A terror attack plot at the CIA office in Pakistan was foiled after a man carrying a bag laden with explosives and addressed to a deputy superintendent of police was arrested on Monday when he was about to deliver the parcel. SSP Alam Khan said that the man arrived at the CIA Centre in Sector [...]
Posts Tagged ‘CIA’
Amnesty says EU “failing” over CIA renditions
Amnesty International has accused the EU of failing to hold its members to account for their role in the detention of terrorism suspects by the CIA. It calls for European governments to ensure justice for suspects who were interrogated under the programme known as extraordinary rendition.
CIA seeking wider role in Pakistan
NEW YORK – The United States is pressuring Pakistan to allow more CIA officers into the country to expand US secret operations aimed at eliminating militant havens near the Afghan border, a prominent American newspaper reported Saturday.
“The US asked Pakistan in recent weeks to allow additional Central Intelligence Agency officers and special operations military trainers to enter the country as part of Washington’s efforts to intensify pressure on militants,” The Wall Street Journal said, citing unnamed senior US officials.
The newspaper, however, said that Islamabad hasnÂ’t yet approved the US demand. A senior Pakistani official said that relations with the CIA remain strong but Islamabad continues to oppose a large increase in the number of American personnel on the ground, according to The Journal.
The newspaper also added that the United States has recently increased the number of CIA officers in Pakistan. “The number of CIA personnel in Pakistan has grown substantially in recent years. The exact number is highly classified,” it said, adding that currently there are about 900 US military personnel in Pakistan, 600 of which are providing flood relief and 150 of which are assigned to the training mission.
US-led foreign forces have carried out a record number of airstrikes and drone attacks in Pakistan this year in violation of international law.
This comes as the US announced a $2.29 billion military aid package to Pakistan, claiming that it is aimed at boosting the fight against militants.
“The United States has no stronger partner when it comes to counterterrorism efforts against the extremists who threaten both the US and Pakistan,” US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said on Friday. A request will be made to Congress for the aid to be available for the period from 2012 to 2016, Clinton said in a joint press conference in Washington with Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi. The package will increase current financing for weapons purchases by about one-third. Last year, US Congress approved $7.5 billion dollars in aid for Pakistani roads, schools, power facilities and infrastructure for civilians.
Given Pakistan’s objections to US ground troops, using more CIA paramilitary forces could be a “viable option”, said a government official. “That gives them a little bit of cover,” the official added, referring to the Pakistanis.
US officials also said a stronger US-Pakistan intelligence partnership would not be a substitute for closer working relationship with the militaryÂ’s special operation forces.
WikiLeaks releases CIA memo
The WikiLeaks website has released a secret CIA memo warning about negative consequences if the United States comes to be seen as an “exporter of terrorism.” The three-page document is the latest classified memo to be published by the whistle-blowing website, which last month released more than 70,000 secret U.S. military documents related to the war in Afghanistan.
Nicole Richie “Chuck†Encore
The upcoming fourth season of Chuck will feature a guest appearance from wildchild-turned-mellowed out mom Nicole Richie. Richie will reprise her role as CIA operative Heather Chandler in an episode to air in October, Entertainment Weekly said Wednesday.The Chandler character will be reintroduced to the series when “a prison transfer goes awry” and she is [...]
Strikes inside Pakistan to make US safe: CIA
WASHINGTON – While admitting that the war in Afghanistan had “serious problems”, CIA Director Leon Panetta gave little chance to a political reconciliation process succeeding in that war-torn country.
In an interview with the ABC programme “This Week”, he said the Taliban and their allies would only take part in the process if they believed they faced certain defeat.
“We have seen no evidence that they are truly interested in reconciliation, where they would surrender their arms, where they would denounce al-Qaeda, where they would really try to become part of that society,” Panetta said amid reports that Pakistan was trying to promote a political settlement that would incorporate the Taliban into a power-sharing arrangement with President Hamid Karzai.
The CIA chief, who rarely gives interviews to news media, also defended the widely criticized CIA drone strikes in the Pak-Afghan region, insisting that claims they violate international law are “dead wrong.”
“We have a duty, we have a responsibility, to defend this country so that al-Qaeda never conducts that kind of attack again,” he said while justifying drone attacks, which have also been condemned by a United Nations human rights expert.
On the Afghan war, Panetta said the US was making progress, but “This is going to be tough. This is not going to be easy.”
“We’re dealing with tribal societies. We’re dealing with a country that has problems with governance, problems with corruption, problems with narcotics trafficking, problems with a Taliban insurgency.
“It’s harder, it’s slower than I think anyone anticipated,” he added.
The CIA chief said the problems in Afghanistan he had cited were the major challenges to the goal of “making sure al Qaeda never finds another safe haven from which to attack this country.”
“Is the strategy the right strategy? We think so,” he said. “I think…the key to success or failure is whether the Afghans accept responsibility, are able to deploy an effective army and police force to maintain stability. If they can do that, then I think weÂ’re going to be able to achieve the kind of progress and the kind of stability that the President is after,” Panetta said.
Panetta also said that al-Qaeda is probably at its weakest since the Sept 11 attacks because of US-led strikes, with only 50 to 100 militants — mainly in Kandahar — operating inside Afghanistan and the rest hiding along Pakistan’s mountainous border region.
The CIA director said the US hasnÂ’t had good intelligence on Osama bin LadenÂ’s whereabouts for years and that the terrorist network is finding smarter ways to try to attack the United States.
“He obviously has tremendous security around him,” Panetta said of the al-Qaeda leader sought by the United States in connection with the September 11, 2001 attacks.
With further efforts to disrupt al-Qaeda operations and kill al-Qaeda leaders in Afghanistan, “we think ultimately we can flush out” Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, the group’s second-in-command, Panetta said.
However, he acknowledged it had been years since the US had any good intelligence on the precise location of bin Laden.
Of greatest concern, he said, is al-QaedaÂ’s reliance on operatives without previous records or those living in the US.
“We are engaged in the most aggressive operations in the history of the CIA in that part of the world, and the result is that we are disrupting their leadership.”
“Noting increased violence against US and NATO forces in Kandahar and Helmand provinces, Panetta said the “key to success or failure is whether the Afghans accept responsibility” for securing and governing their country.
With further efforts to disrupt al Qaeda operations and kill al Qaeda leaders in Afghanistan, “we think ultimately we can flush out” Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, the group’s second-in-command, Panetta said. However, he acknowledged it had been years since the US had any good intelligence on the precise location of bin Laden.
Panetta also made clear that the threat from al-Qaeda remains the nation’s main concern, noting the group’s use of people who lack any terrorism record — such as the suspect in the botched bombing attempt of a US airliner on Christmas day — as a way to infiltrate US safeguards. He also mentioned sleeper agents already in the country, and people who “self-radicalize” such as Maj Nidal Hasan, the suspect in the Ft Hood, Texas, shootings.
“Those kinds of threats represent I think the most serious threat to the United States right now,” Panetta said.
“Winning in Afghanistan is having a country that is stable enough to ensure that there is no safe haven for al Qaeda or for a militant Taliban that welcomes al Qaeda,” Panetta said.
On Iran, Panetta said the Tehran government continues to develop the capability to build a nuclear weapon, but that debate exists within the country on whether to actually do so.
“We think they have enough low-enriched uranium right now for two weapons,” Panetta said. “They do have to enrich it, fully, in order to get there. And we would estimate that if they made that decision, it would probably take a year to get there, probably another year to develop the kind of weapon delivery system in order to make that viable.”
Regarding North Korea, Panetta said the question of who will succeed leader Kim Jong Il is likely behind recent military acts such as the alleged sinking of a South Korean navy ship.
“I think that could have been part of it, in order to establish credibility for his son,” Panetta said of a likely successor, adding: “His son is very young. His son is very untested. His son is loyal to his father and to North Korea, but his son does not have the kind of credibility with the military, because nobody really knows what he’s going to be like.”
However, Panetta said he doubted there would be further escalation, noting that “in the end, they always back away from the brink and I think they’ll do that now.”
Monitoring Desk adds: When asked as to how can a company allegedly responsible for killing 17 unarmed civilians in Baghdad in 2007 continue to get State Department and CIA contracts, Panetta said there is ‘not much choice’ because few companies have the capabilities of Blackwater.
“Since I have become director, I have asked our agency to review every contract we have had with Blackwater and whatever their new name is now – Xe – to ensure first and foremost that we have no contract in which they are engaged in any CIA operations. WeÂ’re doing our own operations. ThatÂ’s important that we do not contract that out to anybody,” Panetta told ABC.
“But at the same time I have to tell you that in the war zone, we continue to have needs for security. You’ve got a lot of forward bases. You’ve got a lot of attacks on some of those bases. We’ve got to have security. Unfortunately, there are few companies that provide that kind of security,” Panetta continued.
“State Department relies on them. We rely on them to a certain extent. So, we’ve bid out some of those contracts. They provided a bid that underbid everyone else by about $26 million and a panel that we had said that they can do the job, that they’ve shaped up their act,” he said.
“There was really not much choice but to accept that contract,” said Panetta. “But having said that, I will tell you that I continue to be very cautious about any of those contracts and we’re reviewing all of the bids that we have with that company,” he concluded.
April 13, 1953: CIA OKs MK-ULTRA Mind-Control Tests
1953: Central Intelligence Agency director Allen Dulles authorizes the MK-ULTRA project. The agency launches one of its most dubious covert programs ever, turning unsuspecting humans into guinea pigs for its research into mind-altering drugs.
More than a decade before psychologist Timothy Leary advocated the benefits of LSD and urged everyone to “turn on, tune in, drop [...]
Leaked CIA Report: “Public Apathy Enables Leaders To Ignore Voters” In Waging Endless Wars
A leaked CIA report says:Public apathy enables leaders to ignore voters.The report is discussing apathy among the French and German people to their countries’ involvement in the war in Afghanistan, but the same is true to the apathy of Americans toward…
CIA director says bomber ‘was about to be searched’
CIA Director Leon Panetta revealed on Saturday that a Jordanian doctor who killed seven agency operatives was about to be searched before he blew himself up at a US military base in Afghanistan. “This was not a question of trusting a potential intelligence asset, even one who had provided
Video links CIA bomber to Taliban leader
A newly discovered video claims to show the final message from a suicide bomber who killed seven U.S. intelligence agents in Afghanistan. A newly released video shows a man said to be the suicide bomber who killed seven U.S. intelligence agents in Afghanistan vowing to avenge the death of former Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud.
High-Level CIA Officers: “Reform” of Intelligence Agencies Has Made It MORE DIFFICULT to Stop Terrorism
Two former high-level CIA officers have said that the government’s recent “reform” of the intelligence services has made it more difficult to fight terrorism.Specifically, Jack Rice – a former CIA field officer – told Keith Olbermann yesterday that the…
CIA bomber shown on TV with Pakistan Taliban leader
A Pakistan television station showed on Saturday what it said was the suicide bomber double agent who killed CIA agents in Afghanistan sitting with the Pakistani Taliban leader, and reported he shared US and Jordanian state secrets with militants. Private television station AAJ showed
Al-Qaeda claims attack on CIA in Afghanistan
As Afghanistan reels from fresh violence today, al-Qaeda has said it was behind last week’s suicide attack that killed seven CIA officers. The group’s Afghan wing said the blast was revenge for the deaths of leading militants in US drone attacks.
Al Qaeda ‘triple agent’ killed CIA workers
The suicide bomber who killed seven CIA officers at a US base in Afghanistan last week was an al Qaeda double-agent from Jordan, NBC News reported on Monday, citing unnamed Western intelligence officials. The Taliban had claimed that the attacker was one of the group’s sympathisers
For CIA, Afghan attack a historic blow
A suicide attack in Afghanistan that killed seven agents marks one of the deadliest blows ever for the CIA, dealing a painful setback to an agency increasingly on the frontline of US wars. The Central Intelligence Agency lowered the flag to half-mast at its tightly guarded headquarters in
ISI Chief confronts CIA counterpart with evidence
ISLAMABAD – Serious differences are understood to have cropped up between Pakistan’s premier intelligence agency ISI and US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) over the latter’s dismal role in countering terrorism in Pakistan, TheNation reliably learnt on Friday.
According to well-placed sources, the differences between the two strategic partners in war against terror cropped up when ISI Chief Lt. General Ahmed Shujja Pasha in a meeting expressed his disappointment to his US counterpart, the CIA chief spymaster Leon Panetta, over the US failure to help Pakistan in counter-terrorism efforts.
Although there was no official confirmation either from the US Embassy or ISPR about the meeting, it was learnt that both of them had thought provoking talks here in which General Pasha had presented to the CIA official a shocking evidence about Indian interference into Pakistan by using Afghanistan soil. General Pasha, the informed sources said, had presented the evidence about Indian efforts aiding terrorism in Balochistan and Waziristan.
The sources said that General Pasha was critical to the CIAÂ’s counter-terrorism strategy in Afghanistan and CIAÂ’s failure to provide concrete actionable information to Pakistan in containing flow of aid to terror networks operating from Afghanistan to destabilize Pakistan.
The sources said that the CIA chief is currently visiting Pakistan as a follow-up to the visit of US of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to address complains of PakistanÂ’s military establishment.
The CIA chief is to meet Army Chief General Ashfaq Pavez Kayani today and is likely to get the similar input from him, the sources said. He is also expected to visit Saudi Arabia before his return to USA.
Italian judge sentences former CIA agents
An Italian judge has sentenced 23 former CIA agents in absentia to up to eight years in jail for the abduction of a Muslim cleric in 2003. The CIA’s Milan station chief at the time was sentenced to eight years in prison, and the other Americans to five years. The American suspects were tried in absentia and are considered fugitives. Two Italian secret agents were also given three-year prison terms.
Afghan president’s brother denies CIA payments
Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s brother has denied an American newspaper report that he receives payments from the CIA. Ahmed Wali Karzai was responding Wednesday to a New York Times report that said he has been on the CIA payroll for much of the past eight years.
Afghan President Karzai’s brother receives regular pay from CIA: NYT
Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, who is alleged to be an important player in the country’s booming illegal opium trade, receives regular payments from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), according to current and former US officials.
The CIA pays Karzai for a variety of services, including helping to recruit an Afghan paramilitary force [...]
Afghan leader’s brother on CIA payroll: report
Ahmed Wali Karzai, the brother of the embattled Afghan president and a suspected drug trafficker, has been on the CIA payroll for most of the past eight years, The New York Times reported on Tuesday. The US spy agency pays Karzai for a variety of services, the newspaper said, such as



