Leading counterintelligence officials issued a memo to all of the CIA’s global stations saying that a concerning number of U.S. informants were being captured and executed.
The CIA’s counterintelligence mission center investigated dozens of incidents in the last few years that involved killings, arrests or compromises of foreign informants. In an unusual move, the message sent via a top secret cable included the specific number of agents killed by other intelligence agencies, according to The New York Times.
Officials said that level of detail is a sign of the significance of the cable. Announcing the specific number of killings is rare as that figure is typically held under wraps from the public and even from some CIA employees, the Times noted.
The cable, which also cited the issue of putting “mission over security,” comes amid recent efforts by countries like Russia, China, Iran and Pakistan to find CIA informants and turn them into double agents, the Times reported.
The memo also noted long standing issues like placing too much trust in sources, a speedy recruiting process and inadequate attention to potential intelligence risks among other problems.
The uptick in compromised informants highlights the more sophisticated ways in which foreign intelligence agencies are tracking the CIA’s actions. These mechanisms include artificial intelligence, facial recognition tools and other hacking methods, per the Times.
The New York Times also reported that CIA case officers were sometimes promoted for recruiting spies often regardless of the success, performance or quality of that spy.
“No one at the end of the day is being held responsible when things go south with an agent,” Douglas London, a former CIA operative who was unaware of the cable, said to the Times. “Sometimes there are things beyond our control but there are also occasions of sloppiness and neglect and people in senior positions are never held responsible.”
People who have read the cable added that it was intended for the officers who are most directly involved in enlisting and vetting potential new informants, the Times reported.
The CIA declined to comment on the matter.
If I candidly assert an indicative sentence, I imply that the content of my belief is represented by that sentence — Srap Tasmaner
You can't assert that the book is in your room, or that you believe the book is in your room, and that it is not true that the book is in your room. — Srap Tasmaner
Or an assertoric utterance of "The book is in Michael's room." — Srap Tasmaner
But you have no way of saying this as a report of your beliefs. — Srap Tasmaner
(1) If you want to convey your honest belief that the book is in Michael's room, the words you choose to express that belief are "The book is in Michael's room."
(2) You choose those words because the literal (or conventional) meaning of that sentence represents your belief accurately. — Srap Tasmaner
Look at the T-schema discussed earlier by Banno. — Metaphysician Undercover
"The book is in my room" is true iff the book is in my room. In this example, "the book is in my room" only means that the book is in my room, if the statement is true. In other instances "the book is in my room" means something else. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since it is very obvious that you could state "the book is in my room" when the book is not in your room, then it is also very obvious that "the book is in my room" means something other than that the book is in your room. Do you not agree with this? — Metaphysician Undercover
Since the meaning concerns what you believe... — Metaphysician Undercover
It wouldn't hurt to distinguish the epistemic and alethic modalities now and then. — Srap Tasmaner
What you don't seem to understand MIchael, is that whether or not the book is actually in your room is completely irrelevant here. — Metaphysician Undercover
When you say that the book is possibly in your room, you imply that the book may be elsewhere. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is because the two concepts are mutually exclusive, inconsistent with one another, such that if something is truthfully said to be possible, it cannot at the same time be truthfully said to be actual. That's what I explained to say one when you believe the other, is to be dishonest. — Metaphysician Undercover
The former, as I explained — Metaphysician Undercover
You misquoted me. I said "non-actual". — Metaphysician Undercover
"Possible" refers to what may or may not be. "Actual" refers to what is and is not. If you say that the book is possibly in your room, then you are saying that it may or may not be in your room. This is logically distinct from saying that it actually is in your room, or actually is not, according to the definitions. Therefore the conclusion I stated is sound. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I said, the two (possible and actual) are not opposed to each other. But obviously, saying "the book is possibly in my room", is to say something completely different from saying "the book is actually in my room". — Metaphysician Undercover
... since actual is defined as what is, it is a logical conclusion that the possible is non-actual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Obviously, this is the problem, we are working on a different definitions of "possible". I define it as what may or may not be, consistent with common use. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Possible" is not defined as non-actual, it is defined as what may or may not be. And, since actual is defined as what is, it is a logical conclusion that the possible is non-actual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Philosophers often distinguish dispositional from occurrent believing.
...
Suppose Harry thinks plaid ties are hideous. Only rarely does the thought or judgment that they are hideous actually come to the forefront of his mind. When it does, he possesses the belief occurrently. The rest of the time, Harry possesses the belief only dispositionally. The occurrent belief comes and goes, depending on whether circumstances elicit it; the dispositional belief endures.
B knew where the book was, but that knowledge was unavailable to her for the moment. It seems clear that the belief was unavailable as well — Srap Tasmaner
Are you claiming she *discovered* that she herself put A's book on A's nightstand? That she *inferred* it from the evidence of her memory? — Srap Tasmaner
That was the point of having B suddenly remember that she moved the book; A suggested that her book would have been in the way, and B then remembered that it was in the way and she moved it. — Srap Tasmaner
But we’re not just interested in what people mean by what they say. — Srap Tasmaner
But here I’m talking about what someone might say, not about the fact of their knowing that P being consistent with ~P. — Srap Tasmaner
From “I’m certain that Trump won,” we can’t infer that Trump won. We can’t infer that you know that Trump won. We can’t even infer that you are certain that Trump won. It’s a thing you are saying. What it means, what you mean by it, what you mean by saying it, all that might be interesting, but is not the same as addressing the question of whether knowing that P is equivalent to being certain that P, or if there’s some other relation or what. — Srap Tasmaner
Unless we intend to define certainty or knowledge, that’s about all we’ve got so far. — Srap Tasmaner
I’ve already presented a case in which someone flatly denies having knowledge that they do in fact have. — Srap Tasmaner
“I know the answer! — At least, I think I do. I could be wrong.” — Srap Tasmaner
Your argument is that if there’s something odd about saying “I know that p but I am not certain,” then (“perhaps”) knowledge requires certainty.
Except that’s not an argument. From S asserting “I know that p,” it does not follow that S knows that p; from S asserting “I am uncertain,” it does not follow that S is uncertain; we can’t infer that if S were to assert the problematic sentence then S would have to be in a problematic mental state. — Srap Tasmaner
For example: you vote for Labour — javi2541997
but... who chooses the person who would run for the presidency? — javi2541997
Truss reminds me of a quote Christopher Hitchens once made about David Cameron:
Q: What do you think about David Cameron?
A: He doesn't make me think. — Manuel
I think it would make more sense to let public decide who leads the party — I like sushi
That's would represent a real democratic system! — javi2541997
But this is the Liz Truss who thinks you plebs don't show enough graft. — Baden
State they can't afford inflation-matching pay rises for public sector workers but borrow a ton of money (while interest rates skyrocket on repayments) to give the rich a massive tax cut > Respond to the markets subsequently fleeing sterling due to said bonkers policy by asking them to be nice. — Baden
