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Click Here: <A HREF="aol://5863:126/alt.conspiracy:586705">Covert Operations
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Subject: Covert Operations in China
From: Ralph McGehee <A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>
Date: Fri, 07 January 2000 10:34 AM EST
Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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                  Covert Acion In China

   In response to another's knowledgeable comments on the possibility of
the CIA running covert operations in China, included below are some
extracts from CIABASE.

   I should first note that there are various trends within the U.S.
Government re China -- the more conservative elements; e.g., many
Republicans and some Democrats see fealty to Taiwan as the prime
objective of our China foreign policy.

   The Clinton Administration apparently seeks a rapprochement with
China through liaison and trade. It apparently also seeks, through
political action operations via the National Endowment for
Democracy (NED) and the CIA, to convert the Chinese government.
But more conservative elements seek a confrontation with China.

   My particular concern, is that the conservative policy may hold sway
and we may see a Vietnam-like war in China -- first in the Western
Provinces and then throughout China.

   I believe that DCI Tenet serves the conservative agenda as do his
CIA Directorate of Operations employees. The Nixon/Kissinger
rapprochement to China left CIA Cold Warriors agape and they
wait to counter this "tragic" apostasy.

   Now conservatives beat the drums against China -- to stir
up public opinion to sponsor more drastic covert actions. The
power to stir emotions is a mighty tool. I recall in amazement how
the U.S. public was brought to fear the tiny island nation of Grenada.
An extremely poor nation of about 100,000 people without a navy,
air force and only a tiny militia, whom we feared was about to
pounce on Harlequin, Texas. Absurd, but we believed.

   The CIA as a policy-implementing agency uses its
intelligence-gathering role for propaganda -- possibly
the most important propaganda tool in its covert arsenal.
My particular concern is that it operations may lead to a
massive paramilitary war, destructive to all.

Ralph McGehee
<A HREF="http://come.to/CIABASE">http://come.to/CIABASE</A>
________________________________________________

>From CIABASE:

  97  DCI Tenet said CIA to focus on 10 or 15 countries -- North Korea
  and Iran to nations like Russia and China -- and strengthen emphasis on
  fighting terrorism, drug trafficking and arms proliferation.
  New York Times 7/22/97

   China,  87-97  CIA suspected of instigating separatism in Xinjiang by
  helping Moslem separatists there. this isn't surprising given the CIA has
  provided covert support of pro-democracy movements in China since the late
  1980's, and since it has a covert assistance network in place. China's
  state security and public security ministries, have made it a priority to
  uncover CIA's ops in China and have uncovered evidence indicating that
  separatists have had contacts with the CIA, although China has doubts about
  extent of CIA's involvement today. Beijing has refrained from publicly
  accusing CIA, while maintaining usual line of blaming separatists and
  "foreign forces hostile to China" for a series of bomb attacks in the
  far-western region and in Beijing in the recent past. sources briefing DSO,
  inc. 8/27/97

  97-99  DCI Tenet put the proliferation of biological, chemical and nuclear
  weapons at the top of his list of issues "that pose dangers to the lives of
  all Americans..." in testimony before the senate intelligence committee,
  (sic). Tenet said, countries such as Russia and China "require particular
  attention" because, despite recent promises to halt sales of missiles and
  missile technology, both countries have contributed to proliferation. Tenet
  was appearing along with other senior Intel officials at senate Intel
  committee's annual open hearing on current and projected national security
  threats. Phyllis oakes, assistant secretary of state for INR called
  proliferation of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons a major threat.
  she said the u.s. funds programs at chemical and biological institutes in
  Russia to keep specialists there. lt. gen. Patrick m. Hughes, director of
  the DIA, also put proliferation as "the greatest direct threat to u.s.
  interests worldwide," noting that 20 countries are actively developing such
  weapons motivated "either by regional competition or the desire to develop
  a deterrent or counter to the concomitant superiority of others, including
  the u.s." Washington post 1/29/98 a7

  96  politicization flourishes under Tenet...we all have reason for grave
  concern. CIA's analytical record under Tenet has been dismal. early in
  1998, the CIA's office of transnational issues, unhappy with a report by
  university of Hawaii professor Gary fuller on the relative ethnic stability
  of China, pressured university officials to fire him. although not sworn in
  until 7/97, DCI Tenet served as acting DCI when deutch left in late 1996.
  in January 97, Tenet testified that CIA had not withheld info re possible
  chemical exposures of gulf war vets. later the CIA, recanted Tenet's
  testimony. CIA since 1986, had evidence that chemical weapons were stored
  at the khamisiyah weapons depot destroyed by American combat engineers in
  3/91. [even] later the IG issued a report indicating CIA identified more
  than 1.5 million documents with potential relevance to maladies of ailing
  desert storm vets. op-ed by Patrick g. eddington a former CIA analyst.
  Washington post 8/27/99 a29

  98-99  CIA: cyberattacks aimed at u.s. by China and other countries have
  begun to focus on u.s. computer networks as a target for possible high-tech
  attacks that could cripple anything from telephones to electricity, per dci
  Tenet. per "strategic trends in China," published this month by the
  pentagon's national defense university, Chinese military officials believe
  the U.S. relies on satellites for 90 percent of its combat info and commo.
  air force lt. gen. Kenneth minihan, head of the national security agency,
  said attacks against u.s. networks were occurring "every day." Reuters

  China,  95  Chinese premier Li Peng has ordered ministries of state
  security and public security to increase antidissident ops. according to
  south China morning post, Peng and state council secretary general Luo Gan
  have concluded that covert ops from a western gvt have been financing and
  lending support to dissident groups. Kyoto 5/30/95

  China,  97  western China's Muslim Uighurs turmoil roils. Uighurs, a turkic
  Muslim people want re-establishment of what was once called eastern
  turkestan. linda benson, professor of history at oakland u. in Michigan one
  of the few experts on the region. region has been part of China at least
  since 1884. erkin alptekin is a spokesman for the eastern turkestan union
  of Europe. human rights activist harry Wu has alleged that the Xinjiang
  production and construction corps runs a multitude of labor camps. the
  eastern turkestan national freedom center, located in Washington, d.c. is
  led by 34-year-old exile anwar yusuf. his organization was established in
  Jul. 1995 and is funded by contributions. alptekin, 58, is perhaps the best
  known spokesman and is based in Bonn. he said his group is funded by
  private contributions. Washington post 2/23/97 a25

  96-97  CIA reports Kazakstan president nursultan nazerbayev provided
  support and assistance to Uighur separatists behind the riots and
  anti-Chinese demonstrations in yining, Xinjiang province, about two weeks
  ago, which left more than 20 people dead and scores injured. nazerbayev has
  sanctioned three Uighur liberation movements, the united association of
  Uighurs, the united national revolutionary front and the united association
  of Uighurs, to reside within kazakstan's borders. CIA reports indicate
  leaders from the three groups met with nazerbayev earlier this month before
  making public declarations in favor of Uighurstan, a region the groups hope
  to carve out of xinjiang. more than 200,000 ethnic Uighurs live in
  kazakstan, and more than 50,000 reside in kyrgyzstan. CIA sources believe
  the yining riots were fueled by support from two separate fronts:
  afghanistan's taliban militia and turkey - with the support from turkey
  funneled through Uighur separatists resident in kazakstan. ankara has
  issued a stern diplomatic protest to China over the "brutal suppression" of
  the Muslim population in xinjiang province. Russia is in a quandary,
  "Russia is between two fires". "on the one side they are preparing for an
  official summit in april between president [boris] yeltsin and Chinese
  president jiang zemin, and on the other side they need the support of
  kazakstan's nazerbayev, who leans toward russian ideals." asia times
  2/19/97 8

  China,  97  An explosion on a public bus injured at least eight people in a
  beijing shopping district. cause of explosion was unknown. terrorist
  attacks are almost unheard of in the Chinese capital. three bombings last
  month occurred in western xinjiang region, whose large Muslim population
  wants more autonomy. three bus bombs exploded within minutes of each other
  in xinjiang's capital, urumqi, on feb. 25 -- the last of the six days of
  official mourning ordered for deng. xinjiang is populated mostly by
  turkic-speaking Muslim groups who have grown increasingly resentful of
  Chinese domination. in the past year, Muslim separatist groups, mostly from
  the Uighur minority, have held gun battles with police and tried to
  assassinate pro-China officials. Washington post 3/8/97

  China,  97  China launching a new campaign against Muslim separatists in
  the nw region of xinjiang after a string of pro-independence sabotage
  incidents. Washington post 7/17/97 a22

  China,  98  16 people were killed and 30 were injured when a bus exploded
  in Wuhan. a Hong Kong-based dissident group put the death toll at 30.
  The info Center of human rights and democratic movement in China quoted
  an  unidentified source. "The center has good sources in China's
  dissident community." Emphasis added.  Washington post 2/14-15/98

  China, Afghanistan,  97-99  Muslim separatists in northwest China are being
  trained in taleban-run camps in Afghanistan as they step up struggle for
  independence from beijing. resistance from turkic-speaking muslims, who
  make up three-fifths of the xinjiang population, the largest province in
  China, has plagued the communist leadership for decades. but there is a
  recent escalation by separatist groups, supported by militant islamic
  groups, such as the taleban. campaign is resisted by the Chinese. for them
  xinjiang, which is almost the size of texas, is of crucial strategic
  importance. province's significance stems from its shared borders with
  Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, tajiki-stan and a sliver of Afghanistan, as well as
  India, Russia and Mongolia. To counter them, China has spent billions. it
  has shifted millions of its inland poor to the province to strengthen
  China's control. influx of workers from China followed discovery in 1989 of
  vast oil reserves in the taklamakan desert. as a result of migration, the
  muslims now make up 58 per cent of the population, down from more than 80
  per cent 50 years ago. resentment among non-Chinese, the Uighurs, has
  swelled as they find themselves increasingly marginalized. although no govt
  can risk offending China by helping its opponents to organize outside its
  borders, some factions have established camps in mountains of central asia
  and are directing ops inside the Chinese border. "They have their own
  govt-in-exile and, there are military camps," said chris leung, an American
  researcher who spent time with Uighur separatists in Uzbekistan and Turkey.

  China, Xijiang,  96-97  China's crackdown on the Muslim Uighur uprising in
  Xijiang last month left more than 600 dead or injured per a Hong Kong
  magazine. the monthly cheng ming said the uprising lasted for about a week,
  during which 100 criminals were sentenced to death and 80 public security
  personnel killed. the uprising took place in six cities and involved more
  than 34,000 demonstrators. about 1,500 were arrested. Washington times
  3/1/97 a6

--------------623BC3D69507328A33A60ABF--
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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