
Johnny Carson poster with the abbreviation "CIA" on Carson's eyes. Illustration: MintPress News.
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Johnny Carson poster with the abbreviation "CIA" on Carson's eyes. Illustration: MintPress News.
By Alan MacleodĀ –Ā Aug 1, 2025
The CIA didnāt just infiltrate governments; it infiltrated the internet itself. For over a decade, Langley operated a sprawling network of covert websites that served as global spy terminals disguised as harmless blogs, news hubs, and fan pages.
Beginning in 2004, the CIA established a vast network of at leastĀ 885 websites, ranging from Johnny Carson and Star Wars fan pages to online message boards about Rastafari. Spanning 29 languages and targeting at least 36 countries directly, these websites were aimed not only at adversaries such as China, Venezuela, and Russia, but also at allied nations, including France, Italy, and Spain, showing that the United States treats its friends much like its foes.
Covert soccer blogs and cracked passwords
Gholamreza Hosseini is a former CIA informant. In 2007, the Tehran-based industrial engineer contacted the agency and offered to pass them information about Iranās nuclear energy program. His CIA handlers showed him how to useĀ IranianGoals.comĀ to communicate with them. Iranian Goals was a Farsi-language website that appeared to be dedicated to local soccer news. However, what appeared to be a search bar at the bottom of the home page was actually a password field. Typing the correct word into it would trigger a login process, revealing a secret messaging interface. Each informant had their own webpage, designed specifically for them, to insulate them from others in the network.
It seemed like an ingenious idea. However, Hosseini and the other spies were soon detected, thanks to some sloppy mistakes in Washington, D.C. An Iranian double agent revealed to the authorities their unique website, and some basic detective work led to the uncovering of the entire network.
The CIA purchased the hosting space for dozens, perhaps hundreds, of these websites in bulk, often from the same internet providers, or the same server space. That meant that the IP addresses of these websites were consecutive, akin to housing each informant in adjacent properties on the same street.
Thus, if you looked at neighboring IP addresses, you would see similarly designed websites and could easily put two and two together. Even with some relatively basic online searches, Iranian authorities were able to identify dozens of CIA-run websites. From there, they simply waited to see who would access them.
The Iranian Intelligence MinistryĀ claimedĀ that 30 individuals were arrested and a further 42 CIA operatives were identified. Some websites, such asĀ IranianGoalKicks.com,Ā FirstNewsSource.com, andĀ Farsi-NewsAndWeather.com, can still be accessed through the Internet Wayback Machine. A complete list of known CIA webpages can be foundĀ here.
Hosseini spent more than nine years in prison and was released in 2019. He has received no support from American officials, who have not even contacted him since his arrest. The US, however, continues to attempt to overthrow the Iranian government, sponsoring high-profile opposition figures and hijacking domestic protest movements. In June, it also carried out airstrikes on nuclear facilities across the country.
Spying on allies and adversaries alike
The network of websites spanned a wide range of topics. Few would guess thatĀ Rasta Direct, a website dedicated to the relatively niche religion of Rastafari, had anything to do with US intelligence. The CIA also created Star Wars Web, a fan page for the sci-fi franchise, andĀ All Johnny, a page dedicated to late-night legend Johnny Carson. Sports, gaming and news blogs, however, were the most common topics for fake websites.
These websites served as cover for informants, offering some level of plausible deniability if casually examined. Upon close inspection, however, few of these pages provided any unique content and simply rehosted news and blogs from elsewhere, linking to already available resources.
Informants in enemy nations, such as Venezuela, used sites likeĀ Noticias-CaracasĀ andĀ El Correo De NoticiasĀ to communicate with Langley, while Russian moles usedĀ My Online Game SourceĀ andĀ TodaysNewsAndWeather-Ru.com, and other similar platforms.
However, a vast network of informants in allied countries, such as France, Spain and Italy, was also uncovered, usingĀ financial news, mountaineering, andĀ runningĀ websites to pass on vital information to the CIA.
Germany was another country Washington actively targeted. In 2013, it wasĀ revealed that the US had been bugging the cellphone of Chancellor Angela Merkel for over a decade, sparking a major diplomatic rift. One year later, in 2014, Germany detainedĀ one of its own intelligence officials after catching him spying for the United States.
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The collapse of the CIA’s China network
China, however, remains a top target for the CIA. The organization maintains an extensive network of informants across the country, who, when the network was active, used platforms such asĀ eChessNews.comĀ andĀ SportsNewsFinder.comĀ to transmit information back to the United States.
But, as in Iran, Chinese authorities began to dismantle the network. Starting in late 2010, the spying network was systematically dismantled by officials, likely using similar tactics to those of the Iranians. Unlike Iran, however, China simply executed those operatives. It is believed that the CIA lost around 30 informants in the purge. The affair is considered one of the worst intelligence failures in the agencyās nearly 80-year history.
Since then, the US spying network in China has been severely diminished. Earlier this year, the CIA changed tack, publicly releasing two videos encouraging disaffected Communist Party officials to spy for them in exchange for money and the prospect of a new life in America.
āAs I rise within the party, I watch those above me being discarded like worn-out shoes, but now I realize that my fate was just as precarious as theirs,ā the narrator says in one. āOur leadersā failure to fulfil repeated promises of prosperity has become a well-known secret⦠Itās time to build my own dream,ā he says in another.
The CIA instructs would-be traitors to download the Tor Browser and contact the CIA via its website. While Tor is marketed in the West as a privacy tool, a previous MintPress NewsĀ investigation revealed that it was created with funding from the US government by a company with ties to the CIA. Last year, Washington passedĀ a $1.6 billion bill to finance anti-China propaganda worldwide.
Weaponizing apps and platforms
This is not the only time that the US national security state has created fake web platforms in order to stoke regime change around the world. In 2010, USAIDāa CIA front organizationāsecretly created the Cuban social media app, Zunzuneo.
Often described as āCubaās Twitter,ā Zunzuneo rocketed to prominence. The app had been designed to offer a reliable and affordable service, undercutting the competition, before gaining dominance and slowly disseminating anti-government messages to the island.
Then, at a given time, Zunzuneo would urge users to join protests coordinated by the US in an attempt to foment a color revolution on the island.
In an effort to hide its ownership of the project, the US government heldĀ a secret meeting with Twitter founder Jack Dorsey to encourage him to take it over. It is unclear to what extent, if at all, Dorsey contributed to the project, as he has declined to comment on the matter. In 2012, Zunzuneo was abruptly shut down.
Infiltrating journalism and big tech
While the 885 fake websites were not established to influence public opinion, today, the US government sponsors thousands of journalists worldwide for precisely this purpose. Earlier this year, the Trump administrationās decision to pause funding to USAID inadvertently exposed a network of more than 6,200 reporters working at nearly 1,000 news outlets or journalism organizations who were all quietly paid to promote pro-US messaging in their countries.
Oksana Romanyuk, director of the Ukrainian Institute for Mass Information,Ā warnedĀ that nearly 90% of her countryās media outlets rely on funding from USAID to survive. AĀ surveyĀ of 20 leading media organizations in Belarus revealed that 60% of their budget came from Washington. In Iran, more than 30 anti-government groups came together for a crisis response meeting, while in Cuba and Nicaragua, anti-government press resorted toĀ solicitingĀ donations from readers.
The CIA has also successfully infiltrated the largest and most popular social media networks, giving the agency substantial control over what the world sees (and does not see) in their news feeds.
Facebook hasĀ hiredĀ dozens of former CIA officials to run its most sensitive operations. Perhaps the most notable of these individuals isĀ Aaron Berman.
As the platformās senior misinformation manager, Berman ultimately has the final say over what content is promoted and what is demoted or deleted from Facebook. Yet, until 2019, Berman was a high-ranking CIA officer, responsible for writing the presidentās daily security brief. It was at that time that he jumped ship from Langley to Facebook, despite appearing to have little relevant professional experience.
Google, if anything, is even more saturated with former spies.
A MintPress NewsĀ investigationĀ revealed that dozens of former CIA agents hold top jobs at the Silicon Valley giant. Among these is Jacqueline Lopour, who spent more than ten years at the agency working on Middle East affairs before being recruited to become Googleās senior Intelligence, Trust, and Safety manager. The role gives her considerable influence on the direction of the company. This form of state censorship is how the agency prefers to shape the internet today.
The CIA continues to maintain a vast worldwide network of informants. Today, they use custom-built apps such as Tor or Signal toĀ communicate. If they are caught by their own countries, they will likely be left to their fate, like Hosseini was. Being a spy or a stool pigeon for the CIA is as perilous as ever.
Alan MacLeod is a member of the Glasgow University Media Group and a Senior Staff Writer for MintPress News. After completing his PhD in 2017 he published two books:Ā Bad News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and MisreportingĀ andĀ Propaganda in the Information Age: Still Manufacturing Consent,Ā as well asĀ aĀ numberĀ ofĀ academicĀ articles.Ā He has also contributed toĀ FAIR.org,Ā The Guardian,Ā Salon,Ā The Grayzone,Ā Jacobin Magazine,Ā andĀ Common Dreams.