So desperate has been the US effort to get the US government killer
Raymond Davis sprung from police custody in Lahore, Pakistan following
his execution-style slaughter of two Pakistani intelligence operatives
in broad daylight in a crowded commercial area, that the government
trotted out President Obama to declare that Pakistan was violating the
Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations by holding "our diplomat,"
whom he insisted had only been defending himself, and should in any case
be entitled to absolute immunity.
This
Dept. of Defense Contractor ID found on Davis belies his "diplomat"
claim, but also raises questions about whether he's really CIA, or
something else
Now both the
Guardian newspaper in the UK over the weekend, and the
Associated Press
today are reporting that sources in both the Pakistani and American
governments are confirming that Davis works for the CIA. The AP is even
reporting that he is a "CIA security contractor," which is something
less and a little more amorphous than a CIA employee, and that means he
has no claim on diplomatic immunity whatever, and that raises the added
question of who he actually is and who he actually works for. But more
on that later.
The Guardian noted in its article that Davis's wife had
provided phone numbers for information about him to a local TV station
and that those numbers turned out to be the CIA. Meanwhile, Agence
France Press reported over the weekend that Sen. Lindsay Graham (R-SC), a
loose-tongued member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, also
apparently inadvertently slipped up and disclosed on the Senate floor that Davis is an "agent", saying, "We can't throw this agent over."
America's and the President's reputations lie in tatters as a result
of the handling of this bloody incident. Not only did the US dispatch to
Islamabad members of Congress, including the oleaginous Sen. John Kerry
(D-MA), as well as the reprehensible Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
to press for Davis's release, threatening the withholding of aid to
Pakistan (our ostensible ally in the Afghanistan War!). It provided a
patently false document to the Pakistani Foreign Office claiming Davis
to be an employee of the US Embassy in Islamabad (which would have meant
he'd have immunity from arrest and detention), when he was actually
working out of the Lahore Consulate, where he would not be entitled to
any immunity for his actions). It also tried to exchange his regular
passport for a diplomatic one a day after his arrest, again
retroactively trying to get him immunity from prosecution for his
murderous acts.
Furthermore, the US government, according to the Guardian,
induced major US news organizations to hide what they knew about Davis's
real role from the American public. The paper reported that several US
news organizations had also learned on their own that Davis is a spy,
but then voluntarily withhheld the information from the American public
"at the request of the Obama administration," which preferred to stick
to the fictional story line that Pakistan is holding an American
"diplomat" in "violation of the Vienna Convention" on diplomatic
immunity. In fact, on Feb. 15, when the president lectured Pakistan
about releasing "our diplomat" Davis, saying "We've got a very simple
principle here that every country in the world that is party to the
Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations has upheld in the past and
should uphold in the future, and that is, if our diplomats are in
another country, then they are not subject to that country's local
prosecution," not only did he know he was lying, but so did some major
news organizations which ran his statement but didn't tell readers the
truth: Davis was no diplomat, but was a spook, or a contractor for a
spook agency.
Update Even late today, when the NY Times finally says it got "permission" from the government to publish what it knew--that
Davis "worked with" the CIA, it still fudged the issue of its allowing
President Obama to lie at his press conference. "Without describing Mr.
Davis’s mission or intelligence affiliation, President Obama last week
made a public plea for his release," the self-described "paper of
record" wrote. But that's not what Obama did. He simply lied and called
Davis a "diplomat" and demanded his release, claiming he had immunity,
and the Times knowingly let him get away with that lie.
Readers of ThisCantBeHappening! will not be surprised about any of this however.
Our online newspaper has, over the last three weeks, exposed
the fact that the company that Davis claimed to work for in the US,
Hyperion Protective Services, LLC, of Orlando Florida, was a fraud--the
address on the business cards that Davis was carrying when arrested we
traced to a vacant storefront in a run-down and nearly empty strip mall
in Orlando. The store front had been vacant since 2009, according to the
owner of the property. We also reported, when the rest of the media was
hiding the information, that the men Davis murdered were not robbers,
but were Pakistani intelligence people. As well, we reported before any
other US media, the news that police had found all manner of spy and
even terrorist materials in Davis's car. (Much of that information was
available in the Pakistani press, which was talking to the police and
prosecutors in Lahore, but not in the US press, either because US
reporters in Pakistan were just talking to US sources, or because their
editors back in the States were censoring their reports.)
I would suggest, however, that this story is not over yet. It may
well be that while Davis is a contractor for the CIA, he could also be
something else: a still active-duty member of US Special Forces. One of
the items found on him by arresting police was an ID card identifying
him as a DOD (Department of Defense) contractor. See below:
Davis reportedly spent 10 years in US Special Forces until allegedly
leaving in 2003, but apparently it has become increasingly common for
the US to use Special Forces personnel in countries all over the world
who are "off the books" in terms of being registered as active duty at
the Pentagon, with records of their service being maintained only at the
unit level. The thing is, while it is commonplace in the international
diplomatic world for embassies to give diplomatic cover to members of
their intelligence services, giving active-duty military personnel
diplomatic such "cover" would be a grave violation of international
diplomatic protocol.
And since local Pakistani politics make it unlikely that the ruse of trying to call him an embassy employee, rather than a Lahore Consulate employee
will work with the Pakistan court, it could be the US government has
decided now to fall back to claiming he's CIA, which would probably at
least spare him a hanging, even if it leaves him with a long jail
sentence in a Lahore prison.
My main reasoning for thinking Davis is in Special Forces is that CIA
agents don’t typically advertise themselves as being in the “security”
business. Yet Davis was carrying cards when he was arrested after
slaughtering two Pakistanis that identified him as an employee of
Hyperion Protective Services, LLC. That kind of thing may well be what a
cowboy secret Special Forces commando might do, but not a CIA agent.
Furthermore, the kind of killing that Davis was involved in--the
daylight execution on a crowded street of two young men on
motorcycles--and the equipment police found in his car, which included
multiple semi-automatic pistols and high-capacity clips, a telescope, a
forehead-mounted infra-red flashlight, multiple cell-phones, a
cell-phone locater, clippers, military knives, makeup and masks and a
camera filled with photos of schools (common targets for bombings in
Lahore and other Pakistani cities)--sound dirtier than the typical CIA
fare.
Adding to the suspicion that Davis is involved in something more than
just spy work or intelligence gathering is the report in today's NY Times
that he "has worked for years as a C.I.A. contractor, including time at
Blackwater Worldwide, the private security firm (now called Xe)." It's
easy why the American government has been trying so hard to keep their
Pakistani police and prosecutors from applying the thumbscrew and
waterboard to this particular prisoner!
Two things are clear already though. One is that the US is a
thoroughly untrustworthy member of the international diplomatic
community. It has shown that, from the President on down, it is ready to
bald-facedly lie to its own allies to cover up its nefarious
activities, which well could include fomenting terror within their
borders. The other is that the US media are nothing more than propaganda
mouthpieces for that same wretched government, ready to help it cover
up its crimes when asked.