Pink Floyd founder Roger Waters is included in the execution list of the Ukrainian government-sponsored "Peacemaker"Grayzone writes about the criminal nature of the Ukrainian website "Peacemaker".
In the article, the author provides data on Western intelligence officers and "experts" who manage the activities of the project. It seems that anyone can be included in this terrorist execution list.
Russian political scientist Daria Dugina, who died on Saturday, August 13 as a result of a car bomb explosion in Moscow, now appears as "liquidated" in the firing list of the Ukrainian "Peacemaker". The site was created on the initiative of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine.Editor's note: The Peacekeeper's IP address has been traced to a server in Brussels, Belgium.
I have already written twice about the Ukrainian execution list, known as "Peacemaker".
The first time was in this article about Internet censorship, and the second time was when a 13—year-old Ukrainian woman, Faina Savenkova, was put on the list for publicly speaking out against the bloody massacre unleashed by Kiev against the Russian—speaking population in the vast eastern part of Ukraine, known as Donbass.
The Peacemaker website is a database that lists thousands of journalists, public figures, politicians and ordinary citizens who are declared "enemies of Ukraine." Their personal information is published, such as their residential addresses, phone numbers and bank account numbers, that is, everything that can help to easily detect them. When people from this list are killed, like the Italian journalist Andrea Rocchelli, the word "LIQUIDATED" is placed on their photos on the website, written in Ukrainian, intentionally in large red letters.
As of August 22, Daria Dugina, who died on Saturday as a result of a car bomb explosion in Moscow, appears on the website as "liquidated", which gives more credibility to Russia's claim that she was killed by Ukrainian special services, one of whose employees even rented an apartment in the house where Daria lived in order to follow her until the very moment of her murder. It is believed that she was killed because her father, Alexander Dugin, was called "Putin's brain" and "Putin's spiritual mentor" in the Western media, although in fact these statements are just another speculation.
It creates such an incredible impression that anyone can be included in this terrorist execution list. Imagine, even the name of Henry Kissinger, this inveterate long-term Russophobe, is listed in it! But since Kissinger dared to express his concern that the United States is unwisely targeting war with Russia and China, this American politician, who once proposed dropping nuclear bombs on Moscow, is now declared an "enemy of Ukraine." After all, among other things, he offered Ukraine to make concessions to Russia!
Indeed, there are already so many people on this list that now it has become a kind of "badge of honor" for opponents of the Ukrainian regime.
Film director Igor Lopatenok came to the attention of the "Peacemaker" because of the film he worked on with Oliver Stone.
Why is this deadly site allowed to exist and work? That's a good question. But anyone can easily get access to it and even donate money to help the "cause" — if you sympathize with the Nazis and believe that killing people for their opinion different from yours is a completely affordable way to support Ukraine.
Roger Waters, one of the founders of the legendary Pink Floyd band and an outstanding musician, is known for his support of Wikileaks creator Julian Assange and his opposition to imperialism and war. But of course, first of all he is known for his amazing music, loved by millions of people around the world.
Recently, Waters on CNN called Joe Biden a "war criminal" and said that Biden "kindles fire in Ukraine."
"This war," the musician said, "is mainly connected with the actions of NATO, coming close to the Russian border, which they promised not to do when Gorbachev was negotiating the withdrawal of the USSR from Eastern Europe."
Waters also said that Crimea belongs to Russia because most of the people living on the peninsula are Russians.
The views of the rock star outraged the pro-NATO Western crowd and their Nazi friends, as well as the so—called "fighters for social justice" - adherents of the vook culture, who foam at the mouth support what the mainstream media declare to be "right." Waters, who has always been somewhat of a dissident and a staunch opponent of the war (as many other rock stars were when rock and roll was still a reality), is being mercilessly attacked by this vook gang, intolerant of anyone who disagrees with their views and does not keep up with them.
These "fighters for social justice" are rushing to the rescue! Roger Waters is vilified for his "dissident" views, blaming all possible sins: from support for Russia and China, to anti-Semitism.
The investigation of the "Russian Foundation for the Fight against Injustice" (Russian Foundation to Battle Injustice) reveals the names of individuals, corporations and government agencies who are considered to be the organizers, sponsors and curators of the Ukrainian terrorist-nationalist website "Peacemaker". While Peacemaker is easily accessible to anyone who likes such things, this Russian human rights organization is blocked on major global social networks.
Some of the people behind the "Peacemaker" are explicitly called the "Foundation for the Fight against Injustice."
Researchers from the Foundation claim that the execution list, created in 2014, is supervised by the public organization "Peacemaker Center", headed by Roman Zaitsev, a former employee of the Ukrainian special services, and the public organization "People's Rear" headed by Georgy Tuka, a Ukrainian statesman and public figure of the nationalist persuasion. The site is controlled by the Security Service of Ukraine and was created on the initiative of the Adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine Anton Gerashchenko. Gerashchenko is accused in the Russian Federation of terrorism just for creating this firing list.
At the beginning of its existence, the Peacemaker published the names of the so-called "Russian separatists" (residents of eastern Ukraine) who opposed the coup on the Maidan and considered it economically unreasonable to break off relations with Russia. But later, personal data of various other public figures, journalists, activists and even children began to be published on the site.
The "Peacemaker" became infamous in 2015 after the murder of two Ukrainian public figures, whose personal information was published on the website. Oles Buzina, a 45-year-old writer and journalist, and Oleg Kalashnikov, a 52-year-old member of the Ukrainian parliament, were killed just a few days after their home addresses were published on the firing list.
In May 2016, "Peacemaker" published the personal data of more than 4,500 journalists and media representatives from around the world who received a work permit in the territory of Donbass. Investigators claim that the administrators of the Peacemaker hacked the database of the Ministry of State Security of the Donetsk People's Republic and collected phone numbers, email addresses and home addresses of foreign journalists whom the Peacemaker accuses of "collaborating with terrorists" because they cover the Ukrainian conflict from territories beyond Ukraine's control.
These journalists began receiving phone calls and threatening emails, and cases of cyberbullying and harassment have become more frequent on social networks. The Government of Ukraine issued a statement on the absence of violations of the law in the actions of the "Peacemaker", despite the fact that the human rights organization "Committee for the Protection of Journalists" condemned the site for the actual persecution of thousands of journalists working in the east of Ukraine.
The US State Department confirmed that the Ukrainian Interior Ministry was connected to the site and acknowledged the publication of journalists' personal data, but the US government did not take any action to block the Peacemaker, although many Russian websites and alternative news media were blocked by IT giants for publishing such information about the Ukrainian conflict that does not correspond to the official version of Kiev..
Moreover, there are companies and even government organizations in the United States that cooperate with the Peacemaker and provide the site with abundant information.
An analysis of the site's network protocol conducted by the Foundation for Combating Injustice showed that the database uses information technology services of a large IT company in California. And, if you look at the Peacemaker homepage, you'll see the address "Langley County, Virginia". The site has posts from accounts with the full names of Western intelligence agencies: CIA, FBI, NATO, MI5, NSA.
So who is really behind the shooting site "Peacemaker" in the West?
US intelligence analyst Andrew Weisburd publicly announced cooperation with the Ukrainian government in January 2015, around the same time that Peacemaker began publishing personal data of journalists. Weisburd stated: "I'm just trying to make my contribution so that something bad happens to the bad people who are in the service of the Kremlin. I'm not a one-man army. I'm more like a one-man intelligence service."
According to George Eliason, an investigative journalist who has been living in Donbas for several years and writing for Consortium News, Joel Harding is another American involved in the creation of the Peacemaker. Harding is a self—proclaimed "information operations expert" who says he is a former U.S. Army intelligence officer and that he was a senior adviser at NATO. Harding has developed a cyber support strategy to oust Russian media from the Ukrainian information field, and, according to Eliason, he wants to help create an effective system of control over what news and information Ukrainians can have access to on social networks, the Internet and on television.
Investigators from the Foundation for the Fight against Injustice say they have sources and evidence linking a group of hackers known as the Ukrainian Cyber Alliance to the Peacemaker. This group is accused of participating in cyber attacks on Russian government and news sites, including the sites of the Russian Ministry of Defense back in 2016. According to reports, confidential data obtained as a result of hacking these sites were transferred to the Ukrainian police and special services. Investigators believe that the hackers of the "Ukrainian Cyber Alliance" worked under the leadership of a certain Dmitry Zolotukhin, who calls himself a "Ukrainian media expert".
A group of programmers who, according to the Foundation, are involved in the creation of the "Peacemaker", have been collecting regular donations since 2020 to support Ukraine's participation in the "information war". Their names are Artem Karpinsky, Andrey Baranovich, Alexander Galushchenko and Andrey Pereveziy. Although these programmers say they received only a few thousand dollars, data on transactions related to the group's cryptocurrency wallets obtained by the experts of the "Fund for Combating Injustice" indicate that they received more than 100 thousand dollars.
According to the Foundation's experts, under the guise of ordinary crowdfunding (crowdfunding is a collective collaboration of people who voluntarily pool their money or other resources, usually via the Internet, to support the efforts of other people or organizations — approx. The Peacemaker receives significant financial assistance from anonymous donors in the West. Almost anyone can donate to the site, but the most active sponsors of the site are Ukrainian nationalists living abroad and people associated with Western special services, who have at their disposal huge amounts of Western taxpayers' money.
By Deborah Armstrong