Puppet MastersS


Rocket

Global surveillance state: Australia's Pine Gap drives U.S. drone kills

pine gap
Central Australia's Pine Gap
Central Australia's Pine Gap spy base has played a key role in the United States' controversial drone strikes involving the ''targeted killing'' of al-Qaeda and Taliban chiefs, Fairfax Media can reveal.

Former personnel at the Australian-American base have described the facility's success in locating and tracking al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders - and other insurgent activity in Afghanistan and Pakistan - as ''outstanding''.

A Fairfax Media investigation has confirmed that a primary function of the top-secret signals intelligence base near Alice Springs is to track the precise ''geolocation'' of radio signals, including hand-held radios and mobile phones, in the eastern hemisphere, from the Middle East across Asia to China, North Korea and the Russian far east.

This information has been used to identify the location of terrorist suspects, which then feeds into the United States drone strike program and other military operations. The drone program, which has involved more than 370 attacks in Pakistan since 2004, is reported to have killed between 2500 and 3500 al-Qaeda and Taliban militants, including many top commanders.

Attention

Snowden may be granted papers to leave airport for city center by Wednesday

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Snowden has been in the airport transit area for a month
Edward Snowden May Leave Airport In Two Days

Edward Snowden's lawyer says he should be allowed to leave a Moscow airport transit area in the next few days. The American is expected to be granted papers by Wednesday allowing him to move to the city centre, according to his Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena.

Mr Kucherena, who helped the 30-year-old file his request for temporary asylum in Russia, said: "He should get this certificate (allowing him to leave the airport) shortly."

His bid for temporary asylum in Russia may take up to three months to process but he can pass through customs based on the initial response to his request, Mr Kucherena added.

The former National Security Agency (NSA) worker has not ruled out seeking Russian citizenship, his lawyer said.

Snowden believes it would be unsafe to try to travel to Latin America soon because of US efforts to extradite him to face espionage charges after he leaked details of the Prism surveillance programme.

Calendar

Despite Pentagon claims, Marine colonel sought in Benghazi investigation not yet retired

Bristol
© Eric Steen/ArmyCol. George Bristol speaks during the April 2012 ceremony in which he took command of Joint Special Operations Task Force-Trans Sahara. Although the Pentagon has claimed Bristol is now retired, that is not true. Some lawmakers want to question Bristol about the U.S. response to the attacks on the U.S. diplomatic consulate in Benghazi, Libya.
When insurgents attacked the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, last fall, Col. George Bristol held a key post in the region. As commander of Joint Special Operations Task Force-Trans Sahara, he was in a position to know what options the U.S. had to protect Americans under fire.

U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans died in the Sept. 11 attacks, sparking national outcry and a congressional investigation examining the lack of protection. Several U.S. officials have testified before Congress since - but not Bristol, a salty Marine whose task force was responsible for special operations in northern and western Africa.

Defense Department officials have told members of Congress that Bristol cannot be forced to testify because he retired after stepping down during a March change of command ceremony, according to several media reports. The Pentagon reinforced that point of view to Marine Corps Times on Tuesday.

"Col. Bristol was not invited by Congress to testify before he retired," said Air Force Maj. Robert Firman, a spokesman with the Office of the Secretary of Defense. "The DoD has cooperated fully with Congress and the Accountability Review Board since the beginning of this investigation, and we will continue to do so."

That isn't the case, however. While Bristol is preparing for retirement, he is on active duty through the end of July, said Maj. Shawn Haney, a Marine spokeswoman, on Wednesday. He will be placed on the inactive list on Aug. 1, she said. That contradicts statements that Pentagon officials have issued to both Congress and the media.

Camcorder

Congressman Wolf: Benghazi survivors forced to sign non-disclosure agreements

Congressman Frank Wolf, a Republican from Virginia, said today on the House floor that survivors of the Benghazi terror attack have been forced to sign non-disclosure agreements:


Comment: Comment:

There's a reason why all of the reports about Benghazi are so confusing
Petraeus, Allen, Gaouette, Ham: The Benghazi Story The Media Isn't Telling You


Briefcase

Congressional Investigation finds IRS officials ordered special scrutiny

Lois lerner
© Associated PressLois Lerner, who led the tax-exempt organizations division of the Internal Revenue Service, has been put on administrative leave. The second IRS official removed over the recent scandal, Ms. Lerner has been accused of misleading an investigation into the division.
IRS employees have told congressional investigators that they were ordered by the agency's Washington office to give extra scrutiny to tea party groups' applications for tax-exempt status, according to excerpts from interviews with the employees that were released by House committee chairmen Wednesday.

Carter Hull, a tax law specialist with 48 years of experience at the IRS, told investigators that Lois Lerner, the former head of the Exempt Organizations division, demanded he send some of the reviews of tea party groups to the IRS chief counsel's office in Washington. The chief counsel is one of two political appointees in the IRS.

The Internal Revenue Service has come under fire over the past several months after the agency's auditor, J. Russell George, exposed that the agency was targeting conservative groups for intrusive scrutiny. This week,The Washington Times reported that government employees also improperly accessed IRS information to look at data on a handful of political candidates and donors.

Arrow Down

Former GOP senate candidate Christine O'Donnell told her tax records were breached

Christine O'Donnell
© Christine O'Donnell
More than two years after her upstart Senate campaign rocked the Delaware political world, Christine O'Donnell got an unexpected contact from a U.S. Treasury Department agent warning that her private tax records may have been breached.

The phone message earlier this year shocked the battled-scarred candidate, a tea party favorite who knocked off Republican mainstay Michael Castle in the primary before losing in a bid to win Vice President Joseph R. Biden's former seat.

"Ms. O'Donnell, this is Dennis Martel, special agent with the U.S. Department of Treasury in Baltimore, Md. ... We received information that your personal federal tax info may have been compromised and may have been misused by an individual," he said in the January message left on her cellphone.

For Ms. O'Donnell, the message immediately raised red flags.

On March 9, 2010, the day she revealed her plan to run for the Senate in a press release, a tax lien was placed on a house purported to be hers and publicized. The problem was she no longer owned the house. The IRS eventually blamed the lien on a computer glitch and withdrew it.

Now Mr. Martel, a criminal investigator for the Treasury Department's inspector general for tax administration, was telling her that an official in Delaware state government had improperly accessed her records on that very same day.

Eye 1

Mood shifting on NSA? Congress may move to limit NSA spying

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© Charles Dharapak/APThe National Security Agency (NSA) building at Fort Meade, MD

Congress is growing increasingly wary of controversial National Security Agency domestic surveillance programs, a concern likely to erupt during legislative debate _ and perhaps prod legislative action _ as early as next week.

Skepticism has been slowly building since last month's disclosures that the super-secret NSA conducted programs that collected Americans' telephone data. Dozens of lawmakers are introducing measures to make those programs less secret, and there's talk of denying funding and refusing to continue authority for the snooping.

The anxiety is a sharp contrast to June's wait-and-see attitude after Edward Snowden, a government contract worker, leaked highly classified data to the media. The Guardian newspaper of Britain reported one program involved cellphone records. The Guardian, along with The Washington Post, also said another program allowed the government access to the online activity of users at nine Internet companies.

Comment: It has been publicly known since 2004 that the US government secretly, illegally, and unconstitutionally spies on its citizens. As Congress and the federal courts have done nothing so far, is seems unlikely that much will come of this debate.
What is the U.S. government's agenda?
The NSA whistleblower from EIGHT years ago: Interview with Russell Tice


Wall Street

Ben Shalom Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, says he is 'not qualified' to offer refinancing advice

bernanke
Federal Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke declined to answer a question from a Michigan member of Congress that's perplexing many homeowners: Should they refinance?

Last week, the average U.S. rate on a 30-year-mortgage climbed to 4.5 percent - a two-year-high.

Rep. Bill Huizenga, R-Zeeland, who is vice chair of the Monetary Policy and Trade Subcommittee, said at a congressional hearing on Wednesday that he had recently refinanced his mortgage and wanted to pass along a question one of his friend's had: "Should he refinance right now?"

Bernanke said he couldn't answer. "I'm not a qualified financial adviser," Bernanke said. "I wouldn't want to."

Separately, Rep. Gary Peters, D-Bloomfield Township, asked whether Japan was manipulating its currency to aid big companies. The Japanese yen has fallen by about 30 percent this year. Bernanke said Japan is not manipulating its currency, but using monetary policy trying to "break the deflation they've had for about 15 years and a side effect of that is the yen has weakened. ... The international consensus is as long as a country is using domestic policy tools for domestic purposes that that would be an acceptable approach."

Bulb

NSA admits it analyzes more people's data than previously revealed

nsa on trial
As an aside during testimony on Capitol Hill today, a National Security Agency representative rather casually indicated that the government looks at data from a universe of far, far more people than previously indicated.

Chris Inglis, the agency's deputy director, was one of several government representatives - including from the FBI and the office of the Director of National Intelligence - testifying before the House Judiciary Committee this morning. Most of the testimony largely echoed previous testimony by the agencies on the topic of the government's surveillance, including a retread of the same offered examples for how the Patriot Act and Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act had stopped terror events.

But Inglis' statement was new. Analysts look "two or three hops" from terror suspects when evaluating terror activity, Inglis revealed. Previously, the limit of how surveillance was extended had been described as two hops. This meant that if the NSA were following a phone metadata or web trail from a terror suspect, it could also look at the calls from the people that suspect has spoken with - one hop. And then, the calls that second person had also spoken with - two hops. Terror suspect to person two to person three. Two hops. And now: A third hop.

Newspaper

Ex-CIA Milan chief held in Panama over cleric abduction

Abu omar
Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, known as Abu Omar, was snatched from Milan in 2003
A former CIA station chief convicted by an Italian court of kidnapping a terror suspect has been detained in Panama, Italian officials say.

Robert Seldon Lady was sentenced to nine years in jail for his involvement in the abduction of the man, an Egyptian cleric, in Milan in 2003.

The cleric, known as Abu Omar, was allegedly flown to Egypt and tortured.

Lady was convicted in absentia with 22 other Americans for their role in his "extraordinary rendition".

But the Italian authorities have so far only sought the international arrest of the former Milan station chief, Italian media say.

The CIA said it had no immediate comment on the arrest, while Panamanian officials have so far denied knowledge of the detention.

Panama and Italy do not have an extradition treaty, so it is unclear if Lady will be sent to Italy to serve his prison sentence.