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CIA's Top Muslim-Getter Outs Himself: Jose Rodriguez

Liana Adler | 13.08.2007 05:11 | Anti-racism | Iraq | Terror War | London

[Aug. 10, 2007] With little fanfare, Jose A. Rodriguez Jr, who heads the National Clandestine Service -- the spies, torturers, and terrorists of the CIA -- had his cover lifted about a month ago. CIA spokesman Mark Mansfield said the driving factor was his interest in publicly participating in minority recruitment events. He's also retiring later this year after more than three decades with the agency.

The scourge of Muslim kidnap and prison victims: Jose A. Rodriguez of the CIA
The scourge of Muslim kidnap and prison victims: Jose A. Rodriguez of the CIA


[The above is typical CIA propaganda. The real reason is he wants to spend more time at his expensive home in the Potomac Mills housing development in the northeast corner of Loudon County, VA, with his wife Millie, who runs a personal-training business. Also he is interested in double-dipping -- leveraging his CIA career to take a cushy job in private industry, which the CIA works for anyway. Rodriguez has been planning to take a job with the notorious mercenary outfit Blackwater USA upon retirement, obviously with a hefty pay raise. The AP article continues:]

Rodriguez is the most important man in the U.S. spy game whose name you probably never knew. When he was mentioned publicly before now, he was referred to only as "Jose." [However, we published an article about him on Wikipedia a year and a half ago. Wikipedia saw fit to delete most of the details that follow, which is better than the major newspapers, TV networks, and websites, which never gave his full name although it was well known. For the complete news, you need to read Indymedia.org sites.]

Rodriguez became head of the CIA's clandestine service in November 2004. [End of the article by Katherine Shrader. The photo is from the CIA and is undated.]

Since taking over the CIA's clandestine service, Jose A. Rodriguez Jr has overseen the agency's torture and dishonoring of Muslims by illegal kidnappings/tortures (renditions) and the operation of illegal "black hole" prisons in countries like Poland and Romania, where people are caged in kennels and hidden from the legal process and the rest of the world. If anyone is sued for these activities, one would think that it would be Rodriguez, now that he has exposed himself.

[Interestingly there is another Jose A. Rodriguez who is a world-class expert on counter "terrorism." That one supposedly is a professor at the University of Barcelona (Spain). However, the professor is as shadowy as the CIA Rodriguez, which is unusual for a professor in any field. About all you will find on him is that he has written a widely used paper on "social network analysis" (what the CIA does with the massive data from illegal National Security Agency wiretaps).  http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:UijcgeTcpNoJ:www.ub.es/epp/redes/11ming.doc+rodriguez+krebs+sageman&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=4&gl=us ]


Following is the bio for Mr. Rodriguez of the CIA, which you will see nowhere else.

Originally, Rodriguez is from Puerto Rico. Rodriguez apparently was a military attache -- a MILGP or MILGRP (US Military Group) "commander" (supposedly an Army colonel) -- at the US Embassy in Argentina from 1994-1996. Officially a Military Group officer advises the US ambassador on military matters and is a liason between the US Government and the host country's security and military forces (actually a funnel for money, arms, and intelligence). US diplomats, even military officers such as the US naval attache in Venezuela, Lt. Commander John Correa, ousted last year for espionage against Venezuela, often are CIA operatives. The infamous CIA turncoat Aldrich Ames once posed as a military officer, and it's likely that Rodriguez was doing so in Argentina.

Besides recruiting the real spies (most of which are traitors to the host countries rather than Americans), CIA overseas agents (posing as diplomats in US embassies) aid US-puppet governments, no matter how repressive, and seek to overthrow independence-minded governments like Chavez's, even if democratically elected.

During the tenure of Ernesto Samper as president of Colombia (Aug. 1994 to Aug. 1998), Rodriguez began serving as the CIA's station chief in Bogota. Rodriguez probably served as COS in Bogota sometime between 1996 and 1998. Soon after Samper became president, the CIA pressured him to assist them in their war, basically a turf war, against the Cali cocaine cartel. Possible enmity between Samper and Rodriguez later caused problems for former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger as explained below. Apparently the CIA tried to muscle in on the drug profits of the cartel and blackmail Samper to obtain influence for the CIA and/or the USA. (People should ask: Is the CIA working for the US, for US business interests, for itself, for some other faction, to line its operatives' pockets -- or all of the above?)

Regarding a 1997 incident, according to Jason Vest of The Nation magzine, Rodguez has been criticized by Agency officers for helping out a "friend" arrested for drug offenses in Latin America. The true story is apt to be much more complicated than that. Rodriguez could well claim he was acting in the line of duty by protecting a CIA asset (foreign "assets" are foreign nationals who do the bulk of the CIA's spy work), which would be true if the freind was procuring drugs for CIA export.

In 1999 Rodriguez was the chief of the large CIA station in Mexico, which reportedly has 500 agents.

Jose A. Rodriguez next became the chief of the Latin America Division of the Operations Directorate of the CIA, presumably back at the McLean, VA, headquarters. Most CIA employees live in McLean and other small towns in Virginia, also DC. The Latin American division is considered obscure by CIA-watchers, but CIA fight-provocation among neighboring nations, and subversion within individual nations, was perfected there, notably in Nicaragua, Honduras, and El Savador in the Iran-contra era (1980s)  http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB27/ . Provocation and regime-changing skills are especially desirable to the CIA in the Middle East and Latin America right now.

Jose Rodriguez assumed in about May 2002 the post of Director of the CIA's Counterterrorism Center (CTC), near the top of the CIA totem pole. He was at this job as George W. Bush putsch-making gathered steam in the wake of 9/11/2001. Rodriguez as D-CTC may have been one reason Henry Kissinger resigned (in Dec. 2002) as chairman of the commission investigating 9/11. Kissinger had been paid as a consultant (apparently in the period 2001-2002) by Ernesto Samper, and the 9/11 job would have involved interfacing with Rodriguez, an old Samper antagonist.

In 2004, as director of the CTC, Jose Rodriguez visited Athens, Greece, to advise the Athens Olympics organizers, including the chief organizer, Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, on security matters. In a March 23, 2004, meeting with these organizers, he was accompanied by the US Ambassador to Greece, Thomas Miller.

Jose A. Rodriguez was promoted to become the CIA's Deputy Director for Operations in November 2004, succeeding Stephen Kappes. This is perhaps the CIA's No. 2 position in terms of power and put him in charge of the CIA's clandedestine (spying and dirty tricks) operations, including illegal renditions and operation of illegal "black hole" prisons for Muslims. Rodriguez dropped out of sight soon after his appointment was announced in the media, but the CIA never reported any reassignment for him.

After the 2005 reorganization of the Intelligence Community under Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte, Jose Rodriguez continued as the head of CIA clandestine operations. This is basically his old job (DDO) with a new title, Director of the National Clandestine Service, and new responsibilities to oversee day-to-day operations of all intelligence gathering by America's human (more or less) agents. This would include agencies besides the CIA, but not electronic data mining and other methods besides HUMINT. It certainly included the black ops, black-hole prisons, renditions, and torture.

On February 7, 2006, Rodriguez fired his successor as Director of the Counterterrorism Center, Robert Grenier, for not being "aggressive" enough in dealing with terrorists (not vicious enough).

Rodriguez's publicity shyness compared to his predecessors apparently was in deference to his wife's desire to pursue a career as a physical trainer rather than any requirement of his job.

Liana Adler


Comments

Display the following 4 comments

  1. Age of Rodriguez — CH
  2. Please do your homework before publishing. — More informed than the author of this article
  3. Please list inaccuracies — Alastair
  4. Jose Rodriguez and Iran Contra — Mac Markiewicz

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