Stephan Lefebvre
In their latest article on U.S. government spying for The Intercept, Ryan Devereaux, Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras review and publish leaked documents that show that the U.S. government may have used the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to aid the National Security Agency (NSA) to spy on U.S. citizens and non-citizens in foreign countries. The NSA is shown to have assisted the DEA with efforts to capture narcotraffickers, but the leaked documents also refer to “a vibrant two-way information sharing relationship” between the two intelligence agencies, implying that the DEA shares its information with the NSA to aid with non-drug-related spying. This may explain how the NSA has gathered not just metadata but also the full-take audio from “virtually every cell phone conversation on the island nation of the Bahamas.”
The authors write,
In 2005, President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela stopped cooperating with the DEA after accusing it of espionage in his country. At the time, a State Department spokesperson responded by saying, “the accusations that somehow the Drug Enforcement Agency is involved in espionage are baseless. There’s no substance or justification for them.” Using arguments that would change very little over the next nine years, a State Department official said at the time, “I think it’s pretty clear to us that the motivation for this is not the accusation itself or not what they state is the problem. The motivation is an effort to detract from the government’s increasingly deficient record of cooperation.”
Three years later, President Evo Morales expelled the DEA from Bolivia saying, “there were DEA agents who worked to conduct political espionage.” He also said, “we can control ourselves internally. We don’t need any spying from anybody.” The State Department spokesperson said in response, “the charges that have been made are just patently absurd. We reject them categorically”, and the news agency EFE reported that “Washington has repeatedly denied that the DEA has been involved in any activities in Bolivia apart from the war on drugs.”
Few of the press reports from 2005 or 2008 took these accusations seriously, and the State Department dismissed the allegations categorically, but in 2008, CEPR’s co-director Mark Weisbrot wrote that “To the Bolivians, the U.S. is using the “war on drugs” throughout Latin America mainly as an excuse to get boots on the ground, and establish ties with local military and police forces.” To this list, we can now add access to national phone and communication networks, and storage of the content of phone calls.
Republished from CEPR
1 comment:
For God's sake, is the author of this article for real? DEA spying? Using the DEA for other than drug-related information?
I don't know if this BlogSpot is run from Bolivia, or elsewhere, and I am sure the editors are both cash-starved and patriotic, but get someone to check out the following information, then USE IT.
The US 'War on Drugs' is a farce, an 'Alice-in-Wonderland', George Orwell reversal of what they really do, just like their 'War on Terror'. Just as the US is the world's supreme 'Terrorist State', so too are the CIA the world's premier drug traffickers. But, hey, don't take my word for it. Read 'Compromised' by Terry Reed; 'Crossing the Rubicon' by Mike Ruppert; 'Cocaine Politics' by Peter Dale Scott & Jonathan Marshall; 'Trance Formation of America' and 'Access Denied - For Reasons of National Security' by Cathy O'Brien & Mark Phillips.
SOMEBODY in your blog should be delegated to read these books, and report back on them; give 'reviews' on Bolivia Rising; this information is extremely important, and should be known and disseminated by the Bolivarian Nations, to counter the lies, destabilisation and worse practised, and in the pipeline, from the 'Evil Empire' to your north.
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