Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey's Con Game: US Officials On The Take, FBI Provides Cover

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey's Con Game: US Officials On The Take, FBI Provides Cover

    TURKEY'S CON GAME: US OFFICIALS ON THE TAKE, FBI PROVIDES COVER
    By John Stanton - Online Journal Contributing Writer

    Online Journal, FL
    April 6 2007

    "Turkey is not as politically stable or as secular domestically
    as they would have you believe," said one long time observer of
    US-Turkish relations in Washington, DC. "The Turks do not have a
    large community across the United States like, say, the Armenians
    and the Greeks who have been here a long time. Because of this you
    see a very large Turkish presence inside Washington, DC."

    Lacking a legitimate national grassroots organization, Turkey has
    built a notable presence inside the corridors of power in Washington,
    by spreading cash around and buying direct access to key US decision
    makers in and out of the US government. It all seems legitimate
    enough: campaign donations and junkets for members & staff of the
    US Congress (FMOCs); consulting fees to former FMOCs, US military
    generals, US State Department employees; and promises of billions
    of dollars in contracts to US corporate representatives operating
    in Washington. With so much money chasing politicians, consultants
    and contractors of all stripes, there's bound to be some corrupt and
    even criminal activity. No seasoned observer of politics anywhere is
    completely surprised at the occasional and well-timed conviction of
    a white collar criminal.

    But Sibel Edmonds' seems to have stumbled into the really big white
    collar crime ring that ties an old George Bush I family friend,
    Brent Scowcroft -- and his American Turkish Council--in with former
    US Ambassador to Turkey Marc Grossman; members of the Turkish Caucus
    in the US Congress; Douglas Feith, (once had his security clearance
    revoked and was rumored to be watched by the FBI) who once greased arms
    sales to Turkey back in the 1990s, is a famed Zionist, formerly of the
    Pentagon and now at Georgetown University in Washington, DC; the Bob
    Livingston Group (Livingston a FMOC), who has gotten very wealthy via
    Turkish business; and Joe Ralston the former USAF general whose bank
    account has blossomed after joining Lockheed Martin and being put on
    the Turkish payroll as a counter-Kurdish insurgency expert. Finally,
    former Speaker of the US House Dennis Hastert seems a natural part of
    the ring, whose claim to fame may become that he kept debate on the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution off the House floor during his tenure
    and was the subject of a Vanity Fair piece.

    Many of us have written on Ms Edmonds' case and after so many
    years find it infuriating that the FBI continues to shut her up
    behind a State Secret Privilege holding. Taking recent events at the
    Department of Justice as guides, it is probably safe to say that Ms
    Edmonds' is being silenced because of some sort of State Embarrassment
    Privilege. The Department of Justice, of which the FBI is a subsidiary,
    is seeing its credibility quotient crushed under the weight of Attorney
    General Albert Gonzales' arrogance and the adolescent antics of his
    staff. Meanwhile at the FBI, Director Mueller is under fire for the
    antics of his staff and its abuse of USAPATRIOT Act provisions to
    catch common criminals, not "terrorists."

    A few thoughts come to mind here. First, the FBI apparently was
    illegally monitoring subjects associated, somehow, with the Edmonds'
    matter and, perhaps, saving a savory scandal for the right time. J
    Edgar Hoover, former FBI director, was skilled at that sort of
    subterfuge. If the illegal monitoring allegation is true, that's
    another damaging blow to the Justice Department and the US justice
    system.

    Second, Ms Edmonds must have stumbled upon the payola racket that
    Turkey had been running and there were so many big US names involved
    in so many high places that to air that laundry would damage US
    credibility not so much abroad, as right here in the USA. Imagine on
    one news day FMOCs, active members of the US Congress, US military
    personnel, US State Department people, US Justice Department folks
    all get nailed for being in on the Turkish gig or at least knowing
    about it. And what could be worse than the FBI, DEA and CIA knowing
    about it? Foreign intelligence agencies, of course.

    Third, if it is true that Turkey is not as secular or as politically
    stable as its proponents in Washington and Ankara say, then the whole
    Turkey-as-US strategic partner and would-be European Union partner
    would be one of the better smoke and mirrors acts sold to the US
    public, and the world, in recent memory.

    The reality is that Turkey remains a distant and unknown entity for
    most Americans, although if Ms Edmonds were allowed to speak freely
    it may become a well-known country. It's a product that is difficult
    to sell to citizens here in the USA as a strategic necessity, as a
    wonderful vacationland, or as a dynamic society full of business
    opportunity. The harsher side to the story is that Turkey has
    threatened to invade Northern Iraq/Kurdistan should it declare its
    independence, or if an upcoming referendum on oil-rich Kirkuk goes the
    Kurds' way; the Turks brutally repress their Kurdish population; free
    speech and tolerance of government critiques are in short supply; and,
    in reality, the Turkish military holds the keys to power in Ankara.

    Lastly, according to the observer of US-Turkish relations, "It seems
    to me that the government in Ankara, Turkey, is always working on
    propaganda, on slogans. Trying too hard. If you visit Turkey, you'll
    notice everywhere you go that there is a picture of Turkey's founder
    Attaturk. It reminds me sort of like Soviet times where you'd see a
    picture of Lenin everywhere. The Turks spend too much time worrying
    about petty resolutions like those recognizing the Armenian Genocide."

    John Stanton is a Virginia based writer specializing in political
    and national security matters. Reach him at [email protected].

    http://onlinejournal.com/art man/publish/article_1936.shtml
Working...
X