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The Shadow War: Making Sense of the New CIA Battlefield in Afghanistan
It was a Christmas and New Year's from hell for American intelligence, that $75 billion labyrinth of at least 16 major agencies and a handful of minor ones. As the old year was preparing to be rung out, so were our intelligence agencies, which managed not to connect every obvious clue to a (literally) seat-of-the-pants al-Qaeda operation. It hardly mattered that the underwear bomber's case -- except for the placement of the bomb material -- almost exactly, even outrageously, replicated the infamous, and equally inept, "shoe bomber" plot of eight years ago.
That would have been bad enough, but the New Year brought worse. Army Major General Michael Flynn, U.S. and NATO forces deputy chief of staff for intelligence in Afghanistan, released a report in which he labeled military intelligence in the war zone -- but by implication U.S. intelligence operatives generally -- "clueless." They were, he wrote, "ignorant of local economics and landowners, hazy about who the powerbrokers are and how they might be influenced... and disengaged from people in the best position to find answers... Eight years into the war in Afghanistan, the U.S. intelligence community is only marginally relevant to the overall strategy."
As if to prove the general's point, Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, a Jordanian doctor with a penchant for writing inspirational essays on jihadi websites and an "unproven asset" for the CIA, somehow entered a key Agency forward operating base in Afghanistan unsearched, supposedly with information on al-Qaeda's leadership so crucial that a high-level CIA team was assembled to hear it and Washington was alerted. He proved to be either a double or a triple agent and killed seven CIA operatives, one of whom was the base chief, by detonating a suicide vest bomb, while wounding yet more, including the Agency's number-two operative in the country. The first suicide bomber to penetrate a U.S. base in Afghanistan, he blew a hole in the CIA's relatively small cadre of agents knowledgeable on al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
It was an intelligence disaster splayed all over the headlines: "Taliban bomber wrecks CIA's shadowy war," "Killings Rock Afghan Strategy," "Suicide bomber who attacked CIA post was trusted informant from Jordan." It seemed to sum up the hapless nature of America's intelligence operations as the CIA, with all the latest technology and every imaginable resource on hand, including the latest in Hellfire missile-armed drone aircraft, was out-thought and out-maneuvered by low-tech enemies.
No one could say that the deaths and the blow to the American war effort weren't well covered. There were major TV reports night after night and scores of news stories, many given front-page treatment. And yet lurking behind those deaths and the man who caused them lay a bigger American war story that went largely untold. It was a tale of a new-style battlefield that the American public knows remarkably little about, and that bears little relationship to the Afghan War as we imagine it or as our leaders generally discuss it.
We don't even have a language to describe it accurately. Think of it as a battlefield filled with muscled-up, militarized intelligence operatives, hired-gun contractors doing military duty, and privatized "native" guard forces. Add in robot assassins in the air 24/7 and kick-down-the-door-style night-time "intelligence" raids, "surges" you didn't know were happening, strings of military bases you had no idea were out there, and secretive international collaborations you were unaware the U.S. was involved in. In Afghanistan, the American military is only part of the story. There's also a polyglot "army" representing the U.S. that wears no uniforms and fights shape-shifting enemies to the death in a murderous war of multiple assassinations and civilian slaughter, all enveloped in a blanket of secrecy.
Black Ops and Black Sites
Secrecy is, of course, a part of war. The surprise attack is only a surprise if secrecy is maintained. In wartime, crucial information must be kept from an enemy capable of using it. But what if, as in our case, wartime never ends, while secrecy becomes endemic, as well as profitable and privitizable, and much of the information available to both sides on our shadowy new battlefield is mainly being kept from the American people? The coverage of the suicide attack on Forward Operating Base (FOB) Chapman offered a rare, very partial window into that strange war -- but only if you were willing to read piles of news reports looking for tiny bits of information that could be pieced together.
We did just that and here's what we found:
Let's start with FOB Chapman, where the suicide bombing took place. An old Soviet base near the Pakistani border, it was renamed
after a Green Beret who fought beside CIA agents and was the first
American to die in the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001. It sits in
isolation near the town of Khost, just miles from the larger Camp
Salerno, a forward operating base used mainly by U.S. Special
Operations troops. Occupied by the CIA since 2001, Chapman is
regularly described as "small" or "tiny" and, in one report, as having "a forbidding network of barriers, barbed wire and watchtowers." Though a State Department provisional reconstruction team has been stationed there (as well as personnel from the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Department of Agriculture), and though it "was officially
a camp for civilians involved in reconstruction," FOB Chapman is
"well-known locally as a CIA base" -- an "open secret," as another
report put it.
The base is guarded by Afghan irregulars, sometimes referred to in news reports as "Afghan contractors," about whom we know next to nothing. ("CIA officials on Thursday would not discuss what guard service they had at the base.") Despite the recent suicide bombing, according to Julian Barnes and Greg Miller of the Los Angeles Times, a "program to hire Afghans to guard U.S. forward operating bases would not be canceled. Under that program, which is beginning in eastern Afghanistan, Afghans will guard towers, patrol perimeter fences and man checkpoints." Also on FOB Chapman were employees of the private security contractor Xe (formerly Blackwater) which has had a close relationship with the CIA in Afghanistan. We know this because of reports that two of the dead "CIA" agents were Xe operatives.
Someone else of interest was at FOB Chapman and so at that fateful meeting with the Jordanian doctor al-Balawi -- Sharif Ali bin Zeid, a captain in the Jordanian intelligence service, the eighth person killed in the blast. It turns out that al-Balawi was an agent of Jordanian intelligence, which held (and abused) torture suspects kidnapped and disappeared by the CIA in the years of George W. Bush's Global War on Terror. The service reportedly continues to work closely with the Agency and the captain was evidently running al-Balawi. That's what we now know about the polyglot group at FOB Chapman on the front lines of the Agency's black-ops war against al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and the allied fighters of the Haqqani network in nearby Pakistan. If there were other participants, they weren't among the bodies.
The Agency Surges
And here's something that's far clearer in the wake of the bombing: among our vast network of bases in Afghanistan, the CIA has its own designated bases -- as, by the way, do U.S. Special Operations forces, and according to Nation reporter Jeremy Scahill, even private contractor Xe. Without better reporting on the subject, it's hard to get a picture of these bases, but Siobhan Gorman of the Wall Street Journal tells us that a typical CIA base houses no more than 15-20 Agency operatives (which means that al-Balawi's explosion killed or wounded more than half of the team on FOB Chapman).
And don't imagine that we're only talking about a base or two. In the single most substantive post-blast report on the CIA, Mark Mazzetti of the New York Times wrote that the Agency has "an archipelago of firebases in southern and eastern Afghanistan," most built in the last year. An archipelago? Imagine that. And it's also reported that even more of them are in the works.
With this goes another bit of information that the Wall Street Journal seems to have been the first to drop into its reports. While you've heard about President Obama's surge in American troops and possibly even State Department personnel in Afghanistan, you've undoubtedly heard little or nothing about a CIA surge in the region, and yet the Journal's reporters tell us that Agency personnel will increase by 20-25% in the surge months. By the time the CIA is fully bulked up with all its agents, paramilitaries, and private contractors in place, Afghanistan will represent, according to Julian Barnes of the Los Angeles Times, one of the largest "stations" in Agency history.
This, in turn, implies other surges. There will be a surge in base-building to house those agents, and a surge in "native" guards -- at least until another suicide bomber hits a base thanks to Taliban supporters among them or one of them turns a weapon on the occupants of a base -- and undoubtedly a surge in Blackwater-style mercenaries as well. Keep in mind that the latest figure on private contractors suggests that 56,000 more of them will surge into Afghanistan in the next 18 months, far more than surging U.S. troops, State Department employees, and CIA operatives combined. And don't forget the thousands of non-CIA "uniformed and civilian intelligence personnel serving with the Defense Department and joint interagency operations in the country," who will undoubtedly surge as well.
Making War
The efforts of the CIA operatives at Forward Operating Base Chapman were reportedly focused on "collecting information about militant networks in Afghanistan and Pakistan and plotting missions to kill the networks' top leaders," especially those in the Haqqani network in North Waziristan just across the Pakistani border. They were evidently running "informants" into Pakistan to find targets for the Agency's ongoing drone assassination war. These drone attacks in Pakistan have themselves been on an unparalleled surge course ever since Barack Obama entered office; 44 to 50 (or more) have been launched in the last year, with civilian casualties running into the hundreds. Like local Pashtuns, the Agency essentially doesn't recognize a border. For them, the Afghan and Pakistani tribal borderlands are a single world.
In this way, as Paul Woodward of the website War in Context has pointed out, "Two groups of combatants, neither of whom wear uniforms, are slugging it out on the Afghan-Pakistan border. Each group has identified what it regards as high-value targets and each is using its own available means to hit these targets. The Taliban/Qaeda are using suicide bombers while the CIA is using Hellfire missiles."
Since the devastating explosion at FOB Chapman, statements of vengeance
have been coming out of CIA mouths -- of a kind that, when offered, by
the Taliban or al-Qaeda, we consider typical of a backward, "tribal"
society. In any case, the secret war is evidently becoming a private
and personal one. Dr. al-Balawi's suicide attack essentially took out
a major part of the Agency's targeting information system. As one
unnamed NATO official told the New York Times,
"These were not people who wrote things down in the computer or in
notebooks. It was all in their heads... [The C.I.A. is] pulling in new
people from all over the world, but how long will it take to rebuild
the networks, to get up to speed? Lots of it is irrecoverable." And
the Agency was already generally known
to be "desperately short of personnel who speak the language or are
knowledgeable about the region." Nonetheless, drone attacks have
suddenly escalated -- at least five in the week since the suicide bombing, all evidently aimed
at "an area believed to be a hideout for militants involved." These
sound like vengeance attacks and are likely to be particularly
counterproductive.
To sum up, U.S. intelligence agents, having lost out to enemy "intelligence agents," even after being transformed into full-time assassins, are now locked in a mortal struggle with an enemy for whom assassination is also a crucial tactic, but whose operatives seem to have better informants and better information.
In this war, drones are not the Agency's only weapon. The CIA also seems to specialize in running highly controversial, kick-down-the-door "night raids" in conjunction with Afghan paramilitary forces. Such raids, when launched by U.S. Special Operations forces, have led to highly publicized and heavily protested civilian casualties. Sometimes, according to reports, the CIA actually conducts them in conjunction with Special Operations forces. In a recent American-led night raid in Kunar Province, eight young students were, according to Afghan sources, detained, handcuffed, and executed. The leadership of this raid has been attributed, euphemistically, to "other government agencies" (OGAs) or "non-military Americans." These raids, whether successful in the limited sense or not, don't fit comfortably with the Obama administration's "hearts and minds" counterinsurgency strategy.
The Militarization of the Agency
As the identities of some of the fallen CIA operatives at FOB Chapman became known, a pattern began to emerge. There was 37-year-old Harold Brown, Jr., who formerly served in the Army. There was Scott Roberson, a former Navy SEAL, who did several tours of duty in Iraq, where he provided protection to officials considered at high risk. There was Jeremy Wise, 35, an ex-Navy SEAL who left the military last year, signed up with Xe, and ended up working for the CIA. Similarly, 46-year-old Dane Paresi, a retired Special Forces master sergeant turned Xe hired gun, also died in the blast.
For years, Chalmers Johnson, himself a former CIA consultant, has referred to the Agency as "the president's private army." Today, that moniker seems truer than ever. While the civilian CIA has always had a paramilitary component, known as the Special Activities Division, the unit was generally relatively small and dormant. Instead, military personnel like the Army's Special Forces or indigenous troops carried out the majority of the CIA's combat missions. After the 9/11 attacks, however, President Bush empowered the Agency to hunt down, kidnap, and assassinate suspected al-Qaeda operatives, and the CIA's traditional specialties of spycraft and intelligence analysis took a distinct backseat to Special Activities Division operations, as its agents set up a global gulag of ghost prisons, conducted interrogations-by-torture, and then added those missile-armed drone and assassination programs.
The military backgrounds of the fallen CIA operatives cast a light on the way the world of "intelligence" is increasingly muscling up and becoming militarized. This past summer, when a former CIA official suggested the agency might be backing away from risky programs, a current official spit back from the shadows: "If anyone thinks the CIA has gotten risk-averse recently, go ask al-Qaeda and the Taliban... The agency's still doing cutting-edge stuff in all kinds of dangerous places." At around the same time, reports were emerging that Blackwater/Xe was providing security, arming drones, and "perform[ing] some of the agency's most important assignments" at secret bases in Pakistan and Afghanistan. It also emerged that the CIA had paid contractors from Blackwater to take part in a covert assassination program in Afghanistan.
Add this all together and you have the grim face of "intelligence" at war in 2010 -- a new micro-brew when it comes to Washington's conflicts. Today, in Afghanistan, a militarized mix of CIA operatives and ex-military mercenaries as well as native recruits and robot aircraft is fighting a war "in the shadows" (as they used to say in the Cold War era). This is no longer "intelligence" as anyone imagines it, nor is it "military" as military was once defined, not when U.S. operations have gone mercenary and native in such a big way. This is pure "lord of the flies" stuff -- beyond oversight, beyond any law, including the laws of war. And worse yet, from all available evidence, despite claims that the drone war is knocking off mid-level enemies, it seems remarkably ineffective. All it may be doing is spreading the war farther and digging it in deeper.
Talk about "counterinsurgency" as much as you want, but this is another kind of battlefield, and "protecting the people" plays no part in it. And of course, this is only what can be gleaned from afar about a semi-secret war that is being poorly reported. Who knows what it costs when you include the U.S. hired guns, the Afghan contractors, the bases, the drones, and the rest of the personnel and infrastructure? Nor do we know what else, or who else, is involved, and what else is being done. Clearly, however, all those billions of "intelligence" dollars are going into the blackest of black holes.
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24 Comments so far
Show All- bigger American war story that went largely untold... We don't even have a language to describe it accurately. -
So, once again I humbly suggest the following story, using the following language:
America is stuck in an insane and DAFT war. Congress declared war against enemies to be named later by a President.
Bush named al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
Obama named al-Qaeda affiliates.
The mission of the US military (includes CIA) in this insanity is to prevent future terrorism. That means killing (innocent) people because they are potentially future terrorists.
Every country deals with future terrorism but only America declared war against it.
America, the land where they review football plays but not declarations of war.
America, 8 years into this insanity and it's still ignoring the law* that started it, the mechanism that continues to drive us closer and closer to the edge of the abyss.
Mr. Obama: "Just days after 9/11, Congress authorized the use of force against al Qaeda and those who harbored them – an authorization that continues to this day."
Public Law 107-40, the Voldemort of America (shhhh, don't say that name in public and maybe it won't be real!)
*except for the President and locust
It's simple, really. Even in the out in the open military, it costs the government about a million dollars per year to keep a soldier in Afghanistan. Lord knows what it costs to fill in the spaces with mercenaries and CIA gumshoes.
It costs close to a million dollars to make a hit on a man with a rifle and claim a dead "insurgent," not to mention the collateral damage, or "bug splats" as they are now called. You know, dead women and children, civilians, farmers, etc.
Afghans make their weapons in caves, by hand. Cost negligible.
An enemy invader can be killed by a bullet or two. Cost negligible.
A drone hit on a village recruits still more freedom fighters (Sorry, terrorists or insurgents).
OK, you do the math.
Who in the Muslin world sees what the US is doing as anything but terrorism? The Taliban should combat this terrorism the same way any country would do - gee, like the US did - and dispose of the terrorists by any means necessary.
As long as there is injustice in the Muslim world, there will never be peace. American's occupying Afghanistan will surely generate more hateful American killers - a logical conclusion.
Get out of Afghanistan.
Yeah, get out of Afghanistan! And Iraq and Pakistan and Palestine and Egypt and Iran and Yemen and Saudi Arabia and...Oh, well, damn! Just get out of the Middle East and stop funding Israel.
Mookie, you write "Who in the Muslin world sees what the US is doing as anything but terrorism?"
Who in "any" world can see it as anything other than terrorism? Can a Christian, a Jew, or a Buddhist see America's actions around the world as anything else? How is it that Americans can see what their forces and their government do as righteous? Now that is my question. How has this package of Evil been sold to so many?
Bigotry, ignorance, arrogance, self-interest plus blind patriotism goes a long way when helped by a little propaganda and fear. Sounds just like Germany 1935....
'Who in "any" world can see it as anything other than terrorism?'
Um, the Nobel Peace Prize Committee?
<""The efforts of the CIA operatives at Forward Operating Base Chapman were reportedly focused on "collecting information about militant networks in Afghanistan and Pakistan and plotting missions to kill the networks' top leaders," especially those in the Haqqani network in North Waziristan just across the Pakistani border. "">
CIA is collecting info to attack Iran.
Meanwhile, back here at Forward Operating Base Obama, Lloyd Blankfein walked into a room full of Democrats and detonated a vest bomb. The Democrats were all blown to smithereens but Blankfein was completely unhurt. He dusted himself off and went back to Wall Street.
". . . a new-style battlefield . . . We don't even have a language to describe it accurately."
Sure we do. It's called MONEY. What's going on now in the ME is simply about certain people and corporations making tens of billions of dollars off these so-called wars. It's about that and nothing else.
I wrote a lot further down, perhaps too much, but now that I see your comment, I think you have put it all quite succinctly.
The expression was, "money is the root of all evil", and this sure is unadulterated Evil. Once you scratch the patriotic bullshit shine off the surface of this whole; Al-Qaeda, 9-11, War on Terror you will find just under the surface, there is no real Muslim Jihad, or Christian Crusade, or Jewish existential battle, there is just money, sociopaths, and a lot of people who will believe whatever they are told to.
But the good news is, some of the people seem to be waking up.
The 'new' CIA? Is it any different than the 'old' CIA?
yeah, they're coming out of the closet now. Brave new world, eh?
I keep forgetting. My bad :(
Yeah, better, more "efficient" weapons, more "efficient" methods of surveillance, larger black bankrolls, more clandestine control over the government, more involvement with drugs as collateral financing of ever more plots.
Other than that, it is pretty much the same. "Join the CIA, travel to exotic places, meet interesting people. Kill them."
"Making Sense of the New CIA Battlefield in Afghanistan"
War makes no sense.
"...out-thought and out-maneuvered by low-tech enemies..."
We got into this sort of act long ago. Ask the Dakohta or the Black Feet about how their ancestors dealt with the likes of Custer.
Tom Engelhard has always presented comments that go to the heart of the matter, but here one gets the feeling he suspended us in a question. If I were to put it my way it would say “What the hell do these low life thugs think they are doing out there, and (in an echo of Helen Thomas) why?
“U.S. intelligence agents…. are now locked in a mortal struggle with an enemy for whom assassination is also a crucial tactic, but whose operatives seem to have better informants and better information. ”
What Engelhard overlooks here is that despite the rigours of training and commitment to become an ex-trained SEAL or Special forces, the "enemy" in Afghanistan or Pakistan is also far more motivated, seeing himself in what the Israelis would call an existential battle. They are fighting to liberate themselves and their brothers from a most hideous heretic invader, a literal abomination. They will blow themselves up to kill their enemy.
Even with the limited intelligence of these well trained thugs as Engelhard describes them, which is what they really are, these “intelligence” operatives must realise that their work is just that of specialist hit men for a major global “war lord”, namely the US Government, fronting for the MIC, and that this is a designer war making war infinite and without resolution.
It must be obvious to these CIA operatives, whose predecessors recruited, financed and armed Mujahidin in Afghanistan against an occupation of 500,000 of Russia’s best forces and watched them prevail, that somehow this occupation would not turn out any better. These boys are not totally naïve. So they know that their enemy will never be defeated or eliminated and that each ranking insurgent killed will be replaced.
Perhaps that is the point. What does one do in life if the only thing you are trained to do is kill people with extreme prejudice and you are good at that specialized job because you are built that way mentally and physically? Would you be considering “hearts and minds”, channels of communication to social leaders, possible links to moderate insurgent element? Hell no, you are there to rip their throats out, and piss on their families’ lifeless bodies.
As Engelhard writes, “This is pure "lord of the flies" stuff -- beyond oversight, beyond any law, including the laws of war. And worse yet, from all available evidence, despite claims that the drone war is knocking off mid-level enemies, it seems remarkably ineffective. All it may be doing is spreading the war farther and digging it in deeper. ”
Of course, it is designed to go on for ever, ever onwards and upwards, career opportunities and advancement in this chosen expertise in the “company” (CIA) and then on into the now well integrated private sector affiliate (Xe et la). Killing is the only expanding industry and service exported by the US. It is the only job with prospects in the new global village.
Just like the cold war this is “a game” Al Qaeda is the invention of the CIA that makes this possible, and is now an ever larger franchise well infiltrated and well managed in Iraq, in Afghanistan, in the Arabian Peninsular, in Somalia, and coming to a town close to you when needed to insure continuity of the market and to the carriers of these dear boys, and their retirement jobs for the older ones that draw their profits from the manufacturing and service companies of the MIC, or political contributions that those companies kick in, back home.
Ain’t war a real treat? The American way, makes you proud to be an American, and see that star spangled….
We're being followed by a Bush Shadow: Unka 'Bomb. Ergo, "Mighty Wurlitzer" shadow war!
The utter incompetence of Reid (shoe-bomber) and Abdulmutallab (underpants-bomber) is eye-opening. Any normal idiot would have moved to the lavatory, disabled the smoke detector, and so have plenty of time to prepare and detonate their devices. Instead, they chose to do so surrounded by passengers.
This could almost make one want to believe that it was all an elaborate hoax.
Informant, double agent, triple agent, quadruple agent, unproven asset.....
"We don't even have a language to describe it accurately. Think of it as a battlefield filled with muscled-up, militarized intelligence operatives, hired-gun contractors doing military duty, and privatized 'native' guard forces. Add in robot assassins in the air 24/7, and kick-down-the-door-style night time intelligence raids, 'surges' you didn't know were happening, strings of military bases you had no idea were out there, and secret international collaborations....."
Insurgent, Al Qaeda, Afghan Taliban, Pakistani Taliban, Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, affiliates in Yemen and Somalia, the ghost of Zarkawi.....
First, Congress should demand release of all the records of all sixteen US intelligence agencies in any way involved in secret international collaborations with foreign intelligence agencies in the weeks and months preceding 9/11/01. Access to these documents was denied to even the 9/11 Commission.
As Senator Leahy once sagely quipped, we cannot turn the page unless we first read the page. If there was a humint asset inside or near the 9/11 hijack team (perhaps one that turned out to be a double agent), what plausible legitimate reason could still remain for keeping that secret a secret now that over eight years have passed?
Second, Congress should amend and revise the National Security Act of 1947 to specifically prohibit targeted assassinations (murder), rendition (kidnapping), and the covert destabilization or overthrow of governments abroad by the Central Intelligence Agency. Restrict the CIA purely to its core function of intelligence gathering and analysis. If blood is to be spilled, such acts of war should be the exclusive responsibility of the active duty armed forces, whether it be with a bullet or a Predator drone.
The entire point of blurring beyond all recognition the difference between soldiers and spies, military personnel and paramilitary civilian contractors, was to fragment the chain of command so that everybody could assert deniability when crimes occur and/or everything goes tragically and publicly FUBAR. The Bush/Cheney White House put a lot of energy into deliberately stirring up this witches' brew of nonaccountability.
I read Major General Flynn's scathing comments about the successful suicide bombing at FOB Chapman in that light: even though, on somebody's set of books somewhere, this lethal fiasco took place on a US military forward operating base in the Afghanistan theatre of combat operations, don't put this turd on the Pentagon's plate. If after 8 years of US/NATO operations, the CIA's spooks are indeed only "marginally relevant to the overall strategy", General Flynn is speaking truth to power, using the language of bureaucratic turf rivalry.
President Obama and the Congress should listen before it's too late.
Bill from Saginaw
Bush and his Republican cohorts got their disastrous war, and now Obama is saddled with it. Afghanistan is not a country, but a wild idea of tribal allegiances. The Afghans, for the most part, could care less about this nonsense. We Americans are paying through the nose (trillions of $)that will result in ignominious defeat and shame. And here in America we are nearing another Great Depression, clueless and ill prepared for what's heading toward us.
The USA bombs nations and always denigrates the victim nation before, during and/or after bombing victim nation.
Uninformed citizens parrot back this traditional imperialist propaganda.
Afghanistan is more culturally unified than either Pakistan or India and has been a universally recognized nation state for twice as long.
Savages, Gooks , Hajis, "lawless tribal areas" , get the picture?
Corporations have been slaughtering Tribal peoples for profit for 600 years.
If one wants to end a conflict one makes Peace and withdraws troops not add troops.
Obama refuses to sit at Peace tables with both the Afghans and Chavez.
Another great article from Tom Engelhardt & Nick Turse. I salute them for their brave efforts to bring the truth into the light. It is unfortunate for the American people to have such poor access to their thinking, instead of to the Fawning Corporate Main Stream Media they do get.
I was happy to see them reference Chalmers Johnson, whose trilogy on the CIA and Imperial America (BLOWBACK, THE SORROWS OF EMPIRE, and finally NEMESIS) is outstanding in helping to understand the current state of affairs, or affairs of state.
And Tom and Nick hit the nail on the head when they report that the CIA operates in "a dark world of pure 'lord of the flies' stuff -- beyond oversight, beyond any law, including the laws of war." NO one knows all the CIA ops that are onging or have been operational, as many of these field ops are purposely black-boxed-off and made internally self-directing, with only a tiny handful of people- maybe just one- within the agency knowing about them... and other handfuls knowing only about their own 'projects' and no others. Really no one knowing them all. And no record exists of their actions, nor oversight, nor knowledge of them, for that is the ultimate in deniability and secrecy. These operations are forgotten or rewritten, just as the records are in the Orwellian vision of Big Brother.
These most superblack operations are the ones completely cut off and independent, so no one will ever know exactly what the operators do or how they do it, perhaps even within the Agency. These kinds of ops would be the most politically sensitive, and would be the ones that even Agency handlers woldn't want to know anything about. Fee-floating cells, these kinds of superblack ultra teams would be given the merest hint of directions by elements within the CIA and never heard from or contacted again, until after that 'suggestion' had been made to occur. Obviously, whatever they do is a top-most state secret, and even could be a CIA top secret from the government itself. And even then, little to nothing is recorded officially anyway.
But the Agency's operators follow the primary dictum of all life forms. That is, protect the existence of one's own "tribe" first... in this case, the existence of the CIA Tribe. Reference the following from the article above, "Since the devastating explosion at FOB Chapman, statements of VENGEANCE have been coming out of CIA mouths -- of a kind that, when offered, by the Taliban or al-Qaeda, we consider typical of a backward, 'TRIBAL'(!) society. In any case, the SECRET war is evidently becoming a PRIVATE and PERSONAL one."
But of course!
For further elaboration of the role of the CIA in the life of this country, see the book, "JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters" - by James W. Douglass. The author's meticulous research indicates that elements within the CIA had Kennedy killed, had assassinated the President of the United States, for Kennedy's cancelling of the planned American military invasion of Cuba, and other actions that stoked Agency fury which led to that treasonous act of VENGEANCE. And Douglass goes on to state that this American nation in fact has been more-or-less essentially run by a a hidden fascist shadow-government since that incident. Then there was the hot war run by the CIA in Afghanistan since the 1970s. A war totally illegal and undeclared. An ENTIRE WAR kept completely SECRET for DECADES from the American people, except for a tiny few of the necessary 'money men' in Congress.
And if THAT is possible, certainly it is possible that a one-time big event called for by the Neocons and Zionists in their sinister "Plan for a New American Century", a call for a "New Pearl Harbor" in order to fire this nation up for mass terror war in the Middle East (wars wherein the Americans were to be the actual aggressors and invaders), is connected to a superblack CIA cell. This operation may have involved a daring black-flag operation on, oh, say, 9/11/01! Perhaps not, but it is definitely quite possible, and far more possible than is the 'explanation' from the total whitewash of the 'official' story.
It is certainly possible for floating superblack ops teams running soon-to-be-dead stooges, patsies, and cutouts, especially with help from a few well-placed military insiders and with advanced technologies and pre-planning, to achieve a black-flag attack of this magnitude. And it could happen without formal Agency direct knowledge or record; in fact, it would. And foreknowledge of this act is thus certainly and truthfully deniable. By all.
All, that is, but the ultra team hit squad members and their enablers; and don't worry about any of them talking. They are soldiers in this current and ongoing shadow war. Agaist the American people. And the world.
Republicans and Republicans in Democrats' clothing: "We're not running a popularity contest." What an understatement! A popularity contest is exactly what we Americans should try. We should count the haters and do everything (especially not wage war) to get this number down. The more haters, the more likely that one gets through. Does not this thinking relate to SECURITY?