COINTELPRO

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Event.png COINTELPRO (subversion,  Civil_unrest/Preparation) Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
5
Cointelpro groups.png
Date1956 - 1971?
PerpetratorsFBI
Interest ofRon Ridenour, Alex Rosen
DescriptionSeries of covert and illegal projects aimed at subversion of 1960s left wing movements

COINTELPRO (syllabic abbreviation derived from COunter INTELligence PROgram) (1956–1971) was a large series of covert and illegal projects conducted by the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) aimed at surveilling, infiltrating, discrediting, and disrupting American political organizations. [1]

"Foster factionalism and create suspicion within groups"

The most frequent COINTELPRO methods were the use of wiretaps, break ins, anonymous letters, sexual blackmail, death threats informants, agents provocateurs, black propaganda, provocations, perjury, doctoring of evidence, frame ups and trumped-up charges sometimes leading to long jail terms.

If this wasn't felt to be sufficient, other methods included giving right-wing groups like Ku Klux Klan or individuals run free to do the dirty work - or with some discreet guidance; assassinations by police; encouraging gang wars; and more.

These, and other means of subterfuge to was meant to, in the Bureau’s own words, foster factionalism and create suspicion within groups, bring individuals into disrepute before the American public, and create disruption and discord among such groups and movements in order to destroy the Left, or at least render it useless.[2]

The program especially targeted members of the Black Panthers movement, where most famously the leader (Fred Hampton) was assassinated by police, others were jailed on false accusations (Mumia abu-Jamal and many others).[3]

COINTELPRO in the 1980s

Even if the program officially closed down in 1971, the tactics of COINTELPRO continued. The gang wars in the black slums in the 1980s and 1990s were fueled by the CIA/Contra drug imports and the police's active participation in encouraging the divisions in the black community[citation needed].

The FBI and police used the same tactics against opponents of US interventions in Central America. Labeling the peace activists "terrorist", they paid informers to infiltrate church services, Bible classes and support networks of clergy and lay workers giving sanctuary to refugees from the CIA dirty wars in El Salvador, Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala. Tactics included infiltration, provocation, perjury, doctoring of evidence,break ins, sexual blackmail, frame ups and even assassination.[4]

COINTELPRO 2.0

The COINTELPRO tactics are still in use, by 2020 to combat “hate and extremist narratives" and conspiracy theories, citizens spreading "foreign disinformation", anti-vaxxers, Covid-deniers etc.

A 2019 academic paper suggests fighting “hate” (unacceptable political speech) by inserting a “population in a pre-engineered format” within a targeted “hate-cluster” and destroying it from within. [5]


 

A COINTELPRO victim on Wikispooks

TitleDescription
Phil OchsThe most political singer/songwriter against the war in Vietnam. Survived strangulation attack by "robber" that may have been CIA operation.

 

Related Document

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:COINTELPRO Revisited - Spying & DisruptionarticleBrian Glick


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5star.png 17 January 2020 Terje 
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