From: V.K.Durham@comcast.net
To: V.K.Durham@comcast.net
Sent: 4/29/2013 10:22:55 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: (Reuters) - Tens of millions of US $s in cash were delivered by the CIA in suitcases...
To: V.K.Durham@comcast.net
Sent: 4/29/2013 10:22:55 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: (Reuters) - Tens of millions of US $s in cash were delivered by the CIA in suitcases...
As Constitutional
Governments are systematically bankrupted and overthrown by those who have
bought leaders allowing the bankruptcy's and contamination of our very earths
atmosphere making our environment unsustainable and unlivable as these 'non
humans' have done on other planets.. we now have what is called their "get
out of Dodge" before the SHTF due to Archaeologist working overtime
inability to find the space portals aka windows. Portal2012 4-24-13… “The
Secret Space Program” | Kauilapele's Blog http://www.kauilapele.wordpress.com/2013/04/25/portal2012-4-24-13-the-secret-space-program/
VKD.
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(Reuters) - Tens of
millions of U.S. dollars in cash were delivered by the CIA in suitcases,
backpacks and plastic shopping bags to the office of Afghanistan President
Hamid Karzai for more than a decade, the New York Times says, citing current
and former advisers to the Afghan leader.
The so-called
"ghost money" was meant to buy influence for the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) but instead fuelled corruption and empowered warlords, undermining
Washington's exit strategy from Afghanistan, the newspaper quoted U.S.
officials as saying.
"The biggest source
of corruption in Afghanistan", one American official said, "was the
United States."
The CIA declined to
comment on the report and the U.S. State Department did not immediately
comment. The New York Times did not publish any comment from Karzai or his
office.
"We called it
'ghost money'," Khalil Roman, who served as Karzai's chief of staff from
2002 until 2005, told the New York Times. "It came in secret and it left
in secret."
There was no evidence
that Karzai personally received any of the money, Afghan officials told the
newspaper. The cash was handled by his National Security Council, it added.
In response to the
report, Karzai told reporters in Helsinki after a meeting with Finnish leaders
that the office of the National Security Council had been receiving support
from the U.S. government for the past 10 years. He said the amounts had been
"not big" and the funds were used for various purposes including
assistance for the wounded.
"It's multi-purpose
assistance," he said, without commenting on the report's claims the funds
fuelled corruption and empowered warlords.
However, Afghan Foreign
Ministry spokesman Janan Mosazai told reporters in Kabul that there was no
proof or evidence to back up the claims in the story.
For more than a decade
the cash was dropped off every month or so at the Afghan president's office,
the New York Times said. Handing out cash has been standard procedure for the
CIA in Afghanistan since the start of the war.
The cash payments to the
president's office do not appear to be subject to oversight and restrictions
placed on official American aid to the country or the CIA's formal assistance
programs, like financing Afghan intelligence agencies, and do not appear to violate
U.S. laws, said the New York Times.
U.S. and Afghan
officials familiar with the payments were quoted as saying that the main goal
in providing the cash was to maintain access to Karzai and his inner circle and
to guarantee the CIA's influence at the presidential palace, which wields
tremendous power in Afghanistan's highly centralized government.
Much of the money went
to warlords and politicians, many with ties to the drug trade and in some cases
the Taliban, the New York Times said. U.S. and Afghan officials were quoted as
saying the CIA supported the same patronage networks that U.S. diplomats and
law enforcement agents struggled to dismantle, leaving the government in the
grip of organized crime.
Nahid Fareed, a member
of parliament from western Herat province, who usually supports Karzai's
government, said the claims in the story represented a "serious
issue".
"Any hidden money
that the palace receives from indirect channels, such as spy agencies, notably
the CIA, is against national interest and is treason," Fareed told
Reuters.
In 2010, Karzai said his
office received cash in bags from Iran, but that it was a transparent form of
aid that helped cover expenses at the presidential palace. He said at the time
that the United States made similar payments.
The latest New York
Times report said much of the Iranian cash, like the CIA money, went to pay
warlords and politicians.
For most of Karzai's
11-year reign, there has been little interest in anti-corruption in the army or
police. The country's two most powerful institutions receive billions of
dollars from donors annually but struggle just to recruit and maintain a force
bled by high rates of desertion.
(Additional reporting by
Alistair Bell and Sarah Lynch in Washington; Hamid Shalizi and Mirwais Harooni
in Kabul; Writing by Michael Perry; Editing by Mark Bendeich and Neil Fullick)
2 comments:
well if this isn't cause to take down the CIA and our government cabal, i don't know what is? This needs to go viral!!
And my government doesn't understand why I quit filing/paying my slave taxes a few years back. After finally awakening to all of the corruption, false flag murdering, chem(NOT CON)trail spraying, weather modifying, war proliferating, media manipulating, etc., etc.,etc. that has been perpetrated by said 'government', wouldn't my sanity be in question as to why I would allow my labor to be taxed to pay for these things? We ALL need to start saying NO to this ongoing agenda.
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