By Kurt Nimmo

After the website DCLeaks posted a cache of Soros documents, its website was yanked offline. Its Twitter account was also suspended.

DCLeaks Twitter and Soros page suspended. Here is the cached page. Should we archive? https://t.co/pl4XysoaGP pic.twitter.com/drpmUge7ZA — King Robbo (@realkingrobbo) August 27, 2016

DCLeaks had put up 2,500 internal Open Society Foundation (OSF) documents in order to “shed light on one of the most influential networks operating worldwide,” reports The Daily Caller.

An OSF spokesperson said the leak is “a symptom of an aggressive assault on civil society and human rights activists that is taking place globally.”

Tony Cartilucci describes the Soros operation as follows:

Kurt Nimmo is the editor of Another Day in the Empire, where this article first appeared. He is the former lead editor and writer of Infowars.com.