The CIA: The U.S. executing arm for intervention in democratic governments
Published at: 20/09/2024 03:30 PM
The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has always been the tool of all U.S. governments to carry out coups in countries that are not in line with Washington's interests.
“We overthrew democracies that worked in more than 20 countries. We manipulated elections in dozens of countries, created armies and put them to fight against enemy governments,” John Stockwell, former CIA officer.
Stockwell, who was in the CIA for 13 years, reported in 1989 that the United States had killed at least 6 million people by coups d'etat.
He specified that this executing arm of the empire supplied weapons and mercenary training in Honduras, Nicaragua, Thailand, El Congo, Laos, Iraq, Vietnam, El Salvador, and others. in order to end the peace of those nations.
“We have assassinated world leaders, including the President of the United States in 1963 (...) I remind you of Chile, the CIA organized the overthrow of the democratic government Salvador Allende in 1973 in which he was assassinated,” Stockwell said.
Venezuela has been under imperial siege because it is a country that does not obey the interests of the North American government. One of the most recent cases was after the elections of April 28 in which the country has suffered cyberattacks, attacks on the National Electricity System, among others.
On September 14, the Minister for Internal Relations, Justice and Peace, Diosdado Cabello Rondón, unveiled a terrorist plan against the country led by the American soldier Wilbert Joseph Castañeda, an operation led from the United States (USA).
In this regard, Cabello denounced that this plan was orchestrated by the CIA, which aimed to assassinate the President of the Republic, Nicolás Maduro, the Executive Vice President, Delcy Rodríguez, and himself, among other senior public officials.
“From Venezuela, we demand that the United States Government clarify its participation in its agency (CIA), to clarify the use of its territory to traffic weapons to overthrow a democratically constituted government,” said Cabello, during the press conference at which he showed the seizure of more than 400 American-made rifles to destabilize the country.
Cabello confirmed that terrorist actions that seek to violate the country's sovereignty and peace will continue to be dismantled.
Methods
A document published in the Global Times in 2023 reveals five methods commonly used by the CIA:
- It provides encrypted network communication services. To help demonstrators in some Middle Eastern countries keep in touch and avoid being tracked, a U.S. company developed TOR technology that can stealthily access the Internet.
- The second method is to provide offline communication services. For example, to ensure that anti-government personnel in Tunisia, Egypt and other countries can still keep in touch with the outside world when the Internet is disconnected, Google and Twitter (now X) quickly launched a special service called “Speak2Tweet”.
- The third method is to provide on-site command tools for Internet-based rallies and parades and wireless communications. The report noted that the United States RAND Corporation has spent several years developing a non-traditional regime change technology called “swarm.”
- The fourth is software developed in the United States called “Riot”. The software supports a 100% independent broadband network, provides a variable WiFi network, doesn't rely on any traditional physical access method, doesn't need a telephone, cable or satellite connection, and can easily escape any form of government monitoring.
- The fifth is the “anti-censorship” information system. The United States Department of State considers research and development of the system to be an important task and has injected more than 30 million dollars into the project.
On August 17, the Minister of Science and Technology, Gabriela Jiménez, announced that 30 million cyberattacks per minute have been registered in the country, affecting 25 state institutions.
“Until yesterday we were receiving attacks, they did so with the Caracas Stock Exchange, the Ministry of Science and Technology, the Central Bank of Venezuela, the SAIME,” he said, stressing that these are “susceptible and critical services” that have to do with “the basic needs of Venezuelans.”
Jiménez explained that these attacks have been carried out through “an entire framework of server infrastructure, computer equipment, people, algorithms”, which have been funded to sustain cyberattacks for five to ten hours.
The Bolivarian Government has made these attacks public by this intelligence agency, while assuring that State security agencies will continue to protect the country's sovereignty.
Mazo News Team