Difference between revisions of "Intelligence agency"
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|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence_agency | |wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence_agency | ||
|image=Intelligence agency.png | |image=Intelligence agency.png | ||
− | |description=The distinction between secret societies, intelligence agencies or international groups may be slightly moot on occasions. Many are officially allowed to commit serious crimes such as murder, and are subject to minimal effective oversight anyway. | + | |constitutes=Police |
+ | |description=The distinction between [[secret societies]], intelligence agencies or international groups may be slightly moot on occasions. Many are officially allowed to commit serious crimes such as [[murder]], and are subject to minimal effective oversight anyway. | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Intelligence agencies''' are also called "'''security services'''" although their modus operandi does not seem to focus on security of [[people]] as much as [[deep state]] groups. | '''Intelligence agencies''' are also called "'''security services'''" although their modus operandi does not seem to focus on security of [[people]] as much as [[deep state]] groups. | ||
+ | |||
==Official Narrative== | ==Official Narrative== | ||
− | For reasons of "[[national security]]", [[nation state]]s need "intelligence services" to gather secrets from other countries (or from individuals or groups inside their own host nation) while preventing other intelligence agencies from discovering such secrets. Members of these groups must not be publicly | + | {{YouTubeVideo |
+ | |code=-4zA1CU1oW9k | ||
+ | |width=500px | ||
+ | |align=left | ||
+ | |caption=Top 10 Intelligence Agencies in the World | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | For reasons of "[[national security]]", [[nation state]]s need "intelligence services" to gather secrets from other countries (or from individuals or groups inside their own host nation) while preventing other intelligence agencies from discovering such secrets. Members of these groups must not be publicly identified as such and they should not be constrained by laws that apply to other people. Since governments oversee their activities, the consensists given is that the general public does not need to have such oversight. As [[US President]] [[Barack Obama]] asserted in [[2014]]: "Our intelligence professionals are [[patriot]]s, and we are safer because of their heroic service and sacrifices."<ref>http://alternative-news.tk/president-obama-praises-patriotic-torturers-says-usa-greatest-force-for-human-dignity-the-world-has-ever-seen/</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Problems== | ||
+ | The justification for national intelligence agencies has a somewhat circular logic to it. In the climate of fear and suspicion generated by the [[cold war]] and the secrecy surrounding terrifying new weapons such as the nuclear bomb, the public were fairly easily persuaded for the need for the "services" they claim to provide. The [[21st century|21<sup>st</sup> century]] "[[war on terror]]" is however failing to galvanise people in quite the same way. Whilst intelligence agencies have a long history of carrying out [[false flag]] attacks, awareness of this fact in the [[20th century|20<sup>th</sup> century]] was limited. The widespread understanding of [[9/11]] as a plan devised by [[deep state]] insiders has perpetrated increasing questions to be asked about intelligence agencies. Many people are now asking what justification there can be for organisations that claim the right to break laws, and carry out [[murder]], [[torture]] or [[mass surveillance]] amidst an "ends justifies the means" culture. In practice, many, perhaps most, intelligence agencies lack ''effective'' oversight, leading to concerns about their unaccountability and the seemingly ever increasing secrecy surrounding their operations. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{SMWQ | ||
+ | |authors=Craig Murray | ||
+ | |date=11 January 2019 | ||
+ | |source_URL=https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2019/01/richard-dearlove-helped-blair-kill-millions-the-security-services-are-a-danger-to-our-state-and-society/ | ||
+ | |source_name=Craig Murray's Blog | ||
+ | |text=There is something very wrong indeed with the UK security services, which are most certainly not a force for freedom or justice. That [[MI6]] can be headed by as extreme a figure as [[Dearlove]], underlines the threat that the security services pose to any [[progressive]] movement in [[politics]]. | ||
+ | |subjects=MI5, MI6, GCHQ, Richard Dearlove | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Activities=== | ||
+ | The "intelligence" (i.e. information gathering, nowadays in large part by [[mass surveillance]]) is one part of the activities of intelligence agencies. Another major strand is [[covert operations]], including [[assassination]], [[drug trafficking]] (most notably [[CIA/Drug trafficking|by the CIA]]) and associated [[money laundering]], [[cyberterrorism]] (probably most notably by the [[NSA]] and the [[Mossad]]) and a spectrum of clandestine [[US Sponsored Regime-change efforts since 1945|regime change]]" efforts. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====Covert Action==== | ||
+ | {{YouTubeVideo | ||
+ | |code=-vB50qswie8 | ||
+ | |width=500px | ||
+ | |align=left | ||
+ | |caption= Top 10 Most Infamous Undercover Operations | ||
+ | }} | ||
− | + | {{FA|Covert Action}} | |
− | + | Covert Action invariably means breaking the law of and in other countries. With the resulting back and forth this can not lead to peace, even when those who have done this as their daily bread argue that it does bring stability, as [[Theodore Shackley]] in his book: ''The Third Option'' does.<ref>https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/826014.The_Third_Option</ref><ref>https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/1988/eirv15n26-19880624/eirv15n26-19880624_030-theodore_shackleys_third_option.pdf saved at [https://web.archive.org/web/20180803135524/http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/public/1988/eirv15n26-19880624/eirv15n26-19880624_030-theodore_shackleys_third_option.pdf Archive.org]</ref> The attitude in "the business" is exemplified by [[Patrick Clawson]] in a 2012 QA at the Policy Forum in Washington.<ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y6LKmhDRWFc saved at [https://archive.vn/AALni Archive.is]</ref> | |
− | ==Deep state control== | + | ===Token public oversight=== |
+ | A global effort was made {{when}}[1990s?] to establish at least a token system of oversight for intelligence agencies in countries including the UK and the USA. However, their continuing culture of secrecy means that such a project was unlikely (and probably never intended) to achieve more than a check on the very crassest abuses.<ref>Document:UK Intelligence And Security Report, 2003</ref> As the "[[war on terror]]" began to roll back [[civil liberties]], undermine [[human rights]] and ramp up government secrecy, intelligence agencies have been rolling back secrecy again.<ref>http://www.unwelcomeguests.net/747</ref> In March [[2019]], [[Donald Trump]] removed a requirement for US intelligence agencies to report on civilian casualties that occurred during their operations.<ref>https://www.boston.com/news/politics/2019/03/06/trump-civilians-killed-in-intelligence-ops-to-go-unreported</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Deep state control=== | ||
{{FA|Deep state}} | {{FA|Deep state}} | ||
The culture of secrecy, the large, often undisclosed, budgets of intelligence agencies, together with their freedom to operate outside the restrictions of national laws makes them ideal for carrying out [[deep event]]s such as [[assassination]]s or false flag terror attacks. This has made them a core component of [[deep state]]s, with probably no more than a token loyalty to the "[[national interest]]". | The culture of secrecy, the large, often undisclosed, budgets of intelligence agencies, together with their freedom to operate outside the restrictions of national laws makes them ideal for carrying out [[deep event]]s such as [[assassination]]s or false flag terror attacks. This has made them a core component of [[deep state]]s, with probably no more than a token loyalty to the "[[national interest]]". | ||
− | == | + | ==Private intelligence== |
− | The | + | The focus on [[privatisation]] in the US and UK since the [[90s]] has brought a number of private intelligence organisations into existence. |
+ | |||
+ | === Selected Examples === | ||
+ | *EUROPE | ||
+ | **[[Aegis Defence Services]] | ||
+ | **[[Control Risks Group]] | ||
+ | **[[Frontier Horizons]] | ||
+ | **[[Group GEOS]] | ||
+ | **[[Hakluyt & Company]] | ||
+ | **[[Orbis Business Intelligence]] | ||
+ | **[[Oxford Analytica]] | ||
+ | **[[Patrium Intelligence]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | *NORTH AMERICA | ||
+ | **[[Aggregate IQ]] | ||
+ | **[[Booz Allen Hamilton]] | ||
+ | **[[Fusion GPS]] | ||
+ | **[[Kroll Inc]] | ||
+ | **[[Pinkerton (detective agency)|Pinkerton National Detective Agency]] | ||
+ | **[[Smith Brandon International]], Inc. | ||
+ | **[[Stratfor]] | ||
+ | **[[Northrop Grumman]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | *ISRAEL | ||
+ | **[[Archimedes]] | ||
+ | **[[Black Cube]] | ||
+ | **[[NSO Group]] | ||
+ | |||
{{GroupType | {{GroupType | ||
|section=Intelligence agencies | |section=Intelligence agencies | ||
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|headers=Nation state/Date/Logo/WWW/Description | |headers=Nation state/Date/Logo/WWW/Description | ||
}} | }} | ||
+ | |||
{{SMWDocs}} | {{SMWDocs}} | ||
+ | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Latest revision as of 17:47, 23 April 2024
Intelligence agency (Police) | |
---|---|
Interest of | • Richard M. Bennett • Consortium for the Study of Intelligence • Robert Dover • Executive Intelligence Review • Bill Fairclough • Daniele Ganser • John Hughes-Wilson • Jefferson Morley • Mark Phythian • James Rusbridger • John Simkin • David Swanson • The Deep State Blog • The Paypal Mafia |
Subpage(s) | •Intelligence agency/List |
The distinction between secret societies, intelligence agencies or international groups may be slightly moot on occasions. Many are officially allowed to commit serious crimes such as murder, and are subject to minimal effective oversight anyway. |
Intelligence agencies are also called "security services" although their modus operandi does not seem to focus on security of people as much as deep state groups.
Contents
Official Narrative
Top 10 Intelligence Agencies in the World |
For reasons of "national security", nation states need "intelligence services" to gather secrets from other countries (or from individuals or groups inside their own host nation) while preventing other intelligence agencies from discovering such secrets. Members of these groups must not be publicly identified as such and they should not be constrained by laws that apply to other people. Since governments oversee their activities, the consensists given is that the general public does not need to have such oversight. As US President Barack Obama asserted in 2014: "Our intelligence professionals are patriots, and we are safer because of their heroic service and sacrifices."[1]
Problems
The justification for national intelligence agencies has a somewhat circular logic to it. In the climate of fear and suspicion generated by the cold war and the secrecy surrounding terrifying new weapons such as the nuclear bomb, the public were fairly easily persuaded for the need for the "services" they claim to provide. The 21st century "war on terror" is however failing to galvanise people in quite the same way. Whilst intelligence agencies have a long history of carrying out false flag attacks, awareness of this fact in the 20th century was limited. The widespread understanding of 9/11 as a plan devised by deep state insiders has perpetrated increasing questions to be asked about intelligence agencies. Many people are now asking what justification there can be for organisations that claim the right to break laws, and carry out murder, torture or mass surveillance amidst an "ends justifies the means" culture. In practice, many, perhaps most, intelligence agencies lack effective oversight, leading to concerns about their unaccountability and the seemingly ever increasing secrecy surrounding their operations.
“There is something very wrong indeed with the UK security services, which are most certainly not a force for freedom or justice. That MI6 can be headed by as extreme a figure as Dearlove, underlines the threat that the security services pose to any progressive movement in politics.”
Craig Murray (11 January 2019) [2]
Activities
The "intelligence" (i.e. information gathering, nowadays in large part by mass surveillance) is one part of the activities of intelligence agencies. Another major strand is covert operations, including assassination, drug trafficking (most notably by the CIA) and associated money laundering, cyberterrorism (probably most notably by the NSA and the Mossad) and a spectrum of clandestine regime change" efforts.
Covert Action
Top 10 Most Infamous Undercover Operations |
- Full article: Covert Action
- Full article: Covert Action
Covert Action invariably means breaking the law of and in other countries. With the resulting back and forth this can not lead to peace, even when those who have done this as their daily bread argue that it does bring stability, as Theodore Shackley in his book: The Third Option does.[3][4] The attitude in "the business" is exemplified by Patrick Clawson in a 2012 QA at the Policy Forum in Washington.[5]
Token public oversight
A global effort was made [When?][1990s?] to establish at least a token system of oversight for intelligence agencies in countries including the UK and the USA. However, their continuing culture of secrecy means that such a project was unlikely (and probably never intended) to achieve more than a check on the very crassest abuses.[6] As the "war on terror" began to roll back civil liberties, undermine human rights and ramp up government secrecy, intelligence agencies have been rolling back secrecy again.[7] In March 2019, Donald Trump removed a requirement for US intelligence agencies to report on civilian casualties that occurred during their operations.[8]
Deep state control
- Full article: Deep state
- Full article: Deep state
The culture of secrecy, the large, often undisclosed, budgets of intelligence agencies, together with their freedom to operate outside the restrictions of national laws makes them ideal for carrying out deep events such as assassinations or false flag terror attacks. This has made them a core component of deep states, with probably no more than a token loyalty to the "national interest".
Private intelligence
The focus on privatisation in the US and UK since the 90s has brought a number of private intelligence organisations into existence.
Selected Examples
- EUROPE
- NORTH AMERICA
- ISRAEL
Intelligence agencies on Wikispooks
Wikispooks page | Nation state | Logo | WWW | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Al Mukhabarat Al A'amah | Saudi Arabia | |||
BND | Germany | http://www.bnd.de | ||
Booz Allen Hamilton | Deep state/Supranational nature | http://www.boozallen.com/ | A for-profit part of the US Deep State. | |
CIA | US | http://www.CIA.gov | The most high profile of the US intelligence agencies, a covert agent of foreign policy. Funded by a 'black budget' derived from the global drug trade, the CIA is experienced at assassination, blackmail, instigating coups and other such covert deep state actions. Its scrutiny in the early 1970s however led to the development of more secure bases for the most sensitive deep state operations. | |
CIA/Directorate of Operations | CIA | CIA directorate | ||
CIA/Directorate of Plans | A branch of the CIA for just over 20 years. | |||
CIA/Near East and South Asia Division | CIA/Directorate of Operations | |||
Confidential Intelligence Unit | National Public Order Intelligence Unit | |||
Covert Intelligence Service | https://www.covertintelligenceservice.com/ | American private intelligence company that allow private citizens to pay to be trained by former field intelligence operatives | ||
Cyber Threat Intelligence Integration Center | ||||
DGSE | France | http://www.defense.gouv.fr/dgse | French foreign intelligence agency | |
DIA | US/Department/Defense | http://www.dia.mil | ||
Defence Intelligence Division (SANDF) | ||||
Diligence | http://www.diligence.com | An industrial espionage network fronted by former members of the establishment. | ||
Direction de la surveillance du territoire | France | |||
Dutch Military Intelligence and Security Service | Netherlands | Dutch military intelligence agency. Employed disappeared spook Willem Matser, covered up thefts of Operation Gladio weapon depots by a gang of liasons of the royal family. | ||
Force Research Unit | UK/Army | |||
GCHQ | UK | http://www.gchq.gov.uk | The UK equivalent of the NSA, which carries out mass surveillance on a lot of the world's internet traffic | |
Gehlen Organization | ||||
Gestapo | ||||
Hakluyt & Company Ltd | Hakluyt is a privately owned intelligence agency founded in 1995 by UK spooks. It has close ties to the UK deep state, MI6, Shell and BP. | |||
Inter-Services Intelligence | Pakistan | |||
Iraqi National Intelligence Service | ||||
Irish Joint Section | MI6 MI5 | |||
Israel/Military Intelligence Directorate | http://www.idf.il | |||
Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre | MI5 | The Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre reports to the head of MI5 although it is not formally part of the Security Service. | ||
Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group | GCHQ | Subunit of GCHQ that uses deception, dirty tricks, fake news to discredit people on the internet to "deny, disrupt, degrade and deceive". | ||
KGB | Russia | |||
Lekem | Israel/Defence Ministry | |||
MI5 | UK | https://www.mi5.gov.uk | MI5 (Military Intelligence, Section 5), is the United Kingdom's domestic counter-intelligence and security agency and is part of its core in the main British domestic intelligence service. | |
MI5/A Branch | MI5 | |||
MI5/B Branch | MI5 | |||
MI5/C Branch | MI5 | A now defunct division of MI5, incorporated into D Branch in 1994. | ||
MI5/D Branch | MI5 | |||
MI5/E Branch | MI5 | |||
MI5/F Branch | MI5 | |||
MI5/G Branch | MI5 | |||
MI5/H Branch | MI5 | |||
MI5/K Branch | MI5 | |||
MI5/T Branch | MI5 | |||
MI6 | UK | http://www.mi6.gov.uk | British foreign secret intelligence service. | |
Mossad | http://www.mossad.gov.il/default.aspx | "Mossad" (Hebrew for Institute) is an abbreviation for ha-Mossad le-Modiin ule-Tafkidim Meyuhadim (Institute for Intelligence and Special Tasks). It is the Israeli State Agency with overall responsible for external intelligence and covert operations. | ||
Muslim Contact Unit | Metropolitan Police | Spooky unit of the UK Metropolitan Police interested in "radicalisation" of Muslims. | ||
National Extremism Tactical Coordination Unit | http://www.netcu.org.uk | UK police intelligence agency interested in "extremism" | ||
Naval Intelligence Division | UK Naval intelligence, originally named the 'Foreign Intelligence Committee'. | |||
New Zealand Security Intelligence Service | New Zealand | http://www.security.govt.nz | New Zealand's internal spy service | |
Office of Naval Intelligence | US/Navy | http://www.oni.navy.mil | Long established US intelligence agency targeted on 9-11 | |
Office of Policy Coordination | A forerunner of the CIA, "staffed by reckless adventurers" | |||
Office of Strategic Services | Precursor to the CIA. | |||
Office of the Director of National Intelligence | http://www.dni.gov/ | Its goal is as "to effectively integrate foreign, military and domestic intelligence in defense of the homeland and of United States interests abroad." | ||
... further results |
Examples
Page name | Description |
---|---|
"Alfa" | |
AIVD | Intelligence agency of the Dutch Deep state. Recruits 15 year olds. Planted Stuxnet. World-champion wiretapping. Rejected evidence of Mabel van Oranje's criminal friends. |
Agency for National Security Planning | |
Agenzia Informazioni e Sicurezza Esterna | |
Aginter Press | International anti-communist mercenary and "terrorist" organization, subcontracting for intelligence services, disguised as a pseudo-press agency. |
Australian Secret Intelligence Service | The Australian foreign intelligence agency, but has tentacles all over society, especially in the media. |
Australian Signals Directorate | Australian snooping agency, foreign, and probably also domestic. |
BOSS | The main South African state intelligence agency |
Belgian State Security Service | |
Black Cube | Spooky Israeli business intelligence agency |
Bureau of State Security | |
CIA | The most high profile of the US intelligence agencies, a covert agent of foreign policy. Funded by a 'black budget' derived from the global drug trade, the CIA is experienced at assassination, blackmail, instigating coups and other such covert deep state actions. Its scrutiny in the early 1970s however led to the development of more secure bases for the most sensitive deep state operations. |
Cesid | Spanish intelligence agency closely tied to the PSOE government of Felipe González. |
Civil Cooperation Bureau | Spooky South African hit squad |
Communications Security Establishment | |
Control Risks | A British "private security" company set up in 1975 by David Walker (SAS), comparable to Kroll Inc set up in New York in 1972 |
Counterintelligence Corps | U.S. intelligence service active from 1941 to 1961. It became noticeable for recruiting and protecting former German and other Axis operatives; including by operating "ratlines" to South America. Conducted large-scale surveillance in the United States itself. |
DIA | |
Danish Defence Intelligence Service | |
Defence Signals Directorate | |
Defense Security Command | |
Dutch Military Intelligence and Security Service | Dutch military intelligence agency. Employed disappeared spook Willem Matser, covered up thefts of Operation Gladio weapon depots by a gang of liasons of the royal family. |
FSB | Russian intelligence agency, successor to the KGB |
Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution | German intelligence agency |
Fiji Intelligence Service | A former intelligence agency of the Republic of the Fiji Islands |
GU | |
General Directorate for Internal Security | |
Gestapo | |
Global Issues Controllerate | |
Government Communications Security Bureau | |
Hakluyt & Company Ltd | Hakluyt is a privately owned intelligence agency founded in 1995 by UK spooks. It has close ties to the UK deep state, MI6, Shell and BP. |
Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency | |
KKR Global Institute | |
Korean Central Intelligence Agency | So dependent on the CIA they didn't bother to change the name. |
Kroll Inc. | The “CIA of Wall Street” |
MI5 | MI5 (Military Intelligence, Section 5), is the United Kingdom's domestic counter-intelligence and security agency and is part of its core in the main British domestic intelligence service. |
MI6 | British foreign secret intelligence service. |
Mossad | "Mossad" (Hebrew for Institute) is an abbreviation for ha-Mossad le-Modiin ule-Tafkidim Meyuhadim (Institute for Intelligence and Special Tasks). It is the Israeli State Agency with overall responsible for external intelligence and covert operations. |
NKVD | |
National Criminal Intelligence Service | |
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency | |
National Information Center (Chile) | The political police and intelligence body which functioned as an organ of persecution, kidnapping, torture, murder and disappearance of political opponents during the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in Chile. Successor of DINA. |
National Intelligence Centre | The Spanish combined foreign and domestic intelligence agency. |
National Security Agency | "No Such Agency". Spook agency working closely with Silicon Valley |
National Underwater Reconnaissance Office | US intelligence agency with very low profile |
New Zealand Security Intelligence Service | New Zealand's internal spy service |
Norwegian Intelligence Service | The most powerful deep state entity in Norway |
Norwegian Police Security Service | |
Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism | |
Office for Special Acquisition | An extra-constitutional secret intelligence organization within the Swedish Armed Forces. |
... further results |
Related Quotations
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | “In one sense MI6 and MI5 have got it right, are, in fact, a brilliant success. Faced with their biggest crisis of the post-war period, the end of the Red Menace which justified the budgets,
the careers and the gongs, they have emerged with budgets renewed, new agendas approved; untouched by the politicians, unsupervised by anyone, still - we are not supposed to laugh - still accountable to the Crown not Parliament ( i.e. to no-one). Both MI6 and MI5 have reacted to the new conditions post Cold War in thoroughly competent, even creative ways. Needing something something to justify the budget, MI6 picked the international drug trade. Far as I know, since MI6 joined the 'war against drugs' the price of cocaine and heroin in the UK at street level has halved: it is now cheaper to get off your face, as they say in Hull, on smack than it is on alcohol. And didn't I read a few months ago that MI6 had persuaded Clare Short to task them to provide her with early warning of coups in the developing world? An honest-to-goodness license to do anything, anywhere. Only a Labour government, timid and ignorant, would fall for a proposal as preposterous as that one. MI5 hardly paused for breath after losing the KGB 'threat' contained in the Soviet Embassy and its Trade Mission, before acquiring the domestic terrorism franchise from the Met Special Branch and beginning the process of hyping up the animal rights and green activists as a new terrorist threat. (And they are getting a new definition of terrorism run through the Houses of Parliament to support it.) Of course, only the politicians and some of the media - the handful who are paying any attention at all - take the talk of the war on drugs seriously. MI6 don't, I am sure; any more than they seriously intend to provide Clare Short with an early warning of coups in the Third World. At the higher levels of MI6, MI5 and all the rest they must be chortling in the senior dining rooms at the incredible gullibility of the British political class - and this present lot in particular.” | Robin Ramsay | |
Philip Agee | “Reforms of the FBI and the CIA, even removal of the President from office, cannot remove the problem. American capitalism, based as it is on exploitation of the poor, with its fundamental motivation in personal greed, simply cannot survive without force – without a secret police force. The argument is with capitalism and it is capitalism that must be opposed, with its CIA, FBI and other security agencies understood as logical, necessary manifestations of a ruling class’s determination to retain power and privilege.” | Philip Agee | 1975 |
Black helicopter | “More than seven years ago a group of Americans traveled to Siberia to buy a pair of Russian Mi-17 helicopters for the CIA's post-9/11 clandestine operations in Afghanistan. As with many "black" programs, the contract had elements of craziness: Contracting officials paid the multimillion-dollar contract on a credit card at a local El Paso bar and then used the credit card rebate to redecorate their office; the team traveled under the guise of being private contractors; and the charter crew transporting the group abandoned the team in Russia in the middle of the night.
Ultimately, a five-year investigation into the mission led to the conviction of the Army official in charge and the contractor who bought the helicopters on charges of corruption. The two men, currently in federal prison, are appealing their convictions. At first glance, it's a simple case: A few days after returning from Russia, the contractor paid off the second mortgage of the Army official in charge of the mission. Prosecutors argued that the contractor, Maverick Aviation, was unprepared for the mission, and the Army official helped cover up the problems in exchange for a payoff. The defendants at trial were barred from mentioning the CIA, Afghanistan or even 9/11. In an article for The New York Post, this author looks at what really happened in Siberia based on over two dozen interviews with people involved in the mission and trial. It's a story, that in some respects, is very different than the portrait painted by the government at trial. One interesting comparison not mentioned in the article is worth noting in light of recent purchases of Russian helicopters: In 2001, Maverick Aviation was paid $5 million for two freshly overhauled Mi-17s and spare parts, as well as travel and logistics for team of Army/CIA personnel, and got the helicopters out of Russia in under 30 days. In 2008, ARINC, a major U.S. defense contractor, was paid $322 million dollars to buy 22 Russian helicopters under a U.S. foreign military sales contract. Guess how many helicopters ARINC has delivered to Iraq after 18 months? Zero.” | Wired Sharon Weinberger | 2009 |
Jimmy Carter | “I became more aware of what our intelligence services were doing. There was only one instance that I'll talk about now. We had a plane go down in the Central African Republic—a twinengine plane, small plane. And we couldn't find it. And so we oriented satellites that were going around the earth every ninety minutes to fly over that spot where we thought it might be and take photographs. We couldn't find it. So the director of the CIA came and told me that he had contacted a woman in California that claimed to have supernatural capabilities. And she went in a trance, and she wrote down latitudes and longitudes, and we sent our satellite over that latitude and longitude, and there was the plane.” | Jimmy Carter GQ | 2005 |
Tom Fuentes | “If you’re submitting budget proposals for a law enforcement agency, for an intelligence agency, you’re not going to submit the proposal that “We won the war on terror and everything’s great,” cuz the first thing that’s gonna happen is your budget’s gonna be cut in half. You know, it’s my opposite of Jesse Jackson’s ‘Keep Hope Alive’” | Tom Fuentes | 2009 |
Malcolm Muggeridge | “In the eyes of posterity it will inevitably seem that, in safeguarding our freedom, we destroyed it. The vast clandestine apparatus we built up to prove our enemies' resources and intentions only served in the end to confuse our own purposes; that practice of deceiving others for the good of the state led infallibly to our deceiving ourselves; and that vast army of clandestine personnel built up to execute these purposes were soon caught up in the web of their own sick fantasies, with disastrous consequences for them and us.” | Malcolm Muggeridge | May 1966 |
Psychic | “I became more aware of what our intelligence services were doing. There was only one instance that I'll talk about now. We had a plane go down in the Central African Republic—a twinengine plane, small plane. And we couldn't find it. And so we oriented satellites that were going around the earth every ninety minutes to fly over that spot where we thought it might be and take photographs. We couldn't find it. So the director of the CIA came and told me that he had contacted a woman in California that claimed to have supernatural capabilities. And she went in a trance, and she wrote down latitudes and longitudes, and we sent our satellite over that latitude and longitude, and there was the plane.” | Jimmy Carter GQ | 2005 |
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:Abolish Terrorist Agencies | essay | 29 July 2019 | David Swanson | Swanson characterises Annie Jacobsen's Surprise Kill Vanish as an apology for intelligence agencies. He deconstructs their the official narratives of defending "democracy", claiming that they have "decades of engaging in and provoking terrorism". Citing blowback from their operations as major factors in the growth of the MICC and its climate paranoia and permanent war, he calls for an end to the intelligence agencies. |
Document:Counter-Intelligence: Spying Deters Democracy | interview | 7 July 2014 | Scott Noble Kim Petersen | |
Document:It’s Identity, Stupid | article | 1 March 2013 | Richard Thieme | Insights into the real, counter-intuitive purposes and functioning of intelligence and security services. As a consequence of their determination of developments in surveillance, computing and related esoteric military technologies, their role of service to democratically determined policy has morphed into hidden, unaccountable shapers and arbiters of all policy that matters. |
Document:The Terrorists Among US- Traitors and Terror 3 | article | 21 June 2019 | George Eliason Michael Jasinski | George Eliason interviews professor Michael Jasinski about the dire effects of outsourcing intelligence gathering and information dissemination. |
Document:Their Will Be Done | article | 1 August 1983 | Martin A Lee | How the CIA targets powerful hierarchies for infiltration and influence. The Roman Catholic Church's claim to be the one and only authentic 'Church of Christ on Earth' does not exempt them from exploitation by deep politicians. This article powerfully demonstrates both the Catholic Church's power and its susceptibility to the machinations of Mammon. As they say in South America, "When the CIA goes to church, it doesn't go to pray." |
Document:UK Intelligence And Security Report, 2003 | report | June 2003 | Richard M. Bennett Katie Bennett | A compendious summary of the UK Intelligence And Security agencies, including people, events and places. |
References
- ↑ http://alternative-news.tk/president-obama-praises-patriotic-torturers-says-usa-greatest-force-for-human-dignity-the-world-has-ever-seen/
- ↑ https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2019/01/richard-dearlove-helped-blair-kill-millions-the-security-services-are-a-danger-to-our-state-and-society/ Craig Murray's Blog
- ↑ https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/826014.The_Third_Option
- ↑ https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/1988/eirv15n26-19880624/eirv15n26-19880624_030-theodore_shackleys_third_option.pdf saved at Archive.org
- ↑ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y6LKmhDRWFc saved at Archive.is
- ↑ Document:UK Intelligence And Security Report, 2003
- ↑ http://www.unwelcomeguests.net/747
- ↑ https://www.boston.com/news/politics/2019/03/06/trump-civilians-killed-in-intelligence-ops-to-go-unreported