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Posts Tagged intelligence
WikiLeaks and the Culture of Classification
WikiLeaks and the Culture of Classification is republished with permission of STRATFOR.
By Scott Stewart
On Friday, Oct. 22, the organization known as WikiLeaks published a cache of 391,832 classified documents on its website. The documents are mostly field reports filed by U.S. military forces in Iraq from January 2004 to December 2009 (the months of May 2004 and March 2009 are missing). The bulk of the documents (379,565, or about 97 percent) were classified at the secret level, with 204 classified at the lower confidential level. The remaining 12,062 documents were either unclassified or bore no classification.
This large batch of documents is believed to have been released by Pfc. Bradley Manning, who was arrested in May 2010 by the U.S. Army Criminal Investigations Command and charged with transferring thousands of classified documents onto his personal computer and then transmitting them to an unauthorized person. Manning is also alleged to have been the source of the classified information released by WikiLeaks pertaining to the war in Afghanistan in July 2010.
WikiLeaks released the Iraq war documents, as it did the Afghanistan war documents, to a number of news outlets for analysis several weeks in advance of their formal public release. These news organizations included The New York Times, Der Spiegel, The Guardian and Al Jazeera, each of which released special reports to coincide with the formal release of the documents Oct. 22. Read the rest of this entry »
BREAKING: New Taliban Threat Feared in U.S. After Failed NYC Plot
Posted by Jack Sinclair in News, Threat Watch on 15/Oct/2010 16:31
“Senior U.S. officials are concerned over recent intelligence indicating that the Pakistani Taliban, which orchestrated the failed Times Square bombing, may have successfully placed another operative inside the United States to launch a second attack, sources tell Fox News. Authorities, however, know very little about the potential operative or any possible plot.
“[We] don’t know who it is and don’t know where it is,” one source said. “We know the guy’s here, but don’t know anything about him.” Based on the intelligence, authorities believe the Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan, would have directed the individual to attempt another Times Square-style operation, but not necessarily in New York City… ”
http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.7653/pub_detail.asp
Army Reveals Afghan Biometric ID Plan; Millions Scanned, Carded by May
Posted by Jack Sinclair in News on 24/Sep/2010 22:43
Scanning prisoners’ irises is just Step 1. In Afghanistan, local and NATO forces are amassing biometric dossiers on hundreds of thousands of cops, crooks, soldiers, insurgents and ordinary citizens. And now, with NATO’s backing, the Kabul government is putting together a plan to issue biometrically backed identification cards to 1.65 million Afghans by next May.
The idea is to hinder militant movement around the country, and to keep Taliban infiltrators out of the army, NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan commander Lt. Gen. William Caldwell tells Danger Room. “The system allows the Afghans to thoroughly screen applicants and recruits for any potential negative past history or criminal linkages, while at the same time it provides an additional measure of security at checkpoints and major facilities to prevent possible entrance and access by malign actors in Afghanistan,†Caldwell e-mails.
Is US Intel Helping in the Capture of Drug Cartel Bosses?
Posted by Jack Sinclair in News on 3/Sep/2010 18:09
Are US agencies providing intel or direct leadership in helping Mexican Military track down all these Cartel bosses in Mexico?
Video here:
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2010/08/is-us-intel-helping-in-capture-of-capos.html
Inside Iran’s Revolutionary Guard: A Defector Speaks
Posted by Jack Sinclair in News on 13/Jul/2010 01:07
“Listen as Reza Khalili speaks about the decade he spent as an American agent inside Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and about the disillusionment and divisions that create new opportunities for U.S. intelligence in Iran.”
Listen to the podcast, here: