http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/articles/20080815

August 15-17, 2008 -- Intercepts reveal Georgian sneak attack on South  
Ossetia
publication date: Aug 15, 2008
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August 15-17, 2008 -- Intercepts reveal Georgian sneak attack on South  
Ossetia

United States and British signals intelligence (SIGINT) intercepts of  
Caucasus region communications, including the cell phone calls of  
Georgian, South Ossetian, and Russian government and military  
officials, reveal that Georgia was involved in a sneak attack on the  
evening of August 8 against South Ossetia and its Russian  
peacekeepers, WMR has learned from American intelligence sources.

The National Security Agency (NSA) maintained a series of SIGINT  
intercept stations in Georgia that were directed at Russian  
communications. In addition, Georgian communications, including  
satellite communications, were under surveillance from the NSA SIGINT  
station at Menwith Hill in England, as well as Britain's Government  
Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in Cheltenham, also in England.

The SIGINT "take" from the Georgian assault on South Ossetia does not  
square with media reports of Russian "aggression" against Georgia.  
Once again, a split has developed between seasoned U.S. intelligence  
professionals and Bush administration officials who are offering up  
propaganda suited to the purposes of the neocon Mikheil Saakashvili  
regime in Tbilisi. A similar split occurred prior, during, and after  
the U.S. invasion of Iraq when the intelligence did not square with  
the propaganda emanating from the Bush White House. In recent years,  
such a gulf between intelligence reality and White House policy has  
also developed with regard to Iran's nuclear program.

Ironically, as the Bush administration seeks to restore the days of  
the Cold War, Russia has a number of U.S. intelligence professionals  
agreeing with its stance and statements on South Ossetia.

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