Puppet Masters
But this week, they are boiling with anger and a sense of betrayal after revelations that Australia's Signals Directorate had been tapping the phones of senior Indonesian government officials, including President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and, worst of all, his wife, First Lady Ani Yudhoyono.
Aussie intelligence was also spying in the very same senior Indonesian cabinet officials who, like the president, are regarded as staunch allies of the US and Australia. This electronic spying was part of the by now notorious, top secret Five Eyes joint intelligence operation between the US, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand - aka "the white man's spy agency."
Five Eyes is run by the US National Security Agency; its other Anglo-Saxon members act as loyal junior partners, spying on their neighborhoods and, often, their own people. How much of their local data is passed to Washington is unknown, but it is likely substantial. Disturbingly, it was recently revealed that the US NSA passes information on US citizens to another ally, Israel.
Indonesians are asking why Australia spied on them - supposedly a friendly neighbor - and, worse, on their admired president and first lady. Interestingly, Indonesians I've talked to, including the very bright editor- in -chief of the Jakarta Post, Meidyatama Suryodiningrat, feel deeply insulted and personally offended. Indonesia and Australia have been trying to better relations for the past twenty years. They have been cooperating closely on a host of government, military, environmental and health programs.
Indonesia, with 248 million people is the closest major neighbor to Australia's 23 million people, a fact that has often made the highly xenophobic Aussies nervous even though their defense is guaranteed by Washington. US Marines are soon to be stationed in northern Australia, near Indonesia. This militarily useless act has angered Indonesia and China
Australia's new, conservative prime minister, Tony Abbot, arrogantly belittled the scandal as a minor flap and issued the same lame excuse as other red-hand spying western governments: "everyone does it." That excuse may work in schoolyards, but not with Indonesia- or with many Americans, for that matter.
There are no plans by the Bush administration to put American soldiers into the Middle East to police an agreement forged by the longtime warring parties. In fact, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld is searching for ways to reduce U.S. peacekeeping efforts abroad, rather than increasing such missions.
But a 68-page paper by the Army School of Advanced Military Studies (SAMS) does provide a look at the daunting task any international peacekeeping force would face if the United Nations authorized it, and Israel and the Palestinians ever reached a peace agreement. Located at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., the School for Advanced Military Studies is both a training ground and a think tank for some of the Army's brightest officers. Officials say the Army chief of staff, and sometimes the Joint Chiefs of Staff, ask SAMS to develop contingency plans for future military operations. During the 1991 Persian Gulf war, SAMS personnel helped plan the coalition ground attack that avoided a strike up the middle of Iraqi positions and instead executed a "left hook" that routed the enemy in 100 hours.
The cover page for the recent SAMS project said it was done for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. But Maj. Chris Garver, a Fort Leavenworth spokesman, said the study was not requested by Washington.
In a speech to the 35-nation governing board of the I.A.E.A., Yukiya Amano, the head of the United Nations' nuclear watchdog, said the invitation was for inspectors to travel to the Arak plant on Dec. 8.
While Mr. Amano did not specifically say the invitation had been accepted, he added that "all other outstanding issues" relating to the I.A.E.A.'s differences with Iran would be addressed "in subsequent steps."
Mr. Amano visited Tehran on Nov. 11 and said he had agreed with high-ranking officials there that Iran would permit "managed access" to at least two contentious sites - the Gachin mine in Bandar Abbas and the heavy-water production plant being built in Arak, which could be used in the production of plutonium potentially for use in weapons.
The way Uncle Sam sent his usual message of imperial contempt was to send two B-52 bombers to flout the Chinese air defense zone. Not content to do something so mind-bogglingly stupid and irresponsible, the Americans also decided to make sure to add an inflammatory statement.
According to the BBC, (emphasis added):
US Colonel Steve Warren at the Pentagon said Washington had "conducted operations in the area of the Senkakus". "We have continued to follow our normal procedures, which include not filing flight plans, not radioing ahead and not registering our frequencies," he said. There had been no response from China, he added.Brilliant, no?
In the early years after 9/11, the CIA turned some Guantánamo Bay prisoners into double agents then sent them home to help the US kill terrorists, current and former US officials said.
The CIA promised the prisoners freedom, safety for their families, and millions of dollars from secret accounts.
It was a risky gamble. Officials knew there was a chance that some prisoners might quickly spurn their deal and kill Americans. For the CIA, that was an acceptable risk in a dangerous business. For the American public, which was never told, the programme was one of the many secret trade-offs the government made on its behalf. At the same time the government used the fear of terrorism to justify jailing people indefinitely, it was releasing dangerous people to work for the CIA.
Suspicions at Microsoft, while building for several months, sharpened in October when it was reported that the NSA was intercepting traffic inside the private networks of Google and Yahoo, two industry rivals with similar global infrastructures, said people with direct knowledge of the company's deliberations. They said top Microsoft executives are meeting this week to decide what encryption initiatives to deploy and how quickly.
Documents obtained from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden suggest - but do not prove - that the company is right to be concerned. Two previously unreleased slides that describe operations against Google and Yahoo include references to Microsoft's Hotmail and Windows Live Messenger services. A separate NSA e-mail mentions Microsoft Passport, a Web-based service formerly offered by Microsoft, as a possible target of that same surveillance project, called MUSCULAR, which was first disclosed by The Washington Post last month.
Comment: You can see the different possible ways that the NSA monitors data traffic in this infographic.
Internet privacy looks more and more like history now, if it ever existed to start with.
Who does Microsoft think it's kidding? This corporation was a central player in setting up the global techno gulag we find ourselves living in! This is a PR effort by the Bill Gates-founded entity to re-establish kudos after the extent of its collaboration with the NSA was exposed earlier this year.
Considering the fact that a proto-Internet was first created in the 60s by DARPA, a US Dept. of Defense agency, one could speculate that the aim of its commercialization in the 90s was to connect PCs owned by private individuals and businesses, running spyware operating systems via MS Windows, and allow certain government agencies to monitor private communications.
Therefore, it's good to remember that once data packets leave your PC and are out on the Internet, whether encrypted (the NSA assisted in creating the open source encryption algorithms widely used nowadays on the Internet) or not, they can be monitored by any third party located anywhere along the path to their destination.
Outlawed are food donations to homeless shelters because the city can't assess their salt, fat and fiber content, reports CBS 2's Marcia Kramer.
Glenn Richter arrived at a West Side synagogue on Monday to collect surplus bagels - fresh nutritious bagels - to donate to the poor. However, under a new edict from Bloomberg's food police he can no longer donate the food to city homeless shelters.
It's the "no bagels for you" edict.
"I can't give you something that's a supplement to the food you already have? Sorry that's wrong," Richter said.
Richter has been collecting food from places like the Ohav Zedek synagogue and bringing it to homeless shelters for more than 20 years, but recently his donation, including a "cholent" or carrot stew, was turned away because the Bloomberg administration wants to monitor the salt, fat and fiber eaten by the homeless.
The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI), led by the country's cricket star Imran Khan, dropped the name of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operative to police in a letter in which the party demanded that the agent face up to the "gross offence" of the drone strike.
The letter was released to the media. However, the name could not be independently verified.
"I would like to nominate the US clandestine agency CIA (Central Intelligence Agency) Station Chief in Islamabad ... and CIA Director John O. Brennan for committing the gross offences of committing murder and waging war against Pakistan," PTI information secretary Shireen Mazarisaid wrote in the letter.
"CIA station chief is not a diplomatic post, therefore he does not enjoy any diplomatic immunity and is within the bounds of domestic laws of Pakistan," the letter added. The complaint was lodged with Tal police station in Hangu district, northwestern Pakistan.
Intelligence agencies in foreign countries make a habit of keeping the identities of their agents and operatives private. If the PTI has successfully named the right person then he may be forced to leave the country.
The pontiff released his Evangelii Gadium, or Joy of the Gospel, attacking capitalism as a form of tyranny and calling on church and political leaders to address the needs of the poor.
"As long as the problems of the poor are not radically resolved by rejecting the absolute autonomy of markets and financial speculation and by attacking the structural causes of inequality, no solution will be found for the world's problems or, for that matter, to any problems," the pope said in the 224-page document that essentially serves as his official platform.
Pope Francis said that inequality was the root of social ills, and prayed for world leaders with more empathy and sense of social justice.
"I beg the Lord to grant us more politicians who are genuinely disturbed by the state of society, the people, the lives of the poor!" Pope Francis wrote. "It is vital that government leaders and financial leaders take heed and broaden their horizons, working to ensure that all citizens have dignified work, education and healthcare."
The pope has already drawn the ire of some conservative Catholics, particularly in the U.S., for his open-minded comments on social issues such as homosexuality, abortion and contraception, and he's also previously criticized capitalism for promoting greed.
Comment: Exclusion, exploitation and disenfranchisement are natural outcomes of a world created by psychopaths, for psychopaths.














Comment: This is typical of the kind of sanitized leaks the CIA puts out now and then to make it seem like their activities are being 'exposed', when in fact they are being whitewashed to make them seem legitimate, humane and 'the best we could do under the circumstances'.
It's none of those things.
The truth is that the CIA was torturing innocent people then using their 'confessions' to confabulate plots against the American people that were used to justify stripping away everyone's civil liberties. Those inmates who really were taken in by extremist ideas would long since have been on the CIA payroll, making real the phony threat of 'Islamofacism', whether they realized it or not.
To get an idea of the true horror of the situation, read this:
Obama's secret kill list - How the 'war on terror' entraps 'database' patsies in the disposition matrix