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    This week the Associated Press reported that unnamed officials “from a country critical of Iran’s nuclear program” leaked an illustration to demonstrate that “Iranian scientists have run computer simulations for a nuclear weapon that would produce more than triple the explosive force of the World War II bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.” The article stated that these officials provided the undated diagram “to bolster their arguments that Iran’s nuclear program must be halted.”

    The graphic has not yet been authenticated; however, even if authentic, it would not qualify as proof of a nuclear weapons program. Besides the issue of authenticity, the diagram features quite a massive error, which is unlikely to have been made by research scientists working at a national level.

    The image released to the Associated Press shows two curves: one that plots the energy versus time, and another that plots the power output versus time, presumably from a fission device. But these two curves do not correspond: If the energy curve is correct, then the peak power should be much lower — around 300 million ( 3×108) kt per second, instead of the currently stated 17 trillion (1.7 x1013) kt per second. As is, the diagram features a nearly million-fold error.

    This diagram does nothing more than indicate either slipshod analysis or an amateurish hoax.

    In any case, the level of scientific sophistication needed to produce such a graph corresponds to that typically found in graduate- or advanced undergraduate-level nuclear physics courses.

    While such a graphic, if authentic, may be a concern, it is not a cause for alarm. And it certainly is not something proscribed by the Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement between the International Atomic Energy Agency and Iran, nor any other international agreements to which Iran is a party. No secrets are needed to produce the plot of the explosive force of a nuclear weapon — just straightforward nuclear physics.

    Though the image does not imply that computer simulations were actually run, even if they were, this is the type of project a student could present in a nuclear-science course. The diagram simply shows that the bulk of the nuclear fission yield is produced in a short, 0.1 microsecond, pulse. Since the 1950s, it has been standard knowledge that, in a fission device, the last few generations of neutron multiplication yield the bulk of the energy output. It is neither a secret, nor indicative of a nuclear weapons program.

    Graphs such as the one published by the Associated Press can be found in nuclear science textbooks and on the Internet. For instance, The Effects of Nuclear Weapons, by physicists Samuel Glasstone and Philip Dolan, features a similar diagram as its Figure 7.84. This iconic book is freely available online and is considered to be the open-source authority on the subject of nuclear weapons and nuclear weapon effects. Another graphic can be found in Figure 2.11 of the textbook The Physics of the Manhattan Project.

    By Yousaf Butt and Ferenc Dalnoki-Veress | 28 November 2012

    Find this story at 28 November 2012

    Copyright © 2012 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. All Rights Reserved.

    AP Exclusive: Graph suggests Iran working on bomb

    The undated diagram that was given to the AP by officials of a country critical of Iran’s atomic program allegedly calculating the explosive force of a nuclear weapon _ a key step in developing such arms. The diagram shows a bell curve and has variables of time in micro-seconds and power and energy, both in kilotons _ the traditional measurement of the energy output, and hence the destructive power of nuclear weapons. The curve peaks at just above 50 kilotons at around 2 microseconds, reflecting the full force of the weapon being modeled. The Farsi writing at the bottom translates “changes in output and in energy released as a function of time through power pulse” (AP Photo)

    VIENNA (AP) — Iranian scientists have run computer simulations for a nuclear weapon that would produce more than triple the explosive force of the World War II bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, according to a diagram obtained by The Associated Press.

    The diagram was leaked by officials from a country critical of Iran’s atomic program to bolster their arguments that Iran’s nuclear program must be halted before it produces a weapon. The officials provided the diagram only on condition that they and their country not be named.

    The International Atomic Energy Agency — the Vienna-based U.N. nuclear watchdog — reported last year that it had obtained diagrams indicating that Iran was calculating the “nuclear explosive yield” of potential weapons. A senior diplomat who is considered neutral on the issue confirmed that the graph obtained by the AP was indeed one of those cited by the IAEA in that report. He spoke only on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue.

    The IAEA report mentioning the diagrams last year did not give details of what they showed. But the diagram seen by the AP shows a bell curve — with variables of time in micro-seconds, and power and energy both in kilotons — the traditional measurement of the energy output, and hence the destructive power of nuclear weapons. The curve peaks at just above 50 kilotons at around 2 microseconds, reflecting the full force of the weapon being modeled.

    The bomb that the United States dropped on Hiroshima in Japan during World War II, in comparison, had a force of about 15 kilotons. Modern nuclear weapons have yields hundreds of times higher than that.

    The diagram has a caption in Farsi: “Changes in output and in energy released as a function of time through power pulse.” The number “5” is part of the title, suggesting it is part of a series.

    David Albright, whose Institute for Science and International Security is used by the U.S. government as a go-to source on Iran’s nuclear program, said the diagram looks genuine but seems to be designed more “to understand the process” than as part of a blueprint for an actual weapon in the making.

    “The yield is too big,” Albright said, noting that North Korea’s first tests of a nuclear weapon were only a few kilotons. Because the graph appears to be only one in a series, others might show lower yields, closer to what a test explosion might produce, he said.

    The senior diplomat said the diagram was part of a series of Iranian computer-generated models provided to the IAEA by the intelligences services of member nations for use in its investigations of suspicions that Iran is trying to produce a nuclear weapon. Iran denies any interest in such a weapon and has accused the United States and Israel of fabricating evidence that suggests it is trying to build a bomb.

    Asked about the project, Iran’s chief IAEA delegate, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, said he had not heard of it. IAEA spokeswoman Gill Tudor said the agency had no comment.

    Iran has refused to halt uranium enrichment, despite offers of reactor fuel from abroad, saying it is producing nuclear fuel for civilian uses. It has refused for years to cooperate with the U.N. nuclear agency’s efforts to investigate its program.

    Iran’s critics fear it could use the enriched uranium for military purposes. Such concerns grew this month when the IAEA said Iran is poised to double its output of higher-enriched uranium at its fortified underground facility — a development that could put Tehran within months of being able to make the core of a nuclear warhead.

    In reporting on the existence of the diagrams last year, the IAEA said it had obtained them from two member nations that it did not identify. Other diplomats have said that Israel and the United States — the countries most concerned about Iran’s nuclear program — have supplied the bulk of intelligence being used by the IAEA in its investigation.

    “The application of such studies to anything other than a nuclear explosive is unclear to the agency,” the IAEA said at the time.

    The models were allegedly created in 2008 and 2009 — well after 2003, the year that the United States said Tehran had suspended such work in any meaningful way. That date has been questioned by Britain, France, Germany and Israel, and the IAEA now believes that — while Iran shut down some of its work back then — other tests and experiments continue today.

    With both the IAEA probe and international attempts to engage Iran stalled, there are fears that Israel may opt to strike at Tehran’s nuclear program. The Jewish state insists it will not tolerate an Iran armed with nuclear arms.

    An intelligence summary provided with the drawing linked it to other alleged nuclear weapons work — significant because it would indicate that Iran is working not on isolated experiments, but rather on a single program aimed at mastering all aspects of nuclear arms development.

    The IAEA suspects that Iran has conducted live tests of conventional explosives that could be used to detonate a nuclear weapon at Parchin, a sprawling military base southeast of Tehran. The intelligence summary provided to the AP said data gained from those tests fed the model plotted in the diagram. Iran has repeatedly turned down IAEA requests to visit the site, which the agency fears is undergoing a major cleanup meant to eliminate any traces of such experiments.

    By GEORGE JAHN
    — Nov. 27 11:43 AM EST

    Find this story at 27 November 2012

    © 2012 Associated Press

    Israel Asked Jordan for Approval to Bomb Syrian WMD Sites

    Anxiety is increasing about the prospect of a desperate Bashar al-Assad using chemical weapons against his rapidly proliferating enemies. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned Assad that such chemical weapons use would cross a U.S. red line: “I’m not going to telegraph in any specifics what we would do in the event of credible evidence that the Assad regime has resorted to using chemical weapons against their own people. But suffice to say we are certainly planning to take action.”

    This new level of anxiety was prompted by reports that Assad’s forces have been moving chemical weapons, according to David Sanger and Eric Schmitt in The Times. They report that one American official told them that “the activity we are seeing suggests some potential chemical weapon preparation,” though the official “declined to offer more specifics of what those preparations entailed.”

    The U.S. is not the only country worried about the possible use of chemical weapons. Intelligence officials in two countries told me recently that the Israeli government has twice come to the Jordanian government with a plan to take out many of Syria’s chemical weapons sites. According to these two officials, Israel has been seeking Jordan’s “permission” to bomb these sites, but the Jordanians have so far declined to grant such permission.

    Of course, Israel can attack these sites without Jordanian approval (in 2007, the Israeli Air Force destroyed a Syrian nuclear reactor), but one official told me that the Israelis are concerned about the possible repercussions of such an attack on Jordan. “A number of sites are not far from the border,” he said, further explaining: “The Jordanians have to be very careful about provoking the regime and they assume the Syrians would suspect Jordanian complicity in an Israeli attack.” Intelligence sources told me that Israeli drones are patrolling the skies over the Jordan-Syria border, and that both American and Israeli drones are keeping watch over suspected Syrian chemical weapons sites.

    He went on to provide context of the Israeli request: “You know the Israelis — sometimes they want to bomb right away. But they were told that from the Jordanian perspective, the time was not right.” The Israeli requests were made in the last two months, communicated by Mossad intermediaries dispatched by Prime Minister Netanyahu’s office, according to these sources. (I asked the Israeli embassy in Washington for comment on this, but received no answer.)

    By Jeffrey Goldberg
    Dec 3 2012, 7:54 AM ET 188

    Find this story at 3 December 2012

    Copyright © 2012 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved. CDN powered by Edgecast Networks. Insights powered by Parsely .

    Israel asked for Jordan’s approval to bomb Syria, say sources

    The government of Israel has sent Jordan at least two requests in the past two months to bomb targets in Syria, according to intelligence sources. The Atlantic magazine, which published the revelation on Monday, said Tel Aviv has been seeking Amman’s “permission” to move ahead with “a plan to take out many of Syria’s chemical weapons sites”. Citing unnamed “intelligence officials in two countries”, The Atlantic said that the Israeli requests were communicated to the Jordanian government by officials from the Mossad, Israel’s primary covert-action agency. In both instances, the Mossad delegation was allegedly dispatched to Amman on the orders of the Office of Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s Prime Minister. However, the Jordanians are so far resisting the Israeli proposals, says The Atlantic, telling their Jewish neighbors that “the time [is] not right” for direct military action. It is worth pointing out that Israel does not technically require Jordan’s permission to bomb Syria. Its air force can do so without assistance from Amman. This was demonstrated on September 6, 2007, when Israel bombed a target at Al-Kibar, deep in the Syro-Arabian Desert, thought to be the site of a nuclear reactor. Even though Tel Aviv has not officially admitted a role in the attack, Israeli officials have repeatedly hinted that Israel was behind it. According to German newsmagazine Der Spiegel, which published a detailed account of the bombing, the attack was codenamed Operation ORCHARD. The difference this time appears to be that many of Syria’s chemical weapons facilities, which Israel allegedly wants to destroy, are located along the Syrian-Jordanian border. This, according to The Atlantic’s sources, poses the danger that Damascus would suspect Amman’s complicity in any attack on its southern territory. Israel is therefore “concerned about the possible repercussions of such an attack on Jordan”, claims the magazine. The Atlantic’s national correspondent, Jeffrey Goldberg, who authored the article, says he contacted the embassy of Israel in Washington, DC, seeking a comment on the story, but received no answer.

    December 4, 2012 by Joseph Fitsanakis 2 Comments

    By JOSEPH FITSANAKIS | intelNews.org |

    Find this story at 4 December 2012

    Israel special forces conducting cross-border operations in Syria

    Teams of Israeli special forces are currently operating inside Syria in an effort to detect and sabotage the Syrian military’s chemical and biological arsenal. Citing an unnamed “Israeli source”, the London-based Sunday Times newspaper said yesterday that the operation is part of a wider “secret war” to track Damascus’ non-conventional weapons stockpiles and “sabotage their development”. The Israeli government refused comment on the paper’s allegation. However, Israel’s covert activities against the Syrian government’s chemical and biological arsenal go back almost 30 years. Reputedly, some of the more recent such activities may have involved the targeting of Russian scientists. Although Russia routinely denies it, it is believed that Syria’s non-conventional arsenal was significantly augmented in the late 1980s and early 1990s with the help of Russian retired general Anatoliy Kuntsevich. Kuntsevich, one of the Soviet Red Army’s top scientists, is said to have helped Damascus build its XV nerve agent stockpiles, which are still believed to be in existence today. Interestingly, Kuntsevich died suddenly in 2003 onboard a flight from the Syrian capital to Moscow. It was widely speculated at the time that the Mossad, Israel’s covert-action agency, may have played a role in the Russian general’s sudden death. In 2010, another retired Russian general, Yuri Ivanov, who had served as Deputy Director of the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency, died in unclear circumstances. The body of 52-year-old Ivanov was found in Turkey on August 16, 2010, several days after he had disappeared close to a Russian naval facility in Syria. Russian media did not report Ivanov’s death until several days later, when he was quietly buried in Moscow. According to reports in the Israeli press, the former GRU official was on his way to a meeting with Syrian intelligence officers when he went missing. Israel has never acknowledged having played a part in Ivanon’s death, but many suspect that Tel Aviv had been targeting the two Russians for quite some time. The Sunday Times article quoted an “Israeli source” who said that intelligence gathered through Israeli-operated satellites and unmanned drones flying over Syria indicates that chemical and biological stockpiles were recently moved to new locations around the country.

    December 10, 2012 by Joseph Fitsanakis 1 Comment

    By JOSEPH FITSANAKIS | intelNews.org |

    Find this story at 10 December 2012

    Israeli arms companies forced to pull out of major aerospace convention in France

    Elbit Systems and , two Israeli arms companies thatassist Israel with the construction of its apartheid wall and supply drones to the Israeli military, have pulled out of a major international aerospace industry convention in Toulouse, in southern France, following a campaign led by BDS Sud-Ouest.

    The two military companies participated in the 2010 Aeromart Business Convention and had been listed as participant’s in this year’s convention, which started on 4 December. But in the wake of a 60-strong demonstration outside the convention center on its opening morning, event organizers announced that Elbit Systems and IAI had “at the last moment decided not to participate in the event.” The companies were worried about the damage to their reputation and further demonstrations taking place during the convention, according to information recieved by campaigners.

    The campaign against the appearance of Israeli companies at the convention began in February, originally targetting local government bodies involved in the convention, and recieved radio and TV coverage.

    In its report Precisely Wrong, Human Rights Watch detailed the use of drones provided by Elbit Systems and IAI in the killing of civilians during the 2008-09 Gaza massacre. Armaments provided by the two companies were surely used during Israel’s latest assault on Gaza. In its promotional materials, Elbit Systems boasts that its drones are “field tested,” by which it means that their deadly power has been demonstrated on Palestinian civilians.

    Several European financial institutions including the Norwegian state pension fund, Danske Bank and ABP have divested from Elbit Systems. Slowly but surely, theboycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement is showing that there is a price to pay for being part of Israel’s military machine.

    52 public figures including Nobel prize winners, artists, writers and academics issued a call for a military embargo on Israel in the wake of the attack on Gaza last month (full text here). The Palestinian BDS National Committee launched a campaign for a military embargo on Israel on 9 July 2011.

    Posted on December 11, 2012 by Michael Deas at Electronic Intifada

    Find this story at 11 December 2012

    University of Oslo to end G4S contract over support for Israeli apartheid

    Student campaigners created stickers imitating G4S’ logo to raise awareness on campus. (Photo courtesey of Palestine Committee at the University of Oslo)

    In a major success for the campaign against Israeli prison contractor G4S, the University of Oslo has announced that it will terminate its contract with the company in July 2013.

    G4S is a private security company that has a contract to provide equipment and services to Israeli prisons at which Palestinian political prisoners, including child prisoners, are detained and mistreated. G4S also provides equipment and services to checkpoints, illegal settlements and businesses in settlements. The Israeli governmentrecently confirmed that G4S also provides equipment to Israel’s illegal apartheid wall.

    Student activists with the Palestine Committee at the University of Oslo began campaigning in August for the university to not renew its contract with G4S, which has been providing security services on campus since 2010. Campaigners plastered the campus with “Boycott G4S” stickers that imitated real G4S stickers and the student parliament voted to support the campaign. Students have also held demonstrations and other actions on campus.

    The university had the option to extend the contract for another year beyond its original expiry date of March 2013 but has now negotiated a termination date of 1 July 2013. The University of Oslo does not want to “support companies that operate in an ethical grey area” and new ethical procurement guidelines will be developed to prevent any future contracts with companies involved in human rights abuses, university director Ole Petter Ottersen has said.

    In November, a petition signed by 21 organizations including trade unions, political parties and nongovernmental organizations such as Amnesty International was sent to G4S Norway. The signatories stated: ”G4S must immediately withdraw from all activities on occupied Palestinian land and halt all deliveries to Israeli prisons in which Palestinian prisoners are imprisoned in violation of the Geneva conventions.”

    There are campaigns against G4S in several other European countries including Denmark, Sweden, the UK and Belgium and several public bodies, nongovernmental organizations and private companies have already been succesfully persuaded to cut their ties to the company.
    Continued deception

    While attempting to defend its support for Israeli violations of international law to Norwegian media outlets, G4S repeated earlier claims that it intends to pull out of several contracts to provide equipment to Israeli settlements and checkpoints by 2015, creating the false impression that it is ending all support for Israeli violations of international law.

    Yet if G4S is serious about ending its complicity, why doesn’t it end all involvement in settlements immediately? The comapny has so far not announced any plans to end its provision of security services to private businesses in illegal Israeli settlements.

    Most importantly, G4S continues to omit any mention of its role in prisons inside Israelin its public communications in response to campaigns, making clear its intent to continue its role in the Israeli prison system, underlining the need for continued campaigning.

    Posted on December 11, 2012 by Michael Deas at Electronic Intifada

    Find this story at 11 December 2012

    G4S tagging contract now at risk

    G4S will face its “next big test” of government support as early as next month after it was stripped of a key prison contract in the wake of the company’s Olympics security shambles.
    FTSE 100 security group is waiting to hear whether it will be reappointed on a contract to provide electronic tagging of offenders. MPs stopped short of calling for the resignation of chief executive Nick Buckles after the Olympics fiasco.

    The FTSE 100 security group is waiting to hear whether it will be reappointed on a contract to provide electronic tagging of offenders services across England and Wales, worth £50m of annual revenue to the company.

    G4S and Serco gained an extension to an existing contract in 2009, which is due to expire in March 2013. It is understood that the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) is considering bids for the next phase of the contract with an announcement expected next month.

    Under the existing contract G4S and Serco manage the entire process including the technology, tagging, and monitoring of offenders, in two regions each. Under the next phase, the contract will not be split into regions but “services”, with one company providing technology across England and Wales and the other providing tagging for example. In September G4S won a contract to provide tagging services in Scotland.

    G4S declined to comment on the contract in England and Wales, but David Brockton, analyst at Espirito Santo, said it would be “the next big test”.

    The MoJ said on Thursday it would strip G4S of its contract to manage HMP Wolds in East Yorkshire when its contract expires in July 2013, with management reverting to the public sector.
    Related Articles
    Olympics security firm G4S loses contract to run Wolds prison 08 Nov 2012
    G4S rebounds after Olympics fiasco 06 Nov 2012
    Olympics fiasco: G4S to be frozen out in future 22 Jul 2012
    Political risks are getting too hot for private companies 08 Nov 2012.

    By Angela Monaghan

    7:30AM GMT 11 Nov 2012

    Find this story at 11 November 2012

    © Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2012

    Homes, G4S style: Rubbish, rising damp… and ‘roaches’

    Another shambles as security giant leaves asylum seeker living in squalor

    An asylum seeker with a five-month-old baby claims she was placed in a property by the private contractor G4S that was infested with cockroaches and slugs. The woman, who was trafficked to the UK and sold into prostitution before seeking asylum, claims she and her baby were left in the house for weeks before the local council intervened to ensure they were rehoused.

    Leeds City Council contacted G4S, and their property sub-contractors Cascade, earlier this week after their inspectors found the property was a “Category 1 Hazard” and unfit for human habitation in its current condition. G4S holds contracts to supply accommodation to asylum contracts across much of England as part of the UK Border Agency’s COMPASS project.

    The woman, known as Angela, says she was “dumped” at the property after she refused to accept an alternative place offered to her on the basis that the filth, mould and damp there would pose a health risk to her child.

    She made repeated complaints to both G4S and Cascade and was told by the firms that they had carried out their own inspections and were satisfied the accommodations was “decent”.

    “One of the people said to me when I rang ‘slugs are not harmful, even if your baby eats one of them’” she told The Independent.

    Angela, who was forced into prostitution after being trafficked to the UK in 2000, was initially housed in a “nice” one-bed flat by UKBA after seeking refuge from her handlers.

    But when her son was born she was moved to an area contracted to G4S and sub-contracted to property firm Cascade. “When I came here I said ‘this house doesn’t look safe for me and my child to live in’, there were cockroaches and slugs,” Angela recalls. “They took me to another property and that was absolutely disgusting, worse than this one. The kitchen smells of wee, the whole place, words cannot describe I was crying, I was screaming”.

    Charlotte Philby
    Friday, 14 December 2012

    Find This story at 14 December 2012

    © independent.co.uk

    De Psyche van een Mol, Paul Kraaijer (onderzoek)

    Paul IJsbrand Kraaijer en zijn spiegelpaleis: Van Buttonboy tot Spion

    I – INLEIDING

    Op 3 juni 2011 kondigde De Telegraaf de onthulling van een informant in extreem-linkse kringen aan. Met op de achtergrond de zee is in een korte video te zien hoe John van den Heuvel een man interviewt die zegt dat hij 25 jaar voor de inlichtingendienst heeft gewerkt. Dezelfde dag is de naam van de persoon in de video bekend: Paul Kraaijer.

    De volgende dag verschijnt op pagina 6 van dezelfde ochtendkrant een eerste artikel dat gevolgd wordt door een tweede op 6 juni 2011. Kraaijer wordt neergezet als spion. In de weken die volgen gaat de discussie in de media en op internet vooral over de dubbelrol die Paul al die jaren zou hebben gespeeld: journalist en informant.

    Het verhaal van Paul wordt als waarheid aangenomen, maar gezien het gebrek aan details zijn er grote vraagtekens te zetten bij de claim van de ‘spion’. Tevens rijst de vraag of De Telegraaf wel onderzoek naar Kraaijer heeft gedaan. Vragen aan de AIVD leveren niets op, dus is daarvoor uitgebreid bronnen raadplegen en archief-/persoonsonderzoek nodig.

    John van den Heuvel heeft Kraaijer op 31 mei 2011 geïnterviewd, het eerste artikel verscheen op 4 juni. Het contact tussen van den Heuvel en Kraaijer is weliswaar al eerder tot stand gekomen, maar veel opzienbarende details heeft de ‘informant’ dan nog niet verteld. In Suriname, waar Paul thans woont, ontstaat ophef over zijn informantenrol en wordt hij door de journalistenvakbond aan de kant gezet.

    Vervolgens probeert Kraaijer nog zijn verhaal in boekvorm uit te brengen, maar als uitgevers geen interesse tonen, biedt hij het op zijn weblog als pdf-bestand aan tegen betaling. Vervolgens wordt het door derden op het internet gepubliceerd. ‘Het dubbelleven van een AIVD-infiltrant/informant’ is in wezen een uitgebreide versie van de artikelen in De Telegraaf, veel nieuwe feiten staan er niet in. Wel veel persoonlijke dingen over het denken, doen en laten van Paul. De krant die Kraaijer jarenlang heeft ondersteund, gevolgd en ruimte heeft geboden voor zijn acties, de Zwolse Courant, kopt op 1 oktober na publicatie van het online-manuscript: ”AIVD-mol’ loopt leeg, maar wie wil het weten?’

    lees meer

    ‘Wilt u voor ons komen fotograferen?’

    Afgelopen zomer werd ‘Carlijn’, fotografe in opleiding, door de RID Amstelland benaderd met de vraag of zij voor hen foto’s wilde maken van linkse activisten. Carlijn weigerde resoluut, maar hield een naar gevoel over van het huisbezoek.

    lees meer

    Informant bij de Black Panters

    In de VS is een controverse ontstaan naar aanleiding van een publicatie over de mogelijke aanwezigheid van een FBI-informant bij de Black Panthers in de jaren ’60. Deed Richard Masato Aoki het nu wel of niet?

    Op 20 augustus 2012 publiceerde The Center for Investigative Reporting (CIR) een verhaal over Richard Masato Aoki, een voormalig lid van de Black Panther Party in de jaren ’60-’70 en inmiddels overleden. Op de website van CIR gaf Seth Rosenfeld het artikel de titel ‘Man who armed Black Panthers was FBI informant, records show.’ De San Francisco Chronicle publiceerde nog dezelfde dag exact hetzelfde verhaal met de titel ‘Activist Richard Aoki named as informant.’ Het nuanceverschil in de kop van markeert de discussie die zich ontpopte in de dagen die volgden.

    lees meer

    Crowd Digging: de Nederlandse cables

    Op 28 november 2010 maakte Wikileaks in samenwerking met vijf dagbladen (The New York Times, The Guardian, Der Spiegel, Le Monde en El País) enkele documenten van de 251.287 diplomatieke telegrammen (cables) afkomstig van Amerikaanse ambassades en consulaten openbaar. In de maanden die volgden werd er veel aandacht aan deze cables besteed, maar al snel verschoof de publiciteit naar de voorman van Wikileaks, Julian Assange.
    lees meer

    Jansen & Janssen nieuwsblog

    nieuwsblog.burojansen.nl is een initiatief van Buro Jansen & Janssen. Op nieuwsblog posten wij artikelen, berichten, verhalen en andere zaken van derden. Het gaat hierbij om berichten over veiligheids-, inlichtingen- en politiediensten in binnen- en buitenland. Ook verhalen over de Wet Openbaarheid van Bestuur, mensenrechtenschendingen en aanverwante onderwerpen komen aan bod. Het betreft informatie dat we tijdens onze onderzoeken verzameld hebben maar ook afkomstig is van derden: kritische burgers, sympathisanten, journalisten en NGO’s.
    lees meer

    De affaire Gardiner

    Voor je ligt, na ruim een jaar arbeid, een rekonstruktie en analiese van ‘DE AFFAIRE GARDINER’. Zestig pagina’s over een van de belangrijkste naoorlogse aan het licht gekomen en toegegeven infiltratiezaken. Lees hoe de BVD de vredesbeweging niet alleen infiltreert, maar ook provoceert. Deze publikatie is gemaakt door ‘de rekonstruktiegroep’: een dertigtal aktivisten uit, de vredesbewegingen en anti-militaristiese kring. Meer precies is het onderzoek en schrijfwerk uitgevoerd door een deelgroep uit die rekonstruktiegroep; de zg. onderzoekgroep. Na een jaar werken is het resultaat voorgelegd aan de rekonstruktiegroep en is besloten tot publikatie. De publikatie als zodanig is verzorgd en wordt uitgegeven door AMOK.
    lees meer

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