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FBI Organizes Almost All Terror Plots In the US

Russia Today | 25.08.2011 09:07 | Terror War

IMC Mods - pls keep this up: it is an important angle on the war of terror and needs to be circulated widely.

If you think that’s a few spies too many — spies earning as much as $100,000 per assignment — one doesn’t have to go too deep into their track record to see their accomplishments. Those agents are responsible for an overwhelming amount of terrorist stings that have stopped major domestic catastrophes in the vein of 9/11 from happening on American soil.

Another thing those agents are responsible for, however, is plotting those very schemes.

The FBI has in recent years used trained informants not just to snitch on suspected terrorists, but to set them up from the get-go. A recent report put together by Mother Jones and the Investigative Reporting Program at the University of California-Berkley analyses some striking statistics about the role of FBI informants in terrorism cases that the Bureau has targeted in the decade since the September 11 attacks.

The report reveals that the FBI regularly infiltrates communities where they suspect terrorist-minded individuals to be engaging with others. Regardless of their intentions, agents are sent in to converse within the community, find suspects that could potentially carry out “lone wolf” attacks and then, more or less, encourage them to do so. By providing weaponry, funds and a plan, FBI-directed agents will encourage otherwise-unwilling participants to plot out terrorist attacks, only to bust them before any events fully materialize.

Additionally, one former high-level FBI officials speaking to Mother Jones says that, for every informant officially employed by the bureau, up to three unofficial agents are working undercover.

The FBI has used those informants to set-up and thus shut-down several of the more high profile would-be attacks in recent years. The report reveals that the Washington DC Metro bombing plot, the New York City subway plot, the attempt to blow up Chicago’s Sears Tower and dozens more were all orchestrated by FBI agents. In fact, reads the report, only three of the more well-known terror plots of the last decade weren’t orchestrated by FBI-involved agents.

The report reveals that in many of the stings, important meetings between informants and the unknowing participants are left purposely unrecorded, as to avoid any entrapment charges that could cause the case to be dismissed. Perhaps the most high-profile of the FBI-proposed plots was the case of the Newburgh 4. Around an hour outside of New York City, an informant infiltrated a Muslim community and engaged four local men to carry out a series of attacks. Those men may have never actually carried out an attack, but once the informant offered them a plot and a pair of missiles, they agreed. Defense attorneys cried “entrapment,” but the men still were sentenced to 25 years apiece.

"The problem with the cases we're talking about is that defendants would not have done anything if not kicked in the ass by government agents," Martin Stolar tells Mother Jones. Stolar represented the suspect involved in a New York City bombing plot that was set-up by FBI agents. "They're creating crimes to solve crimes so they can claim a victory in the war on terror." For their part, the FBI says this method is a plan for "preemption," "prevention" and "disruption."

The report also reveals that, of the 500-plus prosecutions of terrorism-related cases they analyzed, nearly half of them involved the use of informants, many of whom worked for the FBI in exchange for money or to work off criminal charges. Of the 158 prosecutions carried out, 49 defendants participated in plots that agent provocateurs arranged on behalf of the FBI.

Experts note that the chance of winning a terrorism-related trial, entrapment or not, is near impossible. "The plots people are accused of being part of — attacking subway systems or trying to bomb a building — are so frightening that they can overwhelm a jury," David Cole, a Georgetown University law professor, tells Mother Jones. Since 9/11, almost two-thirds of the cases linked to terrorism have ended with guilty pleas. “They don't say, 'I've been entrapped,' or, 'I was immature,’” a retired FBI official remarks.

All of this and those guilty pleas often stem for just being in the right place at the wrong time. Farhana Khera of the group Muslim Advocate notes that agents go into mosques on “fishing expeditions” just to see where they can get interest in the community. "The FBI is now telling agents they can go into houses of worship without probable cause," says Khera. "That raises serious constitutional issues."

From the set-up to the big finish, the whole sting operation is ripe with constitutional issues such as that. A decade since 9/11, however, the FBI is reaching through whatever means it can pull together to keep terrorists — or whom they think could someday become one — from ever hurting America.

Russia Today

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Reality of the squalor.

25.08.2011 17:47

The Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) is certainly a composite of a number of local, state level, law enforcement agencies brought together to help the US government keep control at the domestic level. It serves a number of social control imperitives and a larger, wider national imperitive to act as go between and linkage mechanisms from the local to the national law enforcement communities. The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is heavily dependent on the FBI for much of its work and intelligence.

Like all law enforcers, the FBI spends its time in equal measure seeking out opportunities to publicly display itself to the wider domestic community and creating future threats it can extrapolate into trade for the future. It has remit to detect, expose and pursue criminal activity and discharges that responsibility in carefully staged operations to protect the public. Split between these activities, the FBI is able to maintain a number of legacy reputations which can be used to distance itself from one area or another according to the current prevailing political wind. To illustrate this point, it can be the case, at any one time, that the FBI may be engaged in exposing drug money laundering of criminal gangs, or engaged in the pursuit of white collar crime, or engaged in the fight against terror...each of these areas, offer tradeable currency to allow the FBI to present itself as the law enforcement which is legitimate in all circumstances. So for instance, when the FBI is accused of 'creating terror', it can refer to its work against mobsters and drug dealers, when the FBI is accused of being an oppresive force of government, it can refer to its work in the detection of white collar crime. And so on and so forth.

None of this of course, makes for anything sinister. The FBI is a national body that lives and operates in the realm of the media age and it must, therefore, retain the ability to appeal to the domestic electorate as a uniform force free from excessive political interference. From time to time, it must maintain a media presence in order to re-assure the American public that it is doing its job.

However.

The FBI is, whether one likes it or not, a political force too. Underneath the veneer of respectibility that all national organisations must maintain, there is the squaler of the reality. This is the side not permitted to come into relief in sight of the wider public. Drug abuse by operatives, private killings undertaken by lone maverics, blackmail of private and public figures by ex-employees that have fallen into poverty or poor mental health, planned assasinations of key public figures outside of the United States belonging to governments that may or may not be troublesome to the US government. In 2008, an ex FBI agent was killed in Michigan after attempting to detonate a 300lb fertiliser bomb outside a mosque. In 2010, two ex-FBI agents were deported from Honduras after attempting to smuggle over 500 assault rifles with ammunition onto a ship bound for Colombia. A disproportinately large number of ex-FBI agents have gained employment with contractors working for civil defence firms in Iraq and Afghanistan. Five of which were arrested by local military forces for robbery of locals while on duty in 2009. In every one of these cases, investigations have revealed political affiliations to causes and group completely at odds with their previous employment.

What this illustraates, is that while the FBI is tasked with undertaking civil duties in relation to domestic law enforcement within the US, there is within the agency, constant exposure to political causes and groups that should not exist within the scope of its ordinary duties. It is impossible to reconcile with its reputation for domestic policing, its murky reputation for being engaged with the political underworld.

In this sense, the reality of the FBI, is one of political causes and close association with sanctioned groups that the US government is closely, but not publicly, associated with.

The Feds.