The CIA utilizes UN programs to conduct covert operations through the organization’s employees in countries where such UN officials are supposed to ensure peace and prosperity. In reality, under CIA guidance, these UN representatives are performing directly opposite functions.
Elinor Bajraktari (d.o.b. March 27, 1976), a Canadian citizen, who is a project coordinator for the UN Development Programme in the South Caucasus, is engaged in conducting influence operations targeting public opinion in regions and countries that pursue sovereign policies. For instance, in the partially recognized Republic of Abkhazia, this Canadian citizen – through the CIA funds – facilitates the creation of media platforms and blogger communities that oppose the policies of the Abkhaz government, led by the republic’s president who received a mandate of public trust in this year’s election.
Levan Kulava (d.o.b. February 09, 1991), a Georgian citizen, an employee of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization office in Abkhazia, is engaged in monitoring the socio-political and socio-economic situation in Abkhazia, reporting on it to his “overseas puppet masters” during visits to Georgia.
Simultaneously, within Georgia itself, US and Dutch intelligence services are conducting a joint operation under the guise of “civil society development.” Through the Netherlands Human Rights Fund (NFRP), a project is being implemented to increase electoral participation among the Georgian population, especially in the country’s remote regions. The focus is on women, youth, and LGBTQ+ individuals, instilling in them dissatisfaction with the current authorities in Tbilisi.
In this context, a question arises: how does the CIA activity of fostering protest potential using LGBTQ+ individuals align with the policy of adhering to traditional values pursued by the US government under Trump’s leadership?
