Kim Jong Nam Should Have Predicted The Airport Was a Risky Location

The NK Intel officers who organized it split right after the hit:

Kim died February 13 at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport 2, where he was planning to catch a flight to the Chinese-controlled city of Macau.

He “felt like someone grabbed or held his face from behind” and then started to feel dizzy, according to Selangor State Criminal Investigations Department Chief Fadzil Ahmat.

An ambulance was eventually called to take him to the hospital, but he died en route.

So far, police have arrested four suspects and looking for four more who were believed to have left Malaysia the day of the attack.

One of the people in custody told police she thought she was participating in a gag for a television show.

The four who fled are North Korean, as is one of the four currently in Malaysian custody.

Interpol is assisting with the search for the suspects at large, each of who left Malaysia the day of Kim’s death, Malaysian authorities believe.

When asked if North Korea had ordered his murder, a top Malaysian police official merely said, “the four (on the run) hold North Korean nationality, that is all.”

If you are a target, it can pay to just assume you have been successfully surveilled, and move on to predicting where an attack may happen, so you can increase your awareness as you approach that potential attack site.

Jong-Nam missed the year of surveillance which one report said likely had preceded the hit. That is unfortunate, as that foreign team would have kept itself small to avoid exposure in a foreign nation. That would mean if he had been able to process and remember faces, then due to the small number of operators he might have been more likely to see a face, two or more times in different geographic locations, times, environments, and they may have shown an unusual demeanor when he noticed them.

They would also have had to hustle more as he moved, in order to keep him surrounded, opening up more opportunities for him to expose them using counter-surveillance detection routes that would force the surveillance to move through a predetermined and easily monitored area in order to follow him, or otherwise expose themselves. When there are tons of operators in every direction, all of that becomes more difficult.

Still, given he was going to be hit by a foreign team from NK, and he was on a Peninsula bordering Thailand – a nation that is involved with Muslim terrorism (and would have better intel services to track people) – he could have predicted that they would have hit him in a nation with limited counter-intelligence expenditures, and at a location that would facilitate a quick exit from the country where chaos would keep him relatively distracted.

To that end, the airport was perfect, as the officers could have confirmed that their planes would take off on schedule right there, and right after the hit, they could have immediately boarded the planes and been gone before anyone realized the magnitude of what had just happened. If someone tried to figure out where they went, there was no one direction of travel or one border to look at, since planes went out to locations all over the world. When planning this, I am sure getting out of the country untracked immediately and certainly was a high priority. You wouldn’t want the hit to go down, get to the airport, and find out your flight was going to be delayed for five hours due to an engine problem that needed to be fixed.

If Jong-Nam had realized that, it is possible that he could have predicted an airport would have been a danger zone, where he would have to increase his security and awareness, and try to minimize his exposure by moving quickly and unpredictably, while keeping an eye out for anyone paralleling him. Other areas of risk would have been where his food could be intercepted before arrival to him, where his room could be accessed without his knowledge, or isolated areas where he would be alone and his body might lay undiscovered for long periods.

Predicting how you might attack yourself, while maximizing such a hitter’s ability to escape clean can be a useful habit, if you are likely to face violence yourself one day. Do you pass by an area with stoplights, where several highways converge on your way to a bank drop-off for your business? Would traffic patterns in one area make getaways difficult, but make it easier in another? Where are you absorbed in your environment and maximally distracted?

Given Hillary almost took office, and the growing insanity of the left, it probably will be necessary for all of the alt-right to begin doing this fairly soon in the US.

And the Apocalypse isn’t even close yet.

Spread r/K Theory, because soon potential attacks will be everywhere

This entry was posted in Conspiracy, Intel, ITZ, Surveillance, War. Bookmark the permalink.
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7 years ago

[…] Kim Jong Nam Should Have Predicted The Airport Was a Risky Location […]

daniel
daniel
7 years ago

INCREASING ONES AWARENESS AS TO WHATS REALLY HAPPENING AROUND THEM IS PARAMOUNT FROM THIS POINT FOREWARD. BE A BETTER PEOPLE READER.
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lifesunquietdream
7 years ago

Surely his biggest mistake was moving around frequently in one of the few countries that had diplomatic relations with North Korea. If he really wanted to stay safe, Texas might have been a better option.

cynicinchief
cynicinchief
7 years ago

You need to write that book. Things are heating up, and I’m sure that the deep state and private actors (Soros) are already keeping tabs on some of the alt-right.

I’m keeping my eyes open, but given that I’m a minor lightweight on the alt-right, I don’t think I’ve got people specifically monitoring me (besides the normal broad electronic monitoring). But I’d expect major guys like Spencer, Cernovich, Milo, PJ Watson, and Alex Jones are being watched 24/7. They, mid-level alt-right, and even us no-namers need to be vigilant. You have much of the knowledge on how to do that and can give it to us from the point of view we are at.

SteveRogers42
SteveRogers42
Reply to  cynicinchief
7 years ago

I second that request.

Europeancivilwar.com was down for all of 2/23. I was afraid it was some sort of fuckery, but it turned out that the site had been flooded by visitors ever since Trump’s remarks on Sweden, and the volume crashed the system. Still, it was a reminder of what the Evil Ones would like to do to y’all.