Guatemala: Río Negro Survivors Identify Executioners - Upside Down ...
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May 7, 2008 - The Guatemalan army and INDE labeled the rural Maya Achí people of Río Negro'subversives' and 'guerillas' due to their refusal to be forcefully relocated for the dam. Río Negro ... ofRío Negro. The battalion entered residents' homes, carrying an array of weapons, including Israeli GalilAssault Rifles.ALL THE 9-11 AIRPORTS SERVICED BY ONE ISRAELI OWNED ...
www.whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/ICTS.html
"To make the situation worse, a private security company called ICTS, owned by an Israeli, Ezra Harel, and registered in the Netherlands, was employed at Charles de Gaulle airport to screen passengers boarding US planes. Most of its personnel are ex-Shin Bet officers. The company covers security at Boston's Logan European Tribune - Israeli Security Failure at Amsterdam Airport ...
www.eurotrib.com/story/2010/1/11/23219/8896
Jan 11, 2010 - Memory: ICTS International guarded Logan Airport, Boston on 9/11, was controlled and managed by Menachem Atzmon, who was also convicted of money laundering for his and Netanyahu's and Ehud Olmert's Likud ... ICTS was established in 1982 by former members of the Shin Bet and El Al security.political and science rhymes: 9/11:Israel's Shin Bet Terrorists-Money ...
politicalandsciencerhymes.blogspot.com/.../911israels-shin-bet-terrorists-money.html
9/11:Israel's Shin Bet Terrorists-Money Launderers,Who Controlled Logan Airport Boston on September 11,2001 and allowed WTC To Be Destroyed Warn About Palestinians - Ha! 9/11:Israel'sShin Bet Terrorists-Money Launderers,Who Controlled Logan Airport Boston on September 11,2001 and allowed WTC To BeLogan Airport Security on 9/11 - Discussion on Topix
www.topix.com › Florida › Brevard County › Melbourne
Sep 20, 2016 - 3 posts - 1 author
Most of its personnel are ex-Shin Bet officers. The company covers security at Boston's Logan airport, where the American Airlines plane came down after flight attendants and passengers overpowered Reid." The point of the article was that ICTS knew shoe bomber Richard Reid was dangerous, but ...The sabra approach to preventing a new 9/11 - Magazine ...
www.jpost.com/Magazine/Features/The-sabra-approach-to-preventing-a-new-911
RAFI RON, former head of security at Ben-Gurion Airport, has been using a simpler form of Israeli know-how at Logan Airport in Boston, from which two of the four hijacked ... Before passengers even reach Ben-Gurion International Airport, their names and passport numbers have been run through theShin Bet databaseIsrael’s assassination operations
Poisoned toothpaste that takes a month to end its target’s life. Armed drones. Exploding cell phones. Spare tires with remote-control bombs. Assassinating enemy scientists and discovering the secret lovers of Islamic holy men. A new book chronicles these techniques and asserts that Israel has carried out at least 2,700 assassination operations in its 70 years of existence. While many failed, they add up to far more than any other Western country, the book says.
Ronen Bergman, the intelligence correspondent for Yediot Aharonot newspaper, persuaded many agents of Mossad, Shin Bet and the military to tell their stories, some using their real names. The result is the first comprehensive look at Israel’s use of state-sponsored killings.
Based on 1,000 interviews and thousands of documents, and running more than 600 pages, Rise and Kill First makes the case that Israel has used assassination in the place of war, killing half a dozen Iranian nuclear scientists, for instance, rather than launching a military attack. It also strongly suggests that Israel used radiation poisoning to kill Yasser Arafat, the longtime Palestinian leader, an act its officials have consistently denied.
Bergman writes that Arafat’s death in 2004 fits a pattern and had advocates. But he steps back from flatly asserting what happened, saying that Israeli military censorship prevents him from revealing what – or if – he knows.
The book’s title, Rise and Kill First, comes from the ancient Jewish Talmud admonition, “If someone comes to kill you, rise up and kill him first.” Bergman says a huge percentage of the people he interviewed cited that passage as justification for their work. So does an opinion by the military’s lawyer declaring such operations to be legitimate acts of war.
Despite the many interviews, including with former prime ministers Ehud Barak and Ehud Olmert, Bergman, the author of several books, says the Israeli secret services sought to interfere with his work, holding a meeting in 2010 on how to disrupt his research and warning former Mossad employees not to speak with him.
He says that while the U.S. has tighter constraints on its agents than does Israel, President George W. Bush adopted many Israeli techniques after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and President Barack Obama launched several hundred targeted killings.
“The command-and-control systems, the war rooms, the methods of information gathering and the technology of the pilotless aircraft, or drones, that now serve the Americans and their allies were all in large part developed in Israel,” Bergman writes.
The book gives a textured history of the personalities and tactics of the various secret services. In the 1970s, a new head of operations for Mossad opened hundreds of commercial companies overseas with the idea that they might be useful one day. For example, Mossad created a Middle Eastern shipping business that, years later, came in handy in providing cover for a team in the waters off Yemen.
There have been plenty of failures. After a Palestinian armed group killed Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics, Israel sent agents to kill the perpetrators – and shot more than one misidentified man. There were also successful operations that did more harm than good to Israel’s policy goals, Bergman notes.
Bergman raises moral and legal concerns provoked by state-sponsored killing, including the existence of separate legal systems for secret agents and the rest of Israel. But he presents the operations, for the most part, as achieving their aims. While many credit the barrier Israel built along and inside the West Bank with stopping assaults on Israeli citizens in the early 2000s, he argues that what made the difference was “a massive number of targeted killings of [enemy] operatives.”
One of Bergman’s most important sources was Meir Dagan, a recent head of Mossad for eight years who died in early 2016. Toward the end of his career, Dagan fell out with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu partly over launching a military attack on Iran. Netanyahu said intelligence techniques such as selling the country faulty parts for its reactors – which Israel and the U.S. were doing – weren’t enough.
Dagan argued that these techniques, especially assassinations, would do the job. As Bergman quotes him saying, “In a car, there are 25,000 parts on average. Imagine if 100 of them are missing. It would be very hard to make it go. On the other hand, sometimes it’s most effective to kill the driver, and that’s that.”
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on January 25, 2018, on page 9.
Rio Negro Massacres « Guatemala Human Rights Commission
https://www.ghrc-usa.org/our-work/important-cases/rio-negro/
Five massacres occurred in the Rio Negro (“Black River”) communities between 1980 and 1982. The people of Rio Negro (named after the nearby river) had occupied the region since the classic Mayan age and owned 1,440 hectares of land. During the energy crisis of the 1970's the Guatemalan government looked for ...
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