Friday, March 23, 2018

CIA CONTRACTOR ARREST IN CUBA 2009 REVEALS ABUSES AND MORE EMBARRASSMENT

 This article details connections between the deaths of CIA contractors in Afghanistan and the arrest of a contractor from the same company in Cuba to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).  On December 10th, 2009 an employee of DAI, a CIA contractor, was "accused of subversion and distribution of illegal materials to counterrevolutionary groups" in Cuba. This CIA contractor was a part of a USAID program named "The Cuba Democracy and Contingency Planning Program." "DAI was awarded a $40 million USD contract in 2008 to help the U.S. government “support the peaceful activities of a broad range of nonviolent organizations through competitively awarded grants and subcontracts” in Cuba."  On December 15th, 2009, 5 "civilians" from the same government contractor, DAI, were killed at the USAID office in Gardez, Afghanistan. Another bomb exploded in Kabul the same day, no one was injured.  8 CIA contractors from the company DAI were killed in a suicide bombing in Khost, Afghanistan on December 30, 2009.  "On December 15, DAI published a press release mourning “project personnel killed in Afghanistan. “DAI is deeply saddened to report the deaths of five staff associated with our projects in Afghanistan… On December 15, five employees of DAI’s security subcontractor were killed by an explosion in the Gardez office of the Local Governance and Community Development (LGCD) Program, a USAID project implemented by DAI.”  "A high-level USAID official confirmed two weeks ago that the CIA uses USAID’s name to issue contracts and funding to third parties in order to provide cover for clandestine operations. The official, a veteran of the U.S. government agency, stated that the CIA issues such contracts without USAID’s full knowledge."  The moral of this story is the CIA uses private security contractors to conduct covert operations under the guise of U.S. foreign social and civil society programs. These programs are used to accomplish goals such as creating rebel groups, resistance forces and train assets in countries the U.S. has interests in. However, these types of operations give the appearance the people of the U.S. are aware and complicit with the perpetrators. Of course, this is not the case.This article details connections between the deaths of CIA contractors in Afghanistan and the arrest of a contractor from the same company in Cuba to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

On December 10th, 2009 an employee of DAI, a CIA contractor, was "accused of subversion and distribution of illegal materials to counterrevolutionary groups" in Cuba. This CIA contractor was a part of a USAID program named "The Cuba Democracy and Contingency Planning Program." "DAI was awarded a $40 million USD contract in 2008 to help the U.S. government “support the peaceful activities of a broad range of nonviolent organizations through competitively awarded grants and subcontracts” in Cuba."

On December 15th, 2009, 5 "civilians" from the same government contractor, DAI, were killed at the USAID office in Gardez, Afghanistan. Another bomb exploded in Kabul the same day, no one was injured.

8 CIA contractors from the company DAI were killed in a suicide bombing in Khost, Afghanistan on December 30, 2009.

"On December 15, DAI published a press release mourning “project personnel killed in Afghanistan. “DAI is deeply saddened to report the deaths of five staff associated with our projects in Afghanistan… On December 15, five employees of DAI’s security subcontractor were killed by an explosion in the Gardez office of the Local Governance and Community Development (LGCD) Program, a USAID project implemented by DAI.” 

"A high-level USAID official confirmed two weeks ago that the CIA uses USAID’s name to issue contracts and funding to third parties in order to provide cover for clandestine operations. The official, a veteran of the U.S. government agency, stated that the CIA issues such contracts without USAID’s full knowledge."

The moral of this story is the CIA uses private security contractors to conduct covert operations under the guise of U.S. foreign social and civil society programs. These programs are used to accomplish goals such as creating rebel groups, resistance forces and train assets in countries the U.S. has interests in. However, these types of operations give the appearance the people of the U.S. are aware and complicit with the perpetrators. Of course, this is not the case.

https://www.globalresearch.ca/cia-agents-assassinated-in-afghanistan-worked-for-contractor-active-in-venezuela-and-cuba/16733

 https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB411/

No comments:

Post a Comment