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By Mark Perry, Exclusive, Foreignpolicy.com, Jan. 13, 2012
Buried deep in the archives of America's intelligence services are a series of memos, written during the last years of President George W. Bush's administration, that describe how Israeli Mossad officers recruited operatives belonging to the terrorist group Jundallah by passing themselves off as American agents. According to two U.S. intelligence officials, the Israelis, flush with American dollars and toting U.S. passports, posed as CIA officers in recruiting Jundallah operatives -- what is commonly referred to as a "false flag" operation [....]
The officials did not know whether the Israeli program to recruit and use Jundallah is ongoing. Nevertheless, they were stunned by the brazenness of the Mossad's efforts. "It's amazing what the Israelis thought they could get away with," the intelligence officer said. "Their recruitment activities were nearly in the open. They apparently didn't give a damn what we thought [....]
The report then made its way to the White House, according to the currently serving U.S. intelligence officer. The officer said that Bush "went absolutely ballistic" when briefed on its contents [....]
The debate over Jundallah was resolved only after Bush left office when, within his first weeks as president, Barack Obama drastically scaled back joint U.S.-Israel intelligence programs targeting Iran, according to multiple serving and retired officers [....]
By Ismail Kahn, New York Times, May 23/24, 2012
PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A Pakistani doctor who helped the Central Intelligence Agency pin down Osama bin Laden's location under cover of a vaccination drive was convicted on Wednesday of treason and sentenced to 33 years in prison, a senior official in Pakistan said.
A tribal court here in northwestern Pakistan found the doctor, Shakil Afridi, guilty of acting against the state, said Mutahir Zeb Khan, the administrator for the Khyber tribal region [....]
By Sergei L. Loiko, Los Angeles Times, May 23, 2012
MOSCOW — Stiff new penalties aimed at opposition protesters were given preliminary approval Tuesday by Russian lawmakers loyal to President Vladimir Putin, the target of mass rallies and demonstrations before his March election victory.
The bill, which opposition parliament members termed draconian and protested by threatening to file out of a legislative session, calls for fines of up to $50,000 and up to 200 hours of community service for organizers of rallies and demonstrations that grow violent or exceed the approved number of participants.
The sanctions were approved on first reading by parliament's lower house, which is controlled by Putin's United Russia party. They mark a return by the Kremlin to a tough stance against critics after concessions during the recent election campaign [...]
Also see:
Russians back Putin, strong leadership
Washington Post, May 22, 2012
A Pew survey of 1,000 Russians found that President Vladimir Putin is well-liked by more than 70 percent of citizens, especially older adults.
Associated Press, May 21, 2012
HAVANA — It was all sunshine, smiles and celebratory speeches as officials marked the arrival of an undersea fiber-optic cable they promised would end Cuba's Internet isolation and boost web capacity 3,000-fold. Even a retired Fidel Castro had hailed the dawn of a new cyber-age on the island.
More than a year after the February 2011 ceremony on Siboney Beach in eastern Cuba, and 10 months after the system was supposed to have gone online, the government never mentions the cable anymore, and Internet here remains the slowest in the hemisphere. People talk quietly about embezzlement torpedoing the project and the arrest of more than a half-dozen senior telecom officials.
Perhaps most maddening, nobody has explained what happened to the much-ballyhooed $70 million project....
By Tamasin Ford in Monrovia, Guardian.co.uk, May 22, 2012
Husbands, not strangers or men with guns, are now the biggest threat to women in post-conflict west Africa, according to a report by the International Rescue Committee (IRC) released on Tuesday.
The IRC report, Let Me Not Die Before My Time: Domestic Violence in West Africa, based on data collected over 10 years by the IRC in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Ivory Coast, said domestic violence is the "most urgent, pervasive and significant protection issue for women in west Africa" [.....]
By Lolita C. Baldor, Associated Press, May 22, 2012
WASHINGTON -- Uncle Sam may not want you after all.
In sharp contrast to the peak years of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the Army last year took in no recruits with misconduct convictions or drug or alcohol issues, according to internal documents obtained by The Associated Press. And soldiers already serving on active duty now must meet tougher standards to stay on for further tours in uniform.
The Army is also spending hundreds of thousands of dollars less in bonuses to attract recruits or entice soldiers to remain.
It's all part of an effort to slash the size of the active duty Army from about 570,000 at the height of the Iraq war to 490,000 by 2017. The cutbacks began last year, and as of the end of March, the Army was down to less than 558,000 troops.
For a time during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Army lowered its recruiting standards [....]
Secondary coverage of this story in the Mideast so far:
'Israeli Mossad agents posed as CIA spies to recruit terrorists to fight ...
'Mossad agents have been posing as CIA'
'Mossad agents posed as CIA operatives in 2007'
'Mossad recruited anti-Iran terrorists'
Mark Perry speaks about allegations of Israeli spies posing as CIA agents
Our Pals the Israelis Are Pretending to Be CIA Agents
Israeli Intelligence Posed As CIA To Recruit Terror Group For Covert War On Iran
Mossad Agents Pose As CIA To Recruit Iranian Terror Agents – OpEd
Mossad agents posed as CIA in operation: report
Israeli agents posed as CIA to recruit terrorists
Israeli Mossad Agents allegedly Impersonated CIA in fostering Baluch Terrorism against Iran
Juan Cole/Informed Comment, Jan 14
Are Americans Assassinating Iranian Scientists? | Mother Jones:
"Are American agents involved in an ongoing plan to kill Iranian nuclear scientists? Mark Perry says no: Israel's Mossad is behind the operation, and in the past they've recruited assassins from Jundallah, a Pakistani militant group, by posing as American agents."
Eunomia » Jundallah and Israel’s False Flag Operation in Iran: "Israel seems to have foolishly burned a lot of bridges with the false flag operation:"
Eunomia » Jundallah and Israel: ". It’s not just the false flag nature of the operation that is bothersome. If the report is true, this operation involved a terrorist group that blows up civilians in mosques, and the perception that the U.S. was behind the group that did these things invited attacks on Americans."
Perry's article is fascinating. Not so much for the revelations, which U.S. intelligence has had years to come to grips with (even if it chose not to). No, it's the timing -- just days after a car bomb kills an Iranian scientist in the streets of Tehran, and a U.S. spy who slipped over the border from Bagram Air Base "to visit his grannies" is sentenced to death. It suggests to me that officials at CIA and maybe even State greenlighted the leak.
The intended message to both Israel and Iran would be that the White House is not on board with any Mossad plan to get an outright shooting war started before November. Certainly, its immediate intent is to forestall the American spy's execution, which would put pressure on Obama to harden his rhetoric and/or actions.
Given that some of the shit going down constitutes, as Ron Paul says, acts of war, it makes sense for the U.S. where possible to draw a sharp line between its acts and those of its ally: "Sure, we're spying on you, but we're not murdering Iranians or funding Sunni terrorists." What's fucked up about U.S. domestic politics is that the only acceptable way the government can do it is via a targeted leak.
War with Iran is not in the U.S. interest. The cost and consequences are unforeseeable -- but guaranteed to be huge. It's not even in Israel's interest, despite the delusions of Netanyahu, Lieberman and Barak. But that's another story.
And here's where we are a day later:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/us-military-chief-heads-to-israel-to-avert-attack-on-iran-6290175.html
The U.S. also pulled out of planned joint military exercises with Israel, presumably as a message that if it acts unilaterally, it acts alone.
The Israeli government simply doesn't believe the U.S. would stand aside. They want this war, and they want it now, while they still have leverage over Obama and Congress.
Disbelieve me if you want, but the U.S. is now closer to another major war -- bigger, more consequential and perhaps longer-lasting than Iraq or Afghanistan -- than it's ever been. And the country is stumbling into it blindly. End of economic recovery, end of imperial dreams. I should take some comfort, since it serves you ignorant doofuses right, but thousands of innocent people in other countries will die.
Seriously, dudes. Wake the fuck up.
Thanks for the link. To put it mildly, this is seriously scary. (I copied the text of the article and sent it out via email.
There is no reason to discount what you have provided to us Ack, but the truth of the matter is that none of us has any idea what stories are true and what stories are planted and untrue. We are dealing here in the area of the most secret of clandestine activities at the highest of levels; you're a journalist, and you know from leaks and how they come in so many ways and for so many reasons. Didn't you read Mad Magazine, Spy versus Spy back in the day???? :)
Now if you wish to believe that the United States of America canceled military exercises with Israel based upon alleged unilateral action taken by the Israelis, I'm not going to tell you to "wake the fuck up." But I might question whether that is the truth or at least the whole story for all kinds of reasons, some of which might even have something to do with domestic American politics in an election year. There are so many moving pieces here Ack--in the same week the allegedly angry Americans canceled military exercises with Israel because of alleged unilateral actions against Iran, they also issued an express and loud and public warning to the Iranian government that it would be an act of war for the Iranians to block the Strait of Hormuz.
Now if you wish to believe that Israel has no reason to allow Iran to develop a nuclear bomb, and that it would be foolish for Israel to take any and all steps to prevent that eventuality, then so be it. Israel is fucked up in many ways, and some day I might even feel comfortable writing about how it is so on pages like this, but at this point I will focus on what I think is another undisputed truth, and that is that the notion that the State of Israel should permit Iran to develop a nuclear capability is just preposterous IMO. And that is the case even if I don't think that Israel should go to war with Iran--at this point. As fucked up as Israeli society might be at this point--as opposed to all of the other rational societies around the world--it has plenty of reasons for taking threats against its very physical existence incredibly seriously. And if people like the MJ Rosenbergs of the world want to say that harping back to the Shoah is passe', well I understand that people might take solace in that (not saying you do at all but you catch my drift I think, i.e. Israel knows from existential threats at its innermost and nagging and sometimes obnoxious core, and ultimately folks who poo-poo that waste breath). Of course, I question whether there is a single nation in the world that, unlike Israel, would not take existential threats seriously.
Finally, if you wish to believe that there are not other states in the Middle East and beyond that fear a nuclear Iran, and that the president isn't serious when he says that the United States, not Israel but the United States, will not permit Iran to go nuclear, then so be it. And as a corollary, if you wish to believe that all of the nations in the world that are cooperating with American-driven efforts to sanction Iran for going nuclear are doing so to appease the United States or, as some might argue, all-powerful Israel, I wouldn't say "wake the fuck up" but I would say fiddlesticks. Put another way, the notion that Israel, and Israel alone, fears a nuclear Iran is, respectfully, hooey.
Ciao Ack.
Bruce
Hi b,
Warning: run on sentences follow, this happens to me with these spiderweb kinda stories (where it's all inter-related as an Aussie news junkie friend and I used to joke.)
I'm not up to the chore of getting into links for the entire audience here, but just wanted to say to you in particular, after reading your comment, that all I am reading on this front/topic suggests to me (contrary to the traditional Rosenfeld-style scenario where the Israel lobby has the US wrapped around its little finger,) that the Obama admin is just really fed up with the current Israeli government, hereafter to be called Teh Netanyahu, and in imperialist manner (which many lefties like to stress is the US' supposed wont, excepting of course where Israel is concerned, hah) is telling Teh Netanyahu enough already (assassinating scientists & threatening & planning bombings & such) don't you dare try anything else, cut it out, and furthermore sit down and shut up, leave this to us, we are da boss, we are trying something and you are going to screw it up royally, you'll be sorry if you don't obey.
And the serious attempt right now to fire up some kind of direct communication lines with Iran (which while at the same time yelling at them publicly about Hormuz) while at the same doing major PR about rescues of Iranians at sea, this is all related, I think.
And if the leak to Mark Perry is purposeful and related (it's hard not to think so given that it happened in 2007-so why now?) and if leaked by the US government, it is to back up threats to Teh Netanyahu about backing down and letting the US handle it right now, as in: we could make your name Mudd in the US if we really wanted to, here's just one example. But that's just conjecture on my part, and like you say, this spy leaks stuff is never very straightforward.
As far as history is concerned on the Perry story, I am also reminded me of this:
and how the story came out right before Obama's inauguration and how Obama had made those comments I referred to in the title after being security briefed as President-elect.
Hey AA, thanks! Hope you didn't think I was drawing any analogy whatsoever between the stuff reported above and MJ Rosenberg!!! Check out my buddy Jeff Goldberg, who was just advised by another unnamed senior pentagon official that it was Israel, due to logistical issues, that requested cancelation of the joint military exercise. The plot thickens! Hope all is well.
http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/01/pentagon-israeli-us-missile-exercise-postponed-at-israels-request/251512/
hope you didn't think
Nah, was only referring to an irony about those who complain about our imperialism and at the same time complain we aren't imperialist enough towards Israel
Check out my buddy Jeff Goldberg,
That was interesting, not the least of which because it almost seems as if Israeli leakers are trying him out as a replacement for Safire?
Oh another thing, anyone trying to paint a big picture to fit all the these stories in must not leave out SYRIA--especially with the UN making a big deal about it right now. It's a pretty complicated chess board, more than usual.
This piece needs to be added to this thread. And I swear I only saw it just now and hadn't read it before
writingbabbling my comment above (really, the things I wrote were gleaned from other sources):Commenter deleted duplicate comment here
History lesson for Sy Hersh et.al.: sometimes journalists' sources can also be "false flag" :
I totally agree, Bruce, that -- especially in reporting about high-level diplomacy like this -- the ratio of disinformation to fact can run pretty high. (I’ve criticized elsewhere the Washington media’s sycophancy and credulity. Which is why I feel a constant need to toss out their weak tea and read the tea leaves instead.) In the case of the current U.S.-Israel contretemps, the basic facts have been confirmed by both sides:
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4175595,00.html
When the president of the U.S. has to make contingency military plans because he is unsure what a major ally will do, that’s serious. When news about it gets less play than a cruise ship running aground, Jon Huntsman dropping his candidacy, or Joe Paterno being interviewed about a decades-old sex scandal, that’s really serious. Americans do need to wake the fuck up about what their country is sleepwalking into.
I hear what you’re saying about “existential threats,” and I see what a great cudgel that has been for the Netanyahu government. I’ve also seen the near-consensus by former Israel military and intelligence chiefs that Iran does not pose such a threat. Impose an international boycott of a country’s central bank and embargo 80% of its trade – that might rightly be seen as an an existential threat.
Despite the marketing of fear that "those mad mullahs will go even crazier and attack all their peaceful neighbors," this is mainly a competition for regional influence among Israel, Saudi Arabia and Iran. The ramping up of Shia-Sunni tension to deadly levels is a key tactic by the so-called good guys (see funding of Jundallah terrorism). I've heard all that crap about "the enemy of my enemy," but I'd suggest the Saudis are dangerous friends to have.
On the topic of regional influence, this is from today, and rings true:
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/01/17/israel-nuclear-iran-could-deter-military-action/
This guy isn't worried about nuclear attack, just about Israel having less of a free hand in the territories it occupies. Not the first Israeli official to say so out loud.
Maybe I’m wrong, and Obama can thread the needle to avoid plunging the Mideast and the world into yet another hellish war. I take some slim hope from this:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/16/opinion/preventing-a-nuclear-iran- peacefully.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha212
Peace. As always, I really mean that.