[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Russian and Chinese Military Cargo Planes Shuttling weapons, Missiles, Supplies into Iran

Mossad's reach inside Iran exposed as Tehran arrests 28 alleged agents

Israel and US exhausting supplies of ballistic missile interceptors, source says

China's Covert Cargo Flight to Iran Sparks Global Crisis:

FBI Drops EVIDENCE 2020 Election WAS STOLEN By Democrats For Biden, Chinese Plot UNCOVERED

Mohammad Marandi LEAKS: Trump's Secret Nuclear Talks with Israel!

Hanegbi: Iran has far more missiles than estimated; in the thousands

Gutfeld: Kat’s back!

White House Seeks Meeting With Iran's Foreign Minister As Iran Eases Punishing Strikes: Axios

Iran claims they have disabled Israel Iron dome, caused them to attack each other

Prof. Marandi Drops BOMBSHELL: “Tel Aviv Will Burn… Leave While You Can!”

The Prisoner's Dilemma Of AI

"Everyone Should Immediately Evacuate Tehran!", Trump Warns

Ben Hodges: Russia is a Terrible Ally | Jake Broe Podcast (E034)

Burkina Faso's DRONE STRIKE that SHOCKed the WORLD

Speed of Russian missiles in Feet per second

Laura Ingraham was stunned by one awful problem that has Democrats reeling

AOC Fans the Flames of Division in INS*NE Response to Dangerous Protests

Trump Orders ICE to Democrat Sanctuary Cities

How Iran Turned Israels Iron Dome Against Itself Using Clever Jamming

ICE Raid At Omaha Food Plant Results In Dozens Of Arrests, New Applicants For Open Jobs

If We Send Them All Back... WHO WILL PICK THE CROPS?!

What is Palantir and what exactly does it do. You need to know this.

Nearly 1 MILLION illegals have already self deported under Trump!

Trump pretending to resist Israel attack on Iran; constrained because open support would push Saudi into China camp

Paul Joseph Watson: They Got What Was Coming

Scientists in Antarctica Puzzled as They Discover Mysterious Radio Waves Coming From Below the Ice Sheet

Dems Get Bad News as Trump Scores Massive Approval for Deploying National Guard in LA

ISRAEL: "We don't want war”

German Commissioner Calls For Purge Of AfD Members From Police Ranks


World News
See other World News Articles

Title: Why Congress Can’t Stop the CIA From Working With Forces That Commit Abuses
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://www.propublica.org/article/ ... anistan-night-raids-zero-units
Published: Dec 19, 2022
Author: Lynzy Billing
Post Date: 2022-12-19 07:18:39 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 223
Comments: 1

The Leahy Law prohibits the U.S. military from providing training and equipment to foreign security forces that commit human rights abuses, but it does not apply to U.S. intelligence agencies. Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy said it should.

For more than two decades, the U.S. military has been barred from providing training and equipment to foreign security forces that commit “gross violations of internationally recognized human rights.”

The law, named for its author, Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, applies to military assistance for foreign units funded through the Defense or State departments. Lawmakers including Leahy, a Democrat, acknowledged that it does not cover commando outfits like Afghanistan’s Zero Units.

In an email, Leahy said he believes that the law’s human rights requirements need to be expanded to “cover certain counter-terrorism operations involving U.S. special forces and foreign partners.

“U.S. support for foreign security forces, whether through the Department of Defense, Department of State, CIA or other agencies,” Leahy wrote, “must be subject to effective congressional oversight so when mistakes are made or crimes committed, those responsible are held accountable.”

Leahy called on the Biden administration to apply the law “as a matter of policy” to all overseas military forces that work with any U.S. government agencies.

Tim Rieser, an aide to Leahy, acknowledged that the Leahy Law “is not all-encompassing, as much as we wish it were.” The Leahy Law, he said, applies only to congressional appropriations that fund the State and Defense departments.

“Sen. Leahy’s position has always been that the policy should be consistent, that we should not support units of foreign security forces that commit gross violations of human rights regardless of the source of the funds, but that is not what the law says.”

A source familiar with the Zero Unit program said the CIA’s officers in the field, and special forces soldiers working under their direction, are required to follow the same rules of combat as American service members. The agency does not fall under the Leahy Law.

U.S. military operations fall under the jurisdiction of the Senate and House Armed Services committees. Congressional oversight of the CIA and other intelligence agencies is handled by separate committees in the House and Senate that hold most of their meetings and hearings in secret. By law, the agencies are required to keep Congress “fully and currently informed” of all covert operations. Intelligence committee staffers have the authority to ask the CIA for documents and testimony about classified missions like the support for the Zero Units under the broad national security law known as Title 50.

Congressional officials said the two oversight committees are ill- equipped to monitor the complexities of paramilitary operations in foreign countries. The Pentagon and State Department have created entire bureaucracies to make sure foreign units meet the requirements of the Leahy Law. The intelligence oversight committees, with their relatively small staffs, are not set up to track what’s happening on the ground when U.S. military officers on loan to the CIA work with elite units in the hinterlands of Afghanistan, Somalia or Syria.

“The sense I get from former operators is they don’t give a shit,” said one congressional source. “Their attitude is, the world’s dangerous and you partner with bad people, that’s why we have Title 50.”

Congressional staffers said they believed the failure of Congress to extend the Leahy Law to intelligence agencies was no coincidence.

The Night Raids “I mean, it’s a huge and intentional gap,” one said. “It’s designed to not have oversight; it is meant to not be under the public view.”

In his email, Leahy said an amendment to the Leahy Law, which would expand the scope to certain counter-terrorism operations, is now in the works.

The lack of consequences for blatant human rights violations, he said, “foments anger and resentment toward the U.S., undermines our mission in these countries where we need the support of the local population, and weakens our credibility as a country that supports the rule of law and accountability.”

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Ada (#0)

Congress can try but they will be told to back off and if not some will die by an accident.

Darkwing  posted on  2022-12-19   9:12:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]