28-03-2015, 08:56 AM
US intelligence rates Israeli intelligence as one of the most "hostile foreign intelligence services" inimical to US interests.
I'm really enjoying watching the Obama v Netanyahu rumble in the jungle. For me there can only be one winner, but let's wait and see, punch by punch.
I'm really enjoying watching the Obama v Netanyahu rumble in the jungle. For me there can only be one winner, but let's wait and see, punch by punch.
Quote:NETANYAHU'S SPYING DENIALS CONTRADICTED BY SECRET NSA DOCUMENTSThe Intercept
BY GLENN GREENWALD AND ANDREW FISHMAN @ggreenwald@AndrewDFish
WEDNESDAY AT 7:06 PM
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday vehemently denied aWall Street Journal report, leaked by the Obama White House, that Israel spied on U.S. negotiations with Iran and then fed the intelligence to Congressional Republicans. His office's denial was categorical and absolute, extending beyond this specific story to U.S.-targeted spying generally, claiming: "The state of Israel does not conduct espionage against the United States or Israel's other allies."
Israel's claim is not only incredible on its face. It is also squarely contradicted by top-secret NSA documents, which state that Israel targets the U.S. government for invasive electronic surveillance, and does so more aggressively and threateningly than almost any other country in the world. Indeed, so concerted and aggressive are Israeli efforts against the U.S. that some key U.S. government documents including the top secret 2013 intelligence budget list Israel among the U.S.'s most threatening cyber-adversaries and as a "hostile" foreign intelligence service.
One top-secret 2008 document features an interview with the NSA's Global Capabilities Manager for Countering Foreign Intelligence, entitled "Which Foreign Intelligence Service Is the Biggest Threat to the US?" He repeatedly names Israel as one of the key threats.
While noting that Russia and China do the most effective spying on U.S., he says that "Israel also targets us." He explains that "A NIE [National Intelligence Estimate] ranked [Israel] as the third most aggressive intelligence service against the US." While praising the surveillance relationship with Israel as highly valuable, he added: "One of NSA's biggest threats is actually from friendly intelligence services, like Israel." Specifically, the Israelis "target us to learn our positions on Middle East problems."
Other NSA documents voice the grievance that Israel gets far more out of the intelligence-sharing relationship than the U.S. does. One top-secret 2007 document, entitled "History of the US Israel SIGINT Relationship, post 1992," describes the cooperation that takes place as highly productive and valuable, and, indeed, top-secret documents previously reported by The Intercept and the Guardian leave no doubt about the very active intelligence-sharing relationship that takes place between the two countries. Yet that same document complains that the relationship even after 9/11 was almost entirely one-sided in favor of serving Israeli rather than U.S. interests:
The U.S. perception of Israel as a threat as much as an ally is also evidenced by the so-called "black budget" of 2013, previously referencedby The Washington Post, which lists Israel in multiple places as a key intelligence "target" and even a "hostile foreign intelligence service" among several other countries typically thought of as the U.S.'s most entrenched adversaries:
The same budget document reveals that the CIA regards Israel along with Russia, China, Iran, Pakistan and Cuba as a "priority threat country," one against which it "conduct[s] offensive [counter-intelligence] operations in collaboration with DoD":
One particular source of concern for U.S. intelligence are the means used by Israel to "influence anti-regime elements in Iran," including its use of "propaganda and other active measures":
What is most striking about all of this is the massive gap between (a) how American national security officials talk privately about the Israelis and (b) how they have talked for decades about the Israelis for public consumption at least until the recent change in public rhetoric from Obama officials about Israel, which merely brings publicly expressed American views more in line with how U.S. government officials have long privately regarded their "ally." The NSA refused to comment for this article.
Previously reported stories on Israeli spying, by themselves, leave no doubt how false Netanyahu's statement is. A Der Spiegel article from last fall revealed that "Israeli intelligence eavesdropped on US Secretary of State John Kerry during Middle East peace negotiations." A Le Mondearticle described how NSA documents strongly suggest that a massive computer hack of the French presidential palace in 2012 was likely carried about by the Israelis. A 2014 article from Newsweek's Jeff Stein revealed that when it comes to surveillance, "the Jewish state's primary target" is "America's industrial and technical secrets" and that "Israel's espionage activities in America are unrivaled and unseemly."
All of these stories, along with these new documents, leave no doubt that, at least as the NSA and other parts of the U.S. National Security State see it, Netanyahu's denials are entirely false: The Israelis engage in active and aggressive espionage against the U.S., even as the U.S. feeds the Israelis billions of dollars every year in U.S. taxpayer funds and protects every Israeli action at the U.N. Because of the U.S. perception of Israel as a "threat" and even a "hostile" foreign intelligence service facts they discuss only privately, never publicly the U.S. targets Israel for all sorts of espionage as well.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14