Comando de Operações Especiais dos EE UU Operam no Planeta:


Conforme Documento da Agency Intelligence Stratfor, onde o editorial de um jornal Iraniano, elaborado por Hormoz Baradaran, relata que os Estados Unidos realizam operações secretas em 120 países. Os ataques e guerras aéreas nos seis países muçulmanos como o Iraque, Afeganistão, Iêmen, Líbia, Somália e Paquistão, representam uma diminuta parte das "intervenções" militares do Pentágono, que passam desapercebida a maioria da população. Em maio de 2011, quando comandos navais americanos liquidaram Osama bin Laden em Islamabad, capital do Paquistão, veio a tona a sigla SEALs, uma unidade da marinha americana para operações especiais. A sigla é derivada de sua capacidade em operar no mar (sea), no ar (air) e em terra (land) e apesar da maioria do povo americano ter ignorado a existência da Navy SEALs até a morte de Bin Laden, a mesma opera desde a segunda guerra mundial. Abaixo alguma de suas operações que vão desde caçada a terroristas até a derrubadas de governos que contrariem os interesses norte-americanos:
Segunda Guerra Mundial
Guerra do Vietnã
Força Multinacional no Líbano
Invasão de Granada
Invasão do Panamá
Guerra do Golfo
Unified Task Force
Batalha de Mogadíscio (1993)
Guerra do Afeganistão
Guerra do Iraque
Morte de Osama bin Laden



O Pentágono e a inteligência U.S. dividiu o globo em seis partes para suas operações especiais:

a) EUCOM (para a Europa e Rússia)

b) PACOM (Ásia)

c) CENTCOM (Grande Oriente Médio e parte da África do Norte)


d)  SOUTHCOM (América Latina)

e) NORTHCOM (Estados Unidos, Canadá e México)

f)AFRICOM (a maioria da África).

Há também comandos para os céus, EUA Strategic Command, ou STRATCOM, em que o Comando Espacial dos EUA foi incorporado e, o mais recente de todas, a Internet, onde EUA Cyber ​​Command regras, ou Cybercom.

Neste momento, em que você lê este texto, na maioria dos países do globo, militares e serviços de inteligências Yankee estão operando no cerne de cada governo, de cada grupo corporativo midiático, em cada ponto estratégico, como por exemplo, energia e mineração. Edward Snowden e Julian Assange revelaram que o cidadão não tem privacidade na internet e ao falar pelo telefone, dados são coletados pela National Security Agenc (NSA). A cada átimo de segundo governos, empresas e o cidadão comum são espionados. Com base nas informações recolhidas, são determinadas ações ou não dos vários comandos de operações especiais, infiltrados ilegalmente ou com a chancela de governos em volta do mundo.

Lista de comandantes do US SOCOM 

Nº.ImagemNomeRamoInício do mandatoFim do mandato
1.GEN James Lindsay 1986.jpgGEN James J. LindsayUSAAbril de 1987Junho de 1990
2.Carl W Stiner.jpgGEN Carl W. StinerUSAJunho de 1990Maio de 1993
3.Wayne Downing.jpgGEN Wayne A. DowningUSAMaio de 1993Fevereiro de 1996
4.Henry Shelton official portrait.jpgGEN Henry H. SheltonUSAFevereiro de 1996Setembro de 1997
(representante)RADM Raymond C. Smith, Jr.USNSetembro de 1997Novembro de 1997
5.Peter Schoomaker.jpgGEN Peter J. SchoomakerUSANovembro de 1997Outubro de 2000
6.Holland cr.jpgGEN Charles R. HollandUSAFOutubro de 2000Setembro de 2003
7.GEN Bryan Brown official portrait.jpgGEN Bryan D. BrownUSASetembro de 20039 de julho de 2007
8.Admiral Eric Olson.jpgADM Eric T. OlsonUSN9 de julho de 20078 de agosto de 2011
9.ADM William H. McRaven 2012.jpgADM William H. McRavenUSN8 de agosto de 2011Presente

 



EVIDENCIAS DE OPERAÇÕES ESPECIAIS NA UCRÂNIA: 

Putin Plays the Victim Card

Putin has criticized the United States for using mercenaries to drive out pro-Russian forces from Ukraine.
The Russian Blackwater
The Russian Blackwater takeover of Crimea Airports
Putin’s allegations of war mongering by U.S. forces has merit and are backed up the German newspaper Bild am Sonntag who recently reported  that 400 U.S. mercenaries are working with the (illegal) junta government in Ukraine to crush opposition to the Western coup in the eastern part of the country designed to turn Ukraine away from Russia by eliminating anti-coup activists in Slavyansk and the Donetsk region.

________________________________________________

While the Army has an identity crisis, if you look at SOCOM, it has a very clear view of the future and what it’s going to do about it,” he said. Having a strategy is commendable, Leed noted, but world events tend to get in the way. Russia's military incursion in Ukraine is the latest example of an unexpected crisis that has thrown the credibility of the quadrennial defense review into question. “Nobody was foreseeing this even two months ago,” she said. Since 2012, the Pentagon has been trying to do this “pivot,” Leed said, referring to the military’s plan to shift focus to Asia. “The pivot is turning into a pirouette … from the Middle East, to the Pacific, and now also Europe. This world is not cooperating with our strategy.”





Credit: Left, Adm. William McRaven; Right, Gen. Ray Odierno (Defense Dept. photos)
_________________________________________________________________________________


Globalized Special Ops
Last year, Special Operations Command chief Admiral William McRaven explained his vision for special ops globalization.  In a statement to the House Armed Services Committee, he said:
“USSOCOM is enhancing its global network of SOF to support our interagency and international partners in order to gain expanded situational awareness of emerging threats and opportunities. The network enables small, persistent presence in critical locations, and facilitates engagement where necessary or appropriate...”
Growth Industry
Formally established in 1987, Special Operations Command has grown steadily in the post-9/11 era.   SOCOM is reportedly on track to reach 72,000 personnel in 2014, up from 33,000 in 2001.  Funding for the command has also jumped exponentially as its baseline budget, $2.3 billion in 2001, hit $6.9 billion in 2013 ($10.4 billion, if you add in supplemental funding).  Personnel deployments abroad have skyrocketed, too, from 4,900 “man-years” in 2001 to 11,500 in 2013.
In 2013, elite U.S. forces were deployed in 134 countries around the globe, according to Major Matthew Robert Bockholt of SOCOM Public Affairs.  This 123% increase during the Obama years demonstrates how, in addition to conventional wars and a CIA drone campaign, public diplomacy and extensive electronic spying, the U.S. has engaged in still another significant and growing form of overseas power projection.  Conducted largely in the shadows by America’s most elite troops, the vast majority of these missions take place far from prying eyes, media scrutiny, or any type of outside oversight, increasing the chances of unforeseen blowback and catastrophic consequences.   

On Monday February 27th, 2012, WikiLeaks began publishing The Global Intelligence Files, over five million e-mails from the Texas headquartered "global intelligence" company Stratfor. The e-mails date between July 2004 and late December 2011. They reveal the inner workings of a company that fronts as an intelligence publisher, but provides confidential intelligence services to large corporations, such as Bhopal's Dow Chemical Co., Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and government agencies, including the US Department of Homeland Security, the US Marines and the US Defence Intelligence Agency. The emails show Stratfor's web of informers, pay-off structure, payment laundering techniques and psychological methods.

IRAN/MIDDLE EAST-US Secret Operations in 120 Countries

Released on 2012-10-17 17:00 GMT
Email-ID2571680
Date2011-08-22 12:32:39
Fromdialogbot@smtp.stratfor.com
Todialog-list@stratfor.com
US Secret Operations in 120 Countries - Iran Online
Sunday August 21, 2011 23:46:03 GMT
06 August 2011

US Secret Operations in 120 Countries

International Group - Hormoz Baradaran: America's air attacks and wars in
the six Muslim nations of Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, Libya, Somalia and
Pakistan do not show clearly all the facts about the number of the
Pentagon's military operations. Every day American commandos make new
provocations and operations in 120 nations without the knowledge of their
compatriots.

In mid-spring when American naval commandos known as SEALs emptied bullets
into Bin Laden's brain and chest, the name of one of the American Army's
most fearsome forces became a subject for talk. After the defeat of
America's operations to liberate the spy nest hostages in Iran in 1987 the
US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) was established. This unit has a
fixed budget and a four-star commander at its head. It includes soldiers
and commandos from sea, ground and air forces and teams.

SOCOM conducts America's most secret missions with the help of commandos
and also professional helicopter and boat operators. Assassinations,
anti-terrorist attacks, spy intelligence analysis, training of foreign
forces and operations against the spread of weapons of mass destruction
are some of these missions.

The Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), one of SOCOM's subsidiaries,
has the responsibility of tracking and killing terrorist suspects. The
units called SEALs of the Navy and the Army Delta Force carry out
assassination programs under JSOC's supervision. This command also has 20
black points in Afghanistan where important terrorist suspects are
interrogated.

America's Special Operations Command has about 60000 forces and since
September 11 its budget has risen above $6. 3 billion; including
operations and the emergency budget for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
this figure reaches $9.8 billion.

In a report about America's secret operations the Asia Times Newspaper
wrote: SOCOM commanders believe after the completion of the withdrawal of
the Americans from Iraq and Afghanistan this command can remain in these
nations and play a role because of its budget and its capabilities.

Eric Olson, chief of the Special Operations Command, has implemented a
special program to expand the operations of the unit under his command
called Project Lawrence. "Lawrence" is taken from the name Thomas Edward
Lawrence, the English officer known as Lawrence of Arabia. During World
War I he joined with groups of armed Arabs to start guerilla operations in
the Middle East.

Olson believes America needs people like Lawrence who are "everywhere." Of
course in his view Pakistan, Afghanistan, Mali and Indonesia have
priority. The project includes programs to learn the languages, history
and culture of the nations where operations are conducted.

Early this year before the Congressional Armed Forces Committee Special
Operations Command Spokesman Colonel Tim Nye said 85 percent of SOCOM's
forces are conducting operations just in the nations of the Middle East
including Afghanistan, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Syria,
Lebanon and elsewhere. Thailand, Romania, Brazil, Bulgaria, Germany,
Norway, Panama, Burkina Faso, South Korea and Poland also have SOCOM
forces. In recent years the penetration of this command has increased so
much that Olson considers it a small but accurate model of the Pentagon.

The existence of American secret forces is the biggest evidence of the
continuation of imperialist thinking in America's government. The Obama
government came onto the scene with the slogan of reducing militarism but
the SOCOM organization proves that America's ground, sea an d air units
are present throughout the world and they have the prerogatives and
responsibilities to circumvent international laws and eliminate forces
opposed to America in various places, and they have all the implements of
violence and force.

(Description of Source: Tehran Iran Online in Persian -- an official
government newspaper published by IRNA, the state news agency; URL:
www.iran-newspaper.com)

Material in the World News Connection is generally copyrighted by the
source cited. Permission for use must be obtained from the copyright
holder. Inquiries regarding use may be directed to NTIS, US Dept. of
Commerce.

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