Spies
in the Pentagon?
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
When
I think of spies in the Defense Department, I think of the pitiful
debt-ridden Ron Pelton, who worked for 14 years at the National
Security Agency, quit in 1979, and began selling secrets to the
Soviets until he was arrested in 1986. I heard it was to complete
construction on a home he had been building for years and years.
Construction projects can be like that.
I
think of Jonathan Pollard, a case study in poor
hiring practices within the federal government and the Defense
Department’s even poorer supervisory habits. Pollard was also a
case study in the delusional and incompetent ideologue who becomes
a traitor in the Department of Defense.
More
recently, I think of the high clearances granted to publicly and
at times, rabidly, pro-Likud past and present political appointees
with names like Douglas Feith and Richard Perle, and a host of younger
Likudniks who march through the halls of the five-sided asylum to
a composition unfamiliar to most Americans.
I
don’t think of Larry Franklin, a guy I like and respect. When I
was there in 2002 and 2003, Larry was the Iran desk officer with
the Defense Under Secretary for Policy, Near East South Asia, moving
later to the Office of Special Plans, where ostensibly Iraq policy
was made.
Larry
is an interesting and kind person with a lot of great stories. He
came into our cubicle one morning feeling energetic, and demonstrated
a Karate kick of some kind that to this day still impresses me.
Here’s a little guy in a suit, over 50 years in age, and he can
do the move. I asked him where he learned to do that. He said he
had to learn self-defense because he grew up dirt poor, short and
small, in a slum in Baltimore, one of the few white kids in his
neighborhood. I believed him. He worked for everything he had, all
the way to his Ph.D. Along the way, he got married and had a whole
passel of kids, safely ensconced hours away from the superficialities
and mean streets of Washington, D.C.
The
pre-Republican National Convention weekend story is that Larry gave
draft Iran policy guidance and other info to AIPAC representatives,
in hopes of communicating
a level of concern for what was going on in Iraq to his higher ups
in the Pentagon, specifically Doug Feith and Paul Wolfowitz.
Somehow,
having to go outside the system to get the Pentagon
brass to show concern about what is really going on in Iraq
doesn’t surprise me at all.
The
story of spies in the Pentagon will percolate, no doubt. I have
no answers, but perhaps the questions themselves will help explain
what is going on in the current administration, and the administration
that is sure to come.
Was
the release of Larry’s name at this time politically motivated?
And was that to hurt the Bush presidency or to save it, as Laura
Rozen muses, with a "controlled
burn"?
Why
would Larry need to give draft documents on policy anywhere in the
Middle East to AIPAC, when all the big decisions are already coordinated
between Israel and the U.S. at far higher levels?
Why
is Larry the result of FBI investigational success instead of the
names of the Pentagon senior operatives who shared classified information
with Ahmad Chalabi regarding American success in reading coded Tehran
communications, specifically
now as neoconservatives rage for war in Iran? Or instead of
the names of senior White House operatives who revealed and destroyed
the U.S. security mission of Valerie Plame?
Are
there any advantages gained in front-page stories on a "spy
for Israel" who is not one of the usual suspects? You know,
a person with no business dealings dependent upon American (and
Israeli) decisions, a person without an openly pro-Israel ideology
or someone who was never known as a passionate advocate of U.S.
power to promote Israel’s security and economic viability? A career-constrained
professional rather than fly-by-night political appointees who have
written widely and acted most consistently to advance the interests
of Israel in American policy towards the Middle East? Cui bono?
Could
it be, as so wisely
noted by Chris Manion recently, that it is time for the neoconservatives
to come home?
The
neoconservative harvest has been plucked from the energies and wealth
of an unsuspecting American public – a permanent and costly occupation
of Iraq’s oil production infrastructure, a ringing of unnecessary
military bases from Bosnia and Kosovo, to Uzbekistan to Afghanistan
to Iraq, and the domestic acceptance of a siege mentality of national
defense reminiscent of Machiavelli’s lesser princes, or perhaps
the current political state of Israel.
The
challenge may be simply to properly preserve the harvest – and what
better way than to usher in a presidency that will do what Bush
can never do – legitimize and normalize American militaristic hegemony,
at least for several more years. As Gabriel Kolko writes,
Democrats'
greater finesse in justifying these policies is therefore more
dangerous because they will be made to seem more credible and
keep alive alliances that only reinforce the U.S.' refusal to
acknowledge the limits of its power. In the longer run, Kerry's
pursuit of these aggressive goals will lead eventually to a
renewal of the dissolution of alliances, but
in the short-run he will attempt to rebuild them and European
leaders will find it considerably more difficult to refuse his
demands than if Bush stays in power and that is to be
deplored.
Dangerous,
radically un-American, Machiavellian. It must be exciting these
days to be a neoconservative, looking forward to the continued progress
under a Kerry Presidency. But to preserve the harvest, sacrifice
is required.
Predictably,
the sacrifice will be as it always is for neoconservative strategists.
Whether burned at home or in the desert, the neoconservative sacrifice
requires only the lives of those most loyal, dispensable, and disposable.
August
30, 2004
Karen
Kwiatkowski [send her mail]
is a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, who spent her final four and
a half years in uniform working at the Pentagon. She now lives with
her freedom-loving family in the Shenandoah Valley, and writes a
bi-weekly column on defense issues with a libertarian perspective
for militaryweek.com.
Copyright ©
2004 LewRockwell.com
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