The Dubious Optics of Trump Japan Memorial Day May 2019 Visit from the clear perspectives of The USS WASP: "Trump will bite you", says New Abwehr - 5:52 AM 5/28/2019
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The #TrumpInvestigationsBlog by #MichaelNovakhov - #Review Of #News And #Opinions: "#Trump will #bite you", says #NewAbwehr:— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 28, 2019
The #Dubious #Optics of #Trump #Japan #MemorialDay #May2019 #Visit from the #clear #perspectives of #USSWASP - 5:52 AM 5/28/2019https://t.co/d8aDvnAgrv … pic.twitter.com/pXcMRxo4kG
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Dubious Optics of Trump Japan Memorial Day May 2019 Visit from the clear perspectives of The USS WASP - Post
"Trump will bite you", says New Abwehr:
The #Dubious #Optics of #Trump #Japan #MemorialDay #May2019 #Visit from the #clear #perspectives of #USSWASP - 5:52 AM 5/28/2019
Dubious Optics of Trump Japan Memorial Day May 2019 Visit from the clear perspectives of USS WASP - Google Search
Trump Japan Memorial Day May 2019 Visit - Google News
First Trump denigrated close and WW2 Allies, UK and Australia, by declaring them the "suspects" in "Barr Investigations". And then he exhibited such an extraordinary and quite touching closeness to his guests, as if Japan were the most loyal USA ally and close friend for centuries:
"Everything is fine, Dandy, forgiven, forgotten, and paid for. And now we will have our fishy sushi free lunch on the New Abwehr's panhandle. Danke, danke, mucho danke, my dear Golf Partner, good old Abe!"
RT @EconomicTimes: In Pics | Interesting photos: #DonaldTrump’s visit to #Japan bit.ly/2X6AXh2 pic.twitter.com/rds0Um5Eb9 |
In Pics | Interesting photos: #DonaldTrump’s visit to #Japan
bit.ly/2X6AXh2 pic.twitter.com/rds0Um5Eb9 |
Judging from Trump's restrained facial expression, he barely avoided throwing up onto his hosts' plates, as some of his predecessors were so inclined to do, and instead accepted his humble fishy sushi lunch box offered to him on the safe distance of the panhandle.
Trump on UK and Australia in Barr Investigations - GS
Overall, it looked, and was designed to look, as if Donald Trump, the Great Political Sumo Wrestler (and not your regular NeoNazi Pig, as some TV Talking Heads Propagandize) did finally receive his big, 75 lbs stainless steel prize with the bronze eagle on the top.
It becomes clearer, with the unfolding political and geopolitical dramas and their historical reenactments, remembrances, and reconceptualisations, that the New Abwehr Intelligence Operation "Kaiser Trump" is a part of the New Abwehr's plan to change the perceptions and the realities of the Post-WW2 World.
By Michael Novakhov, in "My Opinion"
5.28.19
Donald Trump wants investigation into Australia's role in 'Russian hoax' theguardian.com/us-news/2019/m…
Posted by mikenov on Tuesday, May 28th, 2019 10:39am
Donald Trump has said he wants Australia’s role in setting off the FBI inquiry into links between Russia and his election campaign examined by the US attorney general, William Barr.
It is a potentially explosive development for the historically solid US-Australian alliance and the first time Trump has publicly named Australia while discussing what he calls the “Russia hoax” and “witch hunt”.
A spokesman for Marise Payne, Australia’s foreign affairs minister, responded to the comments on Saturday by saying: “Australia and the United States are the closest of allies.”
“The government has not commented on these matters and doing so could prejudice any ongoing investigation,” he said.
Trump said he had declassified “potentially millions of pages” of intelligence documents related to surveillance activities on his campaign and Barr would be in charge of analysing it.
“So what I’ve done is I’ve declassified everything,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday before leaving on a trip to Japan.
“He can look and I hope he looks at the UK and I hope he looks at Australia and I hope he looks at Ukraine.
“I hope he looks at everything, because there was a hoax that was perpetrated on our country.”
Trump’s former campaign aide George Papadopoulos has claimed that Australia’s former high commissioner to the UK, Alexander Downer, spied on him during a meeting at a London bar in May 2016.
Downer has rejected this, but said that during the meeting Papadopoulos had told him Russia had damaging material on Trump’s presidential rival, Hillary Clinton.
In an interview with the ABC’s Matt Bevan, Downer said Papadopoulos told him during the meeting he was confident Trump would win the election because the Russians had some information on Clinton which could be damaging to her if released. Downer then passed this information on to Canberra.
Papadopoulos denies he ever mentioned Russia and Clinton during the meeting.
After being forwarded to Canberra the information was passed on to US intelligence services and the FBI.
US special counsel Bob Mueller, in his report on the links between the Trump campaign and Russia, said the Papadopoulos-Downer meeting was what prompted the FBI to open its inquiry on 31 July 2016.
“This sort of idea that there is a kind of a Asis-Asio-MI6-MI5-FBI-CIA-Ukrainian government conspiracy to bring down the Trump administration, that this is treason, that I should be in Guantanamo Bay... I mean it’s a little bit sad that people take that kind of thought seriously,” Downer told the ABC.
He added that he was just doing his job as a diplomat at the time.
“If people tell me things like that, which I think are damaging to western security interests ... expect me, Alexander Downer, former for minister of Australia, to be supporting western interests against Russian intelligence. You can count on me.”
The FBI investigation led to Mueller being appointed.
On Friday, Trump described the Russia inquiry as “an attempted coup or an attempted takedown of the president of the United States”.
He also said he might ask the outgoing British prime minister Theresa May about “potential Five Eyes spying” on his campaign.
Five Eyes is the intelligence sharing alliance between the US, Australia, UK, Canada and New Zealand.
“I may very well talk to her about that, yeah,” Trump said.
“There’s word and rumour that the FBI and others were involved, CIA were involved, with the UK, having to do with the Russian hoax,” he said.
Papadopoulos was one of Mueller’s first convictions – the former aide had pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI. He was sentenced to 14 days’ jail.
Papadopoulos, Republican members of Congress and right-wing US media figures have been urging the president to declassify the documents.
“It’s the greatest hoax, probably, in the history of our country and somebody has to get to the bottom of it,” Trump said. “We’ll see.
“But for a long period of time, they’ve wanted me to declassify and I did.”
Reaction and analysis from Trump surrogate Jack Kingston, former CKE Restaurants CEO Andy Puzder and Democratic strategic Jehmu Greene.
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CNN's Anderson Cooper says President Donald Trump acts like he is a bystander to world events after Trump said it "doesn't matter" that North Korea conducted short-range missile tests. #CNN #News
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Rep. Liz Cheney says Strzok-Page texts sound 'like a coup'; analysis from former DOJ counsel Jamil Jaffer and national security attorney Bradley Moss.
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The New York Times reports that President Trump asked the Justice Department for paperwork about several high-profile cases; reaction from retired Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant Jessie Jane Duff and Charles 'Cully' Stimson, senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation.
Trump Japan Memorial Day May 2019 Visit - Google Search google.com/search?newwind…
Posted by mikenov on Tuesday, May 28th, 2019 10:12am
WATCH: Trump delivers Memorial Day address aboard USS Wasp in Japan washex.am/2QsoQIF
Posted by mikenov on Tuesday, May 28th, 2019 10:00am
USS WASP - Google Search google.com/search?newwind…
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reichstag fire as abwehr canaris operation - Google Search google.com/search?newwind…
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Remarks for Central Intelligence Agency Director Gina Haspel - McConnell Center at the University of Louisville — Central Intelligence Agency cia.gov/news-informati…
Posted by mikenov on Tuesday, May 28th, 2019 8:41am
Trump wishes troops 'happy Memorial Day' as he heads home from ...
<a href="http://NBCNews.com" rel="nofollow">NBCNews.com</a>-5 hours ago
Trump wishes troops 'happy Memorial Day' as he heads home from Japan ... Kaga at JMSDF Yokosuka base in Yokosuka on May 28, 2019. ... Trump and first lady Melania Trump visited a Japanese destroyer, the ... He became the first head of state to meet Japan's new emperor, Naruhito, since his May 1 ...
Trump ending Japan trip after Memorial Day speech to troops
International-The Public's Radio-7 hours ago
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The Latest: Trump heads back to US after 4-day Japan visit
Live Updating-Washington Post-5 hours ago
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Memorial Day deals, Trump in Japan and Stanley Cup: 5 things you ...
USA TODAY-May 27, 2019
Editors, USA TODAY Published 3:48 a.m. ET May 27, 2019 ... While Memorial Day is for honoring military personnel who died in service, businesses ... President Donald Trump is in Japan for a state visit that will make him the first world ... state invited to meet Emperor Naruhito since he assumed power May 1 after his father ...
The Latest: North Korea worries linger as Trump leaves Japan
Associated Press-15 hours ago
Trump is concluding his Japanese trip with rifts still evident between the ... The president and Melania Trump are due to take part in a Memorial Day ceremony aboard a U.S. ... Emperor Naruhito's ascension to the throne on May 1 ushered in the era of .... All contents © copyright 2019 The Associated Press.
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International-USA TODAY-20 hours ago
International-USA TODAY-20 hours ago
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Vice President Pence visits Arlington National Cemetery for Memorial ...
ABC News-17 hours ago
Vice President Mike Pence spent Memorial Day honoring fallen ... While President Donald Trump is visiting Japan on a four-day state ... headstones in Arlington National Cemetery, May 23, 2019.more + ... of U.S. troops in May due to a lack of communication from Pyongyang, according to American officials.
'Their duty was to serve; our duty is to remember': Mike Pence visits ...
In-Depth-Daily Mail-16 hours ago
In-Depth-Daily Mail-16 hours ago
Trump visits Arlington National Cemetery before Memorial Day
Military Times-May 24, 2019
(AP) — President Donald Trump paid his respects Thursday to those who ... which is Memorial Day, but Trump will be in Japan on a state visit.
Trump to visit Japanese warship as country has been quietly building ...
CBS News-May 23, 2019
President Trump's visit to Japan over Memorial Day weekend will culminate with him becoming the first U.S. president in modern history to set ...
Trump and first lady visit Arlington National Cemetery ahead of ...
CBS News-May 23, 2019
In the days leading up to Memorial Day, the U.S. Army places more than 260,000 ... Mr. Trump will also visit a Japanese warship during his trip.
President Donald Trump's Schedule for Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Conservative Daily News-21 hours ago
President Donald Trump's Schedule for Tuesday, May 28, 2019 ... President and Mrs. Trump are on a 3-day State visit to Japan during which he ... PM The president and first lady participate in a Memorial Day address to the ...
Over 100000 bikers mass for 'Rolling Thunder' as Trump vows to ...
The Japan Times-May 26, 2019
May 27, 2019 ... Riders end up at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the nearby ... Memorial Day — on the last Monday in May — is aimed specifically at ... Trump, who was on an official visit to Japan, offered his support.
Knife attack at Japan bus stop wounds 19, kills at least 1
KEYE TV CBS Austin (press release)-8 hours ago
Knife attack at Japan bus stop wounds 19, kills at least 1 ... This aerial photo shows the scene of an attack in Kawasaki, near Tokyo Tuesday, May 28, 2019. ... Tuesday after stopping aboard a U.S. warship to give a Memorial Day speech ... also are expected to visit with Trump and first lady Melania Trump.
President Donald Trump's Schedule for Monday, May 27, 2019
Conservative Daily News-May 26, 2019
President and Mrs. Trump are on a 3-day State visit to Japan during which he will be the first foreign leader to meet Japan's new Emperor and ...
Melania Trump Jets to Japan in a Postcard Dress and Sensual '70s ...
Footwear News-May 24, 2019
Melania Trump looked summer-ready for Memorial Day weekend as ... Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and wife Akie visited the White ...
A Princess Diana moment! Melania battles the wind ahead of her flight ...
In-Depth-Daily Mail-May 24, 2019
In-Depth-Daily Mail-May 24, 2019
Asian shares up in muted trading after Trump visit to Japan
Beloit Daily News-7 hours ago
... Bank headquarters in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, May 27, 2019. ... Trump was closing his state visit to Japan, which began Saturday. ... Markets in the United States were closed Monday for the Memorial Day holiday.
POTUS Makes Pit Stop in Alaska to Praise the 'GREAT TROOPS ...
Independent Journal Review-May 25, 2019
On his way to Japan over the Memorial Day weekend, the president stopped in Alaska ... Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 25, 2019.
Pence honors fallen in Tomb of the Unknown Soldier ceremony
<a href="http://UPI.com" rel="nofollow">UPI.com</a>-10 hours ago
May 27, 2019 / 7:12 PM ... May 27 (UPI) -- Vice President Mike Pence honored fallen U.S. service ... during a Memorial Day Service at the Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. ... from President Donald Trump, who was on a diplomatic trip to Japan. ... The president and first lady Melania Trump planned to visit U.S. troops ...
Trevor Noah: Trump acting like 'a dictator accused of war crimes'
The Guardian-May 24, 2019
Late night hosts discussed Trump's juvenile behavior after ... Trump's Memorial Day travel plans, the fallout from Trump's heated ... May 24, 2019 .... Jimmy Kimmel opened with jokes about Trump'splanned visit to Japan.
Trevor Noah Calls Out Trump's Totally Calm Twitter Tantrum
The New York Times-May 23, 2019
Click here to visit our frequently asked questions about HTML5 video. ... Trump will be heading to Japan on a four-day trip over the Memorial ...
7 Things You Need to Know Sunday May 26, 2019
WSAW-May 26, 2019
The trip marks Mr. Trump's second visit to Japan since taking office, and the ... On Saturday the City of Wausau held its annual Memorial Day ...
Melania Trump to LEAVE son Barron at home during state visit to UK ...
Express.co.uk-May 24, 2019
During the three-day visit marking the 75th anniversary of D-Day, Trump will be ... Melania Trumpwears a £2,615 dress to fly to Japan ... Currently, there is uncertainty surrounding whether Trump will meet with Theresa May who stated ... Queen Elizabeth II to visit the United Kingdom from June 3 to 5, 2019.
Deutsche Bank, Narendra Modi, Game of Thrones: Your Monday ...
The New York Times-May 19, 2019
May 19, 2019 ... Response: A spokeswoman for the Trump Organization said the family .... The timing is expected to be on or around Memorial Day, the U.S. holiday ... Japan: Chiitan, a cutesy, unofficial mascot for the city of Susaki, ... “I loved seeing where ambassadors go to eat in Washington when they ...
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· · · · · · · · ·
Trump honors troops with Memorial Day speech on USS Wasp
Washington Times-7 hours ago
President Trump addressed U.S. sailors and Marines in Japan for Memorial Day late Monday, praising them as “the face of American strength ...
WATCH: Trump delivers Memorial Day address aboard USS Wasp in ...
International-Washington Examiner-8 hours ago
International-Washington Examiner-8 hours ago
Japan Rolled Out the Red Carpet. Trump Veered Off Into Personal ...
Opinion-The New York Times-4 hours ago
Opinion-The New York Times-4 hours ago
Trump puts US servicemembers in spotlight during Memorial Day ...
International-Stars and Stripes-2 hours ago
International-Stars and Stripes-2 hours ago
Service Members Pictured Wearing Donald Trump-Themed Patches ...
HuffPost-2 hours ago
Airmen onboard the USS WASP wearing patches on their jumpsuits that read “Make Aircrew Great Again.” The patches include an image in the ...
Remembering those Oregonians who served, and died, onboard the ...
<a href="http://OregonLive.com" rel="nofollow">OregonLive.com</a>-22 hours ago
In late summer 1942, the aircraft carrier USS Wasp zigzagged through Torpedo Junction, the area south of Guadalcanal where Japanese ...
USNI News Fleet and Marine Tracker: May 27, 2019
USNI News-18 hours ago
Sailors assigned to the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp (LHD-1) watch an F-35B Lightning II aircraft assigned to Marine Fighter Attack ...
Trump Says US Aircraft Carrier Design Is 'Wrong,' Plans Overhaul
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Petty Officer 3rd Class Chase Edwards, of Euless, Texas, was assigned to the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp, which is homeported at ...
President Donald Trump's Schedule for Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Conservative Daily News-21 hours ago
11:00 AM / 10:00 PM The president and first lady participate in a Memorial Day address to the troops aboard USS WASP – USS WASP.
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Second Line of Defense-May 21, 2019
U.S. Marines with Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 121 conduct daily maintenance checks and continue flight operations in international ...
USS America, USS New Orleans to Deploy With US 7th Fleet in Japan
The Diplomat-Apr 29, 2019
On Friday, the U.S. Navy announced that it will rotate USS Wasp, the lead ship of the Wasp-class of amphibious assault ships, and USS ...
Top Asian News 6:00 am GMT
Yahoo News-3 hours ago
ABOARD THE USS WASP (AP) — President Donald Trump on Tuesday wished "Happy Memorial Day" to U.S. service members aboard an ...
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Trump is slated to head for Washington on Tuesday after he addresses US sailors aboard the USS Wasp, stationed at Yokosuka. SOURCE: Al ...
Trump arrives for ceremonial Japanese visit of Reiwa era
<a href="http://UPI.com" rel="nofollow">UPI.com</a>-May 25, 2019
<a href="http://UPI.com" rel="nofollow">UPI.com</a>-May 25, 2019
The Navy is sending its most powerful amphibious assault ship to the ...
Task & Purpose-May 2, 2019
The USS Wasp, a predecessor to the America-class amphibious assault ships, will depart the region for scheduled maintenance in Norfolk.
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International-IHS Jane's 360-Apr 29, 2019
International-IHS Jane's 360-Apr 29, 2019
AP News in Brief at 12:04 am EDT
CityNews Vancouver-5 hours ago
ABOARD THE USS WASP (AP) — President Donald Trump on Tuesday wished “Happy Memorial Day” to U.S. service members aboard an ...
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WSYM-TV-8 hours ago
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The Seventh Fleet is composed of a aircraft carrier, several large amphibious ... The current USS Wasp, is based at Sasebo, outside Nagasaki.
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WDEF News 12-22 hours ago
Sailors' jobs are highly varied aboard USS Wasp. More than 1,000 men and women make up the ship's crew, which keeps all parts of the ship ...
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Newsbug.info-2 hours ago
Trump polled the sailors and Marines on the USS Wasp on steam versus electric catapults Tuesday during a visit to the Yokosuka naval base ...
Stay up to date on results for USS WASP.
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President Trump and the First Lady Participate in a Memorial Day Address Aboard the USS WASP
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Before leaving Japan after a four-day state visit, President Trump gave troops onboard the USS Wasp a Memorial Day message. Watch his remarks here.
Here are the top stories for Tuesday, May 14th: Pompeo warns Russia about interference; Coach pleads guilty in admissions bribery scheme; Anthony Weiner finishes sentence; Olive oil counterfeit ring busted.
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#KaiserTrump is #IntelligenceOperation by #NewAbwehr, #BND, #GermanIntelligence, #GerhardScroeder, #ErnstUhrlau. It #Reveals their #collective #RepetitionCompulsion #Neurosis: the #need to #recreate the #painful #themes of #German #History and to #Undo...
Posted by mikenov on Monday, May 27th, 2019 7:31pm
Under CIA Chief Gina Haspel, an Intelligence Service Returns to the Shadows - WSJ trumpandtrumpism.com/2019/05/27/und…
Posted by mikenov on Monday, May 27th, 2019 7:32pm
#KaiserTrump is #IntelligenceOperation by #NewAbwehr, #BND, #GermanIntelligence, #GerhardScroeder, #ErnstUhrlau. It #Reveals their #collective #RepetitionCompulsion #Neurosis: the #need to #recreate the #painful #themes of #German #History and to #Undo trumpandtrumpism.com/2019/05/27/kai…
Posted by mikenov on Monday, May 27th, 2019 7:43pm
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#collective #RepetitionCompulsion #Neurosis: the #need to #recreate the #painful #themes of #German #History and to #Undo the #Sequelae of #WW2. #CIA – The Trump Investigations Report – Review Of News And Opinions trumpandtrumpism.com/2019/05/27/kai…
Posted by mikenov on Monday, May 27th, 2019 8:16pm
#TrumpNewsReview: #KaiserTrump is #IntelligenceOperation by #NewAbwehr, #BND, #GermanIntelligence, #GerhardScroeder, #ErnstUhrlau. It #Reveals their #collective #RepetitionCompulsion #Neurosis
trumpandtrumpism.com/2019/05/27/tru… pic.twitter.com/4WC7pGnEYL
trumpandtrumpism.com/2019/05/27/tru… pic.twitter.com/4WC7pGnEYL
Posted by mikenov on Monday, May 27th, 2019 9:45pm
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Today we held our annual Memorial Ceremony to honor the courageous CIA officers who died serving their country.
Four new, historic stars were added to the Memorial Wall; two honor officers whose names & contributions must remain secret.
#InMemoriam pic.twitter.com/SnNxANrlyH
Posted by CIA on Tuesday, May 21st, 2019 8:48pm
Retweeted by mikenov on Tuesday, May 28th, 2019 7:32am
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DCIA Haspel Visits Auburn University — Central Intelligence Agency cia.gov/news-informati…
Posted by mikenov on Tuesday, May 28th, 2019 7:45am
CIA Haspel on strategic intelligence gaps - Google Search google.com/search?q=CIA+H…
Posted by mikenov on Tuesday, May 28th, 2019 7:50am
Remarks for Central Intelligence Agency Director Gina Haspel - McConnell Center at the University of Louisville
24 September 2018
It’s a rare pleasure to be back home in Kentucky, and truly a privilege to be back on this campus. I want to thank Senator McConnell and President Bendapudi for the gracious invitation, and I want to thank all of you for being here today and for taking an interest in our nation’s security and in the role CIA plays in protecting our country.
In the interest of full disclosure, and as Senator McConnell mentioned, I should tell you that my college years weren’t spent entirely in Louisville. Like Senator McConnell, I spent some of my time in college at a well-known university over in central Kentucky. But after finishing my junior year, the bright lights of this beautiful city beckoned, and I finished my degree as a Cardinal. Proudly so.
Because I am a proud Kentuckian and a proud U of L graduate, it is very special for me to be with you all today. I look forward to speaking with Scott Jennings a little later. Before I do, I’d like to offer some brief remarks about the remarkable organization I am honored to lead: the Central Intelligence Agency.
Over the summer, we hosted a special guest at Langley. Daniel Craig was kind enough to visit CIA Headquarters to talk about playing James Bond and how it compares to the real world of espionage.
And yes—he parked his red Aston Martin right in front of our main lobby. Which raises a couple of big contrasts between real-world espionage and the Hollywood version.
First, if you’re an undercover officer endeavoring not to be noticed, a red Aston Martin probably is not the best way to go. I’d go with a beige Hyundai.
Second, the average CIA officer can only dream of parking right in front of the main lobby. I can’t even do that!
But whatever the real CIA lacks in Hollywood glamour, it more than makes up for it in job satisfaction. Service at CIA is the opportunity to be part of something bigger than yourself—to serve your country in a meaningful and compelling way. As one of my favorite former Directors, George Tenet, used to say, CIA doesn’t do easy. The hard jobs come to us. CIA officers take on the toughest assignments—at some risk—for the sake of our nation.
From my first days in the nation’s Clandestine Service and my first overseas assignment in Africa, the meaning of our work was clear to me. My training prepared me well for a moonless night in a remote and desolate place, when I conducted my first meeting with a foreign agent.
He passed me intelligence of great value to our government, and I passed him a little extra money for the men he led. It was the beginning of an adventure I could only have dreamed of as a kid. Now that I think about it, that night was the stuff of movies.
It’s fair to say that CIA back then in the late 80s and 90s was a thoroughly male-dominated organization. But I was lucky to have bosses who were willing to take a chance on me.
One of them was a tough, old-school mandarin who picked me to serve as Chief of Station at a small but crucial frontier post. After my appointment was announced, a couple of guys who had been in the running for the job weren’t very pleased. One even told me to my face that he couldn’t believe, couldn’t understand why I—a woman—was chosen to go to a place like that.
While I could have done without the many long nights I spent sleeping on the floor of that small station, that assignment surpassed even the imaginings of a Hollywood screenwriter. I was proud of the fact that we captured two major terrorists, and conducted a counterproliferation operation against a nation state bad actor that went our way.
I managed to do well as an operations officer, and I did what I could to help bring down some of the barriers that I had faced. I’m also proud of a lot of other women who have risen through the ranks, especially since the 9/11 attacks. The Agency really has become a better place to work for all its officers over the years, even though, like others, we still have a way to go.
Strategic Priorities
So it should come as no surprise that one of my top priorities since becoming Director has been to champion diversity and inclusion at CIA. Our global mission at CIA demands that we recruit and retain America’s best and brightest, regardless of gender, race, or cultural background. And I want every officer to have equal opportunities to succeed.
Another strategic priority is to invest more heavily in collecting against the hardest issues. Our efforts against these difficult intelligence gaps have been overshadowed over the years by the Intelligence Community’s justifiably heavy emphasis on counterterrorism in the wake of 9/11. Groups such as the so-called Islamic State and al-Qa‘ida remain squarely in our sights, but we are sharpening our focus on nation-state adversaries.
Closely related to the renewed emphasis on raising our investment against the most strategic intelligence gaps is our push to steadily increase the number of officers stationed overseas. That’s where our mission—as a foreign intelligence agency—lies, and having a larger foreign footprint allows for a more robust posture.
We’re also investing in foreign-language excellence as a core attribute for our officers. We’re strengthening our language training to ensure that our people are more capable and better attuned to the cultures in which they operate.
By the way, I recall very fondly first-class French literature classes at University of Louisville.
And we’re building stronger partnerships at CIA—not only with our sister agencies across the IC, but with our foreign counterparts as well. Teamwork is the only effective way of dealing with the range of complex threats we face across the globe, and CIA is working more closely than ever with our allies across the world.
Finally, no foreign challenge has had a more direct and devastating impact on American families and communities—including right here in Kentucky—than the flow of opioids and other drugs into our country. That’s why CIA is going to invest more heavily in our counternarcotics effort abroad to combat this terrible threat—one that has killed far more Americans than any terrorist group ever has.
CIA and its Role in National Security
In the lobby of our Headquarters building in Langley, Virginia, there’s an inscription from the Book of John: “And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”
It’s a reference to CIA’s core mission: collecting the most accurate and timely intelligence to help policymakers protect our country and advance American interests around the world.
Finding the truth means operating against despotic governments and terrorist groups that fiercely and violently guard their secrets. It’s complicated, risky work.
But as I said, we don’t do easy. The hard jobs come to CIA.
Within the Intelligence Community, CIA is the keeper of the human intelligence mission. Technical forms of collection are vital, but a good human source is unique and can deliver decisive intelligence on our adversaries’ secrets—even their intent.
CIA is also the lead agency for all-source intelligence analysis—the assessments drafted by our analysts based on classified and open-source information. Much of the President’s Daily Brief consists of CIA collection and analysis.
And very often, the President relies on us to act as America’s first line of defense. We’re “first in”—collecting intelligence, moving ahead of the military, going where others can’t go, and doing things that no one else can. These are the sort of activities that fall under the heading of covert action.
Our work requires secrecy, and secrecy in turn requires a profound degree of trust from the American people. Nothing is more important to those of us at CIA than our obligation to earn the trust of our fellow citizens.
That’s why our Agency abides by and embraces an oversight structure that includes the Congressional intelligence committees, the FISA court, and our own independent Inspector General. There’s not another major intelligence agency in the world subject to oversight authority as comprehensive as our own, but that’s as it should be.
It’s what makes us accountable to the open society we serve. It’s what makes us an American intelligence service.
Ethos of CIA
In carrying out every aspect of our work, CIA officers are guided by a professional ethos that is the sum of our abiding principles, core values, and highest aspirations. These include service, integrity, excellence, courage, teamwork, and stewardship.
Sacrifice, too, is an inescapable part of our mission. One hundred and twenty-nine men and women at CIA have died in the line of duty since our founding in 1947.
My first boss in the field was killed in 1993 after volunteering for an assignment in a very dangerous and unstable place. He was brilliant, witty, and courageous—a lovely man who always wore cowboy boots and spoke excellent Russian and Turkish.
He was an inspiration to me and to everyone who served with him, and I think of him frequently.
Of the 129 heroes represented by a star on our Memorial Wall at our Headquarters, 42 have perished since September 11th, 2001. The vast majority of them were lost fighting the long war against al-Qa‘ida.
They include Johnny Micheal Spann, a brave former Marine and the first American to die in the line of duty in Afghanistan. They also include a dear friend of mine, a devoted wife and mother of three who was one of our greatest al-Qa‘ida experts. She was utterly determined to pursue the terrorists who attacked our country—even if it meant putting herself in harm’s way.
People often ask CIA Directors what keeps them up at night. Between rogue WMD programs, cyber threats, terrorist organizations, great power rivalries, and other global threats, there’s bound to be more than a single reason I’m losing sleep on any given night. But I’d like to share with you a story I keep in mind when things get tough.
I served in Africa early in my career, and one day a group of us—largely diplomats—set out to climb Mount Kilimanjaro. Our guide was a wonderful man, a diplomat himself, who had been born at the base of the mountain. His approach was simple—three days up, two days down.
As we made our way up the mountain, we were passed by a group of security officials from a third country who clearly hadn’t done their homework. They were in their prime but overconfident and ascending far too quickly. In the end, they had to be stretchered off the mountain.
But our guide prepared us well for the journey. As we moved up in altitude, he would say again and again in Swahili: “po’le, po’le”—slowly, slowly. Following his advice, many of us made it to the summit safely.
The view was unforgettable. I will never forget the leadership example of our guide. While others tried to make their way up with brute force, he showed us there is no substitute for patience and expertise.
“Po’le, po’le.” I try to remember those words when faced with a difficult challenge. They remind me that in every pursuit, the tough climbs take patience, courage, creativity, and relentless determination.
CIA officers have those qualities in abundance. I couldn’t be prouder to lead them.
And for those of you who aspire to serve your country, take it from your fellow Kentuckian: Prepare yourself with a good education—and don’t do easy. Raise your hand when the hard jobs come to you.
That alone will take you most of the way to the top.
Thank you all very much.
Posted: Sep 26, 2018 10:13 AM
Last Updated: Sep 26, 2018 10:19 AM
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CIA Director Gina Haspel Speaks at Auburn University
18 April 2019
Good morning. It’s a pleasure to be here with you this morning.
I’d like to begin by thanking General Burgess for the warm welcome. I also want to thank all of you for being here today. It’s encouraging to see so many young people taking an interest in our nation’s security and in the role CIA plays in protecting our country.
I also wanted to congratulate Auburn for winning the SEC tournament and making it to the Final Four for the first time! As a Kentuckian and die-hard Wildcats fan, the Auburn-Kentucky game was a little painful to watch—but, I have to admit, it was a well-deserved victory for the Tigers. Once my team was out, I threw my support to your guys.
And speaking of historic sports rivalries, I thought I’d share a little story with you from early in my career.
I was overseas on my first assignment in Africa when I met a Baptist missionary couple—let’s call them Jerry and Rosy. Jerry was a proud Auburn alum, and since my boss, Mark, happened to be one as well, I’d overhear stories about Jerry and his love for Auburn sports.
One day, I learned that Rosy, Jerry’s wife, had had quite a scare the night before. Rosy found Jerry in bed clutching his chest and gasping for air, and she thought he might be having a heart attack—a terrifying prospect when you’re hundreds of miles away from the nearest hospital.
Rosy ran over to Jerry and asked if he was ok. Jerry didn’t answer, so she became agitated, pleading for him to say something.
At last, Jerry bolted up in bed and shouted: “Touchdown Auburn! Touchdown Auburn!” Rosy was taken aback and asked him what was going on.
Jerry ripped off his headphones excitedly and explained that he had been listening to an Auburn football game on Armed Forces Radio. The Tigers had just scored a touchdown on a reverse, beating Alabama.
“Dying can wait,” he shouted. “We just beat Alabama!”
That just goes to show that you can find an Auburn football fan anywhere—even in the most remote corners of the earth.
But in all seriousness, it’s in places like this where you’ll find CIA officers as well.
Our men and women put their lives on the line every day, often in the world’s most dangerous locations. They do it to uncover the secrets our nation needs to defend itself and to advance American interests across the globe—secrets we can’t get any other way.
I’m sure you’ll understand this morning that I can’t offer any recent espionage tales from the streets of Moscow or Tehran. Those are classified.
But I can say something about CIA’s unique mission and the spirit of sacrifice embodied by our officers, day in and day out.
* * * *
It’s hard to believe that I’ll be celebrating my one-year anniversary as Director of CIA next month—and I can tell you that it’s been everything I’ve expected and so much more.
I may be a 34-year veteran of the Agency, but it still seems like yesterday when I stepped across the iconic seal in our Headquarters lobby for the first time. I still remember the thrill of being sworn in as an officer—raising my hand and reciting the oath to protect our country and our Constitution.
When I first came to CIA as a young recruit in the Directorate of Operations at the tail end of the Cold War, I was eager to learn the nuanced art of espionage—evading surveillance, putting down dead drops, recruiting agents, or “bumping” unsuspecting individuals on foreign sidewalks.
A lot has changed since I first arrived at CIA, but our mission remains as relevant and important as ever. And this is what makes our officers excited to come to work each morning, including me.
But the business of espionage is risky work. As former Director George Tenet used to say, “CIA doesn’t do easy—the hard jobs come to us.”
Our officers—whether at our Headquarters or in the foreign field—carry out those jobs with courage, ingenuity, and derring-do, and I could not be more proud of them.
* * * *
Over the past year, our leadership team has taken steps to improve CIA’s ability to tackle the many challenges we face. And our efforts are beginning to pay off.
For starters, we’ve devoted more time, money, and creativity to our effort against some our nation’s toughest adversaries.
Our Russia and Iran investment has been strengthened after years of falling behind our justifiably heavy emphasis on counterterrorism in the wake of 9/11. Groups like ISIS and al-Qa‘ida remain squarely in our sights, but we’re honing our focus and resources on nation-state rivals.
Additionally, we’re applying cutting-edge technologies and tradecraft to allow us to react more quickly to global developments—like targeting a terrorist organization wherever it arises and before it spreads.
We’re making great strides with our foreign partners—those ties are stronger than ever. And let me tell you, our intelligence allies around the world can really open doors and get things done on behalf of our country.
I frequently meet with my foreign counterparts, either in Washington or over there, and they’re generally very interesting characters—for whom I have great regard and even fondness. There’s one counterpart who’s especially fun to engage—very James Bond-like. He worked his way up through his service, has great spy stories, and is definitely someone you want on your side.
And when you have partnerships this close and personal, you have colleagues who go out of their way to share with CIA their really good stuff—their best intelligence. And our country is tangibly benefitting from these relationships.
We’re also sending more of our people to the field. Not only case officers, but analysts, technical experts, and others. It all comes down to this: if you have a bigger footprint overseas, you can get more done where it really counts.
Along with that bigger foreign presence, we’re placing a renewed emphasis on foreign language expertise and training. We want our men and women to be closely attuned to the cultures in which they operate and to speak the local language.
And that aligns well with our push to strengthen diversity and inclusion at CIA. Our mission demands that we draw deeply from our nation’s rich and diverse talent pool. We just had our best recruiting year in a decade, and we’ll do whatever it takes to make the Agency an employer of choice for all Americans.
Finally, no foreign challenge has had a more direct and devastating impact on American families and communities than the flow of opioids and other drugs into our country—a scourge that has killed more Americans than any terrorist group ever has.
That’s why we’re taking concrete steps to increase our contribution to the President’s whole-of-government approach in tackling this epidemic. I recently had the opportunity to meet with some of our officers who are on the front lines of this effort, and I’m proud of the work they’re doing to stop the problem closer to the source.
* * * *
CIA is stronger than I’ve ever seen it, and I wish I could say more about what our officers do worldwide, day in and day out, on behalf of all Americans. But for their protection, and frankly for yours, I won’t.
What I can tell you is that our officers take on jobs that test their mental and physical strength to the fullest. I just returned from a visit to a war zone where I met with CIA men and women who on a one-year deployment work seven days a week—often going days without sleep. These officers were so hard working and so motivated by the mission in this dangerous location. I could not have been more impressed with them. Their missions are long and arduous, and the operational tempo can be grueling. Our nation is asking them to do more every day, and they sacrifice a lot to keep our country safe.
At the same time, they are not just intelligence officers. They also are devoted fathers and mothers, loving spouses, partners, and companions.
Their families sometimes endure long stretches without knowing where their loved ones are, the dangers they might face, or the risks they must take.
At times, our achievements come at a terrible cost.
In the past few months alone, some very brave officers have been seriously wounded battling terrorists in a remote corner of South Asia. Since 9/11, 42 Agency men and women have died in the line of duty.
Before I close, I’d like to share the story of one of those heroes—someone with a special connection to Auburn.
Nearly 20 years ago, we had an officer who was on assignment in Afghanistan. He had deployed there in the fall of 2001 as part of our government’s immediate response to the terrorist attacks of September 11th. His name was Johnny Micheal Spann, and he was an Auburn Tiger, Class of 1992.
Mike was born and raised in Winfield, Alabama. A natural athlete, he played wide receiver and running back for the Winfield High Pirates.
As a child, he dreamed of becoming a soldier—his bedroom walls were covered with Marine recruitment posters. He joined the Marines as a student at Auburn, where he graduated with a degree in Criminal Justice, and during his military service rose to the rank of Captain.
Mike came to us as a paramilitary officer after eight years of military service.
In his application to CIA he used the words “action, responsibility, and leadership” to describe himself. And he embodied these traits when he deployed to the arid plateaus of Afghanistan in the fall of 2001.
On November 25th of that year, Mike was in an ancient Afghan fortress where Taliban prisoners were being held and questioned. These captives had supposedly capitulated to US troops, but their pledge of surrender was a ruse.
Mike was interviewing a group of them when hundreds of prisoners suddenly revolted. Immediately before he was attacked and killed in the uprising, Mike was able to warn an Agency colleague of the imminent danger, allowing that officer to get to safety.
After hearing of Mike’s death, former Director of CIA George Tenet said the following:
"He led one of our teams into Afghanistan. There, he tracked the authors and allies of terror. There, while fighting for the future of the American people, he fought to bring a better future to the Afghan people. And it was there, one evening, that he said he would gladly risk his life if he could help make the world a safer place for his wife and children."
Mike was the first American to die in the line of duty in Afghanistan.
He demonstrated the highest standards of duty and sacrifice at the forefront of our fight against terrorism. In his short time in Afghanistan, Mike’s actions played a pivotal role in our battle against the Taliban and al-Qa‘ida in the region.
His story is a poignant reminder of the unwavering commitment of all our men and women serving on the front lines.
For me, as for our entire Agency family, the 129 stars on CIA’s Memorial Wall are more than just symbols. They are solemn reminders of friends and colleagues who answered their nation’s call, and who willingly risked their lives to protect us all.
It’s a privilege to join you in honoring one of our greatest heroes, Auburn’s own Johnny Micheal Spann. I hope his story gives you a sense of just how critical our officers are to the strength and security of our country. Mike’s CIA colleagues carry on his work and his legacy in the most dangerous parts of the globe and photographs of Mike hang in CIA Stations around the world.
As I look back on my first year as Director, I am more in awe of the men and women at CIA than ever before. And I know that Auburn graduates also know a thing or two about serving our country, having made invaluable contributions over the years by signing up for the tough jobs—as warfighters, astronauts, and, of course, as intelligence officers.
We at CIA could not be more grateful for your school’s distinguished history of service to our nation. And as you carry on that great tradition, I hope to see many of you again—as partners in the honorable and essential work of keeping America safe and free.
Thank you all very much.
Posted: Apr 18, 2019 12:15 PM
Last Updated: Apr 18, 2019 12:59 PM
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DCIA Haspel Visits Auburn University
CIA Director Gina Haspel visited Auburn University in Alabama yesterday, where she delivered remarks and participated in a Q&A moderated by retired Army Lt. Gen. Ronald Burgess, Auburn’s chief operating officer and former DIA director.
“As I look back on my first year as Director,” said Haspel, “I am more in awe of the men and women at CIA than ever before. And I know that Auburn graduates also know a thing or two about serving our country, having made invaluable contributions over the years by signing up for the tough jobs—as warfighters, astronauts, and, of course, as intelligence officers.”
Director Haspel told the Auburn students the story of Mike Spann, an Auburn alumnus, CIA officer, and the first American to die in the line of duty in Afghanistan after 9/11. She also talked about her 34-year career at the Agency, some of her leadership team’s accomplishments over this last year, and her priorities for the future.
Posted: Apr 19, 2019 01:50 PM
Last Updated: Apr 19, 2019 02:30 PM
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