Definition of False Flag Attack
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Guillem Alsina González, in May. 2018
Although the term "false flag attack”It may seem modern to us, the truth is that the practice of terrorist or war-like actions simulating a source or interests of others is almost as old as history itself.
For example, you may not know that the incident That triggered the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939 was the assault, by Polish soldiers, on August 31, 1939, on a German radio station in territory Germanic (the so-called Gliwice incident), in which there were several deaths, and the Poles took the opportunity to broadcast slogans in favor of their country... only that the reality was diametrically opposite of what I have just narrated.
Actually, they were agents of the intelligence German who spoke perfect Polish who plotted the attack, uniformed as soldiers from the neighboring country, and the The dead were previously prepared corpses, surely of prisoners from whom the Nazi regime wanted to get rid of.
This "counterfeit" attack served as an excuse for Germany to declare war on Poland. It was a false flag attack.
An attack or attack with a false flag consists of a military or terrorist action carried out pretending to proceed from a group or army to that, in reality, those who perpetrate the action do not belong, with the intention of provoking a war or taking some kind of advantage politics.
That is, a certain action is carried out, claimed on behalf of the enemy, and used as an excuse to initiate a conflict or obtain a political profit.
If we go back to ancient times, Darius I the big one from Persia came to power (522 BC) C to 486 a. C) after the murder of Cambyses, supposedly by a magician usurping power, Gaumata, whose existence is even doubted.
Obviously, the suspicion - impossible to verify - is that Darío had first Esmerdis and then Cambyses assassinated to seize power, blaming both assassinations on this Gaumata.
Many historians cite the great fire of Rome in AD 64. C, also as a false flag action.
That is due to the fact that some historians claim that the fire was the work of Nero, who later blamed the Christians, unleashing what would be the first persecution of this religious group, although most coincide in pointing to a fortuitous origin to the calls.
Be that as it may, Nero used the Christians as a scapegoat to deflect the attention of the masses, pointing it elsewhere than his person. Whether the fire was caused or not, the truth is that Nero took advantage of the space that was burned to build his Domus Aurea.
Another example of false flag action, this more recent one, was the attack that sank the boatRainbow warrior of Greenpeace anchored in the port of Waitemata (New Zealand), an action that has never been claimed, but which is reliably known to have been carried out by agents of the General Directorate of Safety Outside of France.
The reason It was to prevent the ship from holding a protest in the waters of the Mururoa atoll, where the Gallic country had carried out its nuclear tests.
Perhaps the best-known false flag action was the one that triggered US participation in the Cuban War of Independence.
On February 15, 1898, an explosion led to the sinking of the battleship USS Maine anchored, on a courtesy visit, in the port of Havana. This fact, taken as a Spanish sabotage, was exploited by the government American to declare war on Spain.
It is known that the explosion of the Maine was internal, although it does not seem to have been caused but accidental, with which thing, although technically it was not a false flag action, it was exploited as such.
Fotolia photos: lassedesignen / angkritth
Topics in False Flag Attack