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tv   Opaque Worlds  Deutsche Welle  June 23, 2022 3:15am-4:01am CEST

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sadie o money vill classes feler midsize your money. he's been criticized by some pundits in england, the moving to an easier league whereby and when the title every season. but if he ends up having to replace lavon dos gate, he faces one of the biggest challenges of his career and is in his update at this our coming up next, a new addition of our documentary series jack found on the power of under cover agencies statement for that, i'm play richardson in berlin for me in the entire team working behind the scenes. thanks for joining us. on the green. and then you feel worried about the planet me to on neil, host of the on the green fence podcast and to me it's clear remains to trade. join
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me for a deep dive into the green transformation for me, for you before the plan. ah . were pittsburgh 2009. the u. s. pointed the finger ready run yesterday and the united states, united kingdom and france, was at a detailed evidence to be i a year demonstrating that the islamic republic of iran has been building a cover uranium enrichment facility for several years. this is the de runs leaders immediately suspected spies in their ranks compared to talk to orders were given to hunt down those who had disclosed nuclear secrets in the process. iranian intelligence came across an encrypted platform where c i. e. agents exchanged information. the iranians work who are also very active in iraq,
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had somehow been able to compromise that system. if a run could crank the secret ca, messages the lives of hundreds of agents would be in danger. with super computer generated high cryptographic systems, you need a super computer to attack it. a china has some of the worlds fastest super computers and good relations with iran. so it may be that the iranians passed the intercept over to the chinese. they processed it. they were able to decrypt it with the help of the decrypted messages, the iranians expose the ring of c i, agents, the discovery had unexpected consequences. and several from the cia switch sides. a number of important cases of ca, officers who were turned by the chinese and were working for them most damaging to the cia. was jerry lee's betrayal from 2010. he helped chinese intelligence
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unmasked, at least 20 cia informants in the country. they were jailed or executed. in one case, the punishment was especially cruel. not only was the spy executed, but also his pregnant wife was executed as well. and this was done on closed circuit television so that the people in the ministry where he worked could witness the event. chinese intelligence operations range from extremely brutal to almost silent. a former senior official in vienna se said that russia is like a hurricane. and china is like climate change. i think that in the 20 twenty's we'll probably see the chinese spying the heck out of us. on the other hand will be spying the heck out of them. ah, ah, ah. in
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mid 2019 a, chechen man was crossing berlin's 2 garden park. the man was living in germany under a false name. out of nowhere, a cyclist appeared, carrying a pistol with a silencer attached to the victims. a lincoln hung goes really was shot 3 times. for years he had fought against russia as a militia leader in the caucasus does offer at the new zebra. the, the victim had a really checkered history in the chechen wars done. after that, it was clear that georgia intelligence had maybe recruited him isn't the right phrase for life, but he definitely cooperated with them with him. he was used for negotiations, for example, on long angles. that's in 2001 on gosh, really join the chechnya and military resistance movement, which later became the islamist caucuses. emerett knocked him often battle in go
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against him until after an apparent attack on him was only narrowly stopped in georgia. he went to ukraine in of san contact from his contact from the georgia intelligent service still working there today. the size sunglasses. that means russia must have considered this man an enemy 2 or even 3 times over, unused, that apparently put him on a russian intelligence death list. and a tortoise listless wilson diamond, cisco potter there are said to be as many as 20 targets on that list. russia wants revenge the suspect in the hunger. sh, feely killing is also suspected of a 2013 shooting that was caught on camera in moscow. there to a bike was involved. the suspect is fighting crusty cough, a former soldier rehab because of a lack of russian co operation on this issue. we've expelled to russian embassy employees from the countries. butch after slanders have used but vladimir putin was unmoved at the week. but cham,
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which he has rosky could originally, but he has kissed them that he had not crept in a fair russian side, had repeatedly asked our german colleagues for the extradition of disbanded this murderer who beat. unfortunately, there was no agreement on the issue in listening. same opinion with the world of intelligence services can be brutal, some under them ignorant, easy. it also signals the extent of one's power to other nations. right, when it comes to achieving goals through lethal and military means that restraint has fallen away line because the international community simply hasn't done enough to correct the situation for it's effective. so it's used with less and less restrain with the ultimate one gram dying. that's when the suspect went on trial in berlin, russia and its intelligence services were also on the dock. the accused denied everything, calling it a case of mistaken identity. was
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the park murder, also a way of sending a message to germany in the selected as intelligence agencies would see, it was the act didn't really concerned germany. hawkins like other stains as they reserve the right to hunt any one they deem a terrorist anywhere in the world. and if necessary, shoot them dead animals up to a feast. traitors faced the same fate defector sergey scree. pal was poisoned in england. decent as on thus spectacularly, and these especially sensational cases take place according to time and opportunity site. when kelly, i think about it. if mister scrape all had lived in berlin, there would have been another t a gotten case. is she homicide your years? russian intelligence has had a policy of punishing traitors wherever they live on a topic cloth, vimovo, c o. c. it wasn't always that way. in the cold war, spies like rudolph able, which changed for us prisoners, often and potsdam,
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on the outskirts of berlin. under the watchful eyes of the shed asi, but even then motors also took place in 1954 k g b defector. nicolai's hall clove, told western media that he was ordered to poison a dissident in germany using a poison dart from his cigarette case. oh, clothes family was then sent to a labor camp bus its best hopa as far as western europe was concerned, both superpowers turned away from secret service assassinations that says that because many cases led to a huge public media outcry around the world like tom and they wanted to avoid that altamont for mine. cases like that of georg markoff, were to sensational. the bulgarian was murdered in london in 1978, using a poisoned bullet, fired from an umbrella. the u. s. to planted assassinations as
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revealed to congress in 1975. have you brought with you on some of those in i says which would have been able to say i had used this poison for we haven't the for killing people. no, don't fight it. does this little fire the darn it does was kim fire they smaller than was alons input in the us. it was domestic scandals following watergate that led to secret service assassinations being officially bound by the president warden since 2002, the cia seemed to once again find any means justified. this is maria in eastern poland, far from the capital, warsaw, and near the border with bellows hidden in a forest is a polish secret service facility. this is where the ca has taken members of al
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qaeda and other terrorism suspects. once in poland, they were tortured by c. i. agents similar things have happened in bagram in afghanistan and abu ghraib prison in iraq, where the torture included humiliation in poland. prisoners were interrogated using illegal methods as ordered by ca, leadership. even today, the area is under tight security. military police follow our camera team were filmed, and our cars searched in 2017 a civil lawsuit by inmates revealed the extent of cia practices, lawyers for a victim. interviewed jose rodriguez, a former c. i a covert operations officer, i just saw that the record is clear for the techniques for which you sort approval
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were the attention grass walling facial hold. facial slab, cramped confinement, wall standing, fest positions, sleep deprivation, waterboard use of diapers, insects and mach burial. i'm not asking what got approved. i'm asking whether those were the techniques for which you requested approval. yes. today is january 16th the ca, hired psychologist jeans, e mitchell, and paid his company $81000000.00 to develop enhanced interrogation method was off your pennsylvania at the request of gibbons p. c. the 1st victim was i'll tell you the member opposite. abida, who, why was he water board and after he started cooperating, you'd have to ask the cia why they wanted to continue doing that?
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well, i was the head of it and my analysts were concerned that perhaps he was not compliant . i was due by dall was among those tortured for weeks in poland. he lost and i where they there voluntarily. there were not there voluntarily, but they could stop the interrogation a they agreed to comply. the prisoners were later sent from poland to guantanamo bay. there to the c i a and f b, i use torture. i was so 70 days of intensive torture, nor sleep 6 will fall, beating no medication, nor food. i'm not allowed to go to the bathroom. i have to p and do everything in my clothes. you know, because i was chain, they say either i beg them or i do in my clothes and i chose to do in my clothes. former police officers were also involved in trying to get the prisoners to talk
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to lieutenant russel zullie is a police officer from chicago. he gave me a letter in that letter. it says that my mother would be kidnap and to put in a prison where of the world only man my heart bravo. and i know that mormon, that there was nothing to lose. for several years, muhammad told seller he had contact with al qaeda terrorists. he new followers of osama bin laden, he also met students from the so called hamburg, so among the group where would be terrorists, including mohammed, alta and z, a gera. they were later tasked with quickly learning how to pilot a large plane. the pair were regular visitors to shine gun a mean hamburg street and home to
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a solid fist mosque where they made friends with others, including rumsey, been sheep, who became the groups leader. later in 2003, been out. she was tortured and interrogated for weeks and accused old salary of being the person who had told the 911 pilots how to get to afghanistan. ah, random calls over here right now. we might have a hard yard over here to america 11 time to call a boy with the one that had the bowling. wow. with knowing that,
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like in the boy, always more the attacks on new york and washington left around 3000 people did and forever changed the united states. george w bush had been president for a few months. he called on the international community to fight a war on terror. there is universal support for the american people. sadness in their voice. but understanding that we have just seen the 1st floor of the 21st century or has been declared us. we will lead the world to victory with intelligence agencies were charged with ensuring that victory, especially the cia,
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one of the most famous covered up figures in american history. culture black famously said to congress, there was a before $911.00 and an after $911.00. he says after 911, the clubs came off beginning in 2002. the ca build secret torture prisons, not only in poland, but also in romania. al qaeda members were interrogated in these so called black sites in thailand. damn war error surveillance facility became a torture prison ah. from guantanamo bay, in cuba to eastern europe to asia. the ca is black sites cover the globe. the cooperation of foreign countries and sea ice detention and termination for him is absolutely essential. there was no way to do this program on us soil. the cia needed the cooperation of foreign officials and they're willing to pay for their cooperation. every nation in every region. now has
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a decision to make either you are with us or you are with the terrorists with you freedom and the dignity of every life. what was that was said of them? i love those people at that asked because of our way of life. but we will never abandon our way of life. ironically, the 1st thing that they did, they abandoned their will of life of democracy freedom. and that was the real win of the extra him is the usa which warn afghanistan and iraq were the justification, was supposed to weapons of mass destruction. in doing so, they made enemies of muslims, the world over milan in 2003 abil omar was snatched from the street
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after midday prayers. the operation was carried out by 23 c. i. agents including portuguese operative sabrina de sosa. the ca wasn't concerned about breaking italian law till of even israel, for decades. a hot bed of conflict in the mid 19 ninety's gestures towards peace were once again shattered. this time a bus bombing carried out by islamists, the palestinians. most of the bombs had been constructed by yaya. sh. a 1996, an informant working for israel, shin bet domestic intelligence service slipped him a cellphone containing semtex and explosive. the device exploded, healing i ash. israel's foreign intelligence service most sod also carries out assassinations. at the time, it was led by shopped. i shall eat e ah, masha hulu may seek william god is targeted, killing
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a good and effective strategy on hold. i a law. uh yes. ashley shay? gold. why, ah, she would show us, let's say i'm trying to find and eliminate the leader of a terrorist group and he knows it with the data syllable. then he'll spend half his time protecting himself full of flea come, she was last time. he then can't use to organize terror and all that small lost the glow. how me shame a hose, males luncheon will. sure, we'll mark the, shall bonneville the length to which most sand goes can be seen in this surveillance camera footage from a hotel in dubai. in 2010 israeli agents disguised as tourists pursued a target mahmoud. alma bu a high ranking hamas member. a most odd operative suffocated the man in his room
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with a pillow. def he love, i made a mistake on molly, which that then had of masada has since admitted i, tim. the operation had to be carried out so quickly. that massage didn't have enough time to produce a false identity and was up near me to put up to unfortunate denzil individuals had to travel under the same identity again and again, i can eat and it hits my muscle. massage agents were unmasked. such teams aren't always that big. in 1995 in malta, an agent shocked at the head of your stomach haunt group frantisha khaki. the terrorist group was weakened for months. why? because i saw shouldn't. oh yes, in the past the assassination of leaders has sometimes led to the destruction of their entire organisations. look at the monique, shall i go. as his slow thing, israel's greatest foe, iran has shown that it has a nuclear ambitions of its own. in 2021. it tested
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a missile capable of reaching space. nuclear missiles would pose a serious threat to the small country that is already targeted by conventional rockets fired by palestinian groups. in 2018 is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu didn't mince words in front of the cameras. you long lard, thicker or sorry, looker here with you on the voted separate to high to see for you while but israel didn't stop and accusations in the media using guns and explosives. most odd agents also killed several iranian nuclear scientists. in iran, the murdered scientists were celebrated as martyrs. lou
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key part of the plan was to form new organizations to continue the work. this is how dr. morse st. fuck reside a head of the project. ahmad put it. remember that name. in november 2020 the head of iran's nuclear program was attacked while driving with his wife. massage. had set up a disguised machine gun and triggered it remotely. the nuclear dentist had no chance when iran announced it would retaliate. but anyway, oh no, no, no, no, many iranians have been killed around the world in recent years. well, did it start a war? no, she has a gun. hamlin, we'll come off intelligence agencies,
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carry out their orders, them, and then all of them will go out the in democracies, the government is responsible for intelligence agencies, family and children. it can't escape that responsibility could la jolla leave law who will, who? los angeles. for many years michael, german worked in the city as an f. b. i agent at times he did undercover work, infiltrating right wing terror groups. terrorism is attacking and what i learned working undercover in for a militant groups was that it is at sign of weakness. so for a group to be using this tactic is a clue right away that there are very well aware in 1991 los angeles. and the entire us were shaken by the police violence against rodney king, amid huge divisions in the country, german infiltrated california's neo nazi,
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seen the undercover agent trying to comprehend the extreme right. he's individuals who they're not just in their own world, making their own decisions. they're often reacting to things that government does during the time that i was under cover, that was just ruby ridge siege. it was during waco when horrible cj in inferno killed dozens of people in 1993 the f. b. i rated occult in waco, texas, around 80, people died hard to convince somebody to become a fugitive for the rest of their life. but if the government is engaging in activities, torture, kidnappings, detention without a trial, then you're going to increase the risk that one of these people is going to take matters into their own hand. at the end of 2001, the conquest of afghanistan was celebrated as a triumph in the war on terror. in bagram, near kabul,
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us soldiers began torturing their prisoners. they saw almost every one as an enemy, or you have to look at what the intelligence was at the time the apparatus. tighter was roughly 4 to 5000 people. and that doesn't justify a huge ramping up and government authority. expenditure is in wars and multiple countries. are the masterminds on the war on terror? were men like u. s. secretary of defense donald rumsfeld, her part of it was we've had a generational war that will be like the cold or where we can justify any expenditure. we can justify complete secrecy without any sort of interference from overseers in congress or certainly the pub way.
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it wasn't just the military and the cia that were involved in underhand operations . with the s b, i were to hear a narrative that manage their ages. go with, if they ever got to a point where they thought it was going too far along, they should just invite themselves to leave. that, in fact, was never true. this be i shows up, you know, talking to without good guys who've been to do coffee by. they know that do talk to them because you haven't been taught to him, you know, and this is like very evil. if the eye is as bad as the military as bad does the cia so make no mistake? if me i, agent, when they came to want dental, they, they wanted to bury me alive. the war on terror was beginning to threaten
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freedom and the rule of law as we ways to war on terror overseas. we're also going after the terrorist here at home and a powerful national counter terrorism center was charged with keeping alti eda and many others in it's sites. that theory was that people get infected with some radical idea, and that puts them on a path towards committing a terrorist act. so instead of looking at those 5000 people who are part of al qaeda on 911, we're looking at a 1000000 people. one suspected an individual was always a potential threat. the patriot act is help save american lives and it's protected american liberty. they were looking at everyone, including every american and gathering our information with the idea that somehow they would be able to sift it and find out which of us were lord via threatened the future. rock obama took over the apparatus and continued to expand it.
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and his successors aren't cutting the intelligence budget either, though the current amount to secret in 2010, an estimated $80000000000.00 went to 17 intelligence agencies. and the u. s. is blanketed by an almost continuous network of intelligent sites. over the last 10 years, congress has been trying to figure that out. and how many people are part of this apparatus? when congress asked, every department had to identify the number of people with clearances that they're responsible for. they couldn't do it, and they didn't even know how many people that they had given ers. ah, the digital revolution has prompted a kind of gold rush among intelligence agencies around the world. laws hardly count for anything any more. ah.
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the tools that had been intended to protect the public had been in many ways used to attack the public flagrant violations of us law, constitutional rights, and more importantly, human rights. what do you do when the most powerful institutions in society have become the least accountable to society? edward snowden leaked an essay documents hinted at a massive extent of surveillance. they also incriminated germany's federal intelligence service, the b and d. in 2014 a bonus stock committee investigated how far the cooperation between the agencies went. thomas thomas, drake was with the nfl setting. yes. the former intelligence officer made a serious accusation, sang the b n. d supplied the us with data for drone warfare that it was an arm of the essay in this a, the indices and search terms. and the b n d provided the data constitutional
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rights were being systematically undermined. one intelligence agency was searching national data for digital traces on behalf of the other a devastating system as they hunt for as much data as possible intelligence agencies need helpers are, are government sandra said we are going to need a lot of data about what people are uptown, so we're going to let the market take care of it and then that will be the place where we dip our straws and we can just slip up the data that we need. and that's how we're going to connect the dots that allow these companies to pursue these very strange arrangements where we think we're searching on google, but they're actually capturing every aspect of our online behavior in order to mine it for predictive signals. every year,
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the extent of the surveillance increases with in the state of utah. the in the say, has huge server parks. they can theoretically store and analyze all of the world's digital data. but information alone can't prevent terrorist attacks. there was an investigation before the $911.00 commission demonstrating that the $911.00 conspiracy was lost in the vast strains of data that were being collected on a regular basis. the problem was, by the time the report came out, those vast streams had already turned into raging rivers. in november, 2009, a us soldier, shot and killed 13 people at fort hood. the f. b. i had had the perpetrator in its sights for some time pick any of the successful plots that weren't stopped after 911. fort hood is a good example because the former f b, i,
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director william webster ran a commission. and what they found was that there were concrete pieces of evidence that suggested that something was wrong with his communications, but the data explosion within the f b i obscured those pieces. critical pieces were this other attackers of also evaded f. b i n c i a despite all their data, like those in orlando and manchester is often come on shore test hired from one can certainly say that a lot of things had slowed me since september 11th. of isn't yet spy yet, but it's now 2 decades later when defend them on was and i think you really have to critically evaluate what went well asked and what went badly actually. and then also scale things, facts called justice and things didn't happen that way. and it remains a problem to this day in, besides, these days, u. s. intelligence agencies can monitor and eva, and even kill suspects in almost any corner of the world. yet you see
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a lot of lisky, i a employed and decided on drone attacks him at the end of the day. it's highly problematic when an intelligence agency gets its hands on that kind of weaponry. in the 1st place, a calmed president george w bush laid the groundwork for his successor dish. good fun for it. all the step from torture and interrogation to targeted killings happened under obama bama. proceed. hope to do nothing in the face of terrorist networks would invite far more civilian casualties. simply put, these strikes have saved lives. leticia the abundance of course, obama decided on and supported the massive expansion of the drone program and targeted killings which globally speaking, continue to be basically the most serious crimes committed and the name of the state. and i'm begun with what up the drones don't kill just terrorists. im human in pakistan till when places like yemen and
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pakistan's, they've ended up terrorizing whole swans of land and people living there. but be this creates a never ending cycle of violence as the candidate doesn't come back. terrorism and a fe, it feeds terrorism in town with, even with drones. the covert war on terror can not be one. it's well documented that this methodology we have creating the secret compartmentalized part of our government that we don't ask about leads to considerable waste to abuse their estimates. that just the effort in the quote unquote war on terrorism. with a 6 trillion dollar expenses. since 2001 secret operations and violence have taken precedence over diplomacy for jason, bless archie's, who's deployed in cobble for years. it's the wrong strategy. to me, it is one of the great mistakes of the united states has ever made in the context
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of trying to counter terror because all that that was create more terrorists. so you have met as, as ation of terrorism. i think a large part of that is because groups like are kind of groups like isis have been able to take a message that the united states is carried out. terrible torture and has killed innocent civilians and have been able to effectively market that to audiences who have then eventually joined groups like isis and al qaeda. after the american withdrawal, the threat of terrorist violence has grown enough canister them and offshoot of the islam state, used a suicide bomber to kill dozens of people. the u. s. responded with a drone strike, but it's intelligence was wrong and the strike hit the wrong people. consequences for such actions seemed to be lacking. even revelations about the use of torture in 2014 didn't and careers at the cia enter your role. and there was
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a success in this approval of this near 7000 page report, which is the largest report and senate history. but it's also important to recognize at the very same committee that approved this report, also voted to confirm gina hassle, who was involved in the torture program at c. i a director just a few years after completing deborah. it's been nearly 50 years since in operations officer rose up through the ranks to become the director . and after the experience of the last 2 months, i think i know why that is, ah, c, i, a officers don't have to fear punishment, and they can bend the truth to suit themselves. have you consulted with president trump or members of his administration with regard to quote unquote, bringing back torture? no, well i would never work. we never use torture, which i don't know what you're talking about. b,
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c i. e doesn't refer to torture or just to interrogation methods that get results. be conducted this review over a number of years in a basement with no windows just computers hooked up to a server. and that servers where the cia produced these 6300000 pages of records and what we saw most classified pages again and again. and again, was that when detainees were tortured, they fabricated information. in other words, they told the interrogators exactly what they wanted to. jones, 53 years of cia data, he was probably spied on himself at one point that they went in to the computers that were being used by the senate intelligence committee staff went for the emails, went through the same time messages of staff, and certainly went through drafts of the report, reportedly a u. s. intelligence agency breaking into the networks of its own senate. i have
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grave concerns that the cia so she may well have violated the separation of powers principles. embodied in the united states constitution, yoshi i hecky into santa computers. nothing could be further from the truth and he would crush nice to see you again was ca, denies the accusation instead accusing daniel jones are betraying secret that he study on the sy detention the senators, the configuration time of the criminal referral against staff that was again later found to be fabricated by the c. i were all tactics to delay oversight is the c. i a in danger of spinning out of control. senate intelligence committee in the house intelligence committee were not briefed on the c eyes detention interrogation program until the same day. president bush made a public revelation about the program in september of 2006. the c. i itself also found that it hadn't briefed president bush on the program until years later. i
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thought there would be real bipartisan outrage at the fact that the c, i a knowingly provided false information, the president and i states. and of course, congress in the department of justice officials like michael hayden, a former and essay and cia chief, have downplayed the issue. that was c, i a officers and actually i officers for the most part on television. continuing to push the same misinformation. i think we have a grill accountability crisis in our country and you know, the c i, director was trying to mislead again. the president, congress and american people. and there are 0 consequences for that. ah, germany has also been effected. the war on terror is filling the ranks of potential terrorist attackers. among them was army, some re who murdered 12 people in berlin in 2016. despite the fact that german intelligence had informed among the people he associated with the latin hin visor, austin london. we had information from the state intelligence agency of mecklenburg,
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western pomeranian. it's an informant apparently said that honest summary had connections to a large family in berlin. that itself was said to have connections to organized crime act. lauren enforcement couldn't follow up in time just because the state intelligence agency didn't do close the information from what soon as possible, given that information that could have saved lives wasn't revealed even after the attack that problem. the problem is that the question of whether ambry had accomplished his in the attack has been completely sidelines. there's a very real danger that suspected accomplices. a still out there. information about undercover informants remain secret. meanwhile, potential accomplices are spared, helmeted and sweden, and as i was also on the 2nd investigative committee into the nsu, tara sal, and experienced exactly the same thing there, paloma child lawmakers have no incisive very little insight into the activities of
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informants. when happens, the committee was also denied the opportunity to call as a witness the leader of the informants who was presumably directly involved with on a summary, we filed a complaint with the federal constitutional court, but it was unsuccessful for cash. in february 2021. the german constitutional court decided that a person deploying informants was not accountable to parliament yet, so i'm glad to hear from zayden, doug olson. call you soon foolish. from the point of view of the former government . as i'm the court ruled that the whole landscape of secret informants could completely escape parliamentary oversight. mendoza, and in my opinion, that's an act of madness. so i don't d legitimizes the whole field a jesus godson, but i serve through it to stop the stop, especially in the difficult times we're living through. i think it's a serious mistake for our constitutional state and should be of a feel him in play golf was one of extra i do believe that we need intelligence services institutes because it's just objectively the case that there are mass of
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attacks on all rule of law is gone, our country, and on your must see right from all sorts of places and zanna, gretsch daughter of the land of our hope. our gift germany is an intelligence battlefield, with russian chinese, iranian turkish and american operative spying and violating german law, skipped when it comes to the politics of security. there are many more actors than there used to be have. yeah, well those actors did exist in the past, but they weren't as relevant as the big players wasn't play. in fact, it would have been wise to keep a closer eye on them as well. going to shop. ah, so should germany try to compete? ah, he mentioned in, on some people in this country have the right for germany to be different than unjust regimes and dictator, even ones where people are monitored in a way that is similar to the eastern, imaged ozzy apparatus. yeah, i got to go farm didn't i think it's going to be a bigger problem moving forward as more popular stations like china and india
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become ascendant. what kind of ah, model have we created for them other than they can do what they want by force? secret services continue to gain power and some have developed a dangerous life of their own. only spectacular individual cases find their way into the news. the rest remain hidden in the shadows. ah ah, i'm more precise than you. i am stronger in faster and more efficient and cheaper. your favorite products could be made for less
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money. eli musk, thanks. oh, replace you one day. i see that you're not convinced. let's talk about it. made in germany. in 30 minutes on d, w. i. c. as in art levin died jakarta, what an artist do to help people and the government to use. okay, last minute wiggling done. i did this in 90 minutes on d. w. o. in co,
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mike speaking, how can miss passionate hatred of a people be explained? a gold hung go. a history of anti semitism is a history of stigmatization and exclusion of religious and political power struggles. it's a history of slender, of hatred and violence, or even 77 years after the holocaust hatred towards jews is still pervasive. oh, a history that he semitism starts july 2nd on d w ah, ah, ah, this is dw news, and these are our top stories. at least 1000 people have been killed and 1500 more injured in a powerful earthquake in afghanistan. rescue workers are digging through the.

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