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CIA to Air Decades of Its Dirty Laundry
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...referrer=email
The CIA will declassify hundreds of pages of long-secret records detailing some of the intelligence agency's worst illegal abuses -- the so-called "family jewels" documenting a quarter-century of overseas assassination attempts, domestic spying, kidnapping and infiltration of leftist groups from the 1950s to the 1970s, CIA Director Michael V. Hayden said yesterday. The documents, to be publicly released next week, also include accounts of break-ins and theft, the agency's opening of private mail to and from China and the Soviet Union, wiretaps and surveillance of journalists, and a series of "unwitting" tests on U.S. civilians, including the use of drugs. |
Yeah sure. Some form of April Fools joke? Don't even expect anything incriminating. They will just give you enough to wet your apetite.
Bon appetit! :p -S |
I'll wait to see what all is in the batch. It was my understanding that the only thing being released was illegal domestic programs. Perhaps that's the only thing being released which has specific information?
I'm watching for it. |
:roll:
:shifty: :nope: :shifty: |
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Personally I'm waiting for the documents linking the CIA to Sirhan Sirhan. :yep: |
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But it's really surprising the stuff the CIA does release.
I think the stuff they really want to keep secret they do outside the agency with contract personel. |
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You can even see very funny footage of Dick Helms testifying before Congress about the plot to kill Castro.
They ask him all these questions, about all these outlandish plots, and he finally gets angry and says that he doesn't know why they came up with all these crazy schemes, and finally laughingly says in retrospect they would have been smarter to have just found someone to walk up to Castro and shoot him with a pistol. |
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I think in intelligence you have to be slightly paranoid and highly compartmentalized. Because if the enemy figures out Point A, it might not take them long to deduce Point B, and from there figure out Point C. A successful intelligence operation has to operate like the "cells" used by terrorist groups. One cell should not be able to compromise another.
Otherwise you are liable to have a Robert Hansen or an Aldridge Ames come in and destroy your entire intelligence organization. What really bothers me about the Valeria Plame thing is that everyone she ever came in contact with abroad now has a target on their heads for the possibility of being a US spy. |
I just watched The Good Shepard tonight. FWIW I hope there is a "Mother" or two on our side.
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I have it on my Neflix, but haven't watched it yet.
Think about this. Osama Bin Laden is on dialysis. I find it highly unlikely that if he is still alive, that he has been living in a cave this whole time. What do you think the odds are that he has been living comfortably in Saudi Arabia the whole time? I would imagine that if he was living in Mecca he would be pretty hard to locate, and it would be impossible to assassinate him there without risking a major dust-up? |
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