News you may have missed #0288
February 17, 2010 Leave a comment
- Was Charlotte Observer‘s USSR correspondent a KGB spy? An Observer editor tries to find out who was the mysterious Russia correspondent “employed by The Charlotte Observer“, whom an FBI report in the 1950s described as “unusually well-connected with the Kremlin”.
- US spy chiefs seek UK assurances after Mohamed court ruling. The recent court ruling forcing MI6 to disclose all of Binyam Mohamed’s CIA torture records in its possession, has predictably complicated US-UK spy relations.













Spanish intelligence probe ‘financial attacks’
February 17, 2010 Leave a comment
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By IAN ALLEN | intelNews.org |
Spain’s primary intelligence agency is actively probing alleged links between speculative moves in world financial markets and a series of editorials in “the Anglo-Saxon media”, which Madrid says have sought to undermine market confidence in Spain’s economy. Spanish newspaper El Pais says the Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI) has been asked by Spain’s government to investigate whether “there is something more behind the campaign” to destabilize the Spanish economy, which, if successful, would add tremendously to the financial challenges currently facing the Eurozone. The El Pais article hints at suspicions among many in the European Union that countries not currently participating in the Euro common currency zone may be trying to subvert the Euro through a series of well-timed media reports questioning the financial stability of the European Union. Read more of this post
Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (Spain), economic intelligence, Eurozone, financial warfare, Greece, News, Portugal, Spain, The Economist