Sibel Edmonds Finally Wins
by David Swanson
Recently
by David Swanson: Did
Bush Sr. Kill Kennedy and Frame Nixon?
Sibel Edmonds'
new book, Classified
Woman, is like an FBI file on the FBI, only without the
incompetence.
The experiences
she recounts resemble K.'s trip to the castle, as told by Franz
Kafka, only without the pleasantness and humanity.
I've read a
million reviews of nonfiction books about our government that referred
to them as "page-turners" and "gripping dramas,"
but I had never read a book that actually fit that description until
now.
The F.B.I.,
the Justice Department, the White House, the Congress, the courts,
the media, and the nonprofit industrial complex put Sibel Edmonds
through hell. This book is her triumph over it all, and part of
her contribution toward fixing the problems she uncovered and lived
through.
Edmonds took
a job as a translator at the FBI shortly after 9-11. She considered
it her duty. Her goal was to prevent any more terrorist attacks.
That's where her thinking was at the time, although it has now changed
dramatically. It's rarely the people who sign up for a paycheck
and healthcare who end up resisting or blowing a whistle.
Edmonds found
at the FBI translation unit almost entirely two types of people.
The first group was corrupt sociopaths, foreign spies, cheats and
schemers indifferent to or working against U.S. national security.
The second group was fearful bureaucrats unwilling to make waves.
The ordinary competent person with good intentions who risks their
job to "say something if you see something" is the rarest
commodity. Hence the elite category that Edmonds found herself almost
alone in: whistleblowers.
Reams of documents
and audio files from before 9-11 had never been translated. Many
more had never been competently or honestly translated. One afternoon
in October 2001, Edmonds was asked to translate verbatim an audio
file from July 2001 that had only been translated in summary form.
She discovered that it contained a discussion of skyscraper construction,
and in a section from September 12th a celebration of a successful
mission. There was also discussion of possible future attacks. Edmonds
was eager to inform the agents involved, but her supervisor Mike
Feghali immediately put a halt to the project.
Two other translators,
Behrooz Sarshar and Amin (no last name given), told Edmonds this
was typical. They told her about an Iranian informant, a former
head of SAVAK, the Iranian "intelligence" agency, who
had been hired by the FBI in the early 1990s. He had warned these
two interpreters in person in April 2001 of Osama bin Laden planning
attacks on U.S. cities with airplanes, and had warned that some
of the plotters were already in the United States. Sarshar and Amin
had submitted a report marked VERY URGENT to Special Agent in Charge
Thomas Frields, to no apparent effect. In the end of June they'd
again met with the same informant and interpreted for FBI agents
meeting with him. He'd emphatically warned that the attack would
come within the next two months and urged them to tell the White
House and the CIA. But the FBI agents, when pressed on this, told
their interpreters that Frields was obliged to report everything,
so the White House and other agencies no doubt already knew.
One has to
wonder what U.S. public opinion would make of an Iranian having
tried to prevent 9-11.
Next, a French
translator named Mariana informed Edmonds that in late June 2001,
French intelligence had contacted the FBI with a warning of the
upcoming attacks by airplanes. The French even provided names of
suspects. The translator had been sent to France, and believed her
report had made it to both FBI headquarters and the White House.
Edmonds translated
other materials that involved the selling of U.S. nuclear information
to foreigners and spotted a connection to a previous case involving
the purchase of such information. The FBI, under pressure from the
State Department, Edmonds writes, prevented her from notifying the
FBI field offices involved. Edmonds has testified in a court deposition,
naming as part of a broad criminal conspiracy Representatives Dennis
Hastert, Dan Burton, Roy Blunt, Bob Livingston, Stephen Solarz,
and Tom Lantos, and the following high-ranking U.S. government officials:
Douglas Feith, Paul Wolfowitz, and Marc Grossman.
When Edmonds
was hired, she was the only fully qualified Turkish translator,
and this remained the case. In November 2001, a woman named Melek
Can Dickerson (referred to as "Jan") was hired. She did
not score well on the English proficiency test, and so was not qualified
to sign off on translations, as Edmonds was. Melek's husband Doug
Dickerson worked for the Defense Intelligence Agency under the procurement
logistics division at the Pentagon dealing with Turkey and Central
Asia, and for the Office of Special Plans overseeing Central Asian
policy. This couple attempted to recruit Edmonds and her husband
into the American Turkish Council and the Assembly of Turkish American
Associations, offering large financial benefits. But these were
organizations that the FBI was monitoring. Edmonds reported the
Dickersons' proposal to Feghali, who dismissed it.
Then Edmonds
discovered that Jan Dickerson had been forging her (Edmonds') signature
on translations, with Feghali's approval. Then Edmonds' colleagues
told her about Jan taking files out of other translators' desks
and carrying them out of the building. Dickerson attempted to control
the translation of all material from particular individuals. Dennis
Saccher, who was above Feghali, discovered that Jan was marking
every communication from one important person as being not important
for translation. Saccher attempted to address the matter but was
shut down by Feghali, by another supervisor named Stephanie Bryan,
and by the head of "counterintelligence" for the FBI who
said that the Pentagon, White House, State Department, and Congress
would not allow an investigation.
Had Edmonds
understood the truth of that statement, it might have saved her
years of frustration and stress, but it would have denied us the
bulk of the revelations in her book. Dickerson threatened Edmonds'
life and those of her family. Edmonds lost her job, her reputation,
her friends, and contact with most of her family members. She watched
Congress cave in to the President. She watched the government protect
the Dickersons by allowing them to flee the country. She listened
to Congressman Henry Waxman and others in 2005 and 2006 promise
a full investigation if the Democrats won a majority, a promise
that was immediately broken when the Democrats took control of Congress
in 2007. Edmonds was smeared in the media, and her story widely
ignored when media
outlets got parts of it right. The Justice Department claimed
"States Secrets" and maneuvered for a cooperative judge
(Reggie Walton) to have cases filed by Edmonds dismissed. The government
classified as secret all materials related to Edmonds' case including
what was already public. The Justice Department issued a gag order
to the entire Congress.
And Congress
bent over and shouted "Thank you, sir, may I have another?"
As less confrontational
approaches failed, Edmonds became increasingly an
activist and an independent media participant and creator. Her
story and others she was familiar with were rejected and avoided
by the 9-11 Commission. She worked with angry 9-11 widows and with
other whistleblowers to expose the failures of that commission.
Disgusted with whistleblower support groups that only offered to
help her when she was in the news and never when she needed help
most desperately, Edmonds started her own group, made up of whistleblowers,
called the National Security Whistleblowers
Coalition. She started her own website called Boiling
Frogs Post.
When an unclassified
version of a report on Edmonds' case by the Justice Department's
Inspector General was finally released, it vindicated her.
Edmonds has
received awards and recognition. Her story has been supported
(with rhetoric, not action) by Congress members and backed up by
journalists. It appears in this forthcoming
film.
Coleen Rowley,
another FBI whistleblower, one who was honored as a Time
magazine person of the year along with two others, told me: "What
I find so remarkable is Sibel's persistence in trying every avenue
and possible outlet in trying to get the truth out. When going up
the chain of command in the executive branch and Inspector General
internal mechanisms for investigating fraud, waste, and abuse went
nowhere, she sought judicial remedy by filing lawsuits only to be
improperly gagged by 'state secrecy privilege'. Along the way she
also sought congressional assistance, testified to the 9-11 Commission,
and engaged with various media and other non-governmental organizations.
It's somewhat ironic that Sibel herself demonstrated such enormous
energy and passion throughout this decade quite the opposite of
the 'boiling frog' idiom she uses for her website as a warning to
others. If her book can inspire readers to summon even 1/100th of
the determination and resolve she has modeled, there's hope for
us!"
Yet, thus far,
no branch of our government has lifted its little finger to fix
the problem of secrecy and the corruption it breeds, which Edmonds
argues has grown far worse under President Obama. That's why
this book should be spread far and wide, and read aloud to our
misrepresentatives in Congress if necessary. This book is a masterpiece
that reveals both the details and the broader pattern of corruption
and unaccountability in Washington, D.C. Edmonds has not exposed
bad apples, but a rotten barrel of toxic waste that will sooner
or later infect us all not just the whistleblowers like Sibel
and the thousands of people in our government who see something
and dare not say something for fear that we will not have their
back.
Let's have
their back.
Reprinted
with permission from David Swanson's
website.
May
10, 2012
David Swanson
is the author of the new book Daybreak:
Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union
by
Seven Stories Press. Visit his
website.
Copyright ©
2012 David Swanson
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