Google exposes US airbase in Pakistan used to launch drones
John Byrne

February 20th, 2009
Instead of blanket-wiretapping Americans, maybe the Bush Administration’s 
intelligence agencies should have spent a little more time with Google Earth.



Until recently, Google Earth prominently displayed an image of a clandestine US 
airbase that housed unmanned Predator drones in Pakistan. An image appeared to 
show three drones outside a hangar at the end of a runway, which was then 
confirmed to be an airfield by a British newspaper.

The newspaper then cited intelligence sources as saying the CIA had been using 
the base to attack and observe al-Qaeda and Taliban militants along the 
Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

The photograph appears to confirm a seeming slip-of-the-tongue by Sen. Dianne 
Feinstein (D-CA), a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee who said that 
the US was launching strikes on Pakistani territory from inside Pakistan (”As I 
understand it, these [drones] are flown out of a Pakistani base,” she said). 
Feinstein’s spokesman later asserted she was only repeating something she saw 
in The Washington Post, but intelligence sources used the opportunity to 
confirm that the US had indeed been using Pakistani bases.

American and Pakistani officials have repeatedly denied that the US has 
launched strikes from within Pakistan.

“The Google Earth image now suggests that the US began launching Predators from 
[the Shamsi airbase] — built by Arab sheiks for falconry trips — at least three 
years ago,” the Times of London’s Jeremy Page reported. “The advantage of 
Shamsi is that it provides a discreet launchpad within minutes of Quetta — a 
known Taleban staging post — as well as Taliban infiltration routes into 
Afghanistan and potential militant targets farther afield.”

“Google Earth’s current image of Shamsi — about 100 miles south of the Afghan 
border and 100 miles east of the Iranian one — undoubtedly shows the same 
airstrip as the image from 2006,” Page added. “There are no visible drones, but 
it does show that several new buildings and other structures have been erected 
since 2006, including what appears to be a hangar large enough to fit three 
drones. Perimeter defenses — apparently made from the same blast-proof barriers 
used at US and NATO bases in Afghanistan — have also been set up around the 
hangar.”

A military spokesman at the US Embassy in Islamabad and Pakistan’s chief 
military spokesman declined or was unavailable to comment on the revelations.

Google compliant with censorship requests: report
Despite the latest Google expose, the California-based company has becoming 
increasingly compliant to government requests to block purportedly sensitive 
information — including images of Tibet, military installations and even a 
General Electric research plant — according to a report prepared by the Open 
Source Center for the Bush Administration’s Director of National Intelligence 
Mike McConnell and reports circulated online about areas Google has blocked or 
blurred.

The research report was not approved for public release but was leaked to 
Secrecy News. It is prepared entirely on public information — so called “open 
source” intelligence. But it paints a picture of an increasingly pliant global 
communications juggernaut, willing to do business with authoritarian regimes 
and US government agencies at the expense of transparency.

China, for instance, has an “online geographical information security 
management and coordination group” which regularly browses online mapping sites.

“When problems are discovered, they are either raised with Google’s China 
headquarters or through diplomatic channels,” the report says.

“Google has been very cooperative in the course of communications,” a Chinese 
spokesman remarked.

Among the areas Google blurs out in China includes, not surprisingly, 
Tibet/Xinjiang Province. Other areas of Asia that have been clouded include 
northern areas of Pakistan — it’s unknown why or who might have requested the 
omission.

Google also censors certain sites in India. India may also be taking measures 
to hide their facilities from satellites. According to the report, “India’s 
army announced that it had taken evasive measures against the ‘intrusive 
photographs of strategic installations.’”

Google sometimes uses older images to replace existing ones to erase, say, the 
movement of troops in Iraq. After a January 2007 report that terrorists were 
attacking British bases based on Google Earth imagery, Google replaced images 
of these sites with photographs taken before the war. The report also claims 
that al Qaeda militants used Google Earth to target oil facilities in Yemen.

http://rawstory.com/news/2008/Google_exposes_secret_US_base_in_0219.html

http://waronyou.com/topics/google-exposes-us-airbase-in-pakistan-used-to-launch-drones/

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