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Politics : Foreign Policy Discussion Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Chas. who wrote (6918)7/23/2004 4:52:17 AM
From: Hawkmoon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15992
 
it zeroed in on the corporate involvement re paramilitary and directly acting "corporate entities" working side by side with our military forces in Iraq as well as Afghanistan and other undisclosed locations around the world,

Yeah... certainly a controversial and sensitive issue. But we're seeing more and more private security companies providing such services.. Saw something the other day about a company providing maritime security for an African country (can't remember which).. Who needs a navy when you can outsource it??

Some folks would call them mercenaries.. It's a fine line.. But bottom line is that they provide an invaluable service indeed.. The ones we have on our camp (trigger pullers), keep to themselves pretty much.. But it's heartening to know they are there as a QRF (quick reaction force) should someone slip through the perimeter..

As for a good cigar, unless you have the same access to Cubans I have, that's going to be tough to come up with... ;0)

Be well..

Hawk



To: Chas. who wrote (6918)7/25/2004 7:52:47 AM
From: lorne  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15992
 
CIA official says agents have infiltrated Al Qaeda
By Walter Pincus, Washington Post
July 24, 2004
boston.com

WASHINGTON -- The CIA has intelligence agents inside Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda network -- as it did before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks -- but they are not within the terrorist leader's inner circle where key information about any future attack would be discussed, a senior intelligence official said yesterday.

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"They are beyond foot soldiers but not in the inner circle," the official said. The agents -- Afghans, Pakistanis, Uzbeks, and others recruited and run by CIA case officers -- "are more senior than the agents [the US had] three years ago who were on the periphery," the official said.

Aided by these agents, electronic intercepts, satellite imagery, and extensive help from foreign intelligence services, the United States during the past two years has captured or killed two-thirds of bin Laden's top aides and broken up plots against US embassies, US and foreign aircraft and ships, and other targets worldwide.

Although the US intelligence community believes that Al Qaeda today is far less capable than the team that put together the Sept. 11 attacks, bin Laden "looks to the United States still as the brass ring," another senior intelligence official said. The Wednesday briefing was held on condition that reporters not disclose the names or the identity of three senior intelligence officials who spoke.

They made the revelations as part of a response to the stern criticism of the agency this week by the Sept. 11 commission.