Results tagged “Nouri al-Maliki” from SpyTalk

The controversial Iranian exile organization MEK, which the United States calls a terrorist group, could soon see a windfall of tens of millions of dollars as the result of the European Union's decision Monday to take it off its list of terrorist organizations.

Hunt for Mystery Wiretappers of European Conference

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An intelligence oversight committee in the Belgium parliament is looking into bugs found on the phones of European delegates at a meeting in Brussels last March.

The so-called R Committee, established in the early 1990s to look into reports of rogue operations by Belgian security agencies, has been seeking documents on the wiretapping discoveries for several months, but have been blocked by Belgian magistrates, according to a report in the current issue of the Paris-based Intelligence Online newsletter (subscription required).

On March 18, 2008 interception systems were discovered on the telephone lines of the Spanish, German, French and British delegations to the Council of Europe, a gathering of the heads of European Union governments. Ever since that date, the permanent R Committee, which oversees the operations of Belgian intelligence, has been trying in vain to find the eavesdroppers.

The Council of Europe filed a complaint, and Belgian magistrates began looking into the continuing mystery.  When R Committee investigators asked to see documents the magistrates had gathered, however, they were "repeatedly rebuffed," the newsletter says.

In a July report just now surfacing, however, the R Committee "indicated it had finally been authorized by the court to conduct an inquiry into the incident this year in the hope of finally clearing up the mystery," the newsletter said.

The spy services of all the major powers commonly wiretap each other's diplomats in search of useful political, military and commercial intelligence.

Washington Post associate editor Bob Woodward revealed last week that U.S. intelligence had been spying on top officials in the Iraqi government, including prime minister Nouri al-Maliki.

Iraqi 'Shock' at Woodward Book is Laughable

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Iraqi officials are howling about Bob Woodward's new book like Captain Renault in Casablanca: They are shocked that the CIA has been spying on them.

What a hoot. 

Maybe here, some Americans will truly be shocked, of course, and outraged.

Attention, K-Mart shoppers: Iraq is in the Middle East.

The Baghdad government is an Iranian Trojan Horse, bulging with Tehran agents, including, perhaps, the Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki himself.

His government is a viper's nest of intrigue, as befits a remnant of the Byzantine Empire. It owes its existence to Iran and Syria.

"The prime minister spent long years of exile in Syria and his most important ally in Iraq is the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq," notes the respected British military journalist, Patrick Coburn, "which was founded on Iran's initiative in Tehran in 1982."

They're used to spies.

"They will be used to Syrian and Iranian security monitoring their activities," Cockburn observes. 

But he makes a more salient point.

"Overall, the extent of U.S. surveillance of its Shia and Kurdish allies in Iraq reveals a deep anxiety in Washington that, in supporting a government in Baghdad dominated by Shia Islamic parties, it has promoted a government that is closer to Iran than the U.S."

So of course we're spying on them!

The only surprise is whether it's true, as Woodward alleges, that the CIA has been proficient enough to plant spies -- and eavsdropping technology -- amid the prime minister's inner circle.

To date, most accounts from intelligence sources and former CIA officers who have served in Baghdad paint the agency's spy operations there as extremely limited.