Ex-Bush official advised Gaddafi until early August, documents show

Libya

Libya

By JOSEPH FITSANAKIS | intelNews.org |
Intelligence documents found at the headquarters of Libya’s abandoned spy agency appear to show that the regime of Muammar al-Gaddafi enjoyed the support of an American diplomat who served in the Bush administration. Al Jazeera reports that David Welch, who was Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs in the US Department of State between 2005 and 2008, met on August 2 with Gaddafi officials in the Four Seasons Hotel in Cairo, Egypt. According to a Libyan intelligence memo from the meeting, Welch, who now works for Bechtel Corporation, gave the Gaddafi officials tips on how “to win the propaganda war” against the rebel National Transitional Council (NTC). He also instructed them to undermine Libya’s rebel movement by relying on several “confidence-building measures”, including controlled intelligence leaks aimed at manipulating the news output of Arab and Western media. The documents also reveal that Gaddafi maintained spies at the highest echelons of the rebel council, and that at least one of these spies offered to assassinate rebel leaders by “poisoning their food and water”. However, despite maintaining an ample amount of informants inside the NTC, the Gaddafi regime found it difficult to collect reliable and actionable intelligence during the civil war. Characteristically, many of the names of NTC’s central figures are misspelled in intelligence field reports, and one intelligence analyst complained recently that “the majority of those currently working for the intelligence administration are ill-prepared to carry out intelligence duties”. Despite these shortcomings, however, Gaddafi’s spies inside the NTC appear to have managed to intercept a large number of telephone messages and confidential emails between the NTC and foreign diplomats. Through these messages, which run to “hundreds of pages” of conversation transcripts, the regime discovered that the Libyan rebels were being supplied with war material by Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and France, mostly via the government of Sudan. The Wall Street Journal, which appears to be the only Western newspaper that managed to access the abandoned headquarters of Libyan intelligence, contacted Qatar and France for a response to the allegations of weapons smuggling. Predictably, both countries’ governments declined comment.

2 Responses to Ex-Bush official advised Gaddafi until early August, documents show

  1. the prof says:

    Surely this man can be prosecuted in the USA for treachery-working for America’s enemies?
    Was he a “CUT-OUT” for the CIA?

  2. I wonder who’s helping Gaddafi hide? Hmmmm…I wonder.

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