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Revealed: Bush White House Raised Terror Alert Based On Con Man's Wild Al Jazeera "Decoding" Claims

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-21-09 09:02 PM
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Revealed: Bush White House Raised Terror Alert Based On Con Man's Wild Al Jazeera "Decoding" Claims
Revealed: Bush White House Raised Terror Alert Based On Con Man's Wild Al Jazeera "Decoding" Claims

Posted by Liliana Segura, AlterNet at 12:00 PM on December 21, 2009.

A new article reports how a Nevada-based software firm employee duped the CIA into believing he held the key to decoding secret terrorist messages.




From the Dept. of You-Can't-Make-This-Shit-Up, TPM Muckracker reports:

A self-styled Nevada codebreaker convinced the CIA he could decode secret terrorist targeting information sent through Al Jazeera broadcasts, prompting the Bush White House to raise the terror alert level to Orange (high) in December 2003, with Tom Ridge warning of "near-term attacks that could either rival or exceed what we experience on September 11," according to a new report in Playboy.


We all knew the DHS color-coded terror alerts were bogus and politically-motivated -- Ridge himself recently admitted as much -- but this? This is just ... loony tunes.

According to TPM, "the man who prompted the December 2003 Orange alert was Dennis Montgomery, who has since been embroiled in various lawsuits, including one for allegedly bouncing $1 million in checks during a Caesars Palace spree. His former lawyer calls him a 'habitual liar engaged in fraud.'"

He must have been a pretty good liar to have pulled this off (at least one would hope):

Working out of a Reno, Nevada, software firm called eTreppid Technologies, Montgomery took in officials in the CIA's Directorate of Science and Technology and convinced them that technology he invented -- but could not explain -- was pulling terrorist-produced "bar codes" from Al Jazeera television broadcasts. Using his proprietary technology, those bar codes could be translated into longitudes and latitudes and flight numbers. Terrorist leaders were using that data to direct their compatriots about the next target.


The original article quotes a "former CIA official" who was incredulous when he discovered the arrangement between the agency and Montgomery:

The federal government was acting on the Al Jazeera claims without even understanding how Montgomery found his coordinates. "I said, 'Give us the algorithms that allowed you to come up with this stuff.' They wouldn't even do that," says the first officer. "And I was screaming, 'You gave these people fucking money?'" ...


In a detail that should really piss off right-wingers, credit for calling out this bullshit artist goes to ... France.

A branch of the French intelligence services helped convince the Americans that the bar codes were fake. The CIA and the French commissioned a technology company to locate or re-create codes in the Al Jazeera transmission. They found definitively that what Montgomery claimed was there was not. Quietly, as far as the CIA was concerned, the case was closed. The agency turned the matter over to the counterintelligence side to see where it had gone wrong.


Incredibly, according to TPM, "Former Homeland Security adviser Frances Townsend defended the use of Montgomery's 'intelligence' in an interview with Playboy, telling the magazine, 'It didn't seem beyond the realm of possibility.'"


http://www.alternet.org/blogs/peek/144722/revealed%3A_bush_white_house_raised_terror_alert_based_on_con_man%27s_wild_al_jazeera_%22decoding%22_claims/


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BunkerHill24 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-21-09 09:08 PM
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1. Rocommended.....
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baldguy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-21-09 09:09 PM
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2. Hell, they raised the Terror Alert Level based on Cheney getting indigestion after lunch.
Terror Alerts under the Bush Regime were political demonstrations and had nothing to do with the actual treat level.
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jtrockville Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-21-09 09:12 PM
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3. BS. They raised the terror alert for political reasons (says Ridge)
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Poll_Blind Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-21-09 09:14 PM
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4. That's fucking AMAZING. Jesus Christ, how sad is A) Intelligence and B) Oversight when you...
...get to that level?

I know homosexuals and pot smokers are probably banned from working for the CIA but...seriously...I could be having gay sex after getting stoned and, 100%, do a better goddamned job than that. And I'm not even gay! (So they may have to pay for some training or something if they do decide to hire me)

PB
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immoderate Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-21-09 09:52 PM
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5. If you read the whole Playboy article, you can see how they got sucked in.
Only a small number of tech people knew about it. Far fetched? Yes, but it had enough plausibility to be investigated further, especially since Montgomery passed their background checks.

The extreme secrecy prevented others from vetting the information.

--imm
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Torn_Scorned_Ignored Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Dec-21-09 10:00 PM
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6. This phony alert
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/01/09/terror/main592324.shtml

CBS/AP) Citing a reduced threat of attack, the United States lowered its terror alert from orange, or "high," to yellow or "elevated" on Friday, after weeks of intense security in the nation's airports, cities and skies.

"Based on a careful review of the available intelligence, we have lowered the threat level to yellow," Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge told reporters. "We are still concerned about continued threats, but the threat conditions we have been following have diminished."

"I know that we are all thankful nothing happened," he added, thanking the public and law enforcement for their efforts.

Ridge said he could not yet say whether an actual, planned attack was foiled.

Even after the alert status has been lowered, some of the security precautions undertaken during the period when the nation was at orange alert will remain in effect, the official said. The Homeland Security Department was expected to urge airlines and possibly some areas to remain on a higher alert status.

"We have not let our guard down. Yellow still means we are at risk of attack," Ridge said.

Specifically, Ridge said he remained concerned that al Qaeda hoped to use airplanes as weapons.

The level was raised to orange, or the second-highest level, on Dec. 21, with officials saying attacks were possible during the holidays and that threat indicators are “perhaps greater now than at any point” since Sept. 11, 2001.

Officials cited concerns about possible suicide attacks involving aircraft - including commercial passenger aircraft. Ridge cited reports from "credible sources" that Osama bin Laden's terrorist network is trying find holes in U.S. aviation security.

Ridge and others urged Americans not to disrupt travel plans, but over the next three weeks an extraordinary increase in security took place. Ridge called the steps "unprecedented."

Air France canceled six flights between Paris and Los Angeles on Christmas Eve after a request from U.S. officials. This week, French authorities hunted a passenger who failed to show up for one of the flights, but have concluded he was not a threat.

A new directive outlined by the Homeland Security Department required selected international flights that enter U.S. airspace to carry an armed law enforcement officer aboard.

In the days that followed, flights from Britain, France and Mexico were cancelled, boarded, escorted by military jets or told to turn around.

As 2003 ended, revelers from New York to California to Las Vegas saw hovering helicopters and bomb-sniffing dogs with their champagne and confetti as cities hunkered down for the most heavily guarded New Year's Eve in memory.

In New York, workers sealed manhole covers and removed mailboxes to guard against any potential bomb attack in Times Square. Armed helicopters prowled the Las Vegas Strip.

The Washington Post reports the U.S. - concerned that terrorists might attempt to detonate a "dirty bomb" during the holidays - sent nuclear scientists to five major cities to search for the radiological devices.

The newspaper said the casually dressed scientists concealed detection equipment in golf bags and briefcases while they looked for evidence of the bombs in New York, Washington, Baltimore, Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

The threat of terrorism also prompted the temporary closure of the oil tanker terminal in Valdez, Alaska. Tankers load Prudhoe Bay oil destined for other parts of the United States at Valdez, the end of the 800-mile-long pipeline, which carries 17 percent of the nation's domestic oil supply.

Security was strengthened in the Prince William Sound community after U.S. officials said al Qaeda operatives could target remote sites such as oil facilities in Alaska.

Some officials have worried that operatives of the al Qaeda terrorist network were deliberately trying to spoof U.S. and international intelligence networks aimed at uncovering terrorist threats, by planting misinformation on lines of communications they believed were monitored.

However, other U.S. officials said the amount and energy level of the threatening intelligence were too widespread for this to entirely be a disinformation campaign.

Some foreign countries also took exception to the U.S. alert.

Mexican official chafed at orders to ground an AeroMexico flight.

Several countries rejected the call for the armed guards by the United States. Civil aviation authorities in Denmark, Sweden, Finland and Portugal all said they would not allow the sky marshals to travel and would instead cancel flights if there was a strong suspicion of a planned attack.

South African Airways also said it did not believe marshals were warranted and that its present security arrangements, emphasizing prevention on the ground, were adequate.

The British Air Line Pilots' Association said it might advise its members — nearly 90 percent of Britain's 9,200 commercial pilots — not to fly with a sky marshal.

U.S. officials began scanning fingerprints and taking photographs of foreigners arriving at U.S. airports this week as part of a new program to keep out terrorists. In retaliation, Brazil's Foreign Ministry started fingerprinting and photographing arriving Americans last week.
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