The organization's leader, Bastian Vanderwaal then sought to distribute the virus to various terrorist organizations across Europe. In 2009, the Global Liberation Front stole an illegal bio-weapon known as Legion. Gospic was killed in the final raid and Gutierrez was imprisoned for his crimes. Rainbow successfully stopped these attacks and prevented the release of the nerve gas. To accelerate his plans, Gospic attempted to release VX nerve gas in Rio de Janeiro. Gospic then planned to buy the oilfields and use the proceeds to fiancé a new internal fascist movement. Rainbow successfully retrieved the weapons and killed Kutkin who had attempted to cause a meltdown at a nuclear power plant as a fall back.īetween 20, Nikola Gospić conspired with Venezuelan Presidential Candidate Alvaro Gutierrez to conduct a series of terrorist attacks around the world in order to create an economic crisis in South America and cause the price of oil to plummet. Despite their efforts, Maxim Kutkin of the Russian Mafia was able to secure two portable nuclear devices from Vezirzade. Throughout 20, Rainbow was faced with several attempts by Samed Vezirzade to distribute nuclear weapons to terrorists across the world. Rainbow was able to successfully stop the dispersal of the virus and arrested Brightling and his coconspirators. Brightling had planned to unleash the Ebola Brahma virus at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia in order to decimate humanity and put an end to pollution. Rainbow's first major operation was combating several terrorist attacks orchestrated by Horizon Corporation CEO John Brightling of the Phoenix Group. John Clark was given command of the unit as well as the simulated rank of Major General and the codename, "Six". Rainbow was officially formed in 1999 and was established at Hereford Base, United Kingdom. With backing from then CIA Director Ed Foley, Mary Pat Foley, General Mickey Moore, and selected others, Clark was able to get President Jack Ryan to approve the organization. The long-standing “special relationship” between American and British governmental agencies.įor all of these reasons, the proposed special-operations team, composed of U.S., U.K., and selected NATO personnel, with full support from national-intelligence services, coordinated at site.The legal environment is particularly advantageous, due to press restrictions possible under British law but not American.London is the world’s most accessible city in terms of commercial air travel-in addition to which the SAS has a very cordial relationship with British Airways.currently owns and operates the Special Air Service, the world’s foremost-that is, most experienced-special-operations agency. I further propose that the organization be based in the United Kingdom. The most obvious solution to this-probably-increasing problem will be a new multinational counterterrorist team. The price of support, weapons, training, and safehavens might well become actual terrorist activity, not the ideological purity previously demanded by sponsoring nation states. It seems likely that the current world situation will invert the previous “understanding” enjoyed by the major countries. If anything, this problem is very likely to grow, since under the previous world situation, the major nation states placed firm limits on terrorist activity-these limits enforced by controlled access to weapons, funding, training, and safehavens. But along with that we must face the fact that there remain many experienced and trained international terrorists still roaming the world, some with lingering contacts with national intelligence agencies-plus the fact that some nations, while not desirous of a direct confrontation with American or other Western nations, could still make use of the remaining terrorist “free agents” for more narrow political goals. With the demise of the Soviet Union and other nation states with political positions adverse to American and Western interests, the likelihood of a major international confrontation is at an all-time low. There is good news and there is bad news. In 1996, John Clark wrote a memo to the CIA expressing concerns over the rise of international terrorism since the end of the Cold War and recommended the creation of a NATO response team to rapidly deploy to terrorist situations.
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