Phản Biện:    tài liệu    Who's Who on the CIA Payroll    ”

Đây là tài liệu láo khoét do bọn Do Thái CIA du côn ngụy tạo ra:

Năm 1963 do chúng ngụy tạo tài liệu "nhà Ngô" buôn thuốc phiện mà chúng xúi Nguyễn Văn Thiệu, Mai Hữu Xuân và đồng bọn tra tấn dă man TT Diệm và ông Nhu cho đến chết để khảo của. Chúng tra tấn tại tổng nha cảnh sát do sư đoàn 5 của Đại tá Thiệu chiếm đóng từ chiều ngày 1 tháng 11 - 1963.

 

 

Nhóm đảo chánh nghe thấy tiền là ham và chúng đă thi hành đúng theo kế hoạch của CIA. Nhưng khi khám phá ra TT Diệm và ông Nhu không hề buôn thuốc phiện th́ nhóm đảo chánh vô cùng hối hận và họ biết họ bị CIA lừa (sau đó trong cả mầy mươi năm họ đổ lỗi cho nhau) 

Con Nghiệt Súc Do Thái Miệng Đầy Máu Tươi

Trân trọng,

Bùi Như Hùng

2010

buinhuhung@hotmil.com

  

 

 

 

 

  Đây là Sự PHỔ BIẾN tài TÀI LIỆU BỊA ĐẶT của CIA

  tên Do Thái  Bobby Ghost vô cùng đê tiện ngu ngốc

 

    

 

TIME.com

Who is Who on the CIA Payroll

Allegations that Afghan President Hamid Karzai's brother worked for the CIA are a reminder of a long list of distinguished and not-so-distinguished assets

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http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2009/0910/wali_1028.jpg

Ahmed Wali Karzai, governor of Afghanistan's Kandahar province and brother of President Hamid Karzai, at his house in Kandahar City on Aug. 14, 2009

There was little surprise among Afghanistan experts and longtime CIA watchers at the New York Times report that claimed Ahmed Wali Karzai, brother of the Afghan President and alleged drug kingpin, has been paid by the CIA for eight years. Whether or not Karzai fits the bill — and the allegations against him remain unproven — it would come as a surprise if the CIA did not have any number of shady Afghan politicians on its payroll.

The agency has declined comment on the Times story, but Karzai's CIA connection "has been an open secret in Afghanistan for many years," says Gretchen Peters, author of Seeds of Terror, an authoritative account of Afghanistan's opium-terrorism nexus. In Kandahar, the former Taliban stronghold where Karzai is alleged to have helped the agency stand up a local paramilitary, Kandahar Strike Force, that group has long been half-jokingly known by locals as "the CIA's bastards." (See pictures of the battle against the Taliban.)

Karzai has not been formally charged with any involvement in drugs, but allegations about his connections to the opium trade — which also helps finance the Taliban and al-Qaeda — are legion. Even if true, they would hardly disqualify him from being a CIA asset. "If you want inside information on shady dealings, you have to deal with shady people," says Amy Zegart, a UCLA professor and national-security expert. "Nobody should expect to find Boy Scouts on the agency's payroll." (Read "Why the CIA Can't Be Picky About Afghan Partners.")

Over the years, the CIA has recruited many famous (and infamous) figures for information, cooperation and worse. Sometimes, the association has been rooted in moral or political motivations: during the Cold War, anticommunist revolutionaries made common cause with the agency. Others did it for cold cash. "In a situation where principle and loyalty don't work, money is sometimes the only tool the CIA [can use] to get cooperation," says Nick Cullather, a historian of the CIA at Indiana University.

Some CIA assets went on to lead their countries — Vietnamese strongman Ngo Ding Diem, Congolese despot Mobuto Sese Seko and former Chilean President Eduardo Frei. German Chancellor (and Nobel Peace laureate) Willy Brandt and Indian Prime Minister Morarji Desai spent the twilight of their careers having to deny allegations that they had been on the agency's payroll.

The CIA never confirms the identity of a covert asset, but herewith a list of some of the more notable figures previously alleged to have been linked to the agency:



Read more:
http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1933053_1933052,00.html#ixzz12t8eAnhx

Full List

CIA Recruits

1.      A Brief History of CIA Assets

2.      John Roselli

3.      Ngo Dinh Nhu

4.      General Dan Van Quang

5.      Thubten Jigme Norbu

6.      King Hussein of Jordan

7.      Manuel Noriega

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1933053_1933052_1933043,00.html#ixzz12tyvIdyz

Ngo Dinh Nhu

By Bobby Ghosh / Washington Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009

http://img.timeinc.net/time/2009/cia_assets/nhu_alt.jpg

Larry Burrows / Time Life / Getty

Like Ahmed Wali Karzai, Nhu was the much reviled brother of an unpopular President, Diem. (He had two other brothers: one was an Archbishop, and the other ruled the central provinces of South Vietnam.) The CIA is alleged to have helped Nhu set up the Vietnamese special forces, which were dedicated mainly to preserving the brothers' rule. Known by their acronym ARVN, these forces built a reputation for torture, repression (especially against the country's Buddhists) and corruption. In time, the U.S. came to regard Nhu as a liability to American interests in South Vietnam and cut off aid to the ARVN. Nhu and Diem were assassinated in the 1963 coup that had the tacit support of the U.S.

See six ways to fix the CIA.

 

NHẬN DIỆN HUNG THỦ
1963 1975 1975 - 2010
 

 

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