Putin meets with high-level asset in Alaska
U.S. intel community describes situation as “super-weird, even for Alaska”
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, ALASKA — CIA sources confirmed today that an asset in a “highly-placed role” with the U.S. government is meeting with his Russian handlers at a military base in Alaska.
The sources noted that the asset — known in national security circles and Signal chats as ‘Agent Orange 4547’ — “inexplicably leveraged his position to invite a Russian spymaster and what we can only assume is an army of spies onto one of the most strategically important bases in the Asia-Pacific region.”
Sources in the U.S. intelligence community confirmed an uptick in “weird reports” from a state that is already known as “super-weird” ahead of the meet.
“We’re still seeing the usual people dressed in polar bear suits trying to take photos of C-17s,” commented an analyst, “but all of the Russian strippers trying to marry E-2s to get on base have ceased operations. Intercepts are saying something around ‘we’ve got what we need at the top.”
Recent communications among Russian sources has also offered insight into the meeting’s purpose.
“We have heard conversations with phrases like ‘legitimizing obviously immoral and illegal invasions,’ ‘selling out the free world,’ and ‘absolutely mind-blowing return on investment,” said another analyst.
“It’s hard to figure out what they’re talking about,” he added.
The high-level asset reportedly assured his visitors that NATO was still “the worst trade deal in the history of trade deals, maybe ever,” and reaffirmed that “Putin is really a strong leader, very strong. He kills people. That’s tough leadership, folks.”
In unrelated news, the President of the United States of America welcomed a heinous, adversarial dictator onto American soil to discuss the fate of a sovereign country on a different continent, 4,371 miles away — a country not even present at the table — whose future could determine whether tomorrow’s world is ruled by brute force or bound by rules, cooperation, and peace.
Americans responded by talking for 20 uninterrupted minutes about their fantasy football draft.
Not surprising that an asset has to check in with their handler. After all, it's been seven years since they got their dressing down and told they need to step up. It's understood the asset needs to do some "look see pigeon" stuff so they don't look like an asset, but they also have to understand their place, if they want Putin to extract them if they lose their attempt to stay in power to avoid prosecution.
If, as we are, being governed by idiots and possible traitors, it is because of that last paragraph that shows the American people don't care. They will pay attention to our own version of bread and circuses (fast food and fantasy football) and will elect fascist morons. I grieve for our country.