-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Congress/7727/cia.htm
<A HREF="http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Congress/7727/cia.htm">Global
intelligence links compiled by ex CIA em </A>
-----
Links galore.
Om
K
-----
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Gandalf | CIA | BBC | Echelon | Censorship | Vetting | Freemasons |
NewLabour
Culture, communication and control

Articles critical of the CIA

CIA WAGES WAR ON AMERICA

Clear out the manure in the CIA stables!

CIA and global intelligence Links compiled by ex CIA employee

CIA WAGES WAR ON AMERICA

Mackenzie, A. 'SECRETS: THE CIA'S WAR AT HOME', Berkeley, CA, 1997.


Posted in a-infozine V1 #654. The A-Infos News Service. COMMANDS:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
'An eye-opening expose', the result of 15 years of investigative work,
uncovers the CIA's systematic efforts over several decades to suppress
and censor information and to manipulate academia, the domestic media
and control Congressional oversight. A very informative and important
book. Below are a few extracts.


University of California Press.



------------------------------------------------------------------------

1991-94
DCI Gates ordered DeTrani of Public Affairs to explore openness (for a
public relations campaign). DeTrani said the CIA had a wide range of
contacts with academics through recruiting, professional societies, and
contractual agreements which could be expanded. CIA should sponsor more
academic conferences and bring scholars to Langley and expand the
officer-in-residence program which then had 13 CIA officers at
universities. He recommended expanding CIA work with the media. He
wanted CIA to declassify certain files to put the CIA in more positive
light. By assisting journalists, "intelligence failure" stories could be
turned into "intelligence success," stories -- and boasted of past
successes -- "In many instances, we have persuaded reporters to
postpone, change, hold, or even scrap stories..." He recommended helping
friendly Hollywood directors by allowing them to shoot movies at
Langley. He wanted to cooperate with feature writers. Other propaganda
could be aimed directly at the public via unclassified versions of the
Agency's Studies In Intelligence and CIA officers could step up the
number of their speeches - a CIA speakers bureau was established in
1990. DeTrani wanted the CIA to try to better manipulate Congress. Gates
accepted the suggestion to persuade friendly journalists to write
profiles of CIA officers. Gates assigned more TV time for himself. Gates
approved propagandizing the general public through press releases
detailing the CIA's history, mission and functions in the new world
order. He encouraged setting up intelligence studies programs on
campuses and finding universities to publish CIA-subsidized articles.
pp. 185-188.

1984
CIA organized the Unauthorized Disclosures Analysis Center (UDAC) to
monitor the news media and to stop leaks. Commanded by Dell Bragan, UDAC
was staffed by full-time intelligence officers. CIA officers around the
nation were tasked to by UDAC to keep track of reporters who obtained
news stories through leaks. Mark Mansfield said UDAC was the
coordinating center to combat disclosures. In addition to UDAC, CIA had
an even more secretive unit that investigates leaks, performs damage
assessments, and investigates journalists. Located in the Office of
Security and called the Special Security Office, the unit reports to
UDAC. Journalists were analyzed by how many unauthorized disclosures
they printed a year -- columnist Jack Anderson, Washington Post reporter
Bob Woodward and Bill Gertz were often at the top of the list. pp.
178-180.

1984-90
VP Bush chaired a cabinet-level Task Force on Combating Terrorism. He
used terrorism as justification for domestic spying against groups
lobbying Congress to ban Contra funding. This when statistics showed
domestic terrorist incidents declining rapidly. But the 34-page "Public
Report of the Vice President's Task Force on Combating Terrorism of 1986
," urged Intel agencies involve themselves in "conventional human and
technical intelligence capabilities that penetrate terrorist groups and
their support systems." This when the FBI said domestic terrorism was
virtually nonexistent. Following directions, FBI conducted 8,450
domestic terrorism investigations in 86, even though they reported only
17 actual terrorist incidents that year. The FBI was conducting politic
al spying under the terrorism label. pp. 147-151.

1972-90
Richard Helms cautioned Ober, head of the MHCHAOS program, re the
doubtful legality of MHCHAOS, to describe the operation within the CIA
and the intelligence community as an operation against international
terrorism. but the illegal domestic operation, MHCHAOS targeted radical
youths, blacks, women and antiwar militants. "international terrorist"
was designated to replace "political dissident" as the justification for
illegal domestic operations. helms transferred the MHCHAOS operation to
the international terrorism group. "let's call domestic spying a
response to terrorism." pp. 46-49

USSR, 1985-91
Melvin Goodwin, former CIA Division Chief in Soviet foreign policy was a
witness at the confirmation hearings for Robert Gates to be DCI. Goodwin
testified that Gates had, over a period of years as Deputy Director of
CIA, had given Congress and the president misleading and politicized
intelligence. "Gates role was to corrupt the process and the ethics of
intelligence...[and] to ignore and suppress signs of Soviet strategic
retreat." p. 183.

Nicaragua, El Salvador, 1981-90
The House intelligence Committee knew that the Sandinistas were not
shipping arms to Communist guerrillas in El Salvador, as claimed by
Reagan, "But we were unable to respond to the President's assertions
because this information was classified," per Congressman Lee Hamilton,
later. Senator Moynihan said "I knew the President's claim could not be
substantiated, but I knew this from classified briefings which a
chairman or vice chairman of suck a committee is sworn not to discuss in
public." He said secrecy: "effect is to hide things from the American
people that they need to know." pp. 172-3.

1985-92
An eleven-year CIA career officer, Thomas R. Smeeton, had become
minority counsel to the House Intel Committee -- beginning in 1990,
Smeeton made repeated attempts to convince members of Congress to take
oaths to uphold executive secrecy classifications. He devised an oath
which gave CIA yet another hold over congressional oversight. pp. 173-4.


1981-95
An annotated list of some FBI Surveillance Targets during the 1980s is
given in the appendix. pp. 203-207.

1975-85
A photograph of CIA agent Salvatore John Ferrera when he was
infiltrating the "Quicksilver Times and other news organizations in
Illinois and California. He legally changed his name to Allen Vincent
Carter and fled to the Southern California suburb of Costa Mesa. In
1980, Angus Mackenzie confronted him at his hideout -- and he denied he
worked for CIA. Angus showed him copies of the informant reports he had
sent to CIA Hqs -- he slammed the door. passim.

1972-80
Censoring books, particularly Marchetti's pre-publication review.
Marchetti named Jack O'Connell as the control agent for King Hussein of
Jordan. Karamessines warned against making public the existence of
electronic collection devices in India aimed at Chinese and Russian
weapons systems, CIA financial assistance to Tom Mboya and Jomo Kenyatta
in Kenya. the ruling by judge Bryan re reviews effectively nullified the
first amendment rights of government workers who sign secrecy
agreements. CIA's attempt to halt the publication of Alfred Mccoy's
book, THE POLITICS OF HEROIN IN SOUTHEAST ASIA. pp. 42-49, 52-55

1955-70
Thomas H. Karamessines in 1967 started an operation to handle the
antiwar press. On 8/4/67 a telegram re the new special operations group
(SOG) in the counterintel section. Angleton appointed Dick Ober to
coordinate SOG and expand his Ramparts investigation to encompass the
entire underground press -- some 500 newspapers. SOG was designated as
MHCHAOS. CIA assigned domestic political espionage the highest level of
priority. SOG ops grew to sixty field agents as well as other CIA
compartments. Due to the large number of reports generated computers
were used for the first time to handle the traffic. CIA coordinated
efforts with army agents, the local police and the FBI. Penetration of
antiwar periodicals (his primary mission). john ferrera a student was
recruited to penetrate various antiwar media. details of Ferrera's
successes. the FBI used its agents to create dissension within protest
groups. Ober had relied on the CIA's domestic contract service (DCS) but
was experiencing resistance. pp. 26-41

1955-70
Michael Wood with the national student association, learned that it was
funded by CIA. details of the program. IRS gave copies of Ramparts tax
returns to Dick Ober of the CIA's investigative unit. CIA planted
stories in the media to discredit Ramparts. pp. 18-24

Vietnam, 1955-90
Stanely K. Sheinbaum was the first person to go public with his
experience of CIA activity in the U.S. he began with the CIA in the 50s
when hired by Michigan state u.'s $25 million project to advise the
South Vietnamese government. he resented use of academic cover by CIA.
he resigned in 1959. he with Robert Sheer wrote an article in Ramparts
magazine. The CIA began to investigate Ramparts in violation of its
charter. His article caused a storm of protest among academicians -- to
forestall further embarrassment, president Johnson established the
Katzenbach committee. CIA identified the source of Rampart's money and
urged the FBI to investigate. pp. 15-18

Washington Post 12/27/97 A1
Colombia, 1997 The U.S., fearful that Marxist guerrillas allied with
drug traffickers pose a growing threat to Colombia, is loosening
restrictions on aid to Colombian armed forces, withheld for years
because of the military's human rights record. A unique agreement worked
out last summer -- and heavily debated -- permits U.S. aid, expected to
total about $37 million in fiscal 1998, to be used by the Colombian
military for counterinsurgency as part of a larger program to fight
drugs. The aid can be used only in a specifically defined geographic
area called "the box," whose exact boundaries are classified but which
covers roughly the southern half of the country. Critics say the move
brings the U.S. closer to a vicious, multi-sided political conflict that
is decades old and has cost thousands of lives. the Colombian army and
right-wing paramilitary groups it sponsors have been implicated in
scores of civilian massacres, disappearances and cases of torture.
Leaders of the army-backed PM groups have been implicated in large-scale
drug trafficking, yet have not been singled out as targets of the
anti-drug efforts.. .
This collection of extracts from Mackenzie, A. (1997). SECRETS: THE
CIA'S WAR AT HOME. Berkeley, CA, 1997, written 8:03 AM Jan 2, 1998 by
[EMAIL PROTECTED] in newsgroup alt.politics.org.cia "CIA's Illegal Ops -
Past & Present"




------------------------------------------------------------------------

Radio4All: - http://www.radio4all.org/
The A-Infos Radio Project: - http://radio4all.web.net/
Posted in a-infozine V1 #654
The A-Infos News Service
COMMANDS: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
REPLIES: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
HELP: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
WWW: - http://www.tao.ca/ainfos/



------------------------------------------------------------------------
CIA's AUGEAN STABLES

King Augean owned twelve white bulls sacred to Apollo. Their stables had
not been cleaned in thirty years. Hercules had to do the work in one
day. He diverted the course of a river, made it run through the stables,
and completed his labor.


"The CIA's Directorate of Operations is in a state of deep rot." Former
DCI John Deutch.

The Directorate of Operations is, a "wasteland, a Mecca for know-nothing
men..." Former CIA Officer Reuel Gerecht, pen name, Edward Shirley.

U.S. intelligence "needs to be scrubbed" from the top down, from its
spies to its analysts to its "bureaucratic barons." Admiral Jeremiah's
1998 report.
We might suggest to the current DCI, George Tenet, that he divert the
Potomac River and clean out the CIA's "Augean Stables," the Directorate
of Operations. Instead he has gone on a massive recruitment drive that
will only pile up more manure.


The New York Times recently reported that Tenet has the CIA recruiting
aggressively -- two or three thousand in the next few years. He says he
must do this or risk the slow death of American intelligence. He hopes
to make the clandestine service bigger than it was at the height of the
Cold War, to open more overseas stations and bases, to mount more
complex and more expensive secret operations. And he wants the nation's
sharpest talents to come to work at CIA Headquarters as analysts,
information technicians and in-house experts. He aims to revitalize an
agency mired in a slough of despond-terrible publicity, terrible morale,
terrible credibility.

Congress plans to pump hundreds of millions of extra dollars into the
Agency over the next few years to get new blood flowing. Tenet rates the
hiring blitz as the most important internal affair on the Agency's
agenda for the rest of the century.

I suggest that the CIA's most important internal affair is cleaning out
the Directorate of Operations Augean Stables -- its poor, incompetent
and arrogant leaders. Even if those leaders were capable of recognizing
their deficiencies, they do not have the ability to devise solutions.

Next the CIA must alter its personnel procedures that have resulted in
rewarding incompetence and duplicity -- see a description of these in
Edward Shirley's book, "Know Thine Enemy" or view his comments on my web
page.

Another set of problems occurs with the CIA's Inspector General who
tosses all protests back to the complainants' bosses. A prescription for
disaster.

One issue that has plagued me since my time in the CIA is the complete
inability of its operations officers to analyze. This has defeated
intelligence collection in many ways. First the case officers cannot
evaluate their agents. This is manifest -- Cuba's DGI ran three dozen
agents the CIA thought was working for it. East Germany's Stasi had
probably a few hundred double agents supposedly working for CIA, and the
KGB's double agents convinced the CIA that the USSR was a viable,
threatening menace when everyone else recognized its collapse.

These egregious realities have somehow avoided Tenet's notice as he
happily builds atop its rotting foundations.

One reason (of a number of reasons) the DGI, Stasi and the KGB were able
to dupe the CIA is that the operations officers had no incentive to, nor
measuring ability, to question agent reporting.

There is also the problem that if a case officer questions his own
agents' reporting, he then is questioning his own (the case officer's)
promotability. The Operations Directorate promotes based on the number
of agent recruitments -- the results be damned or ignored or never
reviewed.

Since case officers are recruited for their rigid mentalities (those
with flexible mentalities might question orders) and since Tenet uses
the same personality qualifications for the new officers, he is
recruiting disaster.

The CIA is hiring all sorts of new analysts but until it gets analysts
directly involved in all phases of operations -- we can guarantee
failure.

I must briefly cite my own personal experience at the risk of immodesty.
The CIA in mid-1960s targeted me against the burgeoning insurgency in
Thailand. (For a more complete description see my book, Deadly Deceits).
Within about six months, using analysis and operations, I discovered
what the Thai Communist Party was doing and how to defeat it -- a
problem that had plagued the CIA for decades. I am not that good, it is
just that the rest of the CIA's officers were that bad.

Next I asked to go to Vietnam because I wanted to defeat the communists
there. With a little research and operations I quickly determined that
the United States could not win in Vietnam and that the Agency had
absolutely no idea what was happening in that country. An ignorance that
continues to this day. My conclusions and protests landed me in the
Agency's very vengeful doghouse.

So if Tenet has any sort of analytical ability himself he can see that
he must first clean up the stables before trying to build anew.

A number of critics claim that I am far too soft on the CIA. I have in
recent times changed my views to some extent. With the advent of
international terrorism we need the best possible intelligence service
to fight that terrifying menace. Instead we have the ignorant, arrogant
and incompetent CIA.

We must recognize that the United States will always have an
intelligence agency. It is my hope, therefore, that the CIA can change
enough to become a real intelligence agency, if not it should be
abolished or replaced by a new structure.
Ralph McGehee


http://www.members.tripod.com/CIABASE/index.html



------------------------------------------------------------------------
CIA Links

See also my intelligence agencies links on the bad links page


The Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF), a CIA western culture
manipulation programme - with pictures
http://www.odci.gov/csi/studies/95unclas/war.html

General declassified articles http://www.odci.gov/csi/studies/pubs.html

Useful source of critical of CIA information
 http://www.us.net/cip/cia.htm
Links compiled by Professor John Macartney, an ex DIA Comandant

ONE OF THE BEST INTEL WEBSITES INTEL - Intelligence


http://www.fas.org/irp/
GOOD LINKS TO MANY SITES:


http://mprofaca.cro.net/kimirror.html

http://www.loyola.edu/dept/politics/intel.html

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/indiv/dsc/intell.html

http://.kimsoft.com/kim-spy.htm
NY TIMES 1998 CIA PAGE (Tim Weiner)


http://www.nytimes.com/library/national/cia-diningmain.html
SEARCHABLE DATABASES:


http://intellit.muskingum.edu/intellsite/index.html (Ransom Clark)

http://webcom.com/%7Epinknoiz/covert/ciabasesearch.html (CIABase)
INTELLIGENCE REFORM (1996)


http://www.access.gpo.gov/int/report.html (Aspin / Brown)

http://www.access.gpo.gov/congress/house/intel/ic21/ic21_toc.html (IC21)


http://www.foreignrelations.org/studies/transcripts/970218.html (CFR)
SPECIAL REPORTS


http://www.carnegie.org/deadly/0697warning.htm (warning, 1997)

http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/1998_cr/s980731-rumsfeld.htm (Rumsfeld,
98)

http://www.seas.gwu.edu/nsarchive/news/19980222.htm (Bay Pigs)

http://www.fas.org/irp/cia/product/jeremiah.html (Jeremiah 98)

http://www.fas.org/irp/cia/product/cocaine2/index.html (cocaine)
BUSINESS (COMPETITIVE) INTELLIGENCE


http://www.lookoutpoint.com/index.html

http://www.scip.org/

http://www.stratfor.com/

http://www.opsec.org/

http://www.pcic.net/

http://pathfinder.com/@@y7yrfauarijhm2qe/fortune/1997/970217/boo.html

http://www.fas.org/irp/wwwecon.html

http://www.asia-research.com/JI2000.html (Japanese)
JOBS & CAREERS


http://www.intelstudents.org/

http://www.pcic.net/

http://www.gworx.com/iisd

http://www.odci.gov/cia/employment/appframe.htm
HUMINT (Human Intelligence)


http://www.fas.org/irp/wwwspy.html

http://www3.theatlantic.com/issues/98feb/cia.htm
SIGINT (Signals Intelligence)


http://www.fas.org/irp/wwwsigin.html
IMINT (Imagery Intelligence)


http://www.fas.org/irp/wwwimint.html

http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/kh-12.htm
MASINT


http://www.fas.org/irp/program/masint_evaluation_rep.htm

http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/1996_rpt/ic21/ic21007.htm
OSINT (Open Source Intelligence)


http://www.oss.net/

http://www.fas.org/irp/eprint/oss980501.htm

http://www.fas.org/irp/wwwecon.html
INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS


http://www.odci.gov/cia/di/index.html

http://www.fas.org/irp/gentry/index.html

http://www.fas.org/irp/offdocs/int012.html
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE


http://www.nacic.gov/ (NACIC)

http://www.fbi.gov/ansir/ansir.htm (FBI)

http://www.dtic.mil/dodsi/researc2.html

http://www.loyola.edu/dept/politics/hula/hitzrept.html (Ames)
COVERT ACTION


http://www.nytimes.com/library/national/cia-invismain.html
INFORMATION WARFARE


http://www.infowar.com/

CIA, Center for Study of Intelligence http://www.odci.gov/csi/
CIA FOIA documents


http://www.foia.ucia.gov/
CIA WORLD FACTBOOK (not about intelligence, but indispensable)


http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.html
NATIONAL SECURITY ARCHIVE (declassified documents)


http://www.seas.gwu.edu/nsarchive/
CRITICS OF THE CIA & INTELLIGENCE


http://www.us.net/cip/cia.htm (Mel Goodman)

http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol3/v3n20hri.htm (IPS)

http://www3.theatlantic.com/issues/98feb/cia.htm (Shirley)

http://www.members.tripod.com/CIABASE/index.html (McGehee)

http://www.angelfire.com/id/ciadrugs/

http://www.radio4all.org/crackcia/
SENATE INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE


http://www.senate.gov/committee/intelligence.html
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE SERVICES


http://www.cc.umist.ac.uk/sk/index.html (UK)

http://www.pro.gov.uk/releases/soe-europe.htm (SOE)

http://www.mi5.gov.uk/ (UK, MI-5)

http://www.open.gov.uk/co/cim/cimrep1.htm (UK)

http://www.gchq.gov.uk/ (UK, GCHQ)

http://www.csis-scrs.gc.ca/ (Canada, CSIS)

http://www.cse.dnd.ca/cse/english/home_1.html (Canada)
ON LINE JOURNALS


http://www.afji.com/ (AFJI)

http://www.awgnet.com/aviation/index.htm (Aviation Week)
PRIVATE ORGANIZATIONS


http://www.his.com/~afio/ (AFIO)

http://www.nmia.org/ (NMIA)

http://www.xmission.com:80/~nip/ (NIP)

http://www.oss.net/ (OSS)

http://www.aochq.org/ (Old Crows)

http://www.opsec.org/ (OPSEC pros)

http://www.afcea.com/ (AFCEA)

http://www.cloakanddagger.com/dagger (Cloak & Dagger Books)

http://intelligence-history.wiso.uni-erlangen.de/ (history grp, German)

http://www.covertcomic.com/CovertComicJokes.htm (CIA jokester)



------------------------------------------------------------------------

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Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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