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CIA
Feb 19, 2005 12:32:42 GMT -5
Post by LadyBlue on Feb 19, 2005 12:32:42 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]CIA awards "distinguished career" to top terror agent[/glow] On March 23 the CIA gave Terry Ward, former chief of the Latin American Division, one of its highest honors, the Distinguished Career Intelligence Medal. Ward was fired in 1995 for covering up human rights abuses by paid CIA informants in Guatemala at a time when the CIA was pretending to clean up its act.
CIA officials justify the award by pointing out that when Ward was fired he did not lose his benefits or "appropriate recognition for previous service." Now that there is less public attention on CIA torture and murder in Latin America, Ward can be rewarded for his service as a part of the CIA global reign of terror and for taking the fall for the CIA in 1995.
Ward's "distinguished" career includes service in Laos in the early 1960s, during the u.s. bombing and devastation of that country. He served in countries throughout Latin American throughout the 1960s, 70s and 80s.
Ward's failures to report CIA actions in Guatemala to congress is not the worst of his crimes. Serving in the CIA, actively working to prop up military dictatorships and other pro-imperialist puppets, financing and promoting torture, murder an exploitation are crimes that constitute a "distinguished career" according to the CIA.
MIM is pleased to see the CIA stand up and take credit for the terror it promotes. Those who believe the CIA can be reformed should learn from this award that this and other imperialist institutions must be destroyed by the people through revolutionary struggle.
Notes: Washington Post, March 10, 2000
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CIA
Feb 19, 2005 12:34:16 GMT -5
Post by LadyBlue on Feb 19, 2005 12:34:16 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]CIA: Covert US Warriors Examined[/glow] WASHINGTON DC [SCN] - Discovery Channel in the US is set to televise a three-part series on the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to mark the 50th Anniversary of the Agency. The series, entitled "CIA: America's Secret Warriors", begins on Monday 31 March 97 at 10pm EST and runs through to Wednesday 02 April 97.
The series instructs and warns about the secret government. It includes a number of interviews with former directors, and officers - proponents as well as some critics. It deserves some sober attention and reflection.
Many critics of the Western or US intelligence community would consider "undemocratic empowerment" a valid description - secret budgets, criminality exempted from Justice Department action, policy approval that is often covert even with regard to broad issues, avoidance of public debate of many things it is assumed wouldn't be approved, etc.
However, no US government agency has been more directly 'managed' by members of the rich ruling class or fat cats than the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Its main objective has been to promote US imperialism. Set up to do the dirty political work of the alleged or imagined 'Cold War', it was the creation of rich white men from the "best" families and schools. Typical is George Bush, a CIA director from a rich oil-connected Connecticut/Texas family who went on to become president.
CIA's methods have been wily as well as brutal. The defection of a number of agents during the 1960s-70s period of political upheaval shed light on the agency's trick of setting up rival unions, human-rights organisations, societies of all kinds that sounded liberal, even progressive, but were controlled by the US fat cats. With their access to almost unlimited funds, contacts, and approval in the imperialist US media, they undermined the have-nots and the oppressed etc.
The CIA's story of the dismissal of torturers, assassins and terrorists, gives impact to the image of the CIA "cleansing" itself. "The CIA has millions of agents, 'assets', informants, killers, torturers, drug runners and arm runners, terrorists and kidnappers all over the world. Many informants work for top 5,000 US and European multi-national groups," a Western intelligence source told Shanti RTV news agency. "The CIA has been imprisoned by its own lies. They are out of control and above the law."
It is a standard operating procedure for the CIA to compile Watch Lists of critics, dissidents, imagined or alleged 'enemies' of CIA-supported governments and then pass these lists to the local security services in the Middle East, Asia, Latin America and Africa. Those on the big-brother's list are routinely framed, arrested, tortured, killed.
The programmes examine the evolution of the CIA from the days of the OSS (the Oh So Social "elite") World War II predecessor of the Agency, through its formative stages and its successes and failures. From the overthrow of the government of Iran to the nearly overt war in Afghanistan, to the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War.
The series is most timely in that it shows the CIA's empowerment of dictatorial regimes in the Third World and their use of CIA-backed death squads that tabulate, frame, attack, kill and "disappear" or kidnap the citizens of these regimes. This is especially timely as the CIA was forced to admit in 1997 that it recruited and used torturers, assassins, and terrorists during a Deutch-dictated agent scrub. However, as always, the CIA's Public Relations-spun-story made it appear that it has allegedly cleansed itself and now presents a tabla rasa, or a clean slate to the world - a highly distorted image.
The spellbinding series is a 'must see or record" for anyone who has ever wondered how Nicaraguan contras, crack in Los Angeles, Afghan guerrillas, presidential assassinations, terrorist bombings, Soviet defectors, the Shah of Iran and old notions of James Bond fit together.
America's Secret Warriors is broken into three one-hour programs: Part one; The Brotherhood; Part two The Betrayal; and Part three Blowback. The programmes convey strong messages of both praise and attack, and avoid certain issues. It generally avoids delving enough into the CIA-created Vietnam, Laotian wars, the Gulf War, and the Mossad's disinformation agents, "lobbyists" and the self-styled "terrorism experts" within FBI, CIA, UN, US Congress, US Senate, FEMA, the US state and defense departments, the CFR (Committee on Foreign Relations) and the US administration etc.
The series has been pre-reviewed by the CIA. What most panicked the CIA was the revelation of its role in the worldwide and domestic drug runs. It objected to this coverage because, many law abiding US patriots say, this is where it is most vulnerable.
In all, the series appears to be balanced at least in the perceptions of the American citizen. The series sets up the Catholic William Colby as the White Knight against the non-confessant Richard Helms. Colby spilled the "Family Jewels," to protect the CIA while Helms remained (somewhat) mute. What does not come through is the "elitist" Helms' total disdain for the American people and Congress. This is not a problem for Duanne "Dewey" Clarridge, whose disdain for the American people, Congress and the Media, he documents in his book "A Spy for All Seasons." Many people are troubled by his operations that lead to the deaths of many people, and his use of Agency-generated propaganda as justification for these killing operations.
The first segment, "The Brotherhood" a number of ex-directors - Richard Helms, the now deceased William Colby, Stansfield Turner, and John Deutch are interviewed. The programme questions other top officers - John Horton, Frank Johnson, Duanne "Dewey" Clarridge, Milt Beardon, and dissidents - Ralph McGehee, Philip Roettinger, Philip Agee and others.
The second segment "The Betrayal" covers "counter-intelligence" operations from Kim Philby, James Jesus Angleton who was taken in by Philby and forever thereafter believed in the ability of the KGB to manipulate the world, to Aldrich Ames. Angleton's paranoid fantasies were realized by the defection of the Russian Anatoly Golitsin. His stories of a giant KGB conspiracy led Angleton to suspect every other Soviet defector, to the failure worldwide of CIA operations against the Soviets and to the destruction of the careers of CIA case officers who came under suspicion by Goltisin's claims of a mole in the CIA. The devastation of Angleton's search led to the near total shutdown of internal counterintelligence investigations of CIA personnel and the successful betrayal by Aldrich Ames and how many others?
The third or last segment "Blowback" depicts the consequences of CIA operations not only on the world but also on the US. The CIA was allowed to pre-review America's Secret Warriors, and went ballistic over "Blowback."
The series is the most important exploration of how America operates. Given the provocative interviews with Agency insiders, many intelligent viewers will still be referring to producer Marc Levin's "CIA" file a decade from now. Clearly, this kind of intensive, in-depth documentary is something you won't find on mainstream or traditional network television.
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CIA
Feb 19, 2005 12:34:38 GMT -5
Post by LadyBlue on Feb 19, 2005 12:34:38 GMT -5
The graphic devastation of Afghanistan as a consequence of the Agency's operation, may stun some viewers who don't know much about the covert CIA's global arms and drug runs. The covert operation against the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan, for example, used alleged 'Islamic fundamentalists' or freedom fighters to defeat it. The operation funded, armed and energised the alleged 'terrorists' or 'fundamentalists' - those that now have allegedly spread themselves through out the Middle East, and even to the US. Discovery's legal (and perhaps editorial staff) had problems with Ralph McGehee's accusations against Colby - "I see him as the evil genius whose religious certainties dragged us into the Vietnam and Laotian wars justified by fictionalised intelligence - where Secret Warriors, sees him as the White Knight," McGhee told Shanti RTV news agency. "I found that its interviews and film clips of the consequences of CIA covert operations to be visually and emotionally stunning," he said. Discovery Channel, it seems, has not been cowed by the CIA. Discovery held a Symposium: "Spying Under Siege: The Future of Covert Action" on Tuesday 25 March 1997 when former directorate of operations officers speaking publicly for the first time, and media and academic experts on the CIA discussed issues facing the CIA and future reforms. Duanne "Dewey" Clarridge, the originator of the Contra operation "to kill Cubans," was so upset, however, that he dropped out of the symposium in Washington DC. The channel deserves some praise for funding and broadcasting seemingly unblinking look at the Agency. The symposium moderator was DAVID ENSOR, diplomatic correspondent, ABC News. The panelists were: FRANK ANDERSON, a former CIA Directorate of Operations Officer. MILT BEARDEN, former CIA Directorate of Operations Officer. JACK BLUM, Special Counsel, Committee on Foreign Relations, US Senate, 1987-1989; planned hearings that examined drug trafficking in Latin America, relationship of trafficking to the war in Nicaragua, and failures of US foreign policy in dealing with narcotics. MELVIN GOODMAN, Professor, National War College; his most recent journal article, "Ending the CIA's Cold War Legacy" appears in the Spring 1997 issue of Foreign Policy. WALTER PINCUS, The Washington Post. EVAN THOMAS, Newsweek; author of "The Very Best Men; The Four Who Dared: The Early Years of the CIA," 1995. The symposium was maddening and illuminating. In all it was excellent and informative, and a real kick-off to this very important television series. Most audience questions came from retired CIA officers arguing or commenting in praise of the CIA. Frank Anderson seems an unreconstructed Cold Warrior who has learned history poorly. Evan Thomas was a disappointment and had little constructive to say. Walter Pincus was knowledgeable but guarded. Beyond those, however, the discussions crackled. Milt Bearden, a former top official averred that it may be time to consider abolishing the CIA and starting anew. Jack Bloom articulated the failings and the needs for reform. Melvin Goodman, a former analyst, laid out current problems that demand reform. Richard Nuccio, the former State Department employee removed from his position by CIA arrogance, commented from the audience and brought up a major fault - that the symposium discussed issues that never are heard in the two Congressional oversight committees. These two committees spend their time arguing over non-issues. Louis Wolf, the Editor of Covert Action Quarterly asked about the victims of CIA covert operations -- and here the panelists all avoided any telling comment or death count. Copyright 1997 © Shanti Communications news agency. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished or redistributed, in whole or in part. Copying, storing, transfer, redistribution, retransmission, publication and exploitation of this information is hereby expressly forbidden without the prior written consent of Shanti Communications UK. www.twf.org/News/Y1997/CIA.html
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CIA
Feb 19, 2005 12:36:11 GMT -5
Post by LadyBlue on Feb 19, 2005 12:36:11 GMT -5
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CIA
Feb 19, 2005 12:37:39 GMT -5
Post by LadyBlue on Feb 19, 2005 12:37:39 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]Challenging the Secret Government, The Post-Watergate Investigations of the CIA and FBI [/glow] by Kathryn S. Olmsted, University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4562-0 This book describes the Congressional investigations of the CIA and FBI that occurred in the mid-70s. At the time several scandals had broken out concerning the CIA and the FBI, and both the House and Senate launched investigations. Among the crimes revealed to have been committed by the CIA were the attempted assassinations of foreign leaders, and a "massive" domestic spying campaign. The following excerpt from the book reveals some of the FBI's "excesses": The committee began its FBI hearings by presenting the details of CONINTELPRO, or counterintelligence program -- the bureau's efforts to discredit and destroy dissident organizations. The program had been directed against many groups, including Communists, the Socialist Workers' Party, the Ku Klux Klan, civil rights and black nationalist groups, the New Left, and women's liberation groups. FBI informants would infiltrate these organizations, report on their movements, disrupt their plans, and often attempt to discredit the organization's members -- even, in some cases, to the point of encouraging them to kill one another or destroying their personal lives... The most egregious example of the FBI's abuse of authority was its harassment of Martin Luther King, Jr. Not only had the bureau bugged and wiretapped the civil rights leader, but it had also engaged in a concerted program to knock him "off his pedestal and to reduce him completely in influence."... The congressional investigating committees eventually fell prey to infighting, stonewalling, and the opposition of the politically powerful institutions they were challenging. In the end, some of the investigators even had aspersions cast upon them. Though some reforms were made, other abuses were "dealt with" by essentially making them legal. Many of the reforms were later scrapped by succeeding administrations. Olmstead also analyzes the way the press behaved at the time, both the way they covered the hearings and the way they dealt with sensitive leaked information. In many cases the news media would not report the leaked details of serious domestic crimes committed by the CIA and FBI against American citizens. She concludes that the hearings failed partly because Americans' attention drifted elsewhere. She notes that some people wanted to continue thinking of their government as totally moral and so preferred not to hear about the dirty tricks. This is a fascinating, if frightening and unnerving, book. While there are honorable men and women working in these, and other, institutions, there are others who can and do grossly abuse their authority. Certainly abuses continue to this day. I think it is a strength that Americans expect moral and ethical government. From this book, though, I conclude that if we want moral and ethical government we must both demand it and be persistent and vigilant in getting to the truth -- whatever it is. www.cs.virginia.edu/~alb/ugly/secretGov.html
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CIA
Feb 19, 2005 12:38:26 GMT -5
Post by LadyBlue on Feb 19, 2005 12:38:26 GMT -5
By the autumn of 1963, a major scandal was brewing around Bobby Baker, whom Vice President Lyndon Johnson had made secretary of the Senate Democrats in 1955, when LBJ was majority leader. LBJ called Baker "my strong right arm, the last man I see at night, the first I see in the morning." On October 8, 1963 Baker was forced to resign, as a Senate investigation of his outside business activities began producing sensational testimony on numerous questionable deals. "Baker's deals were tightly interwoven with the Murchison family and the Mob," wrote Dick Russell. "What first attracted the attention of Senate investigators was a lawsuit brought against Baker in 1963 by his associates in a vending company, alleging that he failed to live up to certain bargains. Those associates were, for the most part, Las Vegas gamblers; one of them, Edward Levinson, was a lieutenant of Florida mobster Meyer Lansky, whose Fremont Hotel in Vegas was financed through a Hoffa loan. "Baker, it later turned out, did considerable business with the Mob in Las Vegas, Chicago, Louisiana, and the Caribbean. Through Baker, Levinson had also gotten to know Clint Murchison." "CIint Murchison, Jr. [listed on the Board of Directors of FIDCO] tried to persuade the Senate Rules Committee in 1964 that his own real estate dealings with Jimmy Hoffa in Florida were' hardly relevant' to the Baker investigation." 64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:EJ45dACA-0EJ:www.american-buddha.com/last.circle.7.htm+cia+informants+70%27s&hl=en
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CIA
Feb 19, 2005 12:40:04 GMT -5
Post by LadyBlue on Feb 19, 2005 12:40:04 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]Agents of destruction[/glow] During the 1960's the FBI developed a counter-intelligence program called COINTELPRO, which targeted minority and counterculture activist movements. Federal agents infiltrated activist groups, set up fake organizations to weasel their way in, had sex and long-term relationships with their members, spread disinformation about them, fabricated evidence against them, created splits in their ranks, and assassinated and arrested their leaders on false charges. In his out-of-print book Deep Cover, Former FBI agent Cril Payne revealed the FBI's role as cross-border political police, infiltrating Canada's marijuana culture during the 60's when terrorism threatened the American psyche as it does today. Payne's mission was to track down the elusive Weathermen, a radical student group with ties to the University of California's Berkeley campus, credited with blowing up a statue of a policeman in Chicago in 1969. Then, in 1970, after telling the world that they would "blast away the myths of the total superiority of The Man," bombs exploded at the Santa Barbara National Guard Armory, a California courtroom, an ROTC building in Seattle, and the University of California in Berkeley. Afterward, the Weathermen fled to Canada, and Cril Payne followed. Payne – a clean-cut lad who was dismayed at being rejected for the Vietnam draft – went undercover into British Columbia's hippie culture, replete with marijuana growers and political activists. A seemingly unusual FBI agent, Payne's sensitivity and compassion eventually turned against him. Convinced that his mission was not only illegal but immoral, he never found the Weathermen but did succeed in impregnating one of his targets, a young hippie woman with suspected ties to the Weathermen, before abandoning his quest and his job. Today, Payne's one-man mission seems paltry compared to the increased presence the FBI seeks in Canada and abroad. The recently-passed US anti-terrorism PATRIOT Act extends the FBI's powers to investigate both in foreign countries and at home. This is much like the espionage and sedition acts of the early 1900's, which empowered the FBI to round up tens of thousands of innocent people during and after World War I, and throw them into jail on suspicion of anarchism. In Bolivia, for example, the DEA has its own office building, where it gives government prosecutors special offices and pays them indecent bonuses worth more than their take-home pay for successful drug cases, thereby filling the courts with poverty-stricken coca leaf farmers who cannot afford an attorney to represent them. Other approved tactics include sponsoring and financing anti-drug training to local police, teaching them to hate and destroy pot people. When the DEA gets a foothold in a country, it usually expands its operations quickly. The DEA's first foreign-country offices in Turkey and France in the 1940's comprised but a few agents, working to curb heroin smuggling to the states, and quickly grew into a large enterprise with hundreds of agents by the 60's and 70's. The eye-opening 1998 book Whiteout: the CIA, Drugs and the Press, by Alexander burn and Jeffrey St Clair, shows that, while the DEA ruthlessly persecute mom and pop grows, they routinely turn a blind eye to CIA-sanctioned drug trafficking. From the very beginning, the notorious Harry Anslinger – largely responsible for US marijuana prohibition and director of the agency that would eventually become the DEA – had an agreement with the CIA to keep his agents out of South East Asia, where the CIA built complex protection-rackets for favored drug smugglers like the Kuomintang army. The CIA used these smuggling operations throughout Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. cannabisculture.com/articles/2604.html
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