FBI Burying Doc Showing US Officials Stole Nuclear Secrets? 347
BoingBoing is reporting that the FBI may be burying the existence of a document that proves US officials stole nuclear secrets for eventual sale to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. "One of the documents relating to the case was marked 203A-WF-210023. Last week, however, the FBI responded to a freedom of information request for a file of exactly the same number by claiming that it did not exist. But The Sunday Times has obtained a document signed by an FBI official showing the existence of the file. Edmonds believes the crucial file is being deliberately covered up by the FBI because its contents are explosive. She accuses the agency of an 'outright lie.'"
Gee... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Gee... (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's all reality shows and reruns! Oh, the humanity!
If the government really wanted to cover this stuff up, they'd get the writer's strike resolved.
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Not so different (Score:4, Insightful)
There are even huge bribes involving both parties - i.e., Marc Rich's $1 million 'gift' to Bill Clinton in exchange for a pardon.
Corruption is corruption regardless of which party is practicing it.
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You really think that is simply obstruction of justice if it means details about the selling of nuclear secrets to unstable regions? The person doing the selling obviously committed treason, I'm not sure how far it goes if you cover it up but obstruction of justice is hardly the right term here. Corruption at the level you are now referring to is quite different than the corruption to which you referenced in the past. Now the selling of arms by the same past president could be a more intelligent argument.
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Any politician with a history of receiving money from corporations whilst claiming the retain the principles of the
Re:Gee... (Score:4, Informative)
I'm thinking that perhaps the claim is not that the governments of Turkey and Israel are involved, which, in the case of Israel at least, is implausible, but that the criminals involved are Turkish and Israeli nationals. It isn't clear which is meant, but this is a lot more plausible.
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Sibel Edmonds has evidence that a number of countries and organizations are involved in this, including members of governments, organized crime groups, and front groups for various nationalities. She points the finger primarily at the ATC, a Turkish-American front organization, which operates similarly to AIPAC, the Jewish American front organization.
Edmonds says you can start examining the situation from any start you want - the Plame case, the AIPAC espionage trial, he
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Re:Gee... (Score:5, Insightful)
The initial reaction of outrage that a populace has after finding out something rotten about their gov is one of the strongest tools of a citizenry to police their representatives. See, if there is this sudden burst of emotional outcry politicians have to get all hands on deck to control the situation... not knowing how far or deep the populace is willing to pursue the issue they must fear the worst. Knowing the populace is acting on emotions causes those who want to keep their power to make wide sweeping and highly visible adjustments to the system to calm the emotional response.
Once that initial outrage is gone, the citizenry are reduced to working through channels controlled by the very people who are acting against their best interests.
Just a thought.
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Film at 11
Numb From the Neck Up (Score:4, Insightful)
What does impress you, news of maybe an alien invasion?
Well, no, see, it's the sarcasm that misled you (Score:2)
See how easy it is once you grasp the core fundamental basis of it all?
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It's marketing for Star Wars. Which was the Bush/Cheney admin's main military programme priority, before their old employee Osama gave them the excuse for the much more powerful, lucrative and immediate Terror War (and its juicy Invade Iraq subsidiary). But the Terror War, and even Iraq, have limited (though huge) earning potential. With Star Wars, the sky's the limit (pun inten
Re:Gee... (Score:5, Funny)
Because for some reason, you Americans still seem to think the appropriate reaction is to ask for a little lube and not much else.
Sibel Edmonds makes the Front Page (Score:2)
Re:Gee... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Gee... (Score:5, Funny)
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Thanks for that imagery, now I won't be able to sleep tonight.
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Q: How many Republicans can you fit in the closet?
A: Almost all of them!
Re:Gee... (Score:5, Funny)
"We're dicks! We're reckless, arrogant, stupid dicks. And the Film Actors Guild are pussies. And Kim Jong Il is an asshole. Pussies don't like dicks, because pussies get fucked by dicks. But dicks also fuck assholes: assholes that just want to shit on everything. Pussies may think they can deal with assholes their way. But the only thing that can fuck an asshole is a dick, with some balls. The problem with dicks is: they fuck too much or fuck when it isn't appropriate - and it takes a pussy to show them that. But sometimes, pussies can be so full of shit that they become assholes themselves... because pussies are an inch and half away from ass holes. I don't know much about this crazy, crazy world, but I do know this: If you don't let us fuck this asshole, we're going to have our dicks and pussies all covered in shit!" - Gary Johnston, Team America: World Police
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There isn't much of a difference except in how verbal they get over who is in power and doing it a the time. Not screaming as loud doesn't mean acceptance, it means not screaming as loud.
Re: Gee... (Score:2)
I would recommend skepticism regarding the details of the accusation until more evidence comes to light, but the idea that the government would lie about some questionable activity wouldn't have been surprising even seven years ago. Or seventy.
Re: Gee... (Score:4, Insightful)
I would recommend the opposite of careful skepticism. Anger shown about even the slightest hint of any secrecy in government will let the government know that we won't stand for that kind of BS anymore. Or would you rather put your head in the ground and know that the government lies and that you or no one else cares to hold them accountable? Yea that will go along way to reducing the amount of lying. Let's just ignore it and hope they don't do it again. Seems like a great idea.
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There are loads of different ways to deal with something like this that don't require them to deny
Re:Possibly because of the Valerie Plame thing? (Score:5, Informative)
Plame was never outed because of an attempt to use a charge of "nepotism" to discredit Joe Wilson. That cover story never made any sense. Who cares if the guy's wife was at the CIA and suggested him for the Niger investigation? It only barely made more sense if the concept was that the CIA was somehow deliberately sabotaging the Iraq war - which also never made any sense.
Plame was outed because her organization was investigating the nuclear black market including the A. Q. Khan network and its connections to Iran. That investigation would have inevitably led back to the people in the US State Department and the US nuclear agencies who were on the payroll of the black marketers. So Plame's operation had to be shut down.
Keep in mind that Scooter Libby was once Marc Rich's attorney - and Rich is supposed to be one of or the money man behind this operation. Exactly how deep Dick Cheney's involvement is unclear at this point, but there is no doubt that Marc Grossman at the State Department was involved in the outing, and it is likely that Libby got his information from him.
Instead of the BoingBoing snippet ... (Score:5, Informative)
The BoingBoing writeup is so irritatingly fragmentary it's hard to tell what it's even saying. Which is a good description of BoingBoing in general, actually.
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However, the timesonline article post
Re:Instead of the BoingBoing snippet ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Somebody needs to go to jail for that - the ability of citizens to keep tabs on their government is too critical to the functioning of our democracy for us to just shrug when that ability is circumvented.
Re:Instead of the BoingBoing snippet ... (Score:4, Informative)
Not clear to me from either article how exactly the Times knows that this file does in fact exist? Is it from a document from that same whistleblower.
"But The Sunday Times has obtained a document signed by an FBI official showing the existence of the file."
If the Times claims they have that document, I tend to believe it. Owned by Murdoch or not, it's still one of the most respectable newspapers in the world -- and in this case, that they print it despite being owned by NewsCorp even adds some extra credibility to the story. :)
And reading between the lines... (Score:2)
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And your point was?
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The BoingBoing writeup is so irritatingly fragmentary it's hard to tell what it's even saying. Which is a good description of BoingBoing in general, actually.
Alas, I wouldn't know, as my workplace uses Smartfilter, and since BoingBoing was critical of Smartfilter once, they're on a permanent screw-over list -- even though they have more or less the same content as Slashdot, Smartfilter (now endorsed by the Iranian government! Oppress your serfs today!) blocks them as "N
Here's the REAL link (Score:2)
I hate links to blogs which contain the real link and add nothing. Why not just link to th eoriginal story in the first place?
More attention (Score:5, Funny)
Re:More attention (Score:5, Insightful)
It's kind of hard to tell at this point whether the allegations of the existence of a file by a whistleblower amount to Watergate or Haditha.
If we swapped the media for the government, could we tell the difference on either end?
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Then again, maybe it is getting exactly the attention it deserves. It's kind of hard to tell at this point whether the allegations of the existence of a file by a whistleblower amount to Watergate or Haditha.
For one, there is the lack of any corroboration. Additionally...names or it didn't happen.
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Demand Justice, Americans! Deny those who seek to cover their crimes the right to do so, whether they are government or otherwise!
Re:More attention (Score:5, Informative)
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I was, in fact, alive at the time, but not old enough to remember.
At that age, I watched *M*A*S*H* and actually thought it was set in Vietnam, and couldn't grasp why Alan Alda was laughing and everyone in reality was pissed off.
People don't scale. Organizations are hell. Centralized power, while tactically helpful, can lead to strategic woes.
The fact that Watergate a) is not an isolated behavior pattern, and b) takes a long time to expose should be an important input into the political
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Well, it was run in the Sunday Times, which is Rupert Murdoch's newspaper, so it should be on Fox News in the US any minute because it's all part of NewsCorp --
*Shudders with fear* (Score:5, Insightful)
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And no, I don't believe the Government has a secret fleet of unicorns.
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And no, I don't believe the Government has a secret fleet of unicorns.
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Off to Gitmo with you.
Double standards... (Score:3, Interesting)
Each American citizen has an investment in government, predicated on that whole "By the people" schtick that a few goofballs advanced. Why can't we see that a bunch of bureaucrats are causing this investment to depreciate more rapidly than the dollar?
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Re:Double standards... (Score:5, Informative)
The CIA recruited a Russian scientist to deliver faked nuclear design documents to Iran. Most of the documents were genuine, but there were flaws in the design.
The problem was that the Russian scientist quickly identified the flaws and realized that not only would the Iranian scientists see them quickly, too, destroying the idea that they were legitimate, but that the rest of the design would be valuable to the Iranians. He pointed this out to his CIA handler, who dismissed the concerns as not important.
So the Russian, before delivering the designs to his Iranian connection at the IAEA, added notes to them pointing out the flaws in an effort to make the documents more believable. He did this without the knowledge of his handler, apparently.
It is clear from this that the intent as explained to the Russian of trying to fool the Iranians into building a flawed design was ITSELF a cover story. The real purpose was simply to get the plans into Iranian hands, thus justifying the concept that Iran had a nuclear weapons program (for which there is zero evidence other than a laptop the providence of which no one can ascertain, and which is very likely a forgery along the lines of the Niger documents.)
The document under discussion is totally different. An anonymous letter sent to The Liberty Coalition, a DC-based transpartisan civil and human rights watchdog organization. A subsequent Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, asking for information referring to that case number, resulted in a denial from the FBI that such a case exists. The letter referred to the FBI case document. The FBI case document, the contents of which Edmonds knows, was described by her as follows:
"The case in question, she told The BRAD BLOG, careful to avoid categorical defiance of her gag order, "concerns 1996 to 2002 information, targeting Turkish counter-intelligence, and it involves U.S. officials both appointed and elected."
What Edmonds has alleged, based on what she knows from documents she translated at the FBI, is that Marc Grossman, a State Department employee, tipped off the nuclear black marketers that Valerie Plame's organization was in fact a CIA operation. The anonymous letter which is referred to above also made this claim,
The document in question is an FBI case file, not a CIA operation. So it is not the same as the Iranian false flag operation.
Edmonds has made it clear that there is no "national security" involved in this situation. What is involved is the intent to protect certain elected and appointed government officials from charges of treason, which at the same time would embarrass several national governments such as Turkey, Israel, and others.
Re:Double standards... (Score:4, Insightful)
I would imagine that a great many of those items classified as "matters of national security" are items that would damage the bureaucratic class, and would more or less do no harm to the security of the American people. Or, perhaps this abuse, if it exists, actually harms the people, by failing to show us what government truly is, and by keeping us ignorant and placated. After all, the bureaucratic class is damaged only by our indignation at its existence, no?
The specifications of advanced military technological research (i.e. the Manhatten Project), and the identities of covert operatives are the only two things off the top of my head that justify being classified. Note that this does NOT include the amounts spent on or general focus of military research, nor the purpose and spending on covert operations. I want to know what my government is doing, even in these areas, ESPECIALLY in these areas, because it is here that the greatest potential for abuse lies, in my opinion.
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It's kind of like encryption. Encryption is not for keeping your secrets secret forever; it's for keeping your secrets secret long enough to be effective.
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I think it would be too hard to figure out when an agent could be uncovered. Even if you wait till after their death, admitting they were an agent can put at risk any of their contacts. You also put at risk any secrets they might have stolen that you don't want the other side to know you have. You also put at risk any other agents that are still in the field because they might have met or have similar operation profiles. There
Re:Double standards... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Double standards... (Score:4, Insightful)
When you make everything secret, no one trusts you.
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When a corporation operates with this kind of lack of transparency, it's called Enron. Why do accept this kind of behavior from our government?
Each American citizen has an investment in government, predicated on that whole "By the people" schtick that a few goofballs advanced. Why can't we see that a bunch of bureaucrats are causing this investment to depreciate more rapidly than the dollar?
The thing is that these are American citizens that are running the government, trying to keep these secrets. They suffer (indirectly) as well when they operate in such a way...but you see, I think they are just happy to have more power than the next guy, AND they may not see it as everyone else does.
Having said that, covering up is nothing new, and getting caught is nothing new. Most people in America are just happy to have enough money for food, shelter, and gas for the car, there's no time to worry abo
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I'm not willing to be so cynical. I believe in the enlightened ideals upon which this country was built. I believe in the virtuous nature of a democratic-style government. I believe in the goodness of my fellow man, and in our capacity to come together and strive for something greater. Fundamentally, I believe in our ability to own our government, and make it work for us.
And I also believe we have a lot of work t
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counting down the days until (Score:4, Interesting)
10... 9... 8...
Art of War Chapter 13 (Score:5, Insightful)
8. When these five kinds of spy are all at work, none can discover the secret system. This is called "divine manipulation of the threads." It is the sovereign's most precious faculty.
9. Having local spies means employing the services of the inhabitants of a district.
10. Having inward spies, making use of officials of the enemy.
11. Having converted spies, getting hold of the enemy's spies and using them for our own purposes.
12. Having doomed spies, doing certain things openly for purposes of deception, and allowing our spies to know of them and report them to the enemy.
13. Surviving spies, finally, are those who bring back news from the enemy's camp.
14. Hence it is that which none in the whole army are more intimate relations to be maintained than with spies. None should be more liberally rewarded. In no other business should greater secrecy be preserved.
Oh yeah, we're so stupid that we're going to let some reporter just find this filing we're trying to hide... NOTHING TO SEE HERE!
The Art of war has been around since 5 BC, misinformation has been around longer than that...
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It's like most conspiracy theories involving government taking part in bad actions... it's a lot more comforting to believe that our gover
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I'm just pointing out a section of an old book that is almost required reading of people in high military rank. The same people who know that the "enemy" is using the internet and newspapers as a source of intel. What better place to set misinformation than there? Turning the newspapers into doomed spies is just an alteration of Sun
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Oh yeah, we're so stupid that we're going to let some reporter just find this filing we're trying to hide... NOTHING TO SEE HERE!
The Art of war has been around since 5 BC, misinformation has been around longer than that...
Yeah, well the Art of War also says:
"Know thy self, know thy enemy. A thousand battles, a thousand victories."
WMDs? What WMDs? Mission accomplished!!
There's another book out there, Murphy's Law, one of those passages reads:
Never attribute to malice what can be explained by stupidity.
Re:Art of War Chapter III (Score:4, Informative)
(1) He will win who knows when to fight and when not to fight.
(2) He will win who knows how to handle both superior and inferior forces.
(3) He will win whose army is animated by the same spirit throughout all its ranks.
(4) He will win who, prepared himself, waits to take the enemy unprepared.
(5) He will win who has military capacity and is not interfered with by the sovereign.
18. Hence the saying: If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.
I hate it when people only quote half of it, like "judge, not lest ye be judged"
It's funny that the way to LOSE a war according to the art of war is to have the army in a distant land and run the people into recession in order to fund that war (that you should be using the supplies from the fallen army/land to restock).
arrgghhh (Score:4, Funny)
PUNNED!
Re:arrgghhh (Score:4, Insightful)
Why would they have to steal nuclear secrets? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why would they have to steal nuclear secrets? (Score:5, Informative)
Why would they have knowledge of nuclear secrets? (Score:2)
Why would the FBI have to steal nuclear secrets from anyone? If we
Who's "we"?
You know these nuclear secrets? Everyone in the FBI knows them?
wouldn't messing with other countries and stealing secrets fall under the CIA's realm anyway?
The FBI plays an essential role in the U.S. Government's counterintelligence efforts [fbi.gov] and has the responsibility to produce domestic foreign intelligence in support of other members of the Intelligence Community.
Who Is "We"? (Score:2)
Who is "we"? As I sometimes like to say: "we" is a great word, because there are so many of them to choose from. "We" can be a totally ununified America in general (that is a "we" that can't be said to want anything in particular), or it can be the FBI, or it can be the FBI+DoE, or it can be just a handful of people. There probably is no particular "we" that includes both the knowledge of nuclear secr
Retribution is on the way (Score:4, Funny)
Other countries with nuclear secrets (Score:4, Informative)
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20 billion dollars worth of arms can't act as a deterrent? Really?
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Actually, no.
Europe and/or America and/or Russia and/or China (and probably India too) can take out $20bn of defences in days, with ease. They also have defence in depth of their own, making it rather difficult for more than token damage to be done to their own holdings.
If the token damage has a nuclear payload then suddenly it's a significant national disaster. People don't risk those lightly.
It's not coincidence that nobody invades nuclear powers.
Pakistani nuclear head's comments in 2004 (Score:4, Informative)
While a lot of biased and unfounded propaganda is directed against us, the Western world never talked about their own hectic and persistent efforts to sell everything to us. When we bought inverters from Emerson, England, we found them to be less efficient than we wanted them to be. We asked Emerson to improve upon some parameters and we suggested the method .
At that time we received many letters and telexes and people chased us with figures and details of equipment they had sold to Almelo, Capenhurst, etc. They literally begged us to buy their equipment. We bought what we considered to be suitable for our plant and very often asked them to make changes and modifications according to our requirements.
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US media will *not* touch this, probably ever (Score:5, Insightful)
"The FBI has been accused of covering up a file detailing government dealings with a network stealing nuclear secrets" http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article3216737.ece [timesonline.co.uk]
Which was itself a follow-up to
"For sale: West's deadly nuclear secrets" http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article3137695.ece [timesonline.co.uk]
Basically, the story was that Sibel Edmonds, an FBI translator listening to comm intercepts looking for Middle Eastern "terrorists," discovered evidence of a network of US, Israeli, Turkish and Pakistani nuclear weapons secrets trading. She's told the FBI - they fired her. She told Congress - they placed her under a gag order and threatened to jail her if she talked about it. She's even agreed to tell the story to any American media outlet (which means she's willing to go to jail so people can know), as long as the outlet agrees to tell the whole story, and not edit it to hide the truth. So far, all American sources have refused to cover the story.
Interesting tidbit - the CIA front company, "Brester Jennings," for which Valerie Plame worked before she was outed by Cheney and company, had as its mission tracking nuclear weapons activity in the ME. Outing Plame meant the Brewster Jennings cover was completely blown, like a wiretap being discovered. Which means that Plame's outing, with its supposed rationale as payback for exposing Bush's lies about Iraq and uranium, may have been nothing more than a convenient two-fer with a great cover story, when the real goal was to take out CIA assets who were getting too close to something far more important.
Sibel Edmonds' web site is http://www.justacitizen.com/ [justacitizen.com]>here.
"I'd say what she has is far more explosive than the Pentagon Papers." - Daniel Ellsberg
Nothing to see here. Move along. (Score:4, Interesting)
Which party will be embarrassed if it comes out? (Score:5, Insightful)
Holy Leaping Conclusions, Batman (Score:3, Insightful)
Which has this corollary when leveling accusations at slipper, duplicitous people: Before you accuse some one of an illegal cover-up, be sure that they can't simply say, "Oops, my bad".
"Steal" (Score:2, Informative)
slashkos (Score:3, Insightful)
What's "Democratic" about caring that your government is so corrupt that it threatens nuke war?
How to Cover Up 101. (Score:2)
just google "US Nuclear Secrets" (Score:2)
Why the gag order? (Score:5, Insightful)
People on slashdot haven't mentioned yet the reason for the gag order apparently is cause they want to investigate the officials and see whats going on.
I know its a good knee jerk reaction to yell conspiracy but if you caught a spy in your midst wouldn't you want to counter intel back instead of just firing him and posting the paperwork? This whistle blower might have blown an investigation for all we know.
Re:Why the gag order? (Score:5, Interesting)
Edmonds WAS the "investigation." She was translating documents that had been mis-translated before by FBI personnel who were apparently in the pay of those being investigated. When she brought this to the attention of her superiors, she was fired in retaliation. The FBI internal affairs investigation confirmed this.
The "investigations" you are referring to were ongoing and were being sabotaged inside the FBI itself. The people involved even tried to recruit Edmonds to continue the sabotage, which she refused to do. Once she was fired and went outside the FBI to Congress, the DoJ gagged her.
There is nothing here involving "national security". The gag order was intended to prevent her from revealing that, as she puts it, "senior elected US officials" are engaged in wholesale treason. She has provided information to several US Senators in a secure facility inside Congress. She testified before the 9/11 Commission - and her testimony was reduced to a footnote in the final report. She was promised by Henry Waxman that her case would be number one on his list when the Democrats came to power in January - since then, his office has refused her calls.
The reality is that what she knows is so dangerous to the stability of the US government that I'm surprised she's still breathing - although of course if she ended up dead, that would be pretty much a problem for these people, too, especially as you can imagine she has some sort of "dead man" trigger set up so that the info gets revealed anyway.
I, personally, think she SHOULD just dump it all on her Web site. In fact, after the Time Online article two weeks ago, she posted several pictures of certain officials on her Web site without comment. You are supposed to understand that these are the people involved.
Without some sort of legal immunity, however, and given the Guantanamo situation, it obviously is a very great risk for her to just defy the ban without having enough public impact as a result that it would blunt any attempt to "disappear" her.
Kill the Messenger! (Score:5, Interesting)
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1991080575212848283&q=kill+the+messenger&total=348&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=0 [google.com]
Also i have a special section on my website dedicated to the subject, tho the page is pretty half assed: http://www.hongpong.com/sibel_edmonds_9_11_the_turkish_spy_scandal [hongpong.com]
Essentially here is my understanding of what this weird scandal means:
Sibel edmonds was hired by the FBI shortly after 9/11 to digest the backlog of foreign-language wiretaps run by the counter intelligence division. However Sibel also could listen to English-language conversations recorded on those lines. Within three months she heard extensive conspiracies involving the American Turkish Council, which were being actively covered up by Melek Can Dickerson, who was working alongside Sibel in the translation unit.
However, there was also evidence that the FBI was tracking an international criminal network that includes the big name neocons (Feith and Perle among others) which was funnelling and covering for nuclear secrets pilfered from the national nuclear laboratories (ever notice their shitty security?) and routed to brokers in Pakistan, Turkey and Israel.
Additionally the Turks were caught by the FBI wiretaps doing cash/secret handoffs from the ATC to the State Department. Once 9/11 occurred, it seems that then-State Dept official Marc Grossman was helping get foreign spies who had foreknowledge of 9/11 out of the United States, after the FBI had become very interested in talking to these guys. The wiretaps and intelligence fragments finger real people - and Kill the Messenger details how Sibel was momentarily a famous 9/11 whistleblower because of this. 60 Minutes ran a special with very heavily edited footage and has never released the raw footage of the interview. (yes in fact even the highly controversial Israeli art student 9/11 conspiracy theory appears to fit here)
Finally, this criminal network was deeply opposed to the CIA's counter proliferation operations - attempting to block turkey and pakistan from getting more nuke bits. So therefore Scooter Libby fits in quite differently than widely known. He used to be a lawyer for billionaire israeli-american fugitive Marc Rich, the moneyman for arms trafficker Viktor Bout. These guys seem to roughly be part of this same network. There is apparently an FBI recorded conversation of Marc Grossman tipping off the Turks/and/or Pakis to Brewster Jennings' status as a covert front company. This was certainly treasonous!
Also there is an important revolving door dimension: lobbyists, retired generals, military industrial complex. Turkey is able to convert laundered drug money into funding for the military industrial purchases - its something like 25% of GDP.
this is all a great example of an orwellian cryptocracy getting tangled up in all the criminal evidence it observes. oops. kinda like the federal reserve logging all that drug money moving around.
i realize all of this sounds quite bottom-of-the-barrel everything and the kitchen sink kind of super conspiracy. But hey, it does in fact have odd threads that go back to the weirdest events of the Bush administration - and before. Sorry. I'm offering this stuff in good faith: there is just too much material to ignore.
Re:It's a lie! (Score:4, Funny)
All depends: if any political party, irrespective of the nation, actively campaigns on the platform that Government is a bad thing, of COURSE you're going to get bad government. It's the only truthful platform a lot of US politicians seem to have run on!
As for taxes? I saw the following online but can't find it on Google:
Warrantless wiretaps: illegal.
Phone companies profiting from the act: immoral.
Cutting the program because of unpaid bills: PRICELESS.
There are some things Governments can't buy. For everything else, there's taxes.
Doesn't follow. (Score:2)
Your conclusion does not follow from your premise. Because if any political party, at least in THIS country, campaigns on the platform that Government is a GOOD thing, then you will get equally bad government.
The simple fact is, Government *IS* a Bad Thing. It is properly classed as a "Necessary Evil". Anyone who truly believes oth
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I do not think that applies when the consequences are the only logical ones one could have possibly expected...
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On your behalf, the story as covered in the topic is not the whole story, so your ignorance can be excused - once.
This is not "conspiracy theory". There is an actual, real life conspiracy going on here, the details of which have been officially and publicly suppressed as personified in Sibel Edmonds. Look up the details.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_and_federations_by_military_expenditures [wikipedia.org]
The world total military spending: 1,200,000,000,000
US only military spending 623,000,000,000
http://www.dopmagazin.com/elementi/20070830_230631headUpAss.jpg [dopmagazin.com]