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swarnie_ | 4 years ago

From the FBI's own definition:

International terrorism : Violent, criminal acts committed by individuals and/or groups who are inspired by, or associated with, designated foreign terrorist organizations or nations (state-sponsored).

Struggling to see how the CIA isn't a terrorist organisation at this point.

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okamiueru|4 years ago

The whole history of the US is filled with terrorist activities and violation of human rights. It has overthrown more governments, killed more who politically opposed. The only reason why the US has the slightest thread of anything resembling credibility in the international space, is convenient willful ("diplomatic") ignorance.

Almost every major instability and geopolitical conflict can be traced directly to US involvement and/or weapon deals.

That isn't to say that our world would be rocey without it. Just that, it is the way it is, and pretending otherwise would be puzzling. It's not a secret.

Here is a very small part of it: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_interventions_by_the...

stjohnswarts|4 years ago

So is every other country's history full of the same. Let's stop acting like the USA is unique in this. I will call out hypocrisy wherever I see it.

throwaway0a5e|4 years ago

Sure the US has instigated plenty of crap but your comment is hyperbolic to the point of insanity and belittles damn near every regional power on the globe.

People are perfectly capable of starting wars with each other without the help of the US and if these people truly need help getting to the point of shooting each other the US is not the only nation with an intelligence agency capable of helping them out.

cassianoleal|4 years ago

I don't get the struggle. They are and have probably always been a terrorist organisation by anyone's definition.

Seeing how the FBI have been inspiring, training and generally helping out with lawfare operations and "soft"-coups around the globe, they don't have much of an upper hand either!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Condor https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Hemisphere_Institute_f...

https://theintercept.com/2019/06/09/brazil-archive-operation... https://nacla.org/news/2019/07/01/lawfare-unmasked-brazil https://www.brasilwire.com/folha-brazilian-lawmakers-fbi-and... https://www.brasilwire.com/how-fbi-controlled-operation-topp...

nicoburns|4 years ago

The common definition of terrorism conveniently explicitly excludes governmental activity.

jjgreen|4 years ago

I wonder who thought that up?

simonh|4 years ago

That's a pretty poor definition, but many common ones are. For me the key component of terrorism is the terror part, it's the use of violence to intimidate a population.

So for example if you are targeting specific people or organisations, or infrastructure as targets due to their activities or capabilities then the goal is functional. You are trying to destroy or damage an asset or capability, any intimidation is incidental. Terrorism is where it's the fear itself that's the weapon.

Yep, that does mean some governmental operations count. Shock and Awe comes dangerously close, if the intended target of the S&A is a civilian population.

Joker_vD|4 years ago

Because it's not designated as one, duh.

swarnie_|4 years ago

Someone should really look in to that....