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Mossad has had a reputation for ruthless competence

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Hell Raising Woman
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Sometimes old news can be good news when it educates us whites about the Mossad and jews.

AFIO Weekly Intelligence Notes Issue 8

2 March 1998
AFIO Weekly Intelligence Notes (WINs) are a 1998 initiative to provide added value to AFIO membership.
Format and name are still being adjusted to find the optimum formula. WINs contain published "facts" and commentaries derived from public media and open sources.
WIN back issues are stored on the AFIO Homepage WIN re-transmission is not permitted except with concurrence of the WIN Editor, Roy Jonkers.
SECTION I - Admiral Harvey's Nuggets
SECTION II - Editor's bullets
SECTION III - Announcements, Jobs and Services

SECTION I. HARVEY'S NUGGETS.

NEW "WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION" PANEL -. The 1997 Intelligence Authorization Act established a "Commission to Assess the Organization of the Federal Government to Combat the Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction." Congressional leaders and the President have now named eight members to the commission.
Congressional appointees are Sen. Arlen Specter, retired Senator James Exon, former Rep. Anthony Beilenson, and Henry Cooper, consultant. White House appointees are John Deutch, former DCI; Robert Gallucci, dean of Georgetown School of Foreign Service; from Rep. David McCurdy; and Daniel Poneman, former nonproliferation expert at the NSC. The panel will probably conclude that the intelligence community is organized reasonably well, but that the policymaking side of government is not adequately organized to deal with this problem.
LOS ALAMOS TRAITORS (continued) - The youngest (19 at the time) member of the Los Alamos team that developed the atomic bomb has admitted in his recent book that he passed nuclear secrets to the Soviet Union. The now 71-year old claims he felt concern about a possible US monopoly and says he feels no remorse for being a traitor. He was investigated as an espionage case by the FBI in the 1950's and 1960's, but never charged. He was recruited at Harvard, worked most of his scientific career as a research biophysicist at Cambridge University, and has kidney cancer and Parkinson's disease.
SECTION II. EDITOR'S BULLETS

COVERT ACTION PLANS AGAINST IRAQ LEAKED - a draft plan to destabilize Iraq through a concerted propaganda and infrastructure sabotage campaign has been leaked to the media. On one level the leaks appear to demonstrate Washington leadership divisions and disagreements over required actions to take and the chances of success. On another level the public discussion of future planning for "covert" action constitutes an almost comical contradiction in terms. There is disagreement among policymakers over the vulnerability of the ruling Ba'ath party to covert action. The major political opposition groups in exile, in Jordan and London, are fragmented. The Kurds in the north are deeply divided and often at war with each other. The Shiite groups in the south have ties to Iran and have been ineffective. However, with a powerful group of Senators calling for action, something will probably be done -- hopefully not to be announced previously in the news media. (NYT 26 Feb )
RUSSIAN BIOLOGICAL WARFARE RESEARCH - In 1989 a Soviet defector, Vladimir Pasechnik, revealed the existence of a Soviet "Biopreparat" complex for chemical and germ warfare weapons development, with at least 25,000 people employed in military and civilian laboratories in the 1980's. The defector claimed that the Soviets had plans for producing anthrax bacteria as well as smallpox and plague viruses.
In 1992 Boris Yeltsin renounced the biological warfare program and ratified a Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention. Tri-lateral US-UK-Russian confidence-building inspections were arranged in 1992, but faltered after 1994 when the US and UK pressed for access to Russian military installations. Negotiations to strengthen the 1972 Convention were conducted in 1996 and 1997, but did not succeed due to differing national requirements and perspectives. Now another high-ranking defector, who was part of the Soviet/Russian program from 1975 until 1991, has been given a public forum to put pressure on Russia to prove that it is not secretly continuing with illicit germ warfare research.An example of Intelligence in the service of foreign policy objectives. (WP 26 Feb 1998, page A 17, NYT 28 Nov 97, p A39)
MOSSAD's TIME OF TROUBLES (continued) - General Danny Yatom, Chief of Mossad, resigned a week after he and other Mossad officers were blamed by a government commission for the failure of the assassination attempt against Khaled Meshal in Jordan. Yatom disclaimed findings of fault, but stated that he bore overall responsibility and therefore resigned. Meanwhile Israeli public media jumped onto another alleged Mossad "fiasco," the apprehension of Mossad operatives by the Swiss on 25 February. The operatives made so much noise during the installation of a phone bug in the basement of an apartment building that neighbors called the police. The press embellished this story with recitals of other Mossad "failures," including the failed attempt to bug the Iranian Embassy in Cyprus in 1991, and the much more serious blunder in assassinating the wrong man in Lillehammer, Norway in 1973, when a Moroccan waiter was killed instead of the terrorist target.
Leaks to the press from within the agency and the government have led various commentators to remark on internal problems within the agency, reflecting distrust between the ruling political group and agency officials, deep divisions within Israeli society between secular and religious Jews and over the peace process, and rivalries between intelligence agencies. In short, the intelligence process is said to have become politicized, warping its findings.
Mossad has had a reputation for ruthless competence, both in the field of foreign intelligence activities and in assassinations. According to Benny Morris in his book "Israel's Secret Wars," Mossad agents have assassinated several dozen people abroad. Mossad has succeeded in preempting a number of terrorist attacks and the agency has scores of successes to its credit. It will survive its current time of troubles. (WP 27 Feb page A15, WP 25 Feb page A21, WT 26 Feb page A13, WT 2 Mar p A14)
FBI AGENT AWARD - Former FBI agent Frederic Whitehurst who performed as a "whisteblower" on deficiencies in FBI crime lab procedures in 1995, and was subsequently suspended with pay in 1997, was awarded economic damages plus legal fees. Whitehurst is to be reinstated and resign immediately. The Department Inspector General, in a 500- page report, asserted that FBI crime labs made serious errors in analyzing evidence in major criminal cases, including the Oklahoma City and World Trade Center bombings. Deficiencies included errors in court testimony, substandard analytical work, and flawed management policies at three of the FBI's twent-three labs. In at least two cases testimony appeared tilted to incriminate the defendants.
But the IG report also noted that the majority of Whitehurst's allegations were not substantiated, including hundreds of charges of perjury and fabrication of evidence made against individuals dating back over 10 years. The report was highly critical of Whitehurst, concluding that he could no longer function effectively at the laboratory, noting "the harm he has caused innocent persons by making inflammatory but unsubstantiated allegations, and the doubts that exist whether he has the requisite common sense and judgment to serve as a forensic examiner. "(WT 27 Feb page A8, WP 27 Feb page A23)
INFORMATION WARFARE - The Pentagon's unclassified personnel and payroll computer networks were hit by an organized and systematic infowar attack, according to the Department of Defense. The attack was concentrated on eleven military installations and coincided with a "hacker contest." It did not involve classified information and appeared to have been conducted in the spirit voyeurism, macho-ism and vandalism. Nevertheless, DOD is taking steps to update its defenses against such infowar attacks and is coordinating closely with the Justice Department.
BAY OF PIGS REQUIEM - Old operations never die or even fade away. A 150 page classified report on the Bay of Pigs operation by then-CIA Inspector General Lyman Kirkpatrick, allegedly a relic resident in the CIA Director's safe for all these years, has been released. In short, as reflected in the press, the report alleges that the Agency's reckless gambling, arrogance and incompetence were to blame for the disaster, not mistakes by policymakers. Do not be hasty in sharing this conclusion. AFIO will release a balanced perspective on this matter shortly.

http://www.afio.com/sections/wins/1998/notes08.html


A jew can't handle "truth" with dignity, but refutes with lies of exaggeration.

Jews -- tall, tall, tall, tales they tell. Famous fairytale storytellers of the Holocaust.

 
Posted : 08/02/2009 3:43 pm
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