Agnostic.com

4 1

Hilarious hypocrisy CIA now found to have been spying on more than 100 countries for at least 25 years through computer back doors.

Crypto CIA spy op revelations makes us see US’ Huawei objections in a new light [rt.com]
See also comments on "Hilarious hypocrisy CIA now found to have been spying on more than 100 countries for at least 25 ..." & "Hilarious hypocrisy CIA now found to have been spying on more than 100 countries for at least 25 ..."

#CIA
FrayedBear 9 Feb 13
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

4 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

1

One of the fascinating things I discovered when I was researching my family history was that my Grandfather was a card carrying member of of the CIA during world war two, this was even more amazing since the CIA was not founded until 1947.
I also found evidence of a medal for valour being presented to him for breaking a fifth columnist sabotage ring at Woolwich Arsenal (the actual arsenal not the football team)
I did a little digging and discovered that the CIA of WW2 was not the central Intelligence agency it was in fact the Chief Inspector of Armaments department and that my Grandfather had been recruited because of his involvement with the Temperance movement, (Apparently not drinking alcohol was an indicator of strong character) leading to his splitting his service time (Yes this was considered a part of the armed forces) between actually inspection and as a deep cover agent rooting out saboteurs and traitors.

Amazing history Len. It is only now that I am learning a little about the traitors that Britain had within during WWII. I recently enjoyed a BBC recreation of the words of RAAF pilots. It was four hours+ of pleasure and respect.

@FrayedBear
It is not actually that surprising, Oswald Mosley the leader of The British Union of Fascists held the famous Olympia Rally in 1934 attracted a minimum of three quarter of million Black Shirt supporters (they only counted the men), there was a British legion of the SS made up of British army deserters and before it could be brought under control the British National socialist had to be made an illegal organisation and Moseley himself was exiled to France to avoid arrest.
There were various attempts to bring him back to the UK and restart the party, ending only with Moseley's death in 1980.
The myth that Britain was immune from the wave of fascist populism that swept Europe in the 1920s and 30s was pure propaganda (unfortunately) and it took huge amounts of counter propaganda to hide that embarrassing fact that the (abdicated) King George VI was himself a liar, traitor and card carrying National socialist as where his sister in law (Elizabeth the queen mother) and most of her family extended family the Bowes-Lions.
In that respect the fact that Wallace Simpson was divorced and Catholic was a "god send" in getting George removed without having to point out she the duchess of Windsor was a high ranking Nazi spy.

1

So the news is that everyone has been spying on everyone but when it is ones own people they are tourists just trying to understand another culture and interested in how they do things. Surely no-one would have secrets from us because we are the good guys with God on our side.

I loved some of the stories written by English gentlemen some with with German surnames holidaying in Europe and making notes of German, Italian, Turkish fortifications prior to WWI. Talk about Walter Mittys.

1

Countries have been spying on each other for centuries while complaining about being spied on themselves. Nothing new here.

No THEY have sneaky underhand spying bastards, WE have patriotic brave and heroic intelligence agents

@LenHazell53 LMAO

@LenHazell53 LMAO

2

That's old news. It first surfaced over ten years ago.

Still relevant or not?

Did the CIA pay you when you were running your Spanish newspapers?

@FrayedBear It's relevant in that even more info about the matter has recently come to light.

@FrayedBear No. The mean bastards refused!

@Petter so why post to downplay the significance & reality particularly if the"mean bastards" refused you their munificence?

@FrayedBear I was merely pointing out that it is old news. I knew about it from way back.
In a similar vein, the British never admitted they had invented the world's first fully programmable electronic computers and code breaking algorithms because they were reading other nations' secret messages. The Bletchley Park machines were discreetly transferred to the premises of what became GCHQ.

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:459452
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.