Cryptome DVDs are offered by Cryptome. Donate $25 for two DVDs of the Cryptome 12-years collection of 46,000 files from June 1996 to June 2008 (~6.7 GB). Click Paypal or mail check/MO made out to John Young, 251 West 89th Street, New York, NY 10024. The collection includes all files of cryptome.org, jya.com, cartome.org, eyeball-series.org and iraq-kill-maim.org, and 23,000 (updated) pages of counter-intelligence dossiers declassified by the US Army Information and Security Command, dating from 1945 to 1985.The DVDs will be sent anywhere worldwide without extra cost.


  Cryptome Spy Photos 11

 

11 November 2006 --2

Cryptome


Captions by Associated Press
[Image]

Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte arrives with his wife Diana while wearing a cowboy hat to attend the Congressional Picnic on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Thursday, June 15, 2006. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

[Image]

CIA Director Gen. Michael Hayden, left, leaves the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2006, with Steven Bradbury of the Justice Department, next to Hayden, after a meeting with Republican members of the Senate to discuss military tribunals. (AP Photo/Lauren Victoria Burke)

[Image]

** FILE ** Outgoing Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, left, looks on as Robert Gates, President Bush's nominee to replace him, speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, in this Nov. 8, 2006 file photo. Gates successfully navigated the legal and political perils of the Iran-Contra scandal, emerging as CIA director. Now, as tthe secretary of defence nominee, Gates will have more navigating to do, searching to find a new direction in a war that has devastated the political fortunes of the Bush administration. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)

[Image]

Michael Morrell, 48, Associate Deputy Director of the CIA, meets with the Buffalo News Editorial Board on regional security issues Tuesday October 24, 2006. Morrell is the agency's No. 3 official and one of their leading experts on terrorism. With control of Congress at stake and Democrats favored in the upcoming November elections, the Bush administration is using the power of incumbency to help Republicans. From New York to Ohio to California, top Bush Administration officials are popping up in campaign mode. (AP Photo/Buffalo News/Dennis C. Enser) ** TV OUT - MAGAZINES OUT - NO SALES **

[Image]

**FILE** Radu Timofte, the head of Romania's domestic intelligence service speaks to media in Bucharest Romania, Oct. 2005. The directors of Romania's foreign and domestic intelligence agencies resigned Thursday, July 20 2006 after a suspect, Omar Hayssam, a Syrian-born businessman, in the kidnapping of three Romanian journalists vanished following his release from jail for medical treatment. (AP Photo/MEDIAFAX, Bogdan Maran) ** ROMANIA OUT **

[Image]

**FILE** Gheorghe Fulga, the head of Romania's foreign intelligence service looks on in Bucharest Romania, Dec. 2004. The directors of Romania's foreign and domestic intelligence agencies resigned Thursday, July 20 2006 after a suspect, Omar Hayssam, a Syrian-born businessman, in the kidnapping of three Romanian journalists vanished following his release from jail for medical treatment .(AP Photo/MEDIAFAX/Mihai Spiridonica) ** ROMANIA OUT **

[Image]

Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, chairs a Security Council meeting in the Novo-Ogaryovo just outside Moscow, Saturday, Aug. 12, 2006. From right, Head of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service, Sergei Lebedev, Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev, State Duma speaker Boris Gryzlov. (AP Photo/ITAR-TASS, Dmitry Astakhov, Presidential Press Service)

[Image]

Armed Palestinian relatives of five members of the Intelligence service who were killed in a drive by shooting last week, demonstrate in front of the Palestinian Legislative Council in Gaza City, demanding a police inquiry of the case, Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2006. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas ordered an investigation into the attack, saying an "iron fist" will be used against those "who want to disrupt the security and unity of our people." The motive for the attack was not immediately clear, though officials speculated that it could be an internal feud within the intelligence service. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)

[Image]

** FILE ** Kyrgyz National Security Service Chairman Busurmankul Tabyldiyev is seen in Bishkek in this October 2005 photo. Tabyldiyev also announced Tuesday Sept. 12, 2006, he would step down along with his top deputy, Janybek Bakiyev, President Kurmanbek Bakiyev's brother, who resigned from his senior intelligence post Tuesday after being implicated in planting heroin in the luggage of the main opposition leader. (AP Photo/Azamat Imanaliev, File)

[Image]

** FILE ** Circled by bodyguards the first deputy chief of National Security Service, Janybek Bakiyev, 2nd from left, brother of Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, is seen in Bishkek in this March 2006 photo, with Kyrgyz Deputy Interior Minister Omurbek Suvanaliyev, 2nd right. President Kurmanbek Bakiyev's brother resigned from his senior intelligence post Tuesday Sept. 12, 2006, after being implicated in planting heroin in the luggage of the main opposition leader, who was later detained in Poland, the head of the Central Asian nation's security agency said. (AP Photo/Azamat Imanaliev, File)

[Image]

Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) assistant commissioner Mike McDonell, right, speaks as Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) assistant director of operations Luc Portelance looks on during a press conference in Toronto, Saturday, June 3, 2006. Canadian authorities said Saturday they had foiled plans for terrorist attacks in southern Ontario with the arrests of 17 people who were "inspired by al-Qaida." (CP PHOTO/Aaron Harris)

[Image]

A sign reading Federal Intelligence Service and a German eagle adorn the main entrance to the headquarters of Germany's secret service (BND) in Pullach, southern Germany, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2006. German opposition parties are constituting a parliamentary investigation concerning the service's disputed engagement in the Iraq war. (AP Photo/Diether Endlicher)

[Image]

Dish antennas of Swiss military intelligence at the Onynx control centre in Zimmerwald, Canton Bern, Switzerland, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2006. Swiss Sunday newspaper SonntagsBlick reported on Sunday Jan. 8, 2006 that Swiss military intelligence intercepted a fax received by the Egyptian embassy in London that is supposed to confirm the existence of secret CIA interrogation centres in Europe. The NGO Human Righs Watch had claimed before, that American intelligence services were interrogating suspected al Quaeda members at these centres. Some Swiss politicians fear, that the leak of secret information about the alleged CIA detention centres in Europe could damage Swiss foreign relations. (AP Photo/Keystone/Yoshiko Kusano)

[Image]

Defense Intelligence Agency Director Lt. Gen. Michael Maples testifies before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Capitol Hill Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2006, on national security threats. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook)