Tag: CIA

Diaspora Featured 7 Min Read

They Knew Everything: The 1987 Letter That Should Have Toppled a Government

The official story has always been that Glenn McDuffie was a “lone wolf”—a disgruntled former defense contractor employee shouting into the void about a conspiracy no one else could see. That story ends today. In my previous investigative report, The Whistleblower, the ‘Perfect Murder,’ and the HAWK Missile Cover-Up, I

Featured 2 Min Read

How to Deconstruct a CIA Hoax

In 1983, mujahid leader Sibjhautullah Mojadedi visited Washington and confronted CIA Director William Casey with the lethal reality of his policy: "You are making us die too cheap." Casey's response was not to fix the supply line; it was to retaliate with arms reductions that led to hundreds of deaths.

Featured War & Peace 2 Min Read

The Missile the CIA Fought—And Now Calls a ‘Game-Changer’

Today, the CIA's official museum features the Stinger missile as a game-changer that was one of the key factors in the Soviet defeat in Afghanistan. But this official vindication hides the real story. For six years, the CIA's own Deputy Director, John J. McMahon, was the single most powerful obstacle

Featured Israel 14 Min Read

Was Binyamin Netanyahu Born ‘Pregnant’?

In his 1978 memoir, In Search of Enemies, former CIA station chief John Stockwell offered a sickening insight into the agency's operational doctrine. He described a plan to compromise Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda, who had publicly supported an embargo against shipping arms to Angola. The CIA's plan, Stockwell wrote, was