belief in military justice. Dennis left the army shortly after Bosnia in 1997.
He engaged in politics at a municipal, provincial and federal level. He ran as an Alberta separatist in 2001 and won the leadership of the Libertarian Party of Canada in 2008-11. He practiced law without a license from 2006-2012 in Edmonton and Calgary and currently lives and works in a small town near the Canadian/ American border.
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