Spying is lying, spies tell lies
By Jon Rappoport
In recent articles, I've highlighted items from the latest WikiLeaks data-dump of CIA files. For example:
The CIA's use of other nations' hacking tools, in order to
give the impression that, when the CIA hacks into secret areas, it looks
like other nations did the hacking.
All this is SOP for the CIA and intelligence agencies around the world.
Spies tell lies. A day without lying is a day without joy.
Spies play chess. "Well, when we leak THIS information to the
press, they'll emphasize the source of the leak (of course we know it's
a fake source we've chosen). But when we leak THAT information, the
press will emphasize the content of the leak---which is what we want
them to do in that case."
Naïve people are shocked that the CIA could have fabricated
the whole "Russia hacked the US election" story. But this is what the
CIA does. This is another day at the office.
On the other hand, Russian intelligence could have hacked
(influenced) the US election. And to put a further twist on it, Russia
could have made that move, anticipating that US intelligence would
discover it and go public with it. And then Russia would covertly launch
a planned campaign to ridicule the CIA for claiming such an
"absurdity."
During the Cold War, several important KGB spies defected to
the US. The CIA then proceeded to vet them, to find out whether they
were genuine, or were sent here to seed the CIA with disinformation. As
you can imagine, the whole business developed severe problems.
For example: "All right, yes, the KGB sent me to America to
confuse you. But now I'm telling you the truth. I'm giving you actual
secrets. And I want to stay here. I don't want to go home. If I go
home, the KGB will vet me to see whether I actually gave you real
secrets..."
CIA: "Maybe we can triple this Russian. He's now on our side,
we think. So we send him back, claiming we couldn't get anything useful
out of him. But now he's ours. So we give him a bunch of lies to tell
his bosses about us, the CIA..."
In the end, nobody on either side knows what's going on. But they play the game anyway.
The CIA is a reality-creator and a reality-destroyer. They
pick and choose what to do in each situation. But it would be folly to
imagine Agency people always do brilliant work. They misestimate
blowback. They fail to handle blowback. They try to pick an outside
scapegoat on whom to blame the blowback. They try to limit the blowback
by defaming, discrediting, blackmailing, or killing people.
They rewrite history. They change sequences of events. They
invent events that never happened. They blame people who don't even
exist. They present themselves as bumblers, to hide their more
intelligent operations. They hold forums designed to show their work as
superficial information-gathering, as if they were little more than a
think-tank. They pretend to cooperate with Congress, while they spy on
Congress.
Meanwhile, the press pretends to hold an innocent and
respectful view of the CIA, dutifully reporting every piece of
information that comes their way from the Agency. "Today, the CIA
disclosed..." Disclosed? Or fabricated?
The CIA is perhaps the biggest fake news operation in the world. It exhales fake news as matter of course.
So naturally, it attracts men and women who have a bias in
favor of fabricating. "Do you dream about lying with impunity? Contact
our personnel office for employment opportunities."
If a lie serves a greater truth, release the lie. If a truth serves a greater lie, tell the truth.
The old dictum, "garbage in, garbage out," doesn't apply to the Agency. The CIA is the Garbage Man for the known universe.
It's rather astonishing, at this late date, that more people don't get the con.
The CIA is a hustler operating a shell-game on a
streetcorner. Except, lo and behold, all sorts of rubes are trying to
jostle their way forward, to pay homage. And the cops are never going to
show up to sweep the hustler away. The hustler is the cops.
"I was born to lie. But I always tell the truth. Trust me."
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