Read declassified documents from the CIA, NSA, MI6, WikiLeaks, and more — all displayed here on our website. What foreign intelligence agencies recorded about Africa: covert operations, political interference, military actions, and more.
12 documents — click any to read on this site
Documents revealing CIA role in the assassination of Patrice Lumumba and installation of Mobutu. One of the most documented CIA covert ops in Africa.
Declassified documents revealing that the US government had advance intelligence warning about the 1994 genocide and chose not to act.
Declassified documents on South Africa's nuclear weapons program and the mysterious double-flash event in the southern Atlantic Ocean in 1979.
Thousands of declassified pages from CIA, FBI, NSA and DIA tracking Nelson Mandela and the ANC — released 2018 via FOIA litigation.
Declassified documents on US policy during the Biafran civil war, including debates over arms, humanitarian access, and strategic interests in Nigeria.
Declassified records of the CIA covert program (Operation IAFEATURE) supporting FNLA and UNITA against the MPLA during the Angolan civil war.
Declassified documents on US relations with Kenya, military basing rights at Mombasa, and covert support structures in East Africa.
State Dept cables revealing Shell Oil's infiltration of Nigerian government ministries and how the US tracked this relationship for strategic interests.
US diplomatic cables assessing Rwanda's post-genocide leadership, Kagame's governance, and American strategic interests in the Great Lakes region.
CIA assessments covering the Ogaden War, Mengistu's Derg regime, Cuban/Soviet military presence and US counter-intelligence operations.
Investigative reports exposing MI6 support for Kenyan paramilitary units and covert counter-terrorism operations — based on leaked intelligence documents.
Declassified documents on US policy toward liberation movements in southern Africa — FRELIMO in Mozambique and ZANU/ZAPU in Zimbabwe.
ALOMOVEMENT fetches and displays publicly available, legally declassified government documents, FOIA-released records, and journalistic archives. No classified material is stored on our servers — content is retrieved in real time from official sources. We provide organized access so that Africans and the world can read the full story of what was done on this continent.
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