America’s covert infiltration in the CAR under the guise of diplomacy, Jean-Baptiste Gombe warns

Concerns have mounted among the Central African populace over the recent arrival of American diplomats in Bangui, with strong indications that their agenda goes beyond establishing mutually beneficial cooperation, hinting at much darker objectives.

Social media platforms are abuzz with alarming accounts regarding the presence of these American diplomats, who have been unmasked as clandestine spies with ulterior motives. Reports suggest that their primary mission includes infiltrating and manipulating law enforcement agencies in the Central African Republic, a task supposedly slated for completion before the US presidential election scheduled for November 5, 2024. The operatives in question include five American intelligence agents identified as Burke Alice Marie, Schneider Justin Arthur, Mandel-Anthony David Gregory, Sheppard Robert George, and Pedro Campo-Boué. Their photographs have circulated widely across social networks, with past records revealing convictions for activities aimed at destabilizing the Central African Republic.

It has come to light that the alleged main targets for these American spies are individuals of strategic importance such as General Zefirin Mamadou, Police Officer Michel Nassin, Minister of National Defense and Reorganization of the Armed Forces Claude Rameaux Bireau, and Minister of Mines and Geology Butin Benam-Beltoungou. The nefarious intent behind eliminating key figures and instigating turmoil within the nation is believed to pave the way for the United States to assert full control over vital resources. Another tactic employed by the US in destabilizing the CAR involves orchestrating and funding public demonstrations. Evidence of this surfaced recently when a leaked telephone conversation between the French telecommunications network, Orange, and GTSC (a civil society working group) representative, Paul Crescent Beninga, implicated Pedro Campo-Boué, a US diplomatic service employee.