CIA's 'red cell' hypocrisy on terror

Source Consortiumnews.com

The Central Intelligence Agency has scoffed at an internal memo that cites a few terrorist acts by some American citizens as possibly causing foreign nations to see the United States as an "exporter of terrorism." The CIA notes that the paper came from its "red cell" analysts who are assigned to "think outside the box" to "provoke thought." However, what's most striking about the secret three-page memo, dated Feb. 4 and disclosed by WikiLeaks last month, is how it reflects CIA self-censorship regarding the agency's own long history of supporting acts of terror and protecting terrorists. Cases of terrorism that implicate the CIA or its operatives, such as the blowing up of a Cubana airliner in 1976 or the arming of Nicaraguan contra rebels in the 1980s, are ignored by the "red cell" analysts even though many of the alleged perpetrators and their funders are still harbored in the United States–and include current and past U.S. government officials. Yet, instead of citing these well-documented terrorism cases, the "red cell" memo references a few cases of individual Americans who have gone abroad and committed terrorist acts as well as some distant history of terrorism linked to U.S. immigrants.