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CIA leaves U.S. soldiers blind against terrorists.


"Two former CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency.


(1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy).
 allies in Afghanistan are now fearsome warlords Warlords may refer to:
  • The plural of Warlord, a name for a figure who has military authority but not legal authority over a subnational region.
  • Warlords (arcade game) is also an arcade video game.
 responsible for killing scores of American troops in the escalating border war," the New York Daily News New York Daily News

Morning daily tabloid newspaper published in New York City. It was founded in 1919 by Joseph Medill Patterson and his cousin Robert McCormick as a subsidiary of the Tribune Co. of Chicago. The first successful tabloid-format newspaper in the U.S.
 reported in a December 2 article. The article, entitled "Ex-CIA allies leading Afghan fight vs. G.I.s," focuses on Afghan warlords Jalaluddin Haqqani Maulavi Jalaluddin Haqqani (c. 1950- ) is a Pashtun military leader known for his involvement in fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s, specially during Operation Magistral, as well as for being invited by President Hamid Karzai to become Prime Minister of Afghanistan.  and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar Gulbuddin Hekmatyar (born 1947) is an Afghan Mujahideen leader, warlord and on two occasions the Prime Minister of Afghanistan. He is currently wanted by the United States for attempting to overthrow the Hamid Karzai-led government. , the principal jihadist Noun 1. Jihadist - a Muslim who is involved in a jihad
Moslem, Muslim - a believer in or follower of Islam
 leaders carrying out attacks on U.S. forces in Afghanistan. Both are reportedly receiving generous financial support from al-Qaeda-linked Arabs, as well as steady infusions of Arab recruits and advisers.

The CIA has extensive files on Hekmatyar and Haqqani, which is not surprising since both were favored "clients" of the agency during the 1980s and '90s. Hekmatyar, especially, was a major recipient of CIA cash, weapons, and supplies. However, this historical relationship between U.S. intelligence and the terrorists is news to many of the young U.S. Special Forces soldiers who are tasked with hunting terrorists in Afghanistan's forbidding mountain terrain. Understandably, some of them are upset to learn that the CIA has withheld this information from them. The Daily News quotes one unidentified U.S. soldier in Afghanistan as being "shocked" that our government has denied this intelligence to our men on the ground. "The information would have been extremely useful," he said.

One of the CIA's former Afghan hands, Michael Scheuer, argues that it's critically important for U.S. commanders to have access to this intelligence. "You'd know the whole lay of the land if you reviewed the information we had," Scheuer told the Daily News. Another ex-CIA agent, Vince Cannistraro, who says he "broke bread with Hekmatyar," agrees with Scheuer. "Know thy enemy. If you don't factor in that knowledge, you're fighting blind," Cannistraro said.

Of course, the Council on Foreign Relations The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is an influential and independent, nonpartisan foreign policy membership organization founded in 1921 and based at 58 East 68th Street (corner Park Avenue) in New York City, with an additional office in Washington, D.C.  (CFR CFR

See: Cost and Freight
) brain trust that essentially runs our CIA (as well as the White House and the State Department--virtually all of the executive branch, for that matter) would prefer blind soldiers to an enlightened public. It wouldn't do to remind the American people that the so-called "experts" directing our "war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism.

The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism
" are the same policy elites who trained, financed, and supplied our terrorist enemies.

For years, the CFR/CIA elites justified funneling millions of dollars in aid to Hekmatyar with the patently false claim that he was the Mujahadeen leader who was most effectively fighting the Soviet Red Army in Afghanistan. The opposite was true: Hekmatyar was actually allied with the Soviets and Afghan Communists much of the time and was responsible for betraying and murdering many of the genuinely anti-Soviet Afghan leaders. Hekmatyar had become a Marxist when he was a university student in the 1960s and had participated in the 1973 coup that toppled King Zahir Shah and put the pro-Soviet dictatorship of Mohammed Daoud in place. Although he is now referred to as an Islamic fundamentalist, he has not shed his Marxist roots. Russian columnist Misha Pozhininsky, who served in the Soviet Red Army in Afghanistan, says he learned from Soviet military intelligence that "Hekmatyar was sometimes cooperating with us." According to Pozhininsky, Hekmatyar "thought he could go about ... using Islam, to build a socialist system."
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Title Annotation:INSIDER REPORT
Publication:The New American
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 26, 2005
Words:522
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