Anonymous ID: 8af028 June 25, 2018, 2:35 p.m. No.1902239   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2308

Anons, you might find this interesting:

https://www.facebook.com/notes/chris-ward/why-i-left-the-army/1140498269312137/

 

>>It was January of 2004 and I found myself being brought into work for the Allied Military Intelligence Battalion (AMIB), which operated under the name, SFOR Planning Staff. Although we were told to keep AMIB a secret, it hardly was. Among the other intelligence agencies I met with during my time there, we were considered the bottom rung of intelligence collection. Rightfully so, our agents often used their own phones. I had to pay for my own coffee and meals while out at meetings. Sometimes I would even rent a car from the airport for meetings that required a little more secrecy. Most of the time, my interpreter and I were driving around in a Toyota Land cruiser with NATO license plates. This was not particularly discrete.

 

This is an account of a prior service MI guy, who worked directly with cleaning up some of the CIA's mess. It's a window into how MI and the CIA have sort of been fighting a war with each other with the CIA creating problems MI is then tasked with cleaning up.

Anonymous ID: 8af028 June 25, 2018, 2:57 p.m. No.1902472   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1902308

I probably should have quoted more from the piece… his reasons for leaving the army were very similar for my own decision to not renew my enlistment in the Navy after I discovered, effectively, what he was working on.

 

Which was the rounding up of AQ from Yugoslavia after the CIA carted them in to support Bosnia.