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CIA trolling USC...

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  • CIA trolling USC...

    and other campuses.



    USC marketing class helps CIA recruitment

    Looking to hire recent graduates, Central Intelligence Agency turns to university students nationwide for help developing ad campaigns. The economic downturn increases the jobs' appeal.


    By Larry Gordon
    March 29, 2009

    It's not all cloak-and-dagger anymore. These days, the Central Intelligence Agency is using marketing classes at USC and elsewhere to create public recruitment campaigns on college campuses.

    The timing during such a deep recession helps sell the agency as an attractive employer, say USC students involved in advertising a CIA recruiting event at their school next month. After all, a well-paid, secure government job, even one touched by controversy, may appeal to soon-to-be college graduates who might never have considered a spy career in better economic times.



    Marketing instructor"All we hear today is about the bad economy and how this is basically the worst time to graduate. But the CIA is very interested in hiring graduating seniors and is targeting USC students," said Allison Kosty, a political science major who is in a class of USC students working on the CIA campaign. "So that's a huge bonus for us."

    She and 26 classmates are part of a five-year-old program that has joined the CIA with students in marketing courses at 30 universities throughout the country.

    The agency wants help selling itself to bright young candidates, especially those who speak such key languages as Mandarin and Farsi or who studied economics or computer engineering. The schools -- USC, Michigan State and the University of New Mexico for the current semester -- say they want their students to gain real-world marketing experience, whether for soft drinks or clandestine operations.


    Therese Wilbur, an assistant professor of marketing who teaches the USC course and ran a similar project for the FBI last year, said CIA officers visited her class twice this semester and asked for a campaign that taps into USC's ethnic diversity and does not wrap itself too tightly in the flag.

    Wilbur, who managed international brands for toy-maker Mattel Inc. before she began teaching in 2006, said the campaign tries to appeal both to students' interest in an intriguing, well-rewarded career and to their altruism.

    The student marketers say they know they may face criticism that the CIA failed in intelligence-gathering missions before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the U.S. invasion of Iraq and that its past practices are much-debated. Still, Wilbur said, no student objected to assisting the CIA in finding high-quality recruits to help keep the country safe.

    In the class, a preliminary suggestion for a slogan urged potential recruits to "Discover the Truth" about the CIA. That was jettisoned after some students in a test survey didn't understand it and others suggested that such a search might turn up information discouraging to applicants.

    Instead, the class settled on a slogan that invites people to "Discover the CIA. Be Part of Something Bigger," imposed over a colorful world map in the campaign's graphics.

    Class member Sunny Nguyen, a fine arts major, said she was struck by the assignment's significance. "By joining the CIA, you can make a difference globally," she said. "And your life holds a different sort of meaning."

    USC is the first Southern California campus to participate in the CIA's collegiate marketing program. Other schools have included UC Berkeley, San Jose State, Georgia State, the University of Pittsburgh and Morehouse College, according to CIA spokesman George Little.

    Schools are chosen for their marketing curricula as well as a broadly diverse student population. "We are looking constantly for diverse pools of applicants given the critical nature of our mission," said Little, who added that the agency especially values language skills, overseas experience and candidates from families who are first- or second-generation Americans. U.S. citizenship, however, is a requirement.

    Last year, the CIA recruited at about 1,000 U.S. campuses, with the marketing classes a small part of those efforts, he said. About 120,000 people, college-age and older, applied for CIA jobs last year and the numbers are running higher this recessionary year.

    Overall, the agency is continuing a hiring surge that began after the 2001 attacks, but Little said the number of hirings is classified. CIA starting salaries range from about $50,000 to $90,000, with bonuses for some language fluencies.

    The student-designed marketing programs are arranged through EdVenture Partners, an organization based in Orinda, just east of Berkeley, that serves as a middleman between colleges and such clients as Honda and the country of Morocco. The classes receive $2,500 to cover such costs as posters, table rentals and pizza for focus groups, but reap no reward aside from bragging rights on their resumes, officials said.

    Wilbur's upper-division marketing class, which operates like an actual advertising agency with one big account per semester, did not know in advance whom its client would be. So students quickly had to dispel their own CIA stereotypes of a James Bond life with hot cars and cool gadgets or a secretive existence with no family contact allowed.

    Jeffrey Kelly, an architecture major and advertising minor who is one of the campaign coordinators, said another common myth, soon belied by their own efforts, was "that you don't apply to the CIA but that the CIA finds you."

    At a recent session in a Hoffman Hall classroom, group leaders discussed deadlines for announcements in campus publications, colors for a banner, the name of a website and how to ensure that USC police are aware of the recruiting event, which is scheduled for midday April 7 on a central campus lawn area.

    A similar event at New York University in 2005 was canceled after protests, but Little said that had been the only disruption in the student marketing program. The USC students say they have encountered no criticism on campus and don't expect any organized protests at a school that has a substantial number of conservative-leaning students.

    Some political activists on campus say that they are not thrilled to host the CIA but that no one wants to stop students from exploring jobs and possibly helping to improve the nation's espionage.

    The Rev. Frank Wulf, pastor at United University Church and a campus chaplain active in antiwar protests, said the CIA has the right to recruit on campus. Still, he has concerns "that military, CIA and FBI recruiters use this time of economic crisis to present themselves when students don't have the opportunity to make as independent a choice."

    As a result of working on the campaign, some of Wilbur's students say they too may apply for CIA jobs. But as if already inculcated in spy culture, they say they can't publicly acknowledge that.

    "No comment," said one young man who was clearly mulling it. "I'd rather not say."

    [email protected]

    ------------------------



    ------------------------



    A press release from USC said that this spring 2009 semester, students at USC will have the rare opportunity to participate in a semester-long internship with CIA.


    LOS ANGELES, March 12 (Xinhua) -- To most outsiders, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in the U.S. remains a myth. But a recent program between CIA and University of Southern California (USC) reveals that CIA is taking advantage of the present bad economy when most of the companies are not hiring to target university graduates to join its service, with its clandestine service in particular.

    In an e-mail sent to the local newspapers, including Chinese language newspapers, Allison Kosty from USC said: "I am wondering if you are currently working on any features pieces, or are interested in highlighting USC's partnership with the CIA in an upcoming issue?"

    "While most companies are not currently hiring, the CIA is actively recruiting recent college graduates and seeking Imprint Agency's marketing expertise," Kosty said in the e-mail.

    A press release from USC said that this spring 2009 semester, students at USC will have the rare opportunity to participate in a semester-long internship with CIA. As part of the CIA Collegiate Marketing and Recruitment Program, students will have the chance to develop and execute their own marketing campaign to promote internship and career opportunities with the CIA to qualified candidates.

    According to the press release, students will participate in the program through a Marketing course at USC, one of three schools nationwide working with the CIA. During the semester, students will create a working marketing agency to research, develop, implement, and evaluate a campaign. Students will receive a 2,500-dollar budget to bring their campaign plans to life.

    "The goal of the campaign is to seek qualified diversity applicants and increase awareness and consideration of the CIA's National Clandestine Service as a potential career opportunity. By positively marketing the CIA, USC students will help dispel negative perceptions and common myths associated with the international agency," the press release said.

    The press release said the targets of the campaign are "students possessing critical skills including language and area studies. While all majors are considered, the CIA is particularly interested in African, Asian, Near and Middle Eastern studies, International Business, Law, Telecommunications and Computer Technology majors. Students with international travel experience and those who have recently served in the military are also being considered. Critical languages for the National Clandestine Service include Arabic, Dari, Kurdish, Farsi, Urdu, Turkish, Mandarin (Chinese) and Cantonese, Indonesian, Korean and Russian."

    According to the press release, by partnering with USC, the CIA is able to collaborate with local students who are in their target market to develop creative strategies and effectively reach potential applicants.

    USC is a very ethnically diversified university in the U.S., which enrolls more foreign students than any other American universities, according to the annual Open Door report published by the Institute of International Education in the U.S.

    The diversified student population makes USC very attractive for the CIA to enroll its new members, especially CIA agents working in different foreign countries. Every year, CIA also sets up recruitment stations at USC and other universities at job fairs to recruit new members.

    CIA has openly stated that the enrollment campaign at universities is targeting students with foreign language skills and different ethnic background to work for the Clandestine Service.

    The CIA website says the CIA's Clandestine Service is the front- line source of clandestine information on critical international developments, from terrorism and weapons of mass destruction to military and political issues. The mission often requires clandestine service officers to live and work overseas, making a true commitment to the Agency. This is more than just a job - it's a way of life that challenges the deepest resources of personal intelligence, self-reliance and responsibility.

    The CIA website describes the Clandestine life in detail by saying that Operations Officers and Collection Management Officers spend a significant portion of their time abroad. Typically, Operations Officers will serve 60 percent to 70 percent of their careers overseas, while Collection Management Officers will be overseas for 30 percent to 40 percent of their careers. Staff Operations Officers, although based in the Washington, D.C. area, travel overseas on a temporary basis. Language Officers also are primarily based in Washington, though short-term and some long-term foreign travel opportunities are available.

    It says that officers in each of these careers are under cover. By the very nature of this clandestine business, officers can expect limited external recognition for themselves and their families. Instead, the agency has its own internal promotions, awards and medals, and makes every effort to recognize the accomplishments of its personnel.
    Between childhood, boyhood,
    adolescence
    & manhood (maturity) there
    should be sharp lines drawn w/
    Tests, deaths, feats, rites
    stories, songs & judgements

    - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

  • #2
    Re: CIA trolling USC...

    Wow USC? They must be REALLY desperate
    this post = teh win.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: CIA trolling USC...

      The CIA has always recruited from college campuses, usually the more presitgious ones like Yale and Harvard. Hollywood is also a good recruiting ground for the CIA, where many stars are on CIA payrolls.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: CIA trolling USC...

        Originally posted by ArmSurvival View Post
        The CIA has always recruited from college campuses, usually the more presitgious ones like Yale and Harvard. Hollywood is also a good recruiting ground for the CIA, where many stars are on CIA payrolls.
        Harvard applications for CIA steady; applications rise 50% nationally.


        Yes, Arm, they recruit there; now, they are actively recruiting via classroom assignments. I think this latter part is much newer phenomenon.

        They are also advertising freely on the radio, TV and internet.

        Last edited by freakyfreaky; 04-06-2009, 10:40 AM.
        Between childhood, boyhood,
        adolescence
        & manhood (maturity) there
        should be sharp lines drawn w/
        Tests, deaths, feats, rites
        stories, songs & judgements

        - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: CIA trolling USC...

          Former CIA director was a USC trustee. http://www.cia-on-campus.org/usc.edu/mccone.html

          From CIA to USC: Political Biography of a Trustee

          Many USC students are aware that the roots of Watergate were nourished by the dirty tricks and political intrigues of Ronald Ziegler, Dwight Chapin, Gordon Strachan and Donald Segretti when they were students on this campus. The USC environment during the early sixties provided these student-government power brokers with experience and training that proved useful a decade later, especially after cross-fertilization with the USC alumni talents of H.R. Haldeman, Herb Klein and Herbert Kalmbach.[1]

          Much less is known about USC trustee John A. McCone. His exploits make Watergate look like a mild diversion from the workaday world of international covert operations. While Watergate had its amusing moments, McCone's career is much more sobering. Millions of lives have been affected by his intrigues. When playing politics at McCone's level of sophistication, one does not bargain with slush funds and short prison terms, but with the future of entire nations.

          McCone began in the steel industry before World War II, and from 1941-1946 he was president and director of the California Shipbuilding Company. According to the 1946 testimony of Ralph E. Casey of the General Accounting Office, California Shipbuilding made $44 million in wartime profits on an investment of $100,000.[2] After the war McCone was Deputy to the Secretary of Defense (1948), Under Secretary of the Air Force (1950-1951), and Chairman of the Atomic Energy commission (1958-1961).[3]

          While a Cal-Tech trustee in October, 1956, McCone criticized ten Cal-Tech scientists for supporting Adlai Stevenson's mild proposal for a nuclear test ban. McCone, an Eisenhower campaigner, accused the scientists of being "taken in" by Soviet propaganda and of attempting to "create fear in the minds of the uninformed that radioactive fallout from H-bomb tests endangers life." The scientists felt that McCone was trying to get them fired.[4]

          After the Bay of Pigs fiasco, Kennedy tried to appease the right-wing by appointing McCone as CIA director.[5] McCone's tenure at the CIA lasted from November 29, 1961 to April 11, 1965. He became a director of ITT and a USC trustee in 1965, while remaining a consultant for the CIA at least through 1970.[6]

          McCone resigned in 1965 partly because the CIA's intelligence sources in Vietnam were being ignored by Johnson in favor of the Pentagon's more optimistic sources. The Pentagon Papers depict McCone as one who recognized the futility of Vietnam sooner than most policy makers. He objected to U.S. policy on the grounds that it could not be successful and advocated the use of increased force.[7]

          During McCone's tenure at the CIA, the secret war in Laos (secret from Congress and the public), organized and directed by the CIA, increased to major proportions.[8] Diem was overthrown in 1963 with CIA assistance,[9] and the CIA ignored the Mafia/Saigon-government heroin connections that were developing.[10] After 1965 the heroin trafficking moved to Laos in a big way and received important logistical support from the CIA.[11]

          The CIA assisted efforts to overthrow Sukarno of Indonesia in 1958,[12] but almost nothing has been revealed about CIA involvement in the 1965 coup and its aftermath. There is no doubt that CIA penetration of Indonesia's post-1958 government was substantial.[13] Although Indonesia received little attention in the wake of U.S. escalation in Vietnam, it was not a minor event -- 300,000 to 1 million workers, peasants, intellectuals and soldiers were slain after the coup,[14] and between 30,000 and 100,000 political prisoners are detained today under the most wretched conditions.[15] McCone may have had a special interest in Indonesia. While CIA director he owned $1 million in stock from Standard Oil of California, which had extensive operations there.[16]

          While McCone was director the CIA was heavily involved in the Congo, supplying mercenaries and arms to the supporters of Adoula and Mobutu.[17] They also trained and equipped Tibetan rebels[18] and orchestrated many of the events that led to military rule in Ecuador in 1963[19] and Brazil in 1964.[20] And the threat of Allende in Chile's 1964 election prompted the CIA and other agencies to funnel up to $20 million to his opponents.[21]

          Several attempts on Castro's life were sponsored by the CIA after McCone took office, but no documentary evidence exists to counter his claim that he knew nothing about it. McCone's successor Richard Helms is skeptical of his testimony: "He was involved in this up to his scuppers just the way everybody else was that was in it, and ... I don't understand how it was he didn't hear about some of these things that he claims that he didn't."[22] Perhaps McCone also had no knowledge of the CIA's drug experiments on unsuspecting citizens that occurred during his tenure.[23]

          The Warren Commission investigated the assassination of Kennedy while McCone was CIA director. There is considerable evidence that the CIA (and FBI) obstructed certain avenues of inquiry.[24] Apparently the Warren Commission report turned out to the CIA's satisfaction, for in 1967 they directed their field offices to "employ propaganda assets" to refute the report's critics.[25]

          The cover-up continues to this day. Independent investigators of the John Kennedy assassination have found new life and new leads in the connections between the CIA, Howard Hughes, the Mafia, and the anti-Castro exile community.[26] Recent leaks from the government, on the other hand, seem designed to place the blame on Castro.[27] Such a second-level cover-up appears likely, especially in light of the recent assassinations of Sam Giancana and John Roselli (they were part of the CIA/Mafia/anti-Castro network and were willing to talk about it),[28] and the apparent suicide of George de Mohrenschildt.[29]

          McCone certainly knows more than he's telling, but he is not likely to reveal anything voluntarily. Before resigning as CIA director, McCone attempted to suppress the publication of The Invisible Government by David Wise and Thomas B. Ross, two independent journalists.[30] And his record after leaving the directorship is hardly better.

          In 1965 McCone was appointed by Gov. Brown to investigate the unrest in Watts. The McCone Commission included USC trustee Asa V. Call, and after spending nearly $300,000 in tax money the report was released in December, 1965.

          The California Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights did not think much of McCone's efforts: "The report is elementary, superficial, unorganized and unimaginative ... [exhibiting] a marked and surprising lack of understanding of the civil rights movement.... The McCone Commission failed totally to make any findings concerning the existence or nonexistence of police malpractices."[31]

          McCone deserves equally poor marks in Latin American studies. As an ITT director and CIA consultant, McCone met with Kissinger and CIA director Helms in 1970. McCone testified that he encouraged them to prevent Allende's election and offered $1 million to the CIA from ITT chairman Harold Geneen.[32] The offer was refused by Helms, but $350,000 did pass from ITT to Allende's opponent with CIA assistance.[33] To make a long story short, the Forty Committee eventually adopted ITT's destabilization plan for Chile and added numerous dirty tricks of their own.[34] The results were ideal for ITT, Anaconda, and Kennecott, and catastrophic for the Chilean people.

          Edward M. Korry, U.S. ambassador to Chile from 1967-1971, has accused top officials of ITT and the CIA of conspiring to commit perjury before two Senate committees. Helms, McCone and Geneen are under investigation by a grand jury.[35] The whole truth is not yet out, but the brutal facts are clear to Chileans.

          McCone's success in Chile prompted further efforts on ITT's behalf. CounterSpy magazine reported that McCone met with deposed Portuguese leader Gen. Antonio de Spinola in Switzerland in August, 1975.[36] At that time it appeared that the left in Portugal was viable, despite CIA funding of the right-leaning Socialist party.[37] Spinola was organizing a clandestine army in Spain, and ITT provided funds and communications equipment to the commandos.[38] If the Socialist candidate had lost to the left in last year's elections, Spinola and ITT were prepared to make amends.

          Presently McCone is one of the directors of the Committee on the Present Danger. This group -- a recent coalition of big-name hawks, military-industrial complex leaders, and intelligence- community academicians -- is actively lobbying against proposed cuts in military spending.[39] McCone is also a director of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance, United California Bank, Standard Oil of California, and Western Bancorporation.[40]

          On July 5, 1977, President Hubbard cited USC's 25-year "warm and long-lasting relationship" with Iran while presenting the Shah's wife with an honorary "Doctor of Humane Letters."[41] USC has an exchange program with Iran, receives money from the Shah, and currently enrolls nearly 500 Iranian students. The CIA put the Shah in power in 1953,[42] and Helms was ambassador to Iran until recently. Iran routinely subjects up to 100,000 political prisoners to torture.[43] Their secret political police network is worldwide, and SAVAK agents even operate on U.S. campuses with the full knowledge and occasional assistance of the CIA.[44]

          Hubbard told the Empress that his visits to Iran had impressed him with the "supreme grace and friendship of your great nation."[45] Five hundred demonstrators, many wearing masks to prevent their identification by SAVAK, protested the USC ceremony and the Shah's regime.[46] McCone would be a logical place to begin if one were to investigate the USC/Iran connection.

          The issue of McCone's 12-year association with this campus raises serious questions about the integrity of USC as an educational institution. These questions were pursued by student activists in the late sixties. We spent much of our time arguing with others over the facts because sometimes we were weak on documentation. Ironically, the revelations of the past few years have shown that our most paranoid fears were underestimations, yet today the campuses are relatively quiet. Do students need another draft system and dirty war before they are ready to reflect on their role in the world?

          Let's hope not. Our government geared up to repress dissent during the late sixties and early seventies, but even at its worst it was still more benevolent than many of the regimes we now support. The next time around students may not be so lucky. Not if John McCone has something to say about it.


          1. USC, Daily Trojan, 14 May 1974.

          2. David Wise and Thomas B. Ross, The Invisible Government (Vintage, 1974), p. 194.

          3. Who's Who in America 1974-1975.

          4. Wise and Ross, pp. 193-4.

          5. Ibid., p. 197.

          6. Anthony Sampson, The Sovereign State of ITT (Fawcett, 1974), p. 263.

          7. The Pentagon Papers (Bantam, 1971), pp. 440-1; David Halberstam, The Best and the Brightest (Fawcett, 1973), pp. 374, 702-3.

          8. Victor Marchetti and John D. Marks, The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence (Dell, 1974), p. 54.

          9. The Pentagon Papers, pp. 158-233.

          10. Alfred W. McCoy, The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia (Harper & Row, 1973), pp. 149-222.

          11. Ibid., pp. 242-354.

          12. L. Fletcher Prouty, The Secret Team (Ballantine, 1974), pp. 363-8.

          13. David Ransom, "Ford Country: Building an Elite for Indonesia," in The Trojan Horse: A Radical Look at Foreign Aid, ed. Steve Weissman (Ramparts, 1975), p. 105; Peter Dale Scott, "Exporting Military-Economic Development: America and the Overthrow of Sukarno, 1965-67," in Ten Years' Military Terror in Indonesia, ed. Malcolm Caldwell (Spokesman, 1975), pp. 209-63.

          14. Ransom, p. 198; Caldwell, p. 13.

          15. Amnesty International, Annual Report 1974-75, pp. 91-4.

          16. Wise and Ross, p. 194.

          17. Marchetti and Marks, pp. 53, 131.

          18. David Wise, The Politics of Lying (Vintage, 1973), pp. 239-62.

          19. Philip Agee, Inside the Company: CIA Diary (Penguin, 1975), pp. 131-316.

          20. Ibid., p. 362; James Petras and Morris Morley, The United States and Chile: Imperialism and the Overthrow of the Allende Government (Monthly Review, 1975), pp. 44-68; Guardian, 12 January 1977, p. 12; 27 April 1977, p. 16.

          21. Marchetti and Marks, p. 39.

          22. David Wise, The American Police State: Government Against the People (Random House, 1976), p. 216.

          23. Los Angeles Times, 4 August 1977, I, p. 4.

          24. This is the conclusion of the subcommittee report released by Senators Richard S. Schweiker and Gary Hart on 23 June 1976.

          25. CIA document quoted in Los Angeles Times, 5 February 1977, I, p. 5.

          26. A sampling of recent research: Howard Kohn, "Strange Bedfellows: The Hughes-Nixon-Lansky Connection," Rolling Stone, 20 May 1976, pp. 40-92; Robert Sam Anson, They've Killed the President! (Bantam, 1975); Peter Dale Scott, Crime and Cover-up: The CIA, the Mafia, and the Dallas-Watergate Connection (Westworks, 1977); Carl Oglesby, The Yankee and Cowboy War: Conspiracies from Dallas to Watergate (Sheed Andrews and McMeel, 1976).

          27. Jeff Cohen and Donald Freed, "Fidel on the Grassy Knoll," Liberation, March/April 1977, pp. 5-9.

          28. Newsweek, 23 August 1976, p. 38.

          29. Mike Shuster, "George de Mohrenschildt: The Freelance Spy Who Said He Helped Kill Kennedy," Seven Days, 9 May 1977, pp. 7-9.

          30. Wise and Ross, p. viii.

          31. Robert Conot, Rivers of Blood, Years of Darkness (Bantam, 1967), pp. 415-6.

          32. Sampson, p. 263.

          33. Newsweek, 10 January 1977, p. 25.

          34. North American Congress on Latin America, Latin America & Empire report, October 1973; July/August 1974; October 1974; November 1976; December 1976.

          35. Newsweek, 10 January 1977, p. 25.

          36. Carl Michael and Julie Brooks, "Mercenaries Prepare to Invade Portugal," CounterSpy, Spring 1976, p. 44.

          37. Philip Agee and Steve Weissman, "The CIA in Europe," Oui, January 1977, pp. 141-2.

          38. Michael and Brooks, p. 44.

          39. Radio Havana, 14 March 1977.

          40. Who's Who in America 1974-1975.

          41. USC, Trojan Family, August/September 1977, p. 4.

          42. Wise and Ross, pp. 110-4.

          43. Amnesty International, pp. 128-9.

          44. Jack Anderson and Les Whitten, "Activities of Foreign Spies in U.S. Said Aided by CIA," Spokane Daily Chronicle, 26 October 1976, p. 4; CBS, 60 Minutes, 24 October 1976 and 6 March 1977.

          45. Trojan Family, p. 4.

          46. Los Angeles Times, 6 July 1977, I, p. 3.
          Last edited by freakyfreaky; 05-17-2009, 09:40 AM.
          Between childhood, boyhood,
          adolescence
          & manhood (maturity) there
          should be sharp lines drawn w/
          Tests, deaths, feats, rites
          stories, songs & judgements

          - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: CIA trolling USC...

            Armenian Student activist, CIA torture victim among those who protested CIA's presence on USC campus.

            USC students protest the CIA
            By John Osmand | April 16, 2009 | Issue 695

            LOS ANGELES--When a University of Southern California (USC) marketing class organized a promotional campaign for CIA recruiters, student activists reacted in disgust and in protest.

            On April 7, about a dozen students and community activists held signs reading "CIA off our campus" and passed out informational leaflets to passersby. Called by USC Anti-War Coalition, the protest was attended by members of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), the International Socialist Organization, ANSWER, World Can't Wait, and Torture Abolition Survivors Support Coalition.

            Countering the marketing class' slogan, "Discover the CIA", protest organizers pitched their own facts about the CIA under the same banner. Organizer Gary Yeritsian, a senior at USC, drafted the informational pamphlet, which listed a number of atrocities perpetrated by the CIA, including torture and rendition. The handout quoted a number of sources, including the Human Rights Watch "Statement on U.S. Rendition Legislation":

            The...practice of so-called "extraordinary rendition" is an affront to the fundamental human right not to be subjected to torture. This prohibition is absolute. Just as governments cannot torture people, they cannot send people to countries where they are likely to be tortured. Rendition to torture is the legal and moral equivalent of engaging in torture directly...

            [P]erhaps the best example is that of Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen of Syrian origin. In 2002, he was seized by U.S. authorities while transiting New York and sent to Syria, where he endured nearly a year of brutal treatment, including beatings with electrical cords.

            CIA torture survivor Maria Guardado also joined the protest. In 1980, she was kidnapped, raped and beaten in El Salvador for her involvement with the leftist political movement, the FMLN. Asked repeatedly for her comrades' names and addresses by a man with an Anglo accent, she refused. She was left for dead on the side of the road by suspected CIA thugs.

            Guardado told SocialistWorker.org through a translator that she would like to see a Los Angeles-wide student-based committee dedicated to bringing the CIA to justice for such crimes. Campuses are one of the few places where the CIA openly recruits. "The CIA is currently re-branding itself in an effort to seem more innocuous, less nationalistic, and more racially pluralistic," said Elizabeth Venable, a graduate student who helped organize the event. "However, we know that the actions of the CIA--overthrowing democracies, torture, rendition--contradict these messages."

            SJP members Alex Shams and Shahrzad Ghadjar both infiltrated the CIA event to get a closer look at how recruiters pitch the company. According to Ghadjar, some signs were in Farsi and Mandarin. When they mentioned to the recruiter that they both speak Farsi, they were told they could "help your President [Obama]" by recruiting Iranian spies. "I was insulted," said Ghadjar.

            Students are considering a film screening--possibly a documentary about Maria Guardado's experience--to follow up the effort to educate the campus about CIA torture. Participants also realize they probably haven't seen the last of the CIA on campus and will need to keep organizing.

            For more information a Maria Guardado's story, visit her Web site. Visit the facebook group for the USC Anti-War Coalition Web site for information about upcoming actions of to get involved.
            Between childhood, boyhood,
            adolescence
            & manhood (maturity) there
            should be sharp lines drawn w/
            Tests, deaths, feats, rites
            stories, songs & judgements

            - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: CIA trolling USC...

              POTUS wants to use colleges not only to recruit spies, but to train them too.



              U.S. plans spy school program

              WASHINGTON -- To the list of collegiate types -- nerds, jocks, Greeks -- add one more: spies in training.

              The Obama administration has proposed the creation of an intelligence officer training program in colleges and universities that would function much like the Reserve Officers' Training Corps run by the military services. The idea is to create a stream "of first- and second-generation Americans, who already have critical language and cultural knowledge, and prepare them for careers in the intelligence agencies," according to a description sent to Congress by Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair.



              Obama Wants to Start Training US Spies in College
              By VOA News
              20 June 2009


              The Washington Post newspaper says the Obama administration is proposing a new program to train students in U.S. colleges and universities to become intelligence officers.

              The Post report says Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair has already sent a description of the program to Congress. The Post quotes Blair as saying the idea is to prepare first-and second-generation Americans, who already have critical language skills and cultural knowledge, for careers in intelligence agencies.

              The program aims to cultivate qualified recruits who can work the streets of the Middle East and South Asia to penetrate terrorist groups and criminal enterprises.

              Under the proposal, the Post says schools would apply for grants to create or expand courses that would provide the background needed for intelligence work. These would include classes in foreign languages, analysis and scientific and technical fields.

              Students would apply to the national intelligence director to get into the program and would also go through a selection process for financial assistance.

              The idea is similar to a curriculum already in place for the military services, known as the Reserve Officers' Training Corps or ROTC.

              The Post credits an unnamed official as saying the students' participation in the intelligence program would likely be kept secret to prevent foreign intelligence services from identifying them.

              ---------------------------------------------------------------
              FLASHBACK

              CIA allegedly recruited Obama for his trip to Pakistan while in college.


              Obama's College Trip to Pakistan
              April 08, 2008 8:27 AM

              At a fundraiser in San Francisco, Ca., Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., claimed he had more world experience than his rivals, Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and introduced a new bit of biographical information.

              "Foreign policy is the area where I am probably most confident that I know more and understand the world better than Senator Clinton or Senator McCain," Obama said, according to the Huffington Post.

              "It's ironic because this is supposedly the place where experience is most needed to be Commander-in-Chief. Experience in Washington is not knowledge of the world. This I know. When Senator Clinton brags 'I've met leaders from eighty countries' -- I know what those trips are like! I've been on them. You go from the airport to the embassy. There's a group of children who do native dance. You meet with the CIA station chief and the embassy and they give you a briefing. You go take a tour of a plant that [with] the assistance of USAID has started something. And then -- you go."

              "You do that in eighty countries," Obama said, "You don't know those eighty countries. So when I speak about having lived in Indonesia for four years, having family that is impoverished in small villages in Africa --knowing the leaders is not important -- what I know is the people...I traveled to Pakistan when I was in college -- I knew what Sunni and Shia was [sic] before I joined the Senate Foreign Relations Committee."

              This last part -- a college trip to Pakistan -- was news to many of us who have been following the race closely. And it was odd that we hadn't hear about it before, given all the talk of Pakistan during this campaign.

              So I asked the Obama campaign for more information.

              Apparently, according to the Obama campaign, In 1981 -- the year Obama transferred from Occidental College to Columbia University -- Obama visited his mother and sister Maya in Indonesia. After that visit, Obama traveled to Pakistan with a friend from college whose family was from there. The Obama campaign says Obama was in Pakistan for about three weeks, staying with his friend's family in Karachi and also visiting Hyderabad in Southern India.

              - jpt
              Between childhood, boyhood,
              adolescence
              & manhood (maturity) there
              should be sharp lines drawn w/
              Tests, deaths, feats, rites
              stories, songs & judgements

              - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: CIA trolling USC...

                Just to add some personal experience to back up your point, freaky: At the unnamed southern California University that I attend, after having become familiar with members (and even a president) of campus student associations, I have found out that the CIA openly tries to recruit university students who are in these associations through on-campus meetings and seminars. Just in the past month, they had meetings with 2 such student associations, and those are just the ones I know about. Now factor in the other student majors that they targetted at my school, and then add all the other major universities in the state and the country. This means the CIA has direct contact with a potential labor pool of young (and impressionable) adults numbering in the millions. This doesn't even include the secretive recruiting that takes place.

                Yes folks, we already live in a police state, and CIA recruitment is hardly the only reason one would rely on to reach this conclusion.

                Comment

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