Cia

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    • CIA admits Castro plot OK’d at the top

      Posted by Jeff from MSNBC

      Bay of Authorization? Buried deep in the hundreds of historical documents the CIA declassified Tuesday is a memo that reveals for the first time that the Kennedy administration’s CIA director, Allen Dulles, personally approved a plot to assassinate Cuban President Fidel Castro.

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    • CIA to Air Decades of Its Dirty Laundry

      Posted by Damianmann

      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.

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    • WP: CIA to air decades of dirty laundry

      Posted by Jeff from MSNBC

      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.

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      9/11 widows demand release of CIA's Inspector General report

      Posted by Jeff from Rawstory

      "The report, prepared by the CIA's inspector general, is the only major 9/11 government review that has still not been made publicly available," Michael Isikoff reported in January. "When it was completed in August 2005, Newsweek and other publications reported that it contained sharp criticisms of former CIA director George Tenet and other top agency officials for failing to address the threat posed by Al Qaeda, as well as other mistakes that might have prevented the attacks."

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  1. thumbnail

    muckraker comments on:

    Worried CIA Officers Buy Legal Insurance

    One of the many tragedies of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina three years ago was the fact that insurance companies used the event to systematically deny claims, leaving victims further in desperate straits. That shouldn’t happen following any natural disaster, and even though the immediate storm effects did not cause as much damage as predicted, there are sure to be plenty of claims for flood damages throughout the Midwest and along Gustav’s path. If you or someone you know has been denied an insurance claim related to Gustav: that would be a site you should visit.

     

    Reply »

    9:10 pm 9/11/08
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    socean comments on:

    Top Bush aides approved interrogation tactics: report

    I think we should waterboard all the "principals" until they confess.

     

    Reply »

    3:12 pm 4/12/08
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    Jon comments on:

    Top court rejects ACLU domestic spying lawsuit

    Kafka anyone?

    Reply »

    11:39 am 2/20/08
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    theangryindian comments on:

    CIA documents point to massive and ongoing government criminality

    No big surprise that there isn’t an iota of outrage in the United States about this.

    Reply »

    11:03 am 7/05/07
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    Damianmann comments on:

    CIA to Air Decades of Its Dirty Laundry

    RFK’s son was on “Hardball” today and says Kissinger’s comments are “revisionist” and completely untrue.

    Reply »

    2:37 pm 6/22/07
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    j1o2n3a4s5 comments on:

    Link between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden: BCCI

    Tax documents and other financial records show that Bath, an aircraft broker with controversial ties to Saudi Arabia sheiks, had invested $50,000 in Arbusto, granting him a 5 percent interest in two limited partnerships controlled by Dubya.
    Time magazine described Bath in 1991 as “a deal broker whose alleged associations run from the CIA to a major shareholder and director of the Bank of Credit & Commerce.” BCCI, as it was more commonly known, closed its doors in July 1991 amid charges of multibillion-dollar fraud and global news reports that the financial institution had been heavily involved in drug money laundering, arms brokering, covert intelligence work, bribery of government officials and%u2014here’s the kicker%u2014aid to terrorists.
    Bath was never directly implicated in the BCCI scandal, but according to The Outlaw Bank, an award-winning 1993 book by Time correspondents, Jonathan Beaty and S.C. Gwynne, Bath originally “made his fortune by investing money for [Sheikh Kalid bin] Mahfouz and another BCCI-connected Saudi, Sheikh bin Laden,” reportedly the brother of none other than Osama bin Laden, the man accused by the U.S. government of masterminding the August 1998 terrorist bombings of the American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania which killed more than 250 people.
    According to court documents, Bath swore that in 1977 he represented four prominent and wealthy Saudi Arabians as a trustee and used his name on their investments in the United States. In return, he received a 5 percent interest in their deals. Time reporters Beaty and Gwynne suggest in their book that the $50,000 Bath invested in Dubya’s Arbusto Energy drilling company may have belonged to Bath’s Saudi clients since the Houston businessman “had no substantial money of his own at the time.”
    The FBI and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network later investigated Bath after allegations were made by one of his American business partners that the Saudis were using Bath and their giant piggy bank to influence U.S. policy. (Dubya’s father had been appointed by President Ford to head the CIA from 1976%u201377.)

    Reply »

    8:48 pm 4/06/07
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    Jeff comments on:

    NY Times slams Bush's 'nasty and bumbling comments' on US Attorney firings; Calls on Congress to sub

    It continues to amaze me how most Americans aren’t offended and outraged by the idea that public officials should be allowed to testify in private, not under oath and without a transcript.

    Isn’t not under oath code for needing to lie without repercussions?

    Reply »

    11:55 pm 3/20/07
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    thaimat

    Member since Oct 2008

    No city