Signal, No Noise

March 24, 2010

Iran-contra Operative Linked to Questionable Spy Program

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Updated: 11:41 AM Mar 24, 2010

Sources: Iran-contra Operative Linked to Questionable Spy Program
A former CIA operative who was involved in the Iran-contra scandal has worked on an alleged ad hoc spy program which the Pentagon is investigating.

Posted: 11:41 AM Mar 24, 2010
Reporter: From Barbara Starr CNN Pentagon Correspondent

WASHINGTON (CNN) — A former CIA operative who was involved in the Iran-contra scandal has worked on an alleged ad hoc spy program which the Pentagon is investigating, CNN has learned.

Duane “Dewey” Clarridge — who was pardoned for his alleged role in the Reagan-era scandal by the first President George Bush in the waning hours of his presidency in 1992 — is using contacts in Afghanistan and Pakistan to obtain information for the Pentagon, according to former government officials familiar with the current program.

They declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.

The Pentagon has launched an assessment of the role of at least three contractor companies with more than $20 million in contracts, according to Pentagon officials

Defense Secretary Robert Gates wants to know if bounds were overstepped.

He needs “a factual baseline from which to determine whether or not systemic problems exist,” and how to fix them if so, defense department spokesman Geoff Morrell said Tuesday.

The two-week survey will be led by a small team of senior military and Defense Department officials, he said.

The assessment was prompted by an investigation — currently under way — into a program led by Michael Furlong, a Defense Department official who oversaw contracts aimed at gathering information about Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The program was meant to be limited to gathering what is known as “open-source information,” in which publicly available facts are gathered from, for example, local media and public events.

Some of the contractors with the program — retired CIA officers and former military commandos — may have instead hired local agents to gather information on the specific locations and movements of particular individuals and passed it along to military officials for possible lethal strikes, according to government officials and private-sector businessmen familiar with the investigation.

Furlong has denied wrongdoing.

“This is something that I need to know more about but we do have reviews and investigations going on to find out what the story is here, find out what the facts are, and if it’s necessary to make some changes, I’ll do that,” Gates said Monday.

Documents provided to CNN detail sensitive information contractors gathered including a meeting between Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s brother and Mullah Baradar, a top Taliban leader who was arrested weeks later in Pakistan. At another meeting with Taliban commanders, an audio message from the reclusive leader Mullah Omar was played, in which he directed who would lead operations after a key member was captured. Another document details the comings and goings at a Kabul safe house used by suspected members of the Haqqani insurgent network.

Concern within the Central Intelligence Agency about the contract played a role in prompting the investigation, according to officials.

Rear Adm. Gregory Smith, a spokesman for the U.S.-led force in Afghanistan, told CNN last week that elements of Furlong’s project were not clear.

“There was ambiguity about how they were going to collect information,” he said, and about whether Afghans were to be used to do the work, and how the information might be used.

“None of us were comfortable with what this contract meant. We wanted to know how they were going to glean information,” Smith said.

Smith said he subsequently terminated Furlong’s effort last year because of his concerns. He estimates he spent $6 million to $7 million of the funds allocated and does not know what happened to the balance of the contract money.

The-CNN-Wire/Atlanta
TM & © 2010 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.

March 16, 2010

Counterintelligence traps MI6 man ‘trying to sell secrets’

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A former MI6 spy has been accused of trying to sell “top secret” intelligence files to a foreign government for £2m.

By Duncan Gardham, Security Correspondent
Published: 5:12PM GMT 03 Mar 2010

Daniel Houghton, 25, was caught in a sting operation after allegedly approaching a foreign intelligence agency offering to sell them information he had collected while working for the Secret Intelligence Service, known as MI6.

The files, which belonged to the domestic security service MI5, allegedly related to the capabilities of the security and intelligence services and the techniques they have developed to gather intelligence, sources said, and were labeled “top secret” and “secret.”

Houghton, who worked for MI6 between September 2007 and May 2009, allegedly telephoned the foreign intelligence service three months after leaving MI6 to try and arrange a deal.

But undercover MI5 officers, known as “spy catchers”, met him in February to view the material on his laptop and allegedly negotiated a price of £900,000, while recording the meeting with hidden listening devices.

Houghton allegedly told them he had downloaded the information onto a number of CDs and DVD disks which he then copied onto a secure digital memory card of the type used in cameras.

He also allegedly told the undercover MI5 officers that he had copied material onto a second memory card which he had hidden at his mother’s home in Devon.

They arranged to meet him again at a central London hotel where he allegedly showed them the material on a laptop and then handed over two memory cards and a computer hard drive.

Sources said he was allowed to leave the hotel room with £900,000 in a suitcase before he was arrested as he waited for a hotel lift by plain clothes officers from the Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism Command.

It is understood Houghton told them: “You’ve got the wrong man.”

Police have conducted a series of raids since the arrest on Monday at Houghton’s shared flat in Hoxton, east London and at his mother’s home, a farm house in Holne, near Newton Abbot in Devon.

They are understood to be looking for any copies of the material he may have downloaded and any other material he may have stolen.

Sources said they had found additional hard copies of material marked “top secret,” “secret” and “restricted.”

Houghton, who is single and has dual British and Dutch citizenship, is understood to have been born abroad before his mother moved back to Britain.

He was brought up in the Netherlands and Devon, went to university in Birmingham where he studied computing. He has an older brother aged 28, and two sisters aged 26, and 23.

His flatmate, Kimberly Peterson, 27, a student from the US, said he had told her he was working for Lloyds Bank as a graduate trainee and she had no idea he used to work for MI6.

She said: “My family back home in Seattle are terrified. They wanted me to jump straight on the first flight home.

“We got on but we weren’t close. He was quiet but friendly. There was nothing that would have raised any suspicion.

“It feels like I am in my own episode of Law and Order.”

On Wednesday he appeared at Westminster Magistrates Court wearing a white long-sleeved T-shirt and jeans.

He was accused under the Theft Act of stealing a number of electronic files belonging to MI5 containing “techniques for intelligence collection” between September 1 2007, and May 31 2009.

Houghton was also alleged to have “disclosed articles relating to security or intelligence, namely a number of electronic files containing techniques for intelligence collection,” contrary to the Official Secrets Act 1989 on March 1 this year.

Houghton did not apply for bail and District Judge Timothy Workman remanded him in custody until a further hearing next week.

January 11, 2010

Anatomy of a Double-Cross

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Anatomy of a Double-Cross

How a Jordanian jihadist turned CIA operative—and back again.

By Mark Hosenball, Sami Yousafzai and Adem Demir | NEWSWEEK

Published Jan 9, 2010

From the magazine issue dated Jan 18, 2010

At the CIA training facility in Virginia known as “The Farm,” one of the standard courses is called “High Threat Meetings.” All aspiring case officers spend the three-week class learning how to arrange a get-together with potentially dangerous informants. When meeting with such agents, “security is everything,” recalls one graduate. “I remember being told very forcefully, ‘It doesn’t matter what you might get from an informant if you wind up dead.’ ” There are very rigorous protocols for such meetings, says another former agent who once taught the course: all informants should be searched carefully, the rendezvous location should be staked out ahead of time, and when the mole arrives, only one or two CIA officers should be present. “The protocol is for a case officer to meet an informant one-on-one, or maybe two—always, always, always,” adds Robert Baer, a former CIA officer who spent years tracking terrorists in the Mideast. “The one thing you never do is meet an informant with a committee.”

A committee of at least nine CIA officers and contractors was on hand to meet Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi at CIA Forward Operating Base Chapman in Khost, Afghanistan, on Dec. 30. Why the operatives apparently broke a fundamental rule of CIA tradecraft is unclear. Perhaps they were giddy with anticipation. Balawi had suggested he might be able to deliver something that every CIA officer desperately wants in order to protect the United States and advance their careers: the location of Al Qaeda’s second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahiri. The meeting was considered so important that intelligence officials had informed the White House about it in advance, according to a U.S. counterterrorism officer briefed on the matter. According to two current U.S. intelligence officials, who would not be named discussing sensitive information, security officers were preparing to frisk Balawi after he arrived inside the base. As Balawi stepped from the vehicle, he had a hand in his pocket, according to this account. Someone asked him to remove it, and that’s when the bomb exploded, killing five CIA operatives and two contractors, and wounding others.

This has been a season for intelligence fiascoes. Only days before the Balawi bombing, 23-year-old Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab managed to buy an airline ticket to the United States with cash, conceal a bomb in his underwear, and nearly blow up Northwest Flight 253 as it was approaching Detroit on Christmas Day. In that case, many key bits of intelligence were in hand—including a warning by Abdulmutallab’s father that his son had come under the influence of extremists in Yemen—but U.S. intel agencies were unable to connect the dots in time. Within the same week, the senior intelligence officer in Afghanistan, Maj. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, coauthored a refreshingly candid and very public report that said, among other things, that the “U.S. intelligence community is only marginally relevant to the overall strategy” in Afghanistan. (Among his views: there’s too much emphasis on intel for killing bad guys, and not nearly enough on information to help soldiers understand what’s really going on in the society.)

Given all the tens of billions of dollars the United States spends on intelligence activities every year, and the high-profile reforms that were enacted after 9/11, a lot of people—including President Obama—were questioning why we can’t do better at spying on enemies and analyzing threats.

The Balawi case raises a further question: how good is Al Qaeda at infiltrating our national-security agencies? That’s been a fear in intelligence circles at least since 2003, when two Arabic translators working at Guantánamo were arrested on suspicion of terrorist sympathies. (One linguist pleaded guilty to minor charges of insubordination and mishandling secret information; charges against the other were all dropped.) The following year the CIA convened a special two-day conference to discuss the counterintelligence threat posed by Al Qaeda and other terror groups. The meeting took place at the headquarters of a European spy agency, and included representatives from 10 allied countries. At the time, the very notion that Al Qaeda could be clever enough to plant a mole in a Western spy organization “was a new concept to everybody,” says a former security official who helped organize the event. But the meeting ended without an action plan. “This is the sort of thing that [the CIA's spy division, the Directorate of Operations] was always doing,” says another former U.S. intelligence officer, who did not want to be named dissing his former colleagues. “They were always holding conferences.”

Now, tragically, the CIA has a case study to examine. Exactly how Balawi came to be a double agent is still very murky. But interviews with Balawi’s wife and some of his jihadist colleagues, together with information from U.S. and Jordanian officials familiar with the case, reveal a successful doctor, with Palestinian roots, plagued by anger and guilt over the suffering of his people. It’s an all-too-common story these days—of a successful, devout, socially alienated young man who becomes increasingly radicalized as he watches U.S. and other foreign militaries fight and kill in Muslim lands.

Balawi’s Turkish wife, Defne Bayrak, says he was always conservative in his Muslim beliefs. The real turning point toward extremism came, she says, with the American invasion of Iraq in 2003. The U.S. occupation “caused a comprehensive transformation in my husband,” she says. The following year Balawi started blogging about jihad on radical Web sites. “He was constantly reading and writing,” she says. “He was crazy about online forums… He would cite verses from the Quran that talked about the need for jihad, and then write very tough comments based on those verses or on the sayings of the prophet.” He yearned to do more, says Bayrak, but didn’t see how. Sometime between 2004 and 2009, he attended two dinners sponsored by the mainstream, fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood, but he wasn’t impressed. He went to eat “their famous mansaf [rice with meat],” not to hear their ideas, he told his wife. He spoke openly of wanting to visit “places of jihad.”

His pro-jihad postings on the Internet—under an alias, Abu Dujanah al-Khurasani—got widespread notice. He even became the Web administrator of al-Hesbah, a Qaeda-linked jihadi forum. This likely attracted the attention of a smart young officer at Jordanian intelligence, a distant cousin of King Abdullah II named Ali bin Zaid. According to a former colleague, bin Zaid had a real talent for ferreting out information about terrorist groups in Internet chat rooms and bulletin boards. But he was not known as a case officer skilled at managing agents face to face. He would become Balawi’s handler, and die with him at FOB Chapman.

Balawi didn’t make the leap to become a full-fledged jihadist until after he was arrested by Jordanian security agents in January of last year. Just prior to that, Balawi had signed up with a group of doctors to provide aid to Palestinians after the December 2008 Israeli incursion into Gaza. Perhaps that is why he was picked up, or maybe he had long been on Jordan’s radar as a potential agent. Bayrak, who shares her husband’s radical views, thought at the time that he would be in jail for a very long period. But he was out in three days. According to Bayrak’s account to NEWSWEEK, the spies “might have offered him money” to work for them, and perhaps “he pretended to accept these offers just to be able to go” to jihadi-controlled areas of Pakistan. A source close to Bayrak claims that Jordan and the CIA both offered large sums of money. (The CIA would not comment on any alleged offers of money, and Bayrak says she could not confirm any specific amounts.) There also may have been coercion: “They pressured him so much,” said Balawi’s brother.

Bayrak believes that Balawi was using the Jordanians and the CIA, and never really intended to spy for them. But that isn’t at all clear. What is known is that he went to Pakistan, telling his wife that he was studying there, but hinting of something more dangerous—perhaps working as a doctor in jihadi areas. “In all our conversations, he would say, ‘God forbid, if something happens to me, what would you do without me?’” Bayrak recalls. She would respond: “God is generous, great; he is the one to provide.” While he was away, Balawi’s two young daughters would look up at airplanes and say, “Papa came.” But he never did. “At the end, this is about belief,” says the widow. “In my belief, it was his time for death.”

At some point while he was in Pakistan, Balawi began offering his Jordanian handlers information that seemed valuable. “He contacted us by e-mail and said he had critical information on Al Qaeda,” a senior Jordanian official told reporters in Amman on condition that he would not be named. “Naturally … we verified the information and shared that information with friendly services, including the U.S.” Taliban who met Balawi in the Pakistani tribal areas last year describe him as very cautious. “He was not like other Qaeda operatives in the area,” says a Taliban sub-commander who works with suicide bombers. “[He] had smooth, soft skin, unlike the other Arabs whose faces were more sun- and windburned.” Balawi seemed important, and often had other Qaeda Arabs around him. But he also appeared extraordinarily nervous about possible drone attacks. “I found him to be one of the most nervous and careful mujahedin,” says the Taliban subcommander. “He always said, ‘It’s not safe to stay here for long, so let’s move.’ ”

Several Taliban militants, none of whom wanted to be named discussing their activities, say they were aware of many cases of infiltrators in their ranks. Some spies had been beheaded; others had been able to escape and hide before they were discovered. It could be that Balawi was discovered as a spy, and turned, or that he simply offered himself up to the other side. That’s the version of one Taliban who met Balawi and says he drew suspicion by asking too many questions about bin Laden and his whereabouts. “This is a prohibited question and made him suspect,” says this Taliban source, reached by phone in North Waziristan. After staying in the jihadi areas for some months, seeing conditions there and listening to his new colleagues, Balawi seems to have had a change of heart. “After a while, he exposed his plan and said, ‘It’s up to you guys: behead me or use me as bomber,’ ” says the Talib.

One of Balawi’s last online appearances was in an interview with the online Taliban magazine, Vanguard of the Khurasan, in September. He appeared to hint at an internal, personal struggle over his commitment to jihad. “I was raised to love Jihad and martyrdom in my youth,” he said. But at times he “used to wonder” whether he could maintain that commitment. He had come to see that “this love of Jihad is either going to kill you in repentance, should you choose to sit away from Jihad, or it will kill you as a martyr for the cause of Allah…And the human must choose between these two deaths.”

Why weren’t the CIA officers in the field more cautious in dealing with Balawi, who, after all, they had never met before, and who had a long history of pro-jihadist Web activity before he began cooperating? “The kind of people who can penetrate Al Qaeda are jihadis themselves,” says one U.S. intel official. “That’s how it works in the real world. The next Mother Teresa won’t get in.” As for why Balawi was invited onto a CIA base, the official, who would not be named discussing the case, says: “Bear in mind that this was a forward base in a combat zone. You don’t exactly have an abundance of safe houses ideal for agent meetings… And you can’t exactly do it in an open field, either, especially in hostile territory.”

True enough. But that still leaves open the question of why so many CIA operatives were on hand when his vehicle arrived, and why Balawi wasn’t searched earlier. Was the CIA depending on its Jordanian friends to handle that? Possibly: in a general sense, American agencies are very dependent on Jordanian and other allied spy agencies when it comes to enlisting and running human agents in the Muslim world. Whoever met with Balawi that day and drove him into the base may have felt the need to show him some confidence. Running spies is all about trust—making a spy feel like a trusted friend, so he’ll be comfortable betraying his other friends. It’s also worth remembering that Balawi’s bombing was touted by Al Qaeda as a revenge attack for all the recent Predator strikes on some of its top people. The suicide attack “was to avenge our good martyrs,” said a Qaeda statement. So it’s not as if the other side isn’t suffering as a result of good CIA intelligence, and action. But the terrorists are learning and adapting, perhaps more than the spooks had anticipated.

With Christopher Dickey in Paris, Michael Isikoff in Washington, and Ranya Kadri in Amman

Find this article at http://www.newsweek.com/id/229997

© 2010

December 15, 2009

Paper-based data breaches on the rise

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By Brian Krebs  |  December 10, 2009; 6:15 PM ET

More than one quarter of data breaches so far this year involved consumer records that were jeopardized when organizations lost control over sensitive paper documents. Experts say those incidents came to light in large part due to a proliferation of state data breach notification laws, yet current federal proposals to preempt those state measures would allow paper-based breaches to go unreported.

According to the Identity Theft Resource Center, a San Diego based nonprofit, at least 27 percent of the data breaches disclosed publicly in 2009 stemmed from collections of sensitive consumer information printed on paper that were lost, stolen, inadvertently distributed or improperly disposed of.

dumpsterjpg.JPG

Some 45 states and the District of Columbia have enacted laws requiring companies that lose control over sensitive consumer data such as Social Security or bank account numbers to alert affected consumers, and in some cases state authorities. Concerned about the mounting costs of complying with so many different state breach regulations, businesses often find it easier and cheaper to adhere to the strictest state laws.

Congress, though, is considering several federal data breach notification measures that would preempt existing state regulations.The three leading federal proposals, including a bill passed this week by the House of Representatives — and a pair of measures passed by the Senate Judiciary Committee last month, would require notification only when data stored electronically is lost or stolen.

“Computers were supposed to take us to a paperless society, yet computers probably create more paper than before we had them, because now we want a hard copy as well as what’s on the computer,” ITRC co-founder Linda Foley said. “It’s a double danger of course, because paper – especially when it’s just tossed in a dumpster somewhere – is not like data on a hard drive. It’s ready to use, it often contains the consumer’s handwriting and signatures, which can be very useful when you’re talking about forging credit card and mortgage applications.”

Still, it is frequently difficult to determine precisely how many consumer records are jeopardized in paper-based breaches. Indeed, often the closest measure of the size of paper-based data breach is the number of pounds of documents involved, Foley said.

“There was a case earlier this month in Missouri where 2,000 pounds of credit reports, blank checks and copies of Social Security statements were found in a dumpster,” Foley said. “Unfortunately, you pay by the pound for shredding these documents, and that’s the best measure we have sometimes.”

That incident, reportedly involving the former Battlefield, Mo. -based Nationwide Credit Counseling, exposes a frequent source of paper breaches: Companies that go belly-up. And with the ongoing recession claiming more and more companies each day, paper-based breaches are only going to grow as a percentage of overall data spills, Foley predicts.

“What we’re seeing is companies are going out of business and then they take these papers and just toss them, or leave them for the building’s cleaning crew to deal with,” Foley said. “This is a trend that’s only going to get worse.”

According to the ITRC, 17 percent of data breaches reported last year were solely paper-based.

While the federal bills are largely silent on paper breaches, most existing state laws also focus on electronic records. At least two states — Massachusetts and North Carolina – require notification whether the data breached is in electronic or paper form.

David Sohn, senior policy counsel at the Center for Democracy & Technology, said the fact that more than one quarter of data breaches reported this year were paper-based suggests that businesses are in fact reporting paper breaches.

“Our position has been personal data – once digitized — does raise the stakes in terms of ease-of-use,” by identity thieves, Sohn said. “But certainly it is not the case that [breached] paper records pose no threat. The question is: To what extent do companies suffering a breach today think they have an obligation to report paper breaches?”

Stuart Ingis, a partner with the law firm Venable LLP in Washington, said many clients he deals with strictly speaking do not have a legal obligation to report paper-based breaches, but that most of his clients err on the side of caution.

“Most companies really are looking to whether there is likely to be harm to the consumer,” from a breach, Ingis said. “We really don’t have too many scenarios where legitimate companies are trying to hide the fact that they’ve had a breach.”

The ITRC has chronicled 125 paper breaches so far this year, out of a total of 463. Businesses were responsible for 44 or 9.5 percent of the breaches; government agencies and the military caused 27 breaches, or 5.8 percent; lost, stolen or improperly disposed of medical records accounted for 5 percent; financial institutions caused 17 breaches, or 3.7 percent; and educational institutions were responsible for 14 paper breaches, or 3 percent of this year’s total.

November 16, 2009

Thai arrested on espionage charge in Cambodia

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  • Published: 13/11/2009 at 03:35 PM
  • Online news: Local News

Cambodian police have charged a Thai man with spying on fugitive former Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra, further inflaming a diplomatic crisis between the neighbouring countries.

The spy row erupted as Thaksin played a relaxed round of golf with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, underscoring Bangkok’s powerlessness to make Phnom Penh extradite the fugitive politician to serve a jail term for conflict of interest while prime minister.

Siwarak Chothipong, a 31-year-old employee of the Cambodia Air Traffic Service, which manages flights in the country, was accused of stealing Thaksin’s flight schedule and sending it diplomats at the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh, Cambodian deputy police chief Lt-Gen Sok Phal said on Friday.

Lt-Gen Sok Phal alleged that Siwarak handed over the flight schedule to the first secretary at the Thai embassy, who was then ordered by Cambodia on Thursday to leave the country on Thursday for carrying out activities inconsistent with his official duties.

Thailand responded on Thursday by ordering out the first secretary of Cambodia’s mission in Bangkok.

Mr Siwarak appeared in municipal court on Thursday and was charged with stealing information that could impact national security. If found guilty, he faces up to 15 years in jail.

Officials said  police were investigating whether more people were involved.

Thailand rejected the “malicious” allegations against its citizen.

“It’s not true. It is a malicious and false claim,” Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya told reporters before boarding a flight with Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to attend the Apec regional summit in Singapore.

Mr Kasit said he believed Mr Siwarak had been framed. He affirmed that the Foreign Ministry would ensure he receives proper treatment and justice.

As for Thai staff at the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh, Mr Kasit said the Cambodian government was duty-bound to ensure their safety. Thailand accepts the same responsibility for  staff at the Cambodian embassy in Bangkok.

Mr Kasit said problems caused by the former Thaksin regime were still far from at an end. Thaksin was now using a neighbouring country as a base in his efforts to topple the Abhisit government, serving his own interests and causing damage to Thailand without any care for the majority of people.

Cambodia expelled the Thai first secretary and Thailand reciprocated on Thursday in a sign of the growing tensions caused by the Cambodian government’s appointment of Thaksin earlier this month as an economic adviser.

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said on Friday the Thai military attache would remain in Phnom Penh.

Military ties must remain in place as a channel for negotiatons to prevent tension along the border, he said.

He again gave an assruance the government would not let the problems affect the daily lives of Thai people living along the border with Cambodia.

He said Phnom Penh’s demand that the Thai government sack Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya was out of line. This was an internal matter for Thailand and a foreign government had no say in it.

Mr Suthep said  the government was being careful not to stir up too much among pariotism or people might not act rationally.

He was responding to a question about reports that SMS messages had been sent to Cambodian people not to use products made in Thailand.

Thaksin, who was ousted in a 2006 coup, arrived in Cambodia on Tuesday to take up the role and Hun Sen on Wednesday rejected Bangkok’s formal extradition request for Thaksin.

The countries had already recalled their ambassadors last week.

Thaksin on Friday met a group of supporters before playing golf with Hun Sen in the tourist hub of Siem Reap. Hun Sen and Cambodian officials laughed and applauded Thaksin’s shot as he teed off first at the luxury Angkor Golf Resort.

He was later due to meet around 50 MPs from Thailand’s main pro-Thaksin party, Puea Thai, who had crossed the border Friday, Puea Thai lawmaker Pongpan Sunthornrachai said.

Thaksin hit out at the Thai government during a lecture in the capital Phnom Penh on Thursday, accusing Thai rulers of “false patriotism”.

Thaksin has pledged to help impoverished Cambodia understand finance, reduce poverty and lure more foreign investment. Cambodian officials have indicated he would leave the country Friday or Saturday and was not intending to live there.

Abhisit on Thursday ordered a review of two road construction projects with Cambodia that involved loans of more than 1.4 billion baht (42 million dollars) to Phnom Penh, the finance ministry said.

Thailand has already put all talks and cooperation programmes with Cambodia on hold and also tore up an oil and gas exploration deal signed during Thaksin’s time in power.

Tensions were already high between the two countries following a series of clashes over disputed territory near an ancient temple and the row threatens to mar a weekend summit of regional leaders with US President Barack Obama.

Twice-elected Thaksin fled Thailand in August 2008, a month before the Supreme Court sentenced him to two years in jail in a conflict of interest criminal case.

November 8, 2009

Israel spy agency tried to recruit alleged killer

Filed under: Counterintelligence,Intelligence,Israel,Middle East — mungurk @ 11:21

source

Fri Nov 6, 4:59 am ET

JERUSALEM (AFP) – A Jewish settler who was arrested for allegedly having murdered two Palestinians was approached by Israel’s internal security agency to be an informer after the attacks, the agency said Friday.

Jack Teitel, a 37-year-old immigrant from the United States, was arrested in October on suspicions of murdering the men in 1997 while visiting Israel as a tourist, the police announced on Sunday. He is also suspected of being behind a string of bomb attacks since 2006.

When Teitel returned to Israel in 2000, three years after the murders, he was questioned by the Shin Bet internal security service and the police over the killings, but no charges were filed.

It was at that moment that the domestic intelligence agency asked him to serve as its informant in extreme right-wing circles, according to the mass-selling Yediot Aharonot newspaper, which broke the story.

The agency confirmed it had tried to recruit Teitel after the 2000 interrogation, saying in a statement that it “had but a limited number of interviews with him, without result. The contacts were then cut.”

Dubbed the “Jewish terrorist” by the Israeli press, police said Teitel has confessed to the murder of a Palestinian taxi-driver in east Jerusalem and a shepherd in the West Bank, saying the killings were to avenge Palestinian suicide bombings in Israel.

Teitel is also alleged to have placed a bomb near a convent outside Beit Shemesh, west of Jerusalem, two year ago, wounding a Palestinian.

In another bomb attack, a 15-year-old boy was seriously wounded when a device was concealed in a parcel sent to his parents, members of a Jewish sect which embraces Jesus.

Another bomb wounded a leading left-wing Israeli professor, Zeev Sternhell, while two other attacks targeted police stations, police said.

The father of four is a resident of the Shvut Rachel settlement in the occupied West Bank.

October 29, 2009

S.Korea announces arrest of N.Korean spy

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Thu Oct 29, 7:51 am ET

SEOUL (AFP) – South Korean security authorities Thursday announced the arrest of a college lecturer on charges of spying for North Korea, saying he was recruited by Pyongyang’s agents in India.

The man, identified only as Lee, is accused of passing information on South Korean military operations and facilities to the communist North, state prosecutors and the National Intelligence Service said in a joint statement.

Lee, 37, who was recruited in 1992 while studying at a college in New Delhi, visited Pyongyang twice to become a communist party member and received a total of 50,600 dollars in operational funds, they said.

He allegedly stole classified information using his status as a member of the National Unification Advisory Council, a state organisation promoting unification of the peninsula.

Information he passed to the North between 1997 and February this year included locations of key government facilities as well as US and South Korean military facilities, the statement said.

Lee had accumulated military information and data while serving as a troop information and education officer in the army in 2001, it said.

He received a North Korean decoration during a trip to Singapore in 2003 and used some of his operational funds to study in India and also for a doctorate in South Korea, the statement said.

“The case tells our country to check its security system as he has served as an opinion leader in our society,” prosecutor Yoon Kap-Geun told Yonhap news agency, calling him “a (North Korean) scholarship student and spy.”

The two nations have remained technically at war since their 1950-1953 conflict and Seoul several times in recent years has announced the arrest of spies for the North.

In the most famous case last year, a 35-year-old woman who came from the North in the guise of a defector and used sex to secure military secrets was jailed for five years.

North Korea denied she was its agent, calling her “human scum” and describing the trial as a “threadbare charade” orchestrated to heighten tensions.

Seoul’s official data shows more than 4,500 people have been exposed as spies for the North since the peninsula was divided in 1948.

October 27, 2009

Top Secret Bulgarian Intelligence Report Online

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October 26, 2009, Monday

The controversial top secret intelligence report of the Bulgarian State National Security Agency has been published online Monday night.

On Saturday, Bulgaria’s Prime Minister, Boyko Borisov, accused his predecessor Sergey Stanishev of concealing the DANS report from October 2008, which allegedly incriminated top officials with corruption.

Bulgaria’s PM Borisov said he was given the report by former secret agent Aleksei Petrov who gave it to him on Friday, October 23, 2009.

What is said to be the original DANS Report in question is published HERE and HERE. The 26-page report is in Bulgarian.

The report is entitled, “Information Regarding the actions of persons and circles, exerting destructive influence on the functioning of ministries and structures of the state administration.”

The authenticity of the report published online has not been confirmed, and it is unclear who posted it on the Internet.

The beginning paragraph of the alleged top secret report is the following:

“The data coming to DANS indicate the existence of a structure acting parallel to the state authority, which has serious opportunities, funds, and positions for influencing the executive and legislative authorities, and the political and social life in the country. This structure is aspiring to create sustainable forms of parallel authority within the state institutions and services, whose functioning would be guaranteed regardless of the changing of the ruling majority in the government and the Parliament. There are categorical data that representatives of business, state institutions, media, and organized criminal groups in certain cases undertake synchronized actions for achieving their common interests.”

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