The Sibel Edmonds Affair
Two weeks ago, The London Times ran a story entitled For sale: West’s deadly nuclear secrets. The story reveals, through FBI whisatleblower Sibel Edmonds, that…
“…one well-known senior official in the US State Department was being paid by Turkish agents in Washington who were selling the information on to black market buyers, including Pakistan.
The name of the official – who has held a series of top government posts – is known to The Sunday Times. He strongly denies the claims.
However, Edmonds said: “He was aiding foreign operatives against US interests by passing them highly classified information, not only from the State Department but also from the Pentagon, in exchange for money, position and political objectives.”
She claims that the FBI was also gathering evidence against senior Pentagon officials – including household names – who were aiding foreign agents.
“If you made public all the information that the FBI have on this case, you will see very high-level people going through criminal trials,” she said.
Her story shows just how much the West was infiltrated by foreign states seeking nuclear secrets. It illustrates how western government officials turned a blind eye to, or were even helping, countries such as Pakistan acquire bomb technology.”
This was then followed up by a story in yesterday’s edition of the paper entitled FBI denies file exposing nuclear secrets theft which included the following…
“THE FBI has been accused of covering up a key case file detailing evidence against corrupt government officials and their dealings with a network stealing nuclear secrets.
The assertion follows allegations made in The Sunday Times two weeks ago by Sibel Edmonds, an FBI whistleblower, who worked on the agency’s investigation of the network.
Edmonds, a 37-year-old former Turkish language translator, listened into hundreds of sensitive intercepted conversations while based at the agency’s Washington field office.
She says the FBI was investigating a Turkish and Israeli-run network that paid high-ranking American officials to steal nuclear weapons secrets. These were then sold on the international black market to countries such as 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”.
“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 that the Department of Justice has declared to be a state secret to protect sensitive diplomatic relations,” she said.
The freedom of information request had not been initiated by Edmonds. It was made quite separately by an American human rights group called the Liberty Coalition, acting on a tip-off it received from an anonymous correspondent.”
The story goes on to include…
“The Turks and Israelis had planted “moles” in military and academic institutions which handled nuclear technology. Edmonds says there were several transactions of nuclear material every month, with the Pakistanis being among the eventual buyers. “The network appeared to be obtaining information from every nuclear agency in the United States,” she said.
They were helped, she says, by the high-ranking State Department official who provided some of their moles – mainly PhD students – with security clearance to work in sensitive nuclear research facilities. These included the Los Alamos nuclear laboratory in New Mexico, which is responsible for the security of the US nuclear deterrent.”
[…]
“Edmonds also claims that a number of senior officials in the Pentagon had helped Israeli and Turkish agents.
“The people provided lists of potential moles from Pentagon-related institutions who had access to databases concerning this information,” she said.
“The handlers, who were part of the diplomatic community, would then try to recruit those people to become moles for the network. The lists contained all their ‘hooking points’, which could be financial or sexual pressure points, their exact job in the Pentagon and what stuff they had access to.”
One of the Pentagon figures under investigation was Lawrence Franklin, a former Pentagon analyst, who was jailed in 2006 for passing US defence information to lobbyists and sharing classified information with an Israeli diplomat.
“He was one of the top people providing information and packages during 2000 and 2001,” she said.
Once acquired, the nuclear secrets could have gone anywhere. The FBI monitored Turkish diplomats who were selling copies of the information to the highest bidder.
Edmonds said: “Certain greedy Turkish operators would make copies of the material and look around for buyers. They had agents who would find potential buyers.”
In summer 2000, Edmonds says the FBI monitored one of the agents as he met two Saudi Arabian businessmen in Detroit to sell nuclear information that had been stolen from an air force base in Alabama. She overheard the agent saying: “We have a package and we’re going to sell it for $250,000.”
Edmonds’s employment with the FBI lasted for just six months. In March 2002 she was dismissed after accusing a colleague of covering up illicit activity involving Turkish nationals.”
Since the Times broke the story, which is an immensely important one, not one North American newspaper or news agency has picked it up. In short, the US media has entirely overlooked a story that has immense national security implications, despite the fact that Rupert Murdoch owns the London Times and various US news outlets.
Regarding that aspect of this affair, Daniel Ellsberg, the man behind the leaking of The Pentagon Papers in the 70’s, and a one time Hawk, commented yesterday…
“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.
For the last two weeks — one could say, for years — the major American media have been guilty of ignoring entirely the allegations of the courageous and highly credible source Sibel Edmonds, quoted in the London Times on January 6, 2008 in a front-page story that was front-page news in much of the rest of the world but was not reported in a single American newspaper or network. It is up to readers to demand that this culpable silent treatment end.
Just as important, there must be pressure by the public on Congressional committee chairpersons, in particular Representative Henry Waxman and Senator Patrick Leahy. Both have been sitting for years on classified, sworn testimony by Edmonds — as she revealed in the Times’ new story on Sunday — along with documentation, in their possession, confirming parts of her account. Pressure must be brought for them to hold public hearings to investigate her accusations of widespread criminal activities, over several administrations, that endanger national security. They should call for open testimony under oath by Edmonds — as she has urged for five years — and by other FBI officials she has named to them, as cited anonymously in the first Times’ story.”
Despite the gravity of this story, it remains one that requires a domestically published response from the FBI to become a matter of import in the United States, and that responsibility rests with the American media. Then again, given what others have been able to get away with over the last eight years despite domestic media coverage, who knows if anything would happen if it were reported. Given the ability of various aspects of the US media to convolute and derail incidents that are nationally damaging, God only knows how diluted it might become by the time that it’s presented to those to whom it should matter most.
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January 21st, 2008 at 11:26 am
The U.S. government and media is quick to induce panic within the nation created overseas, but when their own organizations and institutions, held so highly esteemed, has a flaw made visible in the system, they must be careful to filter what information they will release and what information they will not. This article and the article’s contained within it act as recurring proof of what most of us already know. It just adds another layer of concrete to the ground we currently walk on.
Its sad to realize that one has to look beyond its own nation’s borders to learn what is happening within.
January 21st, 2008 at 11:32 am
I can understand the US sensoring this information, it is not something I would think they would want to attract attention to. However, my question is why, when the rest of the world is publishing this information, is Canada not publishing this information? I don’t recall seeing anything about this in the papers? Perhaps I have just not been paying enough attention to the itty-bitty articles, since I am assuming that is where it would be; making it a top story could be seen as stepping on toes.
January 21st, 2008 at 11:32 am
Now to comment on the contents of Edmond’s testimony, one can realize the importance of whistleblowers and the risks they face providing confidential information to the public. The U.S. is now a central target of persecution and retaliation from several threatening countries and international “terrorist” organizations. To have flaws and people in the system willing to sell out their own country for their countries currency just goes to prove that whores not only walk the streets, but also exist in the institutions we trust and take for granted. The state of alarm, I believe, is growing, only more problems are sure to come for our neighbours to the south.
January 21st, 2008 at 11:40 am
I haven’t seen any Canadian address on this subject either, I’ve even tried searching for it. When you think about it, why would the Canadian government want to publish this kind of story anways? Covering and releasing such a story could cripple our relationship with the U.S. and seeing as most of our national newspapers are owned by politically minded individuals and corporations, committing such a “crime” could severely injure our “cooperation” with the U.S.
That’s why I believe we won’t see any televised or print publication from the majority of our news organizations. Especially the CBC.
January 21st, 2008 at 11:43 am
Nuclear proliferation of Middle Eastern terrorists as self-fulfilling prophecy.
Dole out the secrets, then pursue those that buy them in an never-ending War on Terror.
What was it Eisenhower said in that farewell address?
I need a drink!
January 21st, 2008 at 12:03 pm
[quote comment="39425"]I haven’t seen any Canadian address on this subject either, I’ve even tried searching for it. When you think about it, why would the Canadian government want to publish this kind of story anways? Covering and releasing such a story could cripple our relationship with the U.S. and seeing as most of our national newspapers are owned by politically minded individuals and corporations, committing such a “crime” could severely injure our “cooperation” with the U.S.
That’s why I believe we won’t see any televised or print publication from the majority of our news organizations. Especially the CBC.[/quote]
I agree. I mean, it’s already out in the open that Canada has listed the US and Israel as places to watch in re: torture (nevermind the attempts to distance this from the government’s official party line of “I <3 USA! I <3 ISRAEL! They do no wrong!”). I don’t think there will be much–if any–Canadian mention until US outlets start carrying the story.
January 21st, 2008 at 2:17 pm
I also agree that the only reason this story hasn’t been published in Canada is because of it’s close ties with the States.
As much as Canadian society tries to separate itself from the US, its obvious that there’s been inevitable ‘hushing’ going on…
January 21st, 2008 at 3:12 pm
There’s been some discussion that this issue has been shelved by the mainstream media due to not only direct direct pressure but also pleading from the White House. It wouldn’t be the first time that the White house has had it’s way in this regard. The press has accommodated them before… specifically with the NSA wiretapping story that was delayed for the better part of a year. That this carries over into our own Canadian press is seriously depressing.
Thanks for bringing this story up Mat. Edmonds deserves so much more recognition than she’s getting.
January 21st, 2008 at 3:44 pm
There’s a really good Op-Ed by Daniel Ellsberg on the issue here: http://www.bradblog.com/?p=5583
January 21st, 2008 at 4:25 pm
What can I say? You can’t really believe anything you read or see on the TV anymore. What’s fact and what’s misreported fact from unreliable or deceptive resources? The stories are so twisted no one knows who’s telling the truth anymore and it makes it hard to form an opinion. Sounds like it boils down to one thing the greedy “senior official” just wanted to make a little extra cash and he got caught, at least somewhat. Damn I just wish I could be a kid again and worry about when a was getting out of school and going outside to play.
January 21st, 2008 at 7:46 pm
So much for the Canada’s fifth estate.
Another baby step towards facism.
January 21st, 2008 at 8:24 pm
God. No one should have Nukes. too fucking unpredictable.
January 22nd, 2008 at 8:27 am
agreed…nuclear weaponos of any sort should be banned world wide by the UN….there is really no need for them.
January 22nd, 2008 at 11:13 am
There’s much more at work here than any of us are aware of or can predict. Something far greater is lying underneath the surface.