Wikileaks documents have shown the intimite relationship between Clinton and the Gulen movement.
However,
this will show that Sibel Edmonds has been here long, long before –
in 2011 in fact, before anyone had heard of him
WikiLeaks, Hillary-Gulen Intimate Ties & How Clintons Gave Birth to Mullah Gulen’s Terrorist Network
In
this episode of Spotlight with Sibel and Spiro we discuss the
notorious USA-based Mullah Fethullah Gulen and Operation Gladio B in
light of Wikileaks’ recent announcement that they plan to release a
new batch of e-mails exposing the intimate ties between Hillary
Clinton and Gulen’s 25+ Billion shady network.
Sibel Edmonds explains how Fethullah Gulen was brought into the United States during the Clinton Administration, and how Bill Clinton’s White House, the State Department and the Justice Department’s Janet Reno provided the infamous mullah and his terrorism-heroin operations with blanket immunity and protection.
We also take a look at Clinton’s hand-picked handlers, Graham Fuller and Mark Grossman, selected to manage and direct Gulen’s cells in the U.S. and abroad.
Sibel Edmonds explains how Fethullah Gulen was brought into the United States during the Clinton Administration, and how Bill Clinton’s White House, the State Department and the Justice Department’s Janet Reno provided the infamous mullah and his terrorism-heroin operations with blanket immunity and protection.
We also take a look at Clinton’s hand-picked handlers, Graham Fuller and Mark Grossman, selected to manage and direct Gulen’s cells in the U.S. and abroad.
Turkish
Intel Chief Exposes CIA Operations via Islamic Group in Central Asia
“In
the 1990s Gulen’s Madrasas sheltered 130 CIA agents" in
Kyrgyzstan & Uzbekistan”
6
January, 2011
Yesterday
Washington Post’s Jeff Stein published a very interesting but
incomplete story
regarding a recently published memoir by former Turkish Intelligence
Chief Osman Nuri Gundes. Here is the title of his post: Islamic
group is CIA front, ex-Turkish Intel chief says.
For those of you familiar with my case and what I’ve been covering
here at Boiling Frogs Post this exposé is ‘old news’ but
nonetheless a vindication. As for those who are first-timers here or
not that familiar with my case, this is an opportunity for a bit of
background and to learn a few important points and facts that you
won’t be getting from this ‘half-picture’ presented by the
Washington Post.
In
his memoir Gundes claims that Fethullah Gulen’s worldwide Islamic
movement based in Pennsylvania has been providing cover for the CIA
since the mid-1990s, and that in the 90s, the movement "sheltered
130 CIA agents"
at its schools in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan alone.
Now,
as I’ve done before, I am going to praise Jeff Stain, whom I know
and like, for his solid journalistic talent and background and give
him a few credits for actually covering this story (it is one of
those ‘thou shall not cover’ areas in an agreement between the US
mainstream media and the US government), before I bash the piece, its
half-a.. coverage, incomplete background, and it’s incredibly
lenient treatment of a shady-dubious-charlatan, a major player in
this operation yet a major denier when confronted by Stein; Graham
Fuller. Again, as before, I am going to blame it on the unfortunate
situation of ‘having to sell your journalistic soul to earn your
living.’
Let’s
start with Gulen. The only background provided on Gulen is the
following with only one link which takes you to Gulen’s marketing
site:
…an
influential former Turkish imam by the name of Fethullah
Gulen,
has 600 schools and 4 million followers around the world.
…
The
imam left Turkey in 1998 and settled in Saylorsburg,
Pa.,
where the movement is headquartered. According to Intelligence
Online, he obtained a residence permit only in 2008 with the help of
Fuller and George Fidas, whom it described as head of the agency’s
outreach to universities.
There
is no mention of Gulen’s decade-long ‘wanted’ status in Turkey
(until recently), no mention of the ban on Gulen and his Madrasas in
several Central Asian countries, no mention of various investigations
of Gulen by other western countries, no mention of the unknown
sources of his billions of dollars…As we all know except for a very
few, and by that I mean a number in 100s if that, no one in this
country has ever heard of this guy with his billions, with his castle
in Pennsylvania, his hundreds of Madrasas, now hundreds of US charter
schools, his dubious businesses….Yet, for an article as serious as
this (Madrasas and mosques as CIA operation centers in Central Asia),
the central figure in the story has been given one sentence; no
history, no relevant facts…
Those
of you who have not read our previous commentaries and updates on
this topic can check them out here,
here,
here,
and here,
and below is a list of a few Gulen related facts totally
(mysteriously?) absent from Washington Post piece:more
-In
1999 Gulen defected to the US shortly before his scandalous speech,
where he is heard calling on his supporters to "work patiently
and to creep silently into the institutions in order to seize power
in the state", became public. Turkish prosecutors demanded
a ten-year sentence for Gülen for having "founded an
organization that sought to destroy the secular apparatus of state
and establish a theocratic state". Mr. Gulen has not left the
United States since.
-The
Netherlands has taken major steps to cut funding to all Gülen
associated organizations and is investigating his operations. The
Turkish Fethullah Gülen movement is really an Islamic fundamentalist
group, claims
Rotterdam council member Anita Fähmel (Leefbaar Rotterdam) on the
basis of her own study of the Turkish movement.
-The
Russian government has banned
all Gülen schools and the activities of the Nur sect in Russia. Over
20 Turkish followers of Gulen were deported
from Russia in 2002-2004.
-In
1999 Uzbekistan closed
all Gulen’s Madrasas and shortly afterward arrested eight
journalists who were graduates of Gulen schools, and found them
guilty of setting up an illegal religious group and of involvement in
an extremist organization.
-In
Turkmenistan, government authorities have placed Gulen’s schools
under close scrutiny and have ordered them to scrap
the history of religion from curriculums.
Now,
back to the story and its other major short coming:
Apparently
Mr. Stein was not able to reach Gulen for comment, so he moved on to
his CIA sources with ‘long
ties to Central Asia.’
First he quotes his first source, Former CIA operative Robert
Baer,
chief of the agency’s Central Asia and Caucasus operations from
1995 through 1997, who called the allegations bogus. However, Mr.
Baer added: “It’s
possible that the CIA turned around this ship after I left.”
I
don’t have a problem with Baer’s response. Based on what I
personally know, US Islamization Operations in Central Asia via Gulen
started in late 1997, early 1998. That brings me to what truly set me
off, Stein’s second source and actually a character who is pointed
to by the new memoir’s author - Graham Fuller:
Graham
Fuller,
a former CIA station chief in Kabul and author of “The Future of
Political Islam,” threw cold water on Gundes’s allegations about
Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.
“I
think the story of 130 CIA agents in Gulen schools in Central Asia is
pretty wild,” Fuller said by e-mail.
“I
should hasten to add that I left CIA in 1987 -- nearly 25 years ago
-- and I have absolutely no concrete personal knowledge whatsoever
about this. But my instincts tell me the claim is highly improbable.”
Next,
Jeff Stein very gently confronts Fuller with the fact that according
to the memoir and related media coverage Gulen obtained his US
residence permit with his (Fuller’s) help, and Fuller denies it and
says that’s ‘wrong,’:
“What
I did do,” Fuller explained, “was write a letter to the FBI in
early 2006 …at a time when Gulen's enemies were pressing for his
extradition to Turkey from the U.S. In the post 9/11 environment,
they began spreading the word that he was a dangerous radical. In my
statement to the FBI I offered my views…that I did not believe he
posed a security threat of any kind to the U.S. I still believe that
today, as do a large body of scholars on contemporary Islam.”
…
First
of all, there have been tens if not hundreds of articles establishing
Graham Fuller as one of Gulen’s official references to the court
for his residency, you can view some of these here,
here,
here.
This quote comes from Foreign
Policy Journal:
Fethullah
Gulen became a green card holder despite serious opposition from FBI
and from Homeland Security Department. Former CIA officers (formally
and informally) such as Graham Fuller and Morton Abromovitz were some
of the prominent references in Gulen's green card application.
Next
is the question of why. Why and in what capacity has Fuller been this
active, this supportive, of Gulen? I am talking about this voluntary
‘I wrote a letter to the FBI on Gulen’ line:
…was
write a letter to the FBI in early 2006 …at a time when Gulen's
enemies were pressing for his extradition to Turkey from the U.S. In
the post 9/11 environment, they began spreading the word that he was
a dangerous radical. In my statement to the FBI I offered my
views…that I did not believe he posed a security threat of any kind
to the U.S. I still believe that today, as do a large body of
scholars on contemporary Islam.
And
Stein let that slide?! I’d quickly ask: ‘how often do you write
to the FBI on people you think have been unfairly targeted or treated
by them?!’
Last
but not least on Graham Fuller is my own on-the-record, more
accurately, on-the-album, naming
of individuals implicated (criminally) in my case, thus protected via
invocation of the State Secrets Privilьege:
Coinciding
with the publication of the first article in a series in Britain’s
Sunday Times covering some of her allegations, former FBI translator
Sibel Edmonds posts a gallery of 18 photos of people and three images
of question marks on her website, justacitizen.com The 21 images are
divided into three groups, and the page is titled “State Secrets
Privilege Gallery.”… “The third group includes people who all
appear to work at think tanks—primarily WINEP, the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy”: Graham
E. Fuller—RAND Corporation,
David Makovsky—WINEP, Alan Makovsky—WINEP, ? (box with question
mark), ? (box with question mark), Yusuf Turani (president-in-exile,
Turkestan), Professor Sabri Sayari (Georgetown, WINEP), and Mehmet
Eymur (former head of the Turkish intelligence agency MIT).
…
I
am going to leave you with the following excerpts from my interview
with Phil Giraldi for the Am Con Magazine in 2009, on Gulen, CIA
Central Asia operations & the use of Islam and Mujahideen
there-1997-2001, [All emphasis mine]:
GIRALDI:
You also have information on al-Qaeda, specifically al-Qaeda
in Central Asia
and Bosnia. You were privy to conversations that suggested the CIA
was supporting al-Qaeda in central Asia and the Balkans,
training people to get money, get weapons, and this contact continued
until 9/11…
EDMONDS:
I don’t know if it was CIA. There were certain forces in the U.S.
government who worked with the Turkish paramilitary groups, including
Abdullah Çatli’s group, Fethullah
Gülen.
GIRALDI:
Well, that could be either Joint Special Operations Command or CIA.
EDMONDS:
Maybe in a lot of cases when they said State Department, they meant
CIA?
GIRALDI:
When they said State Department, they probably meant CIA.
EDMONDS:
Okay. So these conversations, between 1997
and 2001,
had to do with a Central Asia operation that involved bin Laden. Not
once did anybody use the word “al-Qaeda.” It was always
“mujahideen,” always “bin Laden” and, in fact, not “bin
Laden” but “bin Ladens” plural. There were several bin Ladens
who were going on private jets to Azerbaijan
and Tajikistan.
The Turkish ambassador in Azerbaijan worked with them.
There
were bin Ladens, with the help of Pakistanis or Saudis, under our
management. Marc Grossman was leading it, 100 percent, bringing
people from East
Turkestan into Kyrgyzstan,
from Kyrgyzstan to
Azerbaijan,
from Azerbaijan some of them were being channeled to Chechnya, some
of them were being channeled to Bosnia. From Turkey, they were
putting all these bin Ladens on NATO planes. People and weapons went
one way, drugs came back.
GIRALDI:
Was the U.S. government aware of this circular deal?
EDMONDS:
100 percent. A lot of the drugs were going to Belgium on NATO planes.
After that, they went to the UK, and a lot came to the U.S. via
military planes to distribution centers in Chicago and Paterson, New
Jersey. Turkish diplomats who would never be searched were coming
with suitcases of heroin.
From 2009 on Gulen -
Direct attacks almost never work. And they are always costly.
ReplyDeleteYou might want to consider indirect attacks to the source of funds. End drug prohibition. And here is the key:
Dr. Lonny Shavelson found that 70% of female heroin users had been sexually abused in childhood. We don't have a drug problem, we have a child abuse problem.