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[COMMENT: Speaks for itself. We are
riddled, I suspect, with traitors all through our government. Security has
been full of holes for years, decades.
E. Fox]
http://pajamasmedia.com/2008/01/fbi_whistleblower_bombshell_tr.php
January 31, 2008 12:00 AM
The UK’s
Sunday Times recently broke the
story of an FBI whistleblower kept from speaking publicly about a State
Department official suspected of selling nuclear secrets. Annie Jacobsen
digs a bit deeper into this shadowy tale and wonders why American media
outlets have greeted the revelations with stunning silence.
by Annie Jacobsen
Two weeks
ago, the London Sunday Times
broke an exclusive story about FBI translator-turned-whistleblower Sibel
Edmonds. For five years, the
U.S. government has prevented Edmonds from speaking
publicly on what she knows, claiming
State Secrets Privilege. The
Times got the exclusive on the
story, eerily titled “For
Sale: West’s Deadly Nuclear Secrets,” by talking to a
number of Edmonds’ close associates who were not under a gag order, and by
filling in pieces of the puzzle from Sibel Edmonds herself.
According the Times article,
the U.S. government sought to gag Edmonds from revealing that corrupt
government officials — specifically, State Department official Marc Grossman
— were directly involved in the stealing and selling of nuclear secrets to
foreign agents. In her role as translator, Edmonds listened in on, or
translated, hundreds of secretly intercepted conversations between State
Department officials and foreign nationals from 1996 to 2002.
Exclusively, Edmonds told the Times
about an FBI case file marked 203A-WF-210023. One arm of the FBI denied the
file’s existence to the Times;
another arm of the FBI
provided the Times with a
signed document confirming its existence. All of the info
in the file predates A.Q. Kahn — the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb —
admitting he had been secretly selling
nuclear weapons technology to Libya, Iran, and
North Korea.
Edmonds told the Times, “I
can tell you that that file and the operations it refers to did exist from
1996 to February 2002. The file refers to the counterintelligence programme
[sic] that the Department of Justice has declared to be a state secret to
protect sensitive diplomatic relations.”
Philip Giraldi, a former CIA officer, was one of the few American
journalists to
report on the Edmonds story after it broke in England.
Last week in the American Conservative
he wrote, “Nothing deserves more attention than the possibility of ongoing
national-security failures and the proliferation of nuclear weapons with the
connivance of corrupt senior government officials.” And
Daniel Ellsberg, the former military analyst who released
The Pentagon Papers to the
New York Times in 1971, lambasted the
mainstream American press for ignoring the story in the
Brad Blog:
For the second time in two weeks, the entire U.S. press has let itself be scooped by Rupert Murdoch’s London Sunday Times on a dynamite story of criminal activities by corrupt U.S. officials promoting nuclear proliferation. But there is a worse journalistic sin than being scooped, and that is participating in a cover-up of information that demands urgent attention from the public, the U.S. Congress, and the courts.
Why has the
mainstream media ignored such an important story? This reporter spoke to a
number of Edmonds’ colleagues on the subject. One member of the
National Security Whistleblower Coalition (NSWC) — over
which Edmonds presides — shared Ellsberg’s disbelief at the lack of coverage
on the Edmonds story; Ellsberg is also a NSWC member.
A current employee of the Department of Homeland Security, who spoke to
Pajamas Media on the condition of anonymity, had this to say: “It is
mind-boggling. I’ve sent personal emails to my contacts at ABC, at CBS, at
the New York Times, and the
Washington Times. No one is
even responding to my emails. They call me back about other things, but as
far as Sibel [Edmonds] is concerned, anything touching on that subject gets
overlooked, gets ignored.”
“Why?” this reporter asked.
“Reporters are terrified of the State Secrets Privilege and being subpoenaed
to testify before a federal grand jury. No one wants to wind up like Judy
Miller — in jail.”
The State Secrets Privilege, born of a controversial 1953 Supreme Court
ruling, has been invoked with growing frequency. It allows the executive
branch of government to
deflect and derail litigation against the government on
grounds that adjudicating such a case would damage national security. In
January 2008, Senators Kennedy and Specter
introduced legislation to reduce the power of this
privilege. Most importantly, the legislation would establish that the
courts, not the executive branch, would be the governing body to review
evidence and decide if information is covered by the privilege or not.
Over the weekend, the Times
broke a third story on the Sibel Edmonds case. In “Tip
Off Thwarted Nuclear Spy Ring Probe,” the paper linked
Valerie Plame to the Edmonds case. But even more important, the paper
interviewed former CIA agent Philip Giraldi, who suggested that if true,
what State Department official Marc Grossman did “in violating US law on
nuclear exports” could possibly constitute treason.
A high-ranking State Department official accused of treason? For how long
will the mainstream press ignore this terrifying story?
According to his biography, Marc
Grossman was a career foreign service officer from 1976 to 2005. He served
as U.S. Ambassador to Turkey from 1994 to 1999 and as Under Secretary,
Political Affairs for the U.S. Department of State from 2001 to 2005.
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