Topic: CIA releases cold war documents

http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2007/06/2 … ml?ref=rss

I have not been keeping up to date on these forums and the 'Real News' of this world as of the last few months, but I just saw this on the google page and had to read it...

Why?

The last quote kind of stands out "One small step for man, one giant leap for the CIA" ... ?! Feedback please?

2 (edited by calpamu 2007-06-27 04:08:09)

Re: CIA releases cold war documents

Mabye they have no need to fear populous reprisals anymore.

Re: CIA releases cold war documents

Well I found the answer to my own question in this article: http://www.redicecreations.com/article.php?id=1106

"Ex-CIA director Allen Dulles used to say that the most effective way to disguise a secret is to pretend to openly share information. The Bush administration isn’t interested in solving problems as much as creating good PR (Public Relations) for itself. With one hand the Bush administration will try to appear like it is openly sharing information and being transparent, while with its other hand it will be actively obstructing the very process it is seemingly supporting."

4

Re: CIA releases cold war documents

This was the subject of NPR's Fresh Air program today, an interview with Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times correspondent Tim Weiner who wrote Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA.
You can listen to it here:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stor … d=11509999

It only took about 30 seconds into the interview to figure out the answer to why the "family jewels" were exposed...they want us to believe that this is what used to go on, that it was wrong, deeply disturbing to the agents involved and that it's all in the past. There were a few interesting tidbits that came out in the interview, stuff about mind control experiments with LSD and the people behind it and how that information has been purged and may never come out. The author seemed genuine enough, more cluelessly patriotic than a deliberate disinfo agent.
I thought it was worth a listen, but then I was getting paid to do something else while I was listening.

Somehow it never came up that most of the domestic spying and other deviant black ops have been moved over to the far more paranoid and amoral Defense Department, where they've been expanded exponentially.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_Info … _Awareness
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/d1/IAO-logo.png/225px-IAO-logo.png