Obama Authorizes: “Presidential Memorandum – Climate Change And National Security”
Dane Wigington geoengineeringwatch.org The stakes are raising by the day as the Earth's climate and life support systems continue to unravel. The US military has long since acknowledged that the disintegrating climate system is the greatest national security threat of all. What has never been admitted to by our government, the military, mainstream media, and legions of academicians (that are either paid off or threatened into silence), is the ongoing global climate engineering assault. Geoengineering/solar radiation management programs are nothing short of weather and biological warfare (due to the highly toxic fallout from the climate engineering programs). The recent "Presidential Memorandum" from President Obama is revealing. Not just because of what it covers, but because of the glaring omission of the climate engineering issue which is only eluded to in the document (excerpts below). Presidential Memorandum — Climate Change and National Security September 21, 2016 MEMORANDUM FOR THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES SUBJECT: Climate Change and National Security By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, I hereby direct the following: Section 1. Purpose. This memorandum establishes a framework and directs Federal departments and agencies (agencies) to perform certain functions to ensure that climate change-related impacts are fully considered in the development of national security doctrine, policies, and plans. The US military has long since stated its objective to "Own The Weather". Sec. 2. Background. Climate change poses a significant and growing threat to national security, both at home and abroad. Climate change and its associated impacts affect economic prosperity, public health and safety, and international stability. Extended drought, more frequent and severe weather events, heat waves, warming and acidifying ocean waters, catastrophic wildfires, and rising sea levels all have compounding effects on people's health and well-being. Flooding and water scarcity can negatively affect food and energy production. Energy infrastructure, essential for supporting other key sectors, is already vulnerable to extreme weather and may be further compromised. Impacts of a changing climate can create conditions that promote pest outbreaks and the spread of invasive species as well as plant, animal, and human disease, including emerging infectious disease, and these can further undermine economic growth and livelihoods. Impacts can also disrupt transportation service, cutting off vulnerable communities from relief immediately after events and reducing economic output. These conditions, in turn, can stress some countries' ability to provide the conditions necessary for human security. All of these effects can lead to population migration within and across international borders, spur crises, and amplify or accelerate conflict in countries or regions already facing instability and fragility. Climate engineering/weather warfare is a primary means by which countries and populations around the globe have been assaulted and manipulated. Climate change and associated impacts on U.S. military and other national security-related missions and operations could adversely affect readiness, negatively affect military facilities and training, increase demands for Federal support to non-federal civil authorities, and increase response requirements to support international stability and humanitarian assistance needs. The top US military leaders have stated again and again that the disintegrating climate system is the greatest national security threat of all. (a) The Climate and National Security Working Group. The Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs and the Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, or their designees, will chair an interagency working group (Working Group) to coordinate the development of a strategic approach to identify, assess, and share information on current and projected climate-related impacts on national security interests and to inform the development of national security doctrine, policies, and plans. US weather/climate modification programs are a historically verifiable fact. Historical documents (a massive 750 page US Senate document is one) verify that global weather modification/climate engineering programs have been going on for some 70 years. (b) Representation. The Working Group shall include representatives, at the Assistant Secretary or equivalent level, or their designees, from: (i) the Department of State; (ii) the Department of the Treasury; (iii) the Department of Defense; (iv) the Department of Justice; (v) the Department of the Interior; (vi) the Department of Agriculture; (vii) the Department of Commerce; (viii) the Department of Health and Human Services; (ix) the Department of Transportation; (x) the Department of Energy; (xi) the Department of Homeland Security; (xii) the United States Agency for International Development; (xiii) the Environmental Protection Agency; (xiv) the National Aeronautics and Space Administration; (xv) the Office of the Director of National Intelligence; (xvi) the U.S. Mission to the United Nations; (xvii) the Office of Management and Budget; (xviii) the Council on Environmental Quality; (xix) the Millennium Challenge Corporation; and (xx) any other agencies or offices as designated by the Co-Chairs. (c) Functions. The Working Group, in close collaboration with the U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP), shall: (i) identify the U.S. national security priorities that are within the scope of the Working Group's mission; (ii) develop recommendations for requirements for climate and social science data and intelligence analyses, as appropriate, that support national security interests; (iii) catalog climate science data, intelligence analyses, and other products and programs that support or should be considered in the development of national security doctrine, policy, and plans. This catalogue shall include climate and social science data repositories and analytical platforms; climate modeling, simulation, and projection capabilities; and information-sharing tools and resources supporting climate risk analyses and assessments, such as the Climate Data Initiative, the Climate Resilience Toolkit, the Global Change Information System, and the National Climate Assessment; The very same governmental agencies that are named in this new "Obama Climate Change Memorandum" have already been involved in the weather modification/climate engineering arena for over a half century as historical presidential reports prove. (x) in coordination with the NSTC, recommend research guidelines concerning the Federal Government's ability to detect climate intervention activities; The US government (and other major powers around the globe) have been actively and aggressively engaged in a toxic tug of war with the Earth's climate system since the end of WWll. (xiv) have classified and unclassified capabilities, as required and appropriate, to consolidate and