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Discussion => Security => Topic started by: kmfkewm on March 06, 2012, 09:01 pm

Title: [intel] - DEA has turned into a massive international intelligence agency
Post by: kmfkewm on March 06, 2012, 09:01 pm
publicintelligence.net/wikileaks-cables-show-dea-has-become-international-spy-network/

Quote
    The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has become a vast international spy network, cables revealed by WikiLeaks show.

    The cables depict drug agents juggling diplomacy and law enforcement in countries where politicians and traffickers are enmeshed and drug rings rival state power, The New York Times reported Saturday.

    The DEA now has 87 offices in 63 countries and close partnerships with governments that distrust the CIA, such as Nicaragua and Venezuela. Many nations are eager to take advantage of the agency’s drug detection and wiretapping technologies.

    Some collaborations seem to go well, with the agency helping to bring down whole cartels. But the cables also cite scores of informants and a few agents who have been killed in Mexico and Afghanistan.

    In Paraguay and Panama, the cables show, governments pressured the DEA to spy on their opponents, leading to friction with Washington.

    In Guinea, the prime minister admitted to the U.S. ambassador in 2008 that the country’s top kingpin was Ousmane Conte, son of President Lansana Conte. After his father’s death, Conte went to prison.

    Later, a publicized burning of confiscated narcotics turned out to be a hoax.

WikiLeaks reveals US drug agency’s intelligence role (The Economic Times):

    The US Drug Enforcement Administration , an agency tasked with the job of tracking drug traffickers around the world, has over the years transformed into a global intelligence organisation with its tentacles extending far beyond narcotics, according to secret American diplomatic cables .

    The organisation has an eavesdropping operation so expansive it has to fend off foreign politicians who want to use it against their political enemies, the New York Times reported on Sunday, quoting a cache of cables published by WikiLeaks . The body’s vast network of informants also had on its roll David Headley, an accused in the Mumbai attacks case, who worked as a double agent for the DEA.

    In far greater detail than previously seen, the cables offer glimpses of drug agents balancing diplomacy and law enforcement in places where it can be hard to tell the politicians from the traffickers, and where drug rings are themselves mini-states whose wealth and violence permit them to run roughshod over struggling governments, the report said.

    Quoting the cables, the report cities an example when the President of Panama sent an urgent message to the American ambassador, demanding that the DEA go after his political enemies: “I need help with tapping phones.”

    In Sierra Leone, a major cocaine-trafficking prosecution was almost upended by the attorney general’s attempt to solicit $2.5 million in bribes. In Guinea, the country’s biggest narcotics kingpin turned out to be the president’s son, and diplomats discovered that before the police destroyed a huge narcotics seizure, the drugs had been replaced by flour.

    Leaders of Mexico’s beleaguered military issued private pleas for closer collaboration with the drug agency, confessing that they had little faith in their own country’s police forces.

    Cables from Myanmar, the target of strict United States sanctions, describe the drug agency informants’ reporting both on how the military junta enriches itself with drug money and on the political activities of the junta’s opponents.

    Officials of the DEA and the State Department declined to discuss what they said was information that should never have been made public, the Times said.

    Though the cables did not offer large disclosures, they provided an insight into the story of how an entrepreneurial agency operating in the shadows of the FBI has become something more than a drug agency, the report said.
Title: Re: [intel] - DEA has turned into a massive international intelligence agency
Post by: lilith2u on March 06, 2012, 09:44 pm
It sucks! not surprised! I<3 wikileaks