Why the CIA doesn't spy on the UAE
(Reuters) - The United Arab Emirates finances the military leader trying to topple a United Nations-recognized government in Libya. It helps lead a coalition of nations imposing an economic blockade of Qatar, despite U.S. calls to resolve the dispute. It hired former staffers of the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) as elite hackers to spy in a program that included Americans as surveillance targets, a Reuters investigation found this year.
"Americans as surveillance targets"... you mean like the Orange Man ?
And yet, in a highly unusual practice, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) does not spy on the UAE’s government, three former CIA officials familiar with the matter told Reuters, creating what some critics call a dangerous blind spot in U.S. intelligence.
"Dangerous blind spot"....similar to the Magic kingdom and 9/11 possibly ?
The CIA’s posture isn’t new. What’s changed is the nature of the tiny but influential OPEC nation’s intervention across the Middle East and Africa - fighting wars, running covert operations and using its financial clout to reshape regional politics in ways that often run counter to U.S. interests, according to the sources and foreign policy experts.
Obviously the UAE cannot be trusted. They keep bills of lading, invoices, and receipts of financial transactions. For insurance purposes of course.
The CIA’s failure to adapt to the UAE’s growing military and political ambitions amounts to a "dereliction of duty," said a fourth former CIA official.
Posted by: Besoeker 2019-08-27 |