US silent about CIA asset’s cover-up of Afghan massacre
December 12, 2008 Leave a comment
During the US invasion of Afghanistan, local warlord General Abdul Rashid Dostum was among the CIA’s most valuable assets. With the close cooperation of CIA agents and members of the US Special Forces, General Dostum and his army supported countless American operations in northern Afghanistan. In the process, Dostum and his men participated in a considerable number of documented war crimes. In one of those instances around 2,000 Taliban prisoners of war were locked in large metal containers and allowed to suffocate to death, or were massacred by bullets fired into the containers by Dostum’s troops. Their remains were buried in large mass graves in a desert north of Mazar-e-Sharif. Recently, large bulldozers and backhoes were used to exhume the remains of the murdered men and move them to an unknown location. Local authorities say this was the job of General Dostum, who has become alarmed by the impending change of guard in Washington. Read more of this post







Russian intelligence suspected in Chechen commander’s assassination in Turkey
December 12, 2008 by intelNews Leave a comment
Another Chechen former commander has been assassinated abroad and the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) is once again suspected of having carried out the assassination. This time it was Islam Dzhanibekov (Canibekof, in Turkish), who had lived in Istanbul, Turkey, since 2002. Dzhanibekov, who was killed on December 9, was reportedly shot from a close range with a single action 7.62 MSP pistol. This type of weapon has been traditionally favored by the KGB and its successor agencies since the early 1970s, mainly due to its small size and relatively silent operation. Read more of this post
Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with Aleksandr Fetisov, Anatoly Yablochkov, assassinations, Chechnya, Gazhi Edilsultanov, Islam Dzhanibekov, Istanbul, News, Qatar, Russia, SVR (Russia), Turkey, Vasily Pugachyov, Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev