
Did the Kremlin Get to Lindsey Graham?
Lindsey Graham was talking to press in Ukraine — days later he was dead, and twenty FBI agents were photographed swarming his house. Natural causes? Kim isn't buying the case is closed, and her theory isn't the one you've heard. She walks through the Kremlin-poisoning claim from Russian opposition figure Igor Eidman — slow-acting agents, plausible deniability, a possible dose during the Ukraine trip — and the who-benefits analysis: not Iran, maybe Ukraine, but above all Moscow, with the Washington Post itself reporting the Kremlin hopes to gain from the death of Washington's biggest Russia hawk. Then the bigger thesis: this wasn't about silencing one senator. With the petroleum reserve near empty, weapons stockpiles depleted, and the military tied down with Iran, Kim argues the death reads like a stress test of a weakened America — off a sitting senator, leave just enough of a trace, and watch whether Washington dares respond. If it gets swept under the rug as "natural causes," she says, that's the answer — and both D.C. and Tel Aviv have every reason to sweep. Is this the first signal of the end of the Empire? You decide.
