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IPFS News Link • Central Intelligence Agency

All the News the CIA Sees Fit to Print

• https://www.lewrockwell.com, By David Talbot

On another occasion, Kiriakou, who rose at the CIA to become executive assistant to the deputy in charge of operations, the spy agency's dark activities—saw CNN host Wolf Blitzer wandering unattended through the same area, despite the CIA's ban on communicating with the media.

"We like to think there's a Chinese wall between the CIA, especially senior CIA officials, and the American media," Kiriakou recently told the London Real podcast. "In fact, they're in bed together."

Kiriakou later became a well-known whistleblower. He was the only CIA employee who went to prison for the agency's torture program, sentenced in 2013 to 30 months behind bars—not because he himself tortured anyone, but because he told an ABC News reporter about the waterboarding to which the agency subjected a war on terror captive.

These days, Kiriakou is outraged for a different reason: the tight connection between the CIA and the media elite. All too often, he says, the national security journalists who are granted access by Langley can be trusted to see world affairs—and the U.S. empire's dominant role in them—the way the CIA wants them to. Whether it's the war in Ukraine, tensions with Russia and China, or U.S. military exploits in the Middle East and Africa, coverage in The New York Times, The Washington Post and on television reflects the slanted view of the national security establishment.

When Kiriakou was a CIA official, he says, the agency leaked regularly to The Washington Post correspondents Woodward, David Ignatius and Joby Warrick—as well as "a half-dozen reporters" at The New York Times—because Langley spymasters knew they "will carry your water."


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