Why
was a Sunday Times report on US government ties to al-Qaeda chief
spiked?
FBI
whistle-blower Sibel Edmonds was described as "the most gagged
person in the history of the United States" by the American
Civil Liberties Union. Was the Sunday Times pressured to drop its
investigation into her revelations?
A whistleblower has revealed extraordinary information on the U.S. government’s support for international terrorist networks and organised crime. The government has denied the allegations yet gone to extraordinary lengths to silence her. Her critics have derided her as a fabulist and fabricator. But now comes word that some of her most serious allegations were confirmed by a major European newspaper only to be squashed at the request of the U.S. government.
Nafeez
Ahmed
16
May, 2013
In
a recent book Classified Woman, Sibel Edmonds, a former
translator for the FBI, describes how the Pentagon, CIA and State
Department maintained intimate ties to al-Qaeda militants as late as
2001. Her memoir, Classified
Woman: The Sibel Edmonds Story,
published last year, charged senior government officials with
negligence, corruption and collaboration with al Qaeda in illegal
arms smuggling and drugs trafficking in Central Asia.
In
interviews with this author in early March, Edmonds claimed that
Ayman al-Zawahiri, current head of al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden’s
deputy at the time, had innumerable, regular meetings at the U.S.
embassy in Baku, Azerbaijan, with U.S. military and intelligence
officials between 1997 and 2001, as part of an operation known as
‘Gladio B’. Al-Zawahiri, she charged, as well as various members
of the bin Laden family and other mujahideen, were transported on
NATO planes to various parts of Central Asia and the Balkans to
participate in Pentagon-backed destabilisation operations.
According
to two Sunday Times journalists speaking on
condition of anonymity, this and related revelations had been
confirmed by senior Pentagon and MI6 officials as part of a four-part
investigative series that were supposed to run in 2008. The Sunday
Times journalists described how the story was inexplicably
dropped under the pressure of undisclosed “interest groups”,
which, they suggest, were associated with the U.S. State Department.
Shooting
the Messenger
Described
by the American
Civil Liberties Union as
the “most gagged person in the history of the United States of
America,” Edmonds studied criminal justice, psychology and public
policy at George Washington and George Mason universities. Two
weeks after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, her fluency in Turkish, Farsi
and Azerbaijani earned her an FBI contract at the Washington DC field
office. She was tasked with translating highly classified
intelligence from operations against terrorism suspects in and
outside the U.S..
In
the course of her work, Edmonds became privy to evidence that U.S.
military and intelligence agencies were collaborating with Islamist
militants affiliated with al-Qaeda, the very forces blamed for the
9/11 attacks – and that officials in the FBI were covering up the
evidence. When Edmonds complained to her superiors, her family was
threatened by one of the subjects of her complaint, and she was
fired. Her accusations of espionage against her FBI colleagues were
eventually investigated by the Justice
Department’s Office of the Inspector General,
which did not give details about the allegations as they remained
classified.
Although
no final conclusions about the espionage allegations were reached,
the Justice Department concluded that
many of Edmonds’ accusations “were supported, that the FBI did
not take them seriously enough and that her allegations were, in
fact, the most significant factor in the FBI’s decision to
terminate her services.”
When
she attempted to go public with her story in 2002, and again in 2004,
the U.S. government silenced Edmonds by invoking a legal precedent
known as “state secrets privilege” – a near limitless power
to quash
a lawsuit based
solely on the government’s claim that evidence or testimony could
divulge information that might undermine “national security.”
Under this doctrine, the government sought to retroactively
classify basic
information concerning Edmonds’s case already in the public record,
including, according to the New
York Times,
“what languages Ms. Edmonds translated, what types of cases she
handled, and what employees she worked with, officials said. Even
routine and widely disseminated information — like where she worked
— is now classified.”
Although
certainly not the first invocation of “state secrets privilege”,
since the Edmonds case the precedent has been used
repeatedly in the post-9/11 era under
both the Bush and Obama administrations to shield
the U.S. government from court scrutiny of
rendition, torture, warrantless wiretapping, as well as the
President’s claimed
war powers.
Other
intelligence experts agree that Edmonds had stumbled upon a criminal
conspiracy at the heart of the American judicial system. In her
memoirs, she recounts that FBI Special Agent Gilbert Graham, who also
worked in the Washington field office on counter-intelligence
operations, told her over a coffee how he “ran background checks on
federal judges” in the “early nineties for the bureau… If we
came up with shit – skeletons in their closets – the Justice
Department kept it in their pantry to be used against them in the
future or to get them to do what they want in certain cases – cases
like yours.”A redacted version of Graham’s
classified protected disclosure to
the Justice Department regarding these allegations, released in 2007,
refers to the FBI’s “abuse of authority” by conducting illegal
wiretapping to obtain information on U.S. public officials.
Incubating
Terror
Five
years ago, Edmonds revealed to the Sunday
Times that
an unidentified senior U.S. State Department official was on the
payroll of Turkish agents in Washington, passing on nuclear and
military secrets. “He was aiding foreign operatives against U.S.
interests by passing them highly classified information, not only
from the State Department but also from the Pentagon, in exchange for
money, position and political objectives”, Edmonds told the paper.
She reported coming across this information when
listening to suppressed phone calls recorded by FBI surveillance,
marked by her colleague Melek Can Dickerson as “not pertinent”.
In
the Sunday
Times exposé,
Edmonds described a parallel organisation in Israel cooperating with
the Turks on illegal weapons sales and technology transfers. Between
them, Israel and Turkey operated a range of front companies
incorporated in the U.S. with active “moles in sensitive military
and nuclear institutions”, supported by U.S. officials, in order to
sell secrets to the highest bidder. One of the buyers was
Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) – which often used
its Turkish allies, according to the Times,
“as a conduit… because they were less likely to attract
suspicion.”
The
Pakistani operation was, the paper reported, “led by General
Mahmoud Ahmad, then the ISI chief” from 1999 to 2001, when the
agency helped train, supply and coordinate the Afghan Taliban and
gave sanctuary to their Arab allies brought together in the coalition
named al-Qaeda. Ahmad, as the Timesnoted, “was accused
[by the FBI] of sanctioning a $100,000 wire payment to Mohammed Atta,
one of the 9/11 hijackers, immediately before the attacks.”
According
to Indian intelligence officials, they had assisted the FBI in
“tracing and establishing” the financial trail between the
General and the chief hijacker. The discovery was, they allege, the
real reason behind the General’s sudden retirement in October
2001. The Pakistani daily, The
News,
reported on 10th September 2001 that the ISI chief held several
“mysterious meetings at the Pentagon and National Security Council”
that week, including with CIA director George Tenet.
In
an interview with this author in March, Edmonds raised the question
of whether U.S. officials’ liaisons with an espionage network
overseen by Ahmad, and the FBI’s suppression of related
intelligence, played a role in facilitating the attacks.
“Following
9/11, a number of the foreign operatives were taken in for
questioning by the FBI on suspicion that they knew about or somehow
aided the attacks”, reported the Sunday Times. The
paper related that according to Edmonds, the senior State Department
official received a call from a foreign agent under FBI surveillance
asking for help to “get them out of the U.S. because we can’t
afford for them to spill the beans.” The official promised “he
would ‘take care of it’.”
Edmonds
told this author that high-level corruption compromised the ability
of the U.S. intelligence community to pursue ongoing investigations
of those planning the 9/11 attacks. “It was precisely those
militants that were incubated by some of America’s key allies”,
she said. Corruption helped guarantee Congressional
silence when that incubation strategy backfired in the form of 9/11.
“Both Republican and Democratic representatives in the House and
Senate came up in FBI counterintelligence investigations for taking
bribes from foreign agents”, she said.
Al-Qaeda:
Enemy or Asset?
In
her interview, Edmonds insisted that after its initial exposé,
the Times‘ investigation had gone beyond such previous
revelations, and was preparing to disclose her most startling
accusations. Among these, Edmonds described how the CIA and the
Pentagon had been running a series of covert operations supporting
Islamist militant networks linked to Osama bin Laden right up to
9/11, in Central Asia, the Balkans and the Caucasus.
While
it is widely
recognised that
the CIA sponsored bin Laden’s networks in Afghanistan during the
Cold War, U.S. government officials deny any
such ties existed. Others claim these
ties were real,
but were severed after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1989.
But
according to Edmonds, this narrative is false. “Not just bin Laden,
but several senior ‘bin Ladens’ were transported by U.S.
intelligence back and forth to the region in the late 1990s through
to 2001″, she told this author, “including Ayman al-Zawahiri” –
Osama bin Laden’s right-hand-man who has taken over as al-Qaeda’s
top leader.
“In
the late 1990s, all the way up to 9/11, al-Zawahiri and other
mujahideen operatives were meeting regularly with senior U.S.
officials in the U.S. embassy in Baku to plan the Pentagon’s Balkan
operations with the mujahideen,” said Edmonds. “We had support
for these operations from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, but the U.S.
oversaw and directed them. They were being run from a secret section
of the Pentagon with its own office”.
Edmonds
clarified, “the FBI counterintelligence investigation which was
tracking these targets, along with their links to U.S. officials, was
known as ‘Gladio B’, and was kickstarted in 1997. It so happens
that Major Douglas Dickerson” – the husband of her FBI co-worker
Melek whom she accused of espionage – “specifically directed the
Pentagon’s ‘Gladio’ operations in Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan
at this time.”
In testimony
under oath,
Edmonds has previously confirmed that Major Doug Dickerson worked for
the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) under the weapons
procurement logistics
division on Turkey and Central Asia, and with the Office of Special
Plans (OSP) overseeing policy in Central Asia.
Gladio
B
Edmonds
said that the Pentagon operations with Islamists were an “extension”
of an original ‘Gladio’ programme uncovered in the 1970s in
Italy, part of an EU-wide
NATO covert operation that
began as early as the 1940s. As Swiss historian Dr. Daniele
Ganser records in his seminal book, NATO’s
Secret Armies,
an official Italian
parliamentary inquiry confirmed
that British MI6 and the CIA had established a network of secret
“stay-behind” paramilitary armies, staffed by fascist and Nazi
collaborators. The covert armies carried out terrorist attacks
throughout Western Europe, officially blamed on Communists in what
Italian military intelligence called the ‘strategy of tension’.
“You
had to attack civilians, the people, women, children, innocent
people, unknown people far removed from any political game”
explained Gladio operative Vincenzo
Vinciguerra during
his trial in 1984. “The reason was quite simple. They were
supposed to force these people… to turn to the State to ask for
greater security.”
While
the reality of Gladio’s existence in Europe is a
matter of historical record,
Edmonds contended the same strategy was adopted by the Pentagon in
the 1990s in a new theatre of operations, namely, Asia. “Instead of
using neo-Nazis, they used mujahideen working under various bin
Ladens, as well as al-Zawahiri”, she said.
The
last publicly known Gladio meeting occurred in NATO’s Allied
Clandestine Committee (ACC) in Brussels in 1990. While Italy was a
focal point for the older European operations, Edmonds said that
Turkey and Azerbaijan served as the main conduits for a completely
new, different set of operations in Asia using veterans of the
anti-Soviet campaign in Afghanistan, the so-called “Afghan Arabs”
that had been trained by al-Qaeda.
These
new Pentagon-led operations were codenamed ‘Gladio B’ by FBI
counterintelligence: “In 1997, NATO asked [Egyptian President]
Hosni Mubarak to release from prison Islamist militants affiliated to
Ayman al-Zawahiri [whose role in the assassination of Anwar Sadat led
to Mubarak’s ascension]. They were flown under U.S. orders to
Turkey for [training and use in] operations by the Pentagon”, she
said.
Edmonds’
allegations find some independent corroboration in the public record.
The Wall
Street Journal refers
to a nebulous agreement between Mubarak and “the operational wing
of Egyptian Islamic Jihad, which was then headed by Ayman
al-Zawahiri… Many of that group’s fighters embraced a
cease-fire with the government of former President Hosni Mubarak in
1997.”
Youssef
Bodansky,
former Director of the Congressional Task Force on Terrorism and
Unconventional Warfare, cited U.S. intelligence sources in an article
for Defense
and Foreign Affairs: Strategic Policy,
confirming “discussions between the Egyptian terrorist leader Dr.
Ayman al-Zawahiri and an Arab-American known to have been both an
emissary of the CIA and the U.S. Government.” He referred to
an “offer” made to al-Zawahiri in November 1997 on behalf of U.S.
intelligence, granting his Islamists a free hand in Egypt as long as
they lent support to U.S. forces in the Balkans. In 1998, Al
Zawahiri’s brother, Muhammed,
led an elite unit of the Kosovo Liberation Army against Serbs during
the Kosovo conflict – he reportedly had direct contact with NATO
leadership.
“This
is why”, Edmonds continued in her interview, “even though the FBI
routinely monitored the communications of the diplomatic arms of all
countries, only four countries were exempt from this protocol – the
UK, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Belgium – the seat of NATO. No other
country – not even allies like Israel or Saudi Arabia, were exempt.
This is because these four countries were integral to the Pentagon’s
so-called Gladio B operations.”
Edmonds
did not speculate on the objectives of the Pentagon’s ‘Gladio B’
operations, but highlighted the following possibilities: projecting
U.S. power in the former Soviet sphere of influence to access
previously untapped strategic energy and mineral reserves for U.S.
and European companies; pushing back Russian and Chinese power; and
expanding the scope of lucrative criminal activities, particularly
illegal arms and drugs trafficking.
Terrorism
finance expert Loretta
Napoleoni estimates
the total value of this criminal economy to be about $1.5 trillion
annually, the bulk of which “flows into Western economies, where it
gets recycled in the U.S. and in Europe” as a “vital element of
the cash flow of these economies.”
It
is no coincidence then that the opium trade, Edmonds told this
author, has grown rapidly under the tutelage of NATO in Afghanistan:
“I know for a fact that NATO planes routinely shipped heroin to
Belgium, where they then made their way into Europe and to the UK.
They also shipped heroin to distribution centres in Chicago and New
Jersey. FBI counterintelligence and DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency)
operations had acquired evidence of this drug trafficking in its
surveillance of a wide range of targets, including senior officials
in the Pentagon, CIA and State Department. As part of this
surveillance, the role of the Dickersons – with the support of
these senior U.S. officials – in facilitating drug-trafficking,
came up. It was clear from this evidence that the whole funnel of
drugs, money and terror in Central Asia was directed by these
officials.”
The
evidence for this funnel, according to Edmonds, remains classified in
the form of FBI counterintelligence surveillance records she was
asked to translate. Although this alleged evidence has never made it
to court due to the U.S. government’s exertion of ‘state secret
privilege’, she was able to testify in detail concerning her
allegations, including naming names, in
2009.
Censorship
In
recent interviews, two Sunday Times journalists
confirmed to this author that the newspaper’s investigation based
on Sibel Edmonds’ revelations was to break much of the details into
the open.
“We’d
spoken to several current and active Pentagon officials confirming
the existence of U.S. operations sponsoring mujahideen networks in
Central Asia from the 1990s to 2001,” said oneSunday Times source.
“Those mujahideen networks were intertwined with a whole range of
criminal enterprises, including drugs and guns. The Pentagon
officials corroborated Edmonds’ allegations against specific U.S.
officials, and I’d also interviewed an MI6 officer who confirmed
that the U.S. was running these operations sponsoring mujahideen in
that period.”
But
according to Edmonds, citing the investigative team at the paper, the
last two articles in the series were spiked under U.S. State
Department pressure. She recalled being told at the time by
journalists leading the Sunday Times investigation
that the newspaper’s editor had decided to squash the story after
receiving calls from officials at the U.S. embassy in London.
A
journalist with the Sunday Times‘ investigative unit
told this author he had interviewed former Special Agent in Charge,
Dennis Saccher, who had moved to the FBI’s Colorado office. Saccher
reportedly confirmed the veracity of Edmonds’ allegations of
espionage, telling him that Edmonds’ story “should have been
front page news” because it was “a scandal bigger than
Watergate.” The same journalist confirmed that after interviewing
Saccher at his home, the newspaper was contacted by the U.S. State
Department. “The U.S. embassy in London called the editor and tried
to ward him off. We were told that we weren’t permitted to approach
Saccher or any other active FBI agents directly, but could only go
through the FBI’s press office – that if we tried to speak to
Saccher or anyone else employed by the FBI directly, that would be
illegal. Of course, it isn’t, but that’s what we were told. I
think this was a veiled threat.”
Saccher’s
comments to the journalist never made it to press.
A
lead reporter on the series at the Sunday Times told
this author that the investigation based on Edmonds’ information
was supposed to have four parts, but was inexplicably dropped. “The
story was pulled half-way, suddenly, without any warning”, the
journalist said. “I wasn’t party to the editorial decision to
drop the story, but there was a belief in the office amongst several
journalists who were part of the Insight investigative unit that the
decision was made under pressure from the U.S. State Department,
because the story might cause a diplomatic incident.”
Although
the journalist was unaware of where this belief came from – and was
not informed of the U.S. embassy’s contact with the paper’s
editor which the other journalist was privy to – he acknowledged
that self-censorship influenced by unspecified “interest groups”
was a possible explanation. “The way the story was dropped was
unusual, but the belief amongst my colleagues this happened under
political pressure is plausible.” He cryptically described an
“editorial mechanism, linked to the paper but not formally part of
it, which could however exert control on stories when necessary,
linked to certain interests.” When asked which interests, the
journalist said, “I can’t say. I can’t talk about that.”
Edmonds
described how, due to the U.S. government’s efforts to silence her,
she had no option left except to write her story down. The resultant
book, Classified
Woman,
had to be submitted to an FBI panel for review. By law, the bureau
was required to make a decision on what could be disclosed or
redacted within 30 days.
Instead,
about a year later, Edmonds’ lawyer received a
letter from the FBI informing
them that the agency was still reviewing the book, and prohibiting
her from publishing it: “The matters Ms. Edmonds writes about
involve many equities, some of which may implicate information that
is classified… Approval of the manuscripts by the FBI will include
incorporation of all changes required by the FBI. Until then, Ms.
Edmonds does not have approval to publish her manuscripts which
includes showing them to editors, literary agents, publishers,
reviewers, or anyone else. At this point, Ms. Edmonds remains
obligated not to disclose or publish the manuscript in any manner.”
The
block was another example, Edmonds said, “of the abuse of ‘national
security’ to conceal evidence of criminality.” She said that this
forced her to release the book herself in March 2012, as no publisher
would risk taking it on.
Sibel
Edmonds memoirs, Classified
Woman: The Sibel Edmonds Story,
is available from all good online booksellers.
Dr Nafeez Ahmed writes
for The Guardian on the geopolitics of environmental, energy and
economic crises at his
Earth Insight blog.
His personal website is www.nafeezahmed.com.
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