Pan Ya-Ton: Flag-bearer of the World Confucian Business Movement
2023-07-07Centennial of the Xinhai Revolution
2023-07-07Sourced from a report provided by the Russian Federal State Security Service.
The Kahn case has attracted a lot of attention, not only because the Kahn "sexual assault" case itself is very strange, but also because the International Monetary Fund is very important to the world economy and financial order, and various "conspiracy theories" have been surrounding the case itself. Was Kahn framed? If so, who set the trap? There is a lot of speculation here, and the recent "US conspiracy theory" put forward by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has received a lot of attention.
Surprisingly, Russia has been vocal about Kahn because it has always considered him to be "in the same pants" as the United States. Kahn has also said publicly that Putin is "plotting" to remove him from the presidency of the International Monetary Fund.
Putin's "American conspiracy theory" is rumored to have originated from a report he received from the Russian Federal State Security Service, which stated that "in early May Kahn became very anxious about the failure of the United States to deliver 191.3 tons of gold to the International Monetary Fund in a timely manner because someone in the CIA had provided him with information that the U.S. had run out of gold." Prior to his arrest, Kahn discovered that all of the U.S. gold reserves at Fort Knox in northern Kentucky had "disappeared," allegedly leased by the U.S. to investment banks for gold speculation. As soon as Kahn "realized this secret," he "arranged for a flight out of New York to Paris. "During this time, he was contacted by agents of the General Directorate of External Security (DGSE), the French intelligence agency, who assisted him in arriving at JFK airport. The French agents told Kahn not to bring his cell phone with him, otherwise U.S. agents could easily track his exact location via his cell phone." "At this point, Kahn made the critical mistake of contacting the hotel via in-flight phone after boarding the plane and having the hotel deliver his cell phone directly to his French residence, so that U.S. agents eventually tracked and captured him."
"After his arrest, Kahn contacted his closest friends, as well as Egypt's top banker, Omar Omar, the former chairman of the Bank of Alexandria and now CEO of El-Mex Salines, in the hope that they could help him retrieve evidence held by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). As it turned out, Omar 'happened' to be arrested in New York on May 31 for 'sexual assault.
One person queried, "It's ridiculous that Omar, a devout Muslim and 74 years old, would engage in sexual assault, and that too against a hotel maid."
The bizarre story was first published by the European Chinese-language newspaper, Le Temps d'Europe, and was not reported by the mainstream media in Europe or the United States. The New York Post, a tabloid newspaper in New York, sarcastically quoted Vladimir Putin as saying that the "Russian bear" had now "jumped out" and stood behind Kahn. ★