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In reply to the discussion: CIA chief: "If I've done something wrong, I'll stand up and admit it" [View all]951-Riverside
(7,234 posts)7. Kind of hard to trust an agency that trains, arms and funds ISIS
and...

Video: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/syria-arming-the-rebels/
NARRATOR: But in recent weeks, they have been receiving more sophisticated weapons. It appears the Obama administration is now allowing select groups of rebels like them to receive U.S.-made anti-tank missiles, known as TOWs. Many of the fighters have filmed themselves firing the missiles. In addition to receiving weapons, the commander says he and his men were taken on a long journey to a secret training camp.
REBEL COMMANDER: [through interpreter] They asked for a group of 80 or 90 fighters from our command, and we headed towards the Turkish border.
NARRATOR: Based on their accounts, we retraced their journey across the border into Turkey. After a 14-hour drive, they say they arrived in the Turkish capital of Ankara and were brought to a hotel. They were kept inside and questioned by Americans, who would only say they were from the military. But the rebels believed they were from the CIA.
REBEL COMMANDER: [through interpreter] We met them for six to seven hours a day. It was medical examinations, questions for each person individually, like, When did you join the uprising? And What was your profession or military rank?
They had tracked our work and asked us to verify information about attacks we carried out, such as who was present and how many men were martyred. Your responses have to match the entire groups.
NARRATOR: A week later, the rebels say they were surprised by what happened next.
REBEL COMMANDER: [through interpreter] We only found out where we were going to be trained on the last day in Ankara, when the Americans said goodbye and that, Tomorrow, well see you in Qatar.
NARRATOR: They were flown 1,500 miles away to Doha, the capital of Qatar, which is a key U.S. ally in the Persian Gulf.
REBEL COMMANDER: [through interpreter] We drove for about two, two-and-a-half hours to reach the training ground. It was close to the Saudi border. We didnt know where we were because it was desert all around.
NARRATOR: Over the course of three weeks, they say they were trained by Americans at a base in the desert guarded by Qatari soldiers. Like many of the rebels who were sent to Qatar, 21-year-old Hussein had never had any previous military training.
HUSSEIN: [through interpreter] They trained us to ambush regime or enemy vehicles and cut off the road. They also trained us on how to attack a vehicle, raid it, retrieve information or weapons and munitions, and how to finish off soldiers still alive after an ambush.
NARRATOR: The rebels were outfitted with brand-new uniforms and boots.
MUHAMMAD ALI: [subtitles] Those trousers are from them, right?
HUSSEIN: [subtitles] Yeah. We got these boots in training.
MUHAMMAD ALI: The Americans were warning the fighters not to tell this story at all. And even at one point, they told them, If in any case this story will be published, we will stop funding you or arming you.
NARRATOR: The CIA and the State Department declined to comment on the fighters accounts of arming and training, though the Obama administration has said it plans to step up support to the rebels, and there have been other reports the CIA is running covert training out of Jordan.
REBEL COMMANDER: [through interpreter] They asked for a group of 80 or 90 fighters from our command, and we headed towards the Turkish border.
NARRATOR: Based on their accounts, we retraced their journey across the border into Turkey. After a 14-hour drive, they say they arrived in the Turkish capital of Ankara and were brought to a hotel. They were kept inside and questioned by Americans, who would only say they were from the military. But the rebels believed they were from the CIA.
REBEL COMMANDER: [through interpreter] We met them for six to seven hours a day. It was medical examinations, questions for each person individually, like, When did you join the uprising? And What was your profession or military rank?
They had tracked our work and asked us to verify information about attacks we carried out, such as who was present and how many men were martyred. Your responses have to match the entire groups.
NARRATOR: A week later, the rebels say they were surprised by what happened next.
REBEL COMMANDER: [through interpreter] We only found out where we were going to be trained on the last day in Ankara, when the Americans said goodbye and that, Tomorrow, well see you in Qatar.
NARRATOR: They were flown 1,500 miles away to Doha, the capital of Qatar, which is a key U.S. ally in the Persian Gulf.
REBEL COMMANDER: [through interpreter] We drove for about two, two-and-a-half hours to reach the training ground. It was close to the Saudi border. We didnt know where we were because it was desert all around.
NARRATOR: Over the course of three weeks, they say they were trained by Americans at a base in the desert guarded by Qatari soldiers. Like many of the rebels who were sent to Qatar, 21-year-old Hussein had never had any previous military training.
HUSSEIN: [through interpreter] They trained us to ambush regime or enemy vehicles and cut off the road. They also trained us on how to attack a vehicle, raid it, retrieve information or weapons and munitions, and how to finish off soldiers still alive after an ambush.
NARRATOR: The rebels were outfitted with brand-new uniforms and boots.
MUHAMMAD ALI: [subtitles] Those trousers are from them, right?
HUSSEIN: [subtitles] Yeah. We got these boots in training.
MUHAMMAD ALI: The Americans were warning the fighters not to tell this story at all. And even at one point, they told them, If in any case this story will be published, we will stop funding you or arming you.
NARRATOR: The CIA and the State Department declined to comment on the fighters accounts of arming and training, though the Obama administration has said it plans to step up support to the rebels, and there have been other reports the CIA is running covert training out of Jordan.

...then there's programs like MKUltra, MKNaomi and MKDelta where the CIA conducted secret and still classified experiments on us citizens.
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CIA chief: "If I've done something wrong, I'll stand up and admit it" [View all]
bobthedrummer
Sep 2014
OP
I wonder what the late Michael Hastings article on Brennan would have revealed to US.
bobthedrummer
Sep 2014
#4
If You Thought Obama's Drone Godfather Was Powerful, Wait 'Til He's at the CIA (1-7-13 Wired article
bobthedrummer
Sep 2014
#6
No US "boots on the ground"= private contractors, they'll do anything if the price is right
bobthedrummer
Sep 2014
#9
I agree, this is from libertarian publication and Greenwald is libertarian
Todays_Illusion
Sep 2014
#22
Lack of trust in agency? Who wouldn't trust the CIA? It's not like they're spies or something.
DesertDiamond
Sep 2014
#13
"The most efficient accident, in simple assassinations, is a fall of 75 feet or more onto a hard
bobthedrummer
Sep 2014
#14
"Brennan expresses frustration with Senate and media while decrying lack of trust in agency..."
Mr_Jefferson_24
Sep 2014
#16
Yes Sir, I did notice that, in the context of "We don't torture..." & "Well, we tortured some folks"
bobthedrummer
Sep 2014
#23
Little warning, theguardian.com, Greenwald, are libertarian and strongly anti-Obama.
Todays_Illusion
Sep 2014
#21
I appreciate the staff of The Intercept, especially cofounder Jeremy Scahill
bobthedrummer
Sep 2014
#25
Gee, protecting US by denying US our rights-goes back quite away into history w/o accountability
bobthedrummer
Oct 2014
#27
Walter F. Mondale was one of the politicians that proposed Intelligence Committees in 1966
bobthedrummer
Oct 2014
#28