News you may have missed #528
July 2, 2011 Leave a comment
- Bin Laden’s courier linked to Pakistan spy agency. A mobile phone found last month during the raid on Osama bin Laden’s hideout shows that Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti, the al-Qaida leader’s closest courier, regularly communicated with commanders of Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, a terrorist group linked to Pakistan’s ISI intelligence agency.
- Egypt remands Israeli spy suspect in custody. Egypt has decided to remand in custody spy suspect Ilan Grapel, a US-Israeli joint citizen, despite Israel’s insistence he is innocent of espionage.
- US extradites fugitive Philippine police officer who served time for espionage. This blog has covered the strange case of Michael Ray Aquino since 2009. In 2006, Aquino was imprisoned for supplying classified FBI intelligence on the Philippines to political forces opposed to the government of President Gloria Arroyo. As intelNews has already shown, Aquino’s extradition is linked to a US-Philippine deal on the continuing presence of US troops in the Southeast Asian country.












News you may have missed #533
July 8, 2011 by intelNews Leave a comment
María Hurtado
By IAN ALLEN | intelNews.org |
The government of Colombia will –finally– officially request from Panama the extradition of Maria Pilar Hurtado, former director of Colombia’s disgraced DAS intelligence agency, who was granted political asylum in the Central American country last year. The Colombian government has been contemplating this move for some time, as the investigation into illegal activities by the DAS is progressing extremely slowly. In Iran, the government says that it plans to try dozens of American intelligence officials in absentia. The announcement has raised the possibility that Tehran may out US spies which the Iranians claim attempted to recruit locals as part of a sophisticated intelligence-gathering operation. One former CIA operative, Glenn Carle, voluntarily came out a few years ago, following retirement, and made news headlines last month, in connection with alleged CIA spying on American academic Juan Cole. Carle, who worked for the CIA for 23 years, in Africa, the Balkans and Latin America, among other locales, has written a book. It focuses on a several-month period he spent questioning a suspected leader of al-Qaeda. The interrogations took place in two countries, which he says he is not permitted to name.
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