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  • Cracking the Case: An Interview With Sibel Edmonds

    AntiWar.com, CA
    Aug 22 2005

    http://www.antiwar.com/orig/horton.php?artic leid=7032


    Cracking the Case: An Interview With Sibel Edmonds

    by Scott Horton

    "Scott Horton: [P]erhaps your case is tied in with the AIPAC spy
    scandal?

    "Sibel Edmonds: Absolutely. And I cannot go into any details. ... But
    even the AIPAC spy scandal, as far as I'm reading today, is just
    touching the surface of it. It's going only to a certain degree. It
    doesn't go high enough, in what it involves and how far it goes, and
    that's as far, and the best - as far as I can explain."
    [Listen to Scott's interview with Sibel Edmonds]

    The following is the transcript of my Aug. 13 interview with the
    courageous FBI linguist/whistleblower Sibel Edmonds. What connection
    does Sibel Edmonds' story have to the prosecution of Larry Franklin,
    Steve Rosen, and Keith Weissman of the Pentagon/AIPAC spy scandal?
    And for that matter, to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001? The
    answer has something to do with international drug, weapon, and
    money-laundering rings, and their ties to terrorists and unnamed
    officials of the Departments of State and Defense. This mess also
    goes back to at least 1997. Sibel says that when the truth comes out,
    it will make the AIPAC case look "lame" by comparison. Who are the
    State Department officials 1 and 2 and the Defense Department
    officials 1 and 2 referred to in the AIPAC indictments[1][2]? Are
    they the same unnamed officials in the new Vanity Fair piece about
    Edmonds? Are these the same neocons who hired Iranian spy Ahmed
    Chalabi, lied us into war with Iraq, drew up the occupation plans,
    and leaked the name of Valerie Plame to the press? Is the quashed
    federal investigation out of Chicago into corruption on the part of
    high-level members of both parties, referred to in the article as
    "the reason" Sibel was gagged by John Ashcroft, related to the
    investigation of terrorist financing by former agent Robert Wright?
    What does Patrick "Bulldog" Fitzgerald know about it? Which countries
    involved in the international heroin market are the subject of such
    "sensitive diplomatic relations" that their involvement in 9/11
    should not be known to the people of the United States? Uzbekistan?
    Tajikistan? Kyrgyzstan? Pakistan? Kosovo?

    The recent stories about the Army's "Able Danger" program having
    identified Mohammed Atta as the leader of a terrorist cell in New
    York a year before 9/11, coupled with Sibel Edmonds' statements in
    her own case and her reference to 25 other sworn and proven instances
    of precise knowledge of an impending attack that were omitted from
    the 9/11 commission report, ought to be enough to reopen the 9/11
    case entirely.

    All of the congressmen and senators who have heard her story, and
    Glenn Fine, the head of the Department of Justice's Office of
    Inspector General, agree: Sibel is telling the truth - not that
    they'll do anything about it.

    Forget the cops, they're the criminals. The case has been filed with
    the Supreme Court, but we can't count on them. It's time to call our
    congressmen and demand public hearings into these questions
    immediately. Or are they in on it too?

    Sibel Edmonds has not given up, but she needs your help. Raise hell
    with Congress and sign her petition.

    To listen to the most recent interview, stream or download mp3.
    Read the recent Vanity Fair article "An Inconvenient Patriot."
    Check out Sibel Edmonds' Web site: justacitizen.com
    Read her Antiwar.com archives here.
    Find my previous interview of her here.
    See Christopher Deliso's excellent interviews of her here and here.

    Transcript


    Scott Horton: Welcome back to the Weekend Interview Show, Sibel.

    Sibel Edmonds: Thank you, Scott. Thank you for inviting me back on
    your show.

    SH: It's very nice to talk with you again. It's kind of fun to
    question around the state-secrets privilege.

    SE: Yeah, we'll try to have fun with that part.

    SH: Tell us, first of all, we know you were a contract linguist for
    the FBI, which languages were you a specialist in?

    SE: First of all, let me tell you that according to the Department of
    Justice, all the languages that I speak are considered "top secret
    classified" in the state secrets case, which is ridiculous. That
    means that even my resume is considered a top secret document. You
    can go and find it at all the Web sites that cite my languages. I
    speak Turkish, Farsi, this is the language spoken in Iran - the
    Persian language, and Azerbaijani.

    SH: For what length of time did you work for the FBI?

    SE: I worked for the bureau for a little bit longer than six months -
    six and a half months.

    SH: And that was from pretty much right after Sept. 11th, through...

    SE: Three days after Sept. 11th until March 22nd, 2002.

    SH: We know already there were problems with some of your colleagues
    in the translation department which we will discuss in more detail
    later. Now the big story, why I brought you back on the show, is that
    finally a reporter has come from across the ocean to dig into this
    story. And it seems he's unearthed quite a bit from others in
    government who have had a chance to hear your whole story behind
    closed doors.

    SE: I'm so glad you pointed out the fact that David Rose came from
    England and spent four or five months on this story, while for three
    - three and a half years nobody here, at least from the main press,
    has bothered to do so. And David worked diligently on this story and
    interviewed many officials in the FBI and from the Congress and
    basically put out this 11 page story. I'm very thankful to David and
    to Vanity Fair to a degree.

    SH: It seems from this article that the reason he was so successful
    in being able to dig up all these the facts is that from the very
    beginning you have gone through all the proper channels, you told
    your story to all the people who should have had it told to them. So
    basically what David Rose did was follow you around and got anonymous
    leaks from the people you have been allowed to tell your story to in
    secret, right?

    SE: See, this is why I love interviews with you Scott because you are
    right on the facts. Great. You are absolutely correct, because I
    testified several times before various representatives and senators
    in the summer of 2002, and gave them my testimony and as you know,
    two senators, Grassley and Senator Leahy. They came out three years
    ago, publicly they said the FBI, during their meetings with the
    Senate confirmed all my allegations and denied none - and in fact
    Senator Grassley said "she is very credible" because even the FBI
    management have corroborated all her stories and all her reports. And
    he pointed out that he was going to turn the department upside down
    and get to the bottom of this issue and here, three years later
    nobody has even touched it.

    I have several gag orders. In fact, based on the research that my
    attorneys, the ACLU, has conducted, I am the most gagged person in
    United States history, believe me or not - someone who worked for six
    months as a language specialist at the FBI. As you know, they gagged
    the Congress in May 2004. The Department of Justice issued a gag
    order, and ordered the senators to pull off everything from their Web
    sites, and not to comment on anything that has to do with my case.
    The inspector general's report was gagged and completely classified.
    They issued the state-secrets privilege for the second time when the
    9/11 family members attorneys subpoenaed my deposition, they came out
    and invoked this gag order. So there has been so many gag orders, and
    some of it so ridiculous that basically they are gagging even my
    existence. And as you pointed out, I've provided this information to
    the Congress, to the 9/11 commission - all tape-recorded - to the
    inspector general's office, and the Department of Justice. If today
    you were to call the Congress and ask them, they would say it's under
    investigation; well it's been for three and a half years. How can it
    be under investigation for three and a half years, with all these gag
    orders, and we have not gotten to the bottom of this thing, and these
    criminals have not faced prosecution in this country?

    SH What sort of criminal investigation should we expect from the FBI
    on this matter when they are the ones to be investigated?

    SE: That's exactly the problem. If you're in some company or in other
    places and you come across these criminal activities, who would you
    report it to? You would report it to the Department of Justice and
    the FBI. But what happens when you come across these criminal
    activities - and find out through the Department of Justice and the
    FBI and the fact they are blocking it from being investigated, then
    who do you go to? I have been asking this question, and that's why I
    started this court case three years ago (which is being gagged and
    stopped - they are fighting it ferociously) is so that maybe through
    the court system, we can subpoena witnesses and bring out these
    documents so I can give them to the American public and say "here are
    these documents."

    SH: You have three branches of government to choose from. Obviously,
    your problem is with the executive branch in the first place. Now,
    you say that Congress has promised they would come to bat for you -
    Senators Grassley and Leahy - and they never did, all you have left
    is the courts. Have you had any success with the courts at all?

    SE: No. To this day, they are not even allowing us any hearings. They
    go in private, and have these private, secret conferences with the
    judges, and then the judges come out and say, "OK, you cannot have
    any hearing." So, we filed with the Supreme Court last week, and by
    mid-October we will know whether or not the Supreme Court is going to
    accept the case, and question the legality of these gag orders. It's
    unconstitutional for the government to come and say, "we don't even
    have to present you with any reasons why we are issuing gag orders
    because the reasons themselves are classified." This is so
    Kafkaesque, Scott.

    SH: It's interesting that the state-secrets privilege actually
    doesn't exist. There's no law that has ever been passed by Congress
    that even says such a thing. Wasn't it the Supreme Court that made up
    the state-secrets privilege in the first place?

    SE: Yes, it's based on common law, and in fact, most judges don't
    even know how it is applied, and therefore that is another challenge
    we are bringing about: for the Supreme Court to look into this and
    say this is time for us to clarify just what the hell is this
    state-secrets privilege. If you were to go ask many attorneys in this
    country, they would tell you that, "Hey, I didn't know that the
    United States had any official secrets act," and they act surprised
    because even most attorneys don't know that we have this arcane
    draconian common law that is being exercised to gag people and rid
    them of their First Amendment rights.

    SH: Sibel, let's see if we can figure out why they [the government]
    are going to such lengths to keep you quiet. Can you tell me, what is
    the American Turkish Council - let me rephrase that, can you tell me
    what the American Turkish Council is?

    SE: Well sure, it's on the Web site. They are this lobbying
    organization for Turkish business and relationship between U.S. and
    Turkey. It's exactly like AIPAC

    SH: Oh good, exactly like AIPAC!

    SE: Exactly. In fact, they have so many crossovers, if you look at
    their members you will see many that are members of both
    organizations. And if you look at the people who are in the
    management and are in charge of these lobbying groups, you come
    across the same names, which is very interesting.

    SH: That is very interesting. In fact, my next guest after you will
    be Bob Dreyfuss about the AIPAC spy scandal and something that
    occurred to me last night as I read the Vanity Fair piece An
    Inconvenient Patriot about you, was that some of the things I read
    about in there, and we'll try to get to some of this a little bit
    later, were about "unnamed Department of State and Department of
    Defense employees," which made me wonder whether perhaps your case is
    tied in with the AIPAC spy scandal case in any way.

    SE: Absolutely. And I cannot go into any details - and maybe some
    other investigative journalist from across the ocean will come here
    and do the rest of this article - as article part two. But even the
    AIPAC spy scandal, as far as I'm reading today, is just touching the
    surface of it. It's going only to a certain degree. It doesn't go
    high enough, in what it involves and how far it goes, and that's as
    far, and the best - as far as I can explain.

    SH: Thank you very much for that, and we'll see what we can make of
    it. Can I ask you how you first learned of the American Turkish
    Council?

    SE: Oh, no, you can't.

    SH: That's classified. Well, according to this article, which is
    written everybody by David Rose, it's in the current issue of Vanity
    Fair magazine. It's called "An Inconvenient Patriot." And I'm going
    to go ahead, because the states-secrets privilege has not been
    invoked against me so far - I don't think. David Rose says in this
    article - he basically talked to the congressional staffers who have
    debriefed you. And what they say, is while you were translating
    intercepts for the FBI you overheard American Turkish Council
    employees discussing criminal activity among both Republicans and
    Democrats, and even including the Speaker of the House of
    Representatives Dennis Hastert. Can you cough or sneeze or blink
    twice or anything for me?

    SE: All I can tell you is that the sources that David Rose
    interviewed - they were the people that were present during the
    investigation of the Congress and their meetings with the FBI, so I
    am sure that it was not based on hearsay that they made these
    comments. I am sure that they based it on the wiretap recordings they
    heard and the documents. So they didn't just come and say this is
    what it was without having all those documents and files from the FBI
    to go over, and I guess their statements were based on the evidence
    that was presented to them both by the inspector general's office -
    Glenn Fine briefed the Congress - because as you know the IG report
    was classified, but they briefed the Congress. So I guess they relied
    on the documents from the inspector general's office and the FBI to
    make those statements. I guess that was the case.

    SH: So this just doesn't come from you but from the official
    investigations of your accusations as well?

    SE: That's what I would assume because if these are Congressional
    sources who were in these investigations, and also David Rose spoke
    with certain FBI officials who were part of these files and case
    investigations within the FBI - they would not make comments on what
    they think it is but they would provide facts, that is my assumption.
    Otherwise, Vanity Fair would not print it.

    SH: The article quotes one unnamed official as saying, "This is the
    reason why Ashcroft reacted to Sibel in such an extreme fashion. It
    was to keep this from coming out."

    SE: Uh, when you say "this," I don't know. If you go to my CBS 60
    Minutes transcript of October 2002 - even though they chose to
    broadcast mostly the administrative problems and issues - I had one
    statement there that said that this involved people, officials,
    well-recognized names in the Department of State, Department of
    Defense, and certain elected officials. So I believe the source is
    also quoted somewhere else talking about the fact that in the late
    '90s they were going to have a special prosecutor to uncover these
    criminal activities and corruption, including the politicians - this
    is in the article. But later, after the administration changed, they
    decided to cool it and not do anything with it, so they stopped the
    investigation and they went against the initial decision of having a
    special prosecutor trying and indicting these criminals in the
    Department of State, the Department of Defense, and the Congress.

    SH: Okay, before we get too far ahead of ourselves in terms of what
    was learned in those wiretaps about Dennis Hastert and other
    Republicans and Democrats involved with the American Turkish Council,
    let's go back and discuss - as much as you can say without going to
    prison - the role of Melek Can Dickerson in the intercept office
    where you worked at the FBI.

    SE: As far as Dickerson goes, I would like to point out to one fact
    that hasn't really been talked about. In September 2002, there were 3
    active investigations on Dickerson: one by the Air Force Office of
    Special Investigation, one the Department of Justice, and the third
    by the Senate Judiciary Committee, and in September 2002, while these
    three active investigations were taking place, the Dickersons left
    the country. They left their house, their car, and they fled the
    country and they were allowed to leave the country and they haven't
    come back. It's been three years, and they haven't come back.

    SH: And it's even worse than that. Because Douglas Dickerson
    continued to be employed by the U.S. military. Didn't he have a job
    at NATO or something?

    SE: Correct. And with access, unlimited access, because of his
    clearance, to the nuclear secrets of the United States.

    SH: Well, let's get back to why that ought to concern anybody. Who is
    this guy Douglas Dickerson, and what do you ever have against him?

    SE: As far as I know, Douglas Dickerson was stationed in Turkey
    between 1992 and 1997. During those years he came under certain... some
    investigation - but I don't know much about that investigation - that
    focused on certain bribery he accepted, and I don't know by whom and
    I don't have any details on that. And then he came to U.S., and even
    though he had this access and clearance, he was in touch with certain
    organizations - and that's plural again - and some of these
    organizations I would call "semi-legit." And while his wife worked
    for... this article in Vanity Fair says she worked for two years for
    American Turkish Council, but for the same two years she was also
    working for this organization called the ATA, American Turkish
    Association, and again that information is public. So she was working
    for these two organizations, and ATC has a lot of sub-organizations
    like ATA, ATAA with chapters all over the United States. They have
    hundreds of chapters. They have it in various states and several in
    certain states.

    SH: And this woman, Melek Can, when she came and got her job working
    at the FBI - it says in this article that on two different official
    pieces of paperwork, she neglected to mention the fact that she had
    worked for the American Turkish Council, who, it turns out were - at
    least partly - the targets of the intercepts that she was overhearing
    and reporting on.

    SE: Well, I cannot talk about the targets, however, that's correct.
    Melek Can Dickerson, in her application, did not disclose. In order
    to get the top secret clearance you have to disclose everywhere you
    have worked, every organization you have been a member of, and she
    had left every single one of those empty, blank, as if she had never
    worked a day in her life, never been a member of any organizations.
    Then after I reported these issues in 2002, within the FBI, they
    opened one investigation, and during the questioning, she was still
    telling them that no, she had never worked anywhere else, and that
    this was her first job that she had held, and had never worked for
    any foreign organization or lobbying firm, that she had not been a
    member of any organization. So, yes, that's correct.

    SH: Interesting. So we have this "semi-legit" organization, the
    American Turkish Council, and this woman who worked for them for
    years comes and gets a job at the FBI helping with the translations.
    And now, I'm pretty sure you're not allowed to talk about this, but
    the VF article goes into pretty astounding detail as to how she said,
    "You know, what we ought to do? Instead of dividing up the intercepts
    randomly, I ought to get all the important ones and you ought to
    overhear all the stuff that doesn't matter," and then, according to
    this Vanity Fair article, your common boss, Mike Feghali took her
    side.

    SE: Correct. There is much more on Mike Feghali, and he himself, is,
    or was, was under investigation both by the inspector general's
    office and the Congress because his case goes even beyond Dickerson,
    which is very interesting, and he is still there in charge of Arabic
    translation, a division of the FBI Washington field office.

    SH: Now Sibel, you had a different boss at the FBI, I guess the guy
    who was the customer of your information, a guy named David Saccer.


    SE: Dennis Saccer.

    SH: Oh, Dennis, my mistake. Now, who exactly was he, and I guess in
    this article it says that he sort of took your side against Mike
    Feghali and Melek Can Dickerson, right?

    SE: Correct. In the FBI, at least for the language division, you
    basically have two supervisors, one would be the administrative
    supervisor, who actually has no control or supervision over your
    actual work or investigation. They just take care of your hours and
    your schedule, etc. - which was Mike Feghali. He was not an agent.
    Then the agent who was in charge of the main department of language
    that I was working for - because I did work for several language
    departments, Farsi, Turkish, and Azerbaijani, but for the Turkish
    division it was Dennis Saccer - special agent Saccer.

    SH: Okay now, he expressed concern to you, according to this article,
    that perhaps there was some espionage going on there on the part of
    Melek Can Dickerson. I'm curious, was that before or after Melek Can
    and her husband had come to your house and tried to recruit you and
    your husband?

    SE: It was around the same time, and in fact, before I even found out
    about it he was reporting it to the FBI headquarters, and his boss,
    the supervisory special agent about suspicious activities by
    Dickerson in terms of certain wiretap information that was being
    lost, and documents that she was forging signatures on and various
    other cases that he had come across and this was even before I
    started reporting these issues to the FBI management.

    SH: Well, and then when he found out about the new arrangement where
    Melek Can Dickerson was assigned all of the important stuff, and you
    were assigned all of the unimportant stuff, he had you go back and
    retranslate and take a look at some of the things that she had marked
    "not pertinent" right?

    SE: Correct. He asked me and another language specialist to go over
    all those pieces of communication that were stamped "not pertinent to
    be translated" by Dickerson, - and some of them were really long
    conversations pieces - but to go back and translate them, and find
    out whether or not the information there was pertinent.

    SH: And did you find that she had mostly been correct in marking
    things "not pertinent"?

    SE: No, just the opposite. Just through our first batch, the first 10
    or 12 communications that had been blocked we came across extremely
    important, pertinent - information that had to do with illegal
    activities between certain foreign elements and certain agencies in
    the United States.

    SH: And for reporting all of this to your superiors, you are the one
    who was punished.

    SE: Initially, actually, they wanted to give me a raise and a
    promotion. In return, they asked me to just leave it alone and not
    report it further up to the headquarters. And that's how it worked
    within the FBI's language division. There were things like that
    happening all the time. After I insisted that this needed to be
    investigated and went higher up, they started threatening me and
    retaliating against me. They busted into my home and confiscated my
    home computer - my husband's home computer - and they forced me to
    take a polygraph, and then later they fired me.

    SH: Also it says in the Vanity Fair article that Melek Can Dickerson
    actually threatened you.

    SE: Correct, that occurred in January 2002.

    SH: If I remember correctly the quote was something to the effect of
    "Why are you doing this? You could be putting your family back in
    Turkey in danger."

    SE: That's correct.

    SH: Did anything ever come of this threat?

    SE: Well yes... I really don't feel like going through that, because
    that is really hard for me to speak about because my family's life
    has changed. They had to come to the U.S. They had to apply for
    political asylum, in fact, the Congress helped them to apply for
    political asylum based on documents they received from Turkey that
    had various threats in it. But that is not the point I want to make
    as far as the country goes, and that's why I usually tell people that
    I don't think the issue here is about whistleblowing, being fired,
    being wronged - that is not the most important issue here. The most
    important issue is: What were these criminal activities, and why
    instead of pursuing these our government chooses to cover it up and
    actually issue classification and gag orders so the American public
    will not know about what is going on within these agencies within
    their government - and even within the Congress? That is my focus
    point, and I have been trying - it is what I have written and have
    said in my interviews - to steer away from the fact that yes, I was
    fired, yes I was wronged, and they retaliated against me, and how
    they ruined my life - which is all true. But this is not where I want
    to focus, and this is not where I want the country to focus, this is
    not where I want the Congress to focus. I'm not saying, "Look, they
    did wrong to me, and this is not fair." I'm saying, "I came forward
    because criminal activities are taking place - have been taking place
    - some of them since 1997." Some of these activities are 100 percent
    related to the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the United States, and they
    are giving this illusion that they are pursuing these cases, but they
    are not. If the case touches upon certain countries or certain high
    level people, certain sensitive relations, then they don't. But, on
    the other hand, they go and talk about lower-level criminal activity
    that boils down to people like Atta and Hamdi.

    SH: So let's get into some of that criminal activity then. The
    semi-legit organization that I think you are most often referring to
    is the American Turkish Council, which is headed by Brent Scowcroft,
    a former national security adviser of the United States, and is
    packed with the leaders of Raytheon, Motorola, Boeing, Lockheed,
    Martin Marietta, and some of the most powerful company names in the
    military-industrial complex.

    SE: Correct.

    SH: Is the ATC just one of many semi-legitimate organizations that
    you are referring to, or is most of this story focused on the ATC
    itself?

    SE: There are many.

    SH: And many organizations that you actually were overhearing?

    SE: I cannot talk to you about what I was overhearing, but as I have
    pointed out there are several organizations.

    SH: Okay, and you mention when you talk about criminal activity,
    drug-running, money-laundering, weapons-smuggling...

    SE: And these activities overlap. It's not like okay, you have
    certain criminal entities that are involved in nuclear black market,
    and then you have certain entities bringing narcotics from the East.
    You have the same players when you look into these activities at
    high-levels you come across the same players, they are the same
    people

    SH:Well, when we're talking about those kind of levels of liquid cash
    money we probably also have to include major banks too, right?

    SE: Financial institutions, yes.

    SH: Did you learn anything that implicated Brent Scowcroft and/or the
    leadership of the ATC in this corruption?

    SE: As I said, I do not talk about this information. I do not talk
    about targets.

    SH: I understand. And David Rose did write in the Vanity Fair article
    that there wasn't anything that he knows of that you found that
    directly implicated Brent Scowcroft.

    SE: That again depends on who was the source and the particular
    information that that particular source provided, but I cannot
    confirm or not confirm it.

    SH: I see. I want to get a promise out of you that when they finally
    lift this gag order, that I get to interview you first. I have a long
    list of questions that I can't ask.

    SE: Sure. And believe me, once they lift the state-secrets privilege
    and once the court case actually begins and we have the witnesses and
    we can subpoena documents, it will be public. And it will be major.
    And it would make the AIPAC case look lame, actually.

    SH: Oh, it will make the AIPAC case look lame?

    SE: Correct.

    SH: I can't wait. Let me go ahead and share with the people some
    things I know you're not allowed to talk about but are in the Vanity
    Fair article. Now [David Rose] talked to the debriefers from the
    different agencies, the FBI, the congressional investigators and, I
    believe, also the Sept. 11 commissioners, and they shared with him
    some interesting allegations that Sibel is not allowed to talk about
    or she'll go to prison. Most importantly that Dennis Hastert, the
    speaker of the House of Representatives, at least is implicated, in
    cooperating on some very important issues with the ATC, and that one
    of the phone calls overheard was that one of the ATC officials
    bragging that they bought the Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert for
    $500,000, they gave him half a million in order to change his vote on
    an Armenian genocide resolution. I think we all know the genocide
    against the Armenians by the Turks in the 19-teens, and various
    states around the world have passed resolutions condemning that, and
    the Americans were about to pass a resolution - in fact, there's a
    pretty substantial Armenian population in California and the press
    all the time that this was happening pointed out that it was pretty
    obvious that Dennis Hastert was pushing this condemnation of Turkey
    for the genocide of the Armenians was in order to help some
    Republicans in California get reelected. But then, at the last minute
    he changed his mind and withdrew the resolution - right as a major
    helicopter deal was going through - this resolution that would have
    made Turkey look really bad. And according to David Rose in Vanity
    Fair, Dennis Hastert got paid $500,000 to change his position on
    that. Am I going off the story anywhere Sibel? Can you comment either
    way?

    SE: No, but as I said, the reason I went to the Congress and to the
    9/11 Commission had to do with criminal activities and the criminal
    activities I provided information on had a lot to do with 9/11. And
    it's very interesting for example this latest development with the
    9/11 Commission and this information from the Department of Defense
    that had to do with Atta, right?

    SH: Able Danger.

    SE: And the main media is treating it as if "here's one piece of
    information the 9/11 Commission didn't include." I had this press
    conference last summer and together with 25 national security
    experts. These sort of people from NSA, CIA, FBI. And we provided the
    public during this press conference with a list of witnesses that had
    provided direct information, direct information. Some had to do with
    finance of al-Qaeda. These are people from NSA, CIA, and FBI to the
    9/11 Commission, and the 9/11 Commission omitted all of this
    information, even though some of this information had been
    established as fact. One of them had to do with certain informants in
    April 2001. This informant provided very specific information about
    the attacks. The other had to do with certain information the FBI had
    in July and August 2001, where blueprints and building composites of
    certain skyscrapers were being sent to certain Middle Eastern
    countries, and many more information was just omitted. With my case
    they just said, "Refer to the inspector general's report," even
    though I had provided the commissioners with the documents and names
    of witnesses. So now today you're seeing the press talk about "Oh,
    one piece of information," which right now the Commission is denying:
    "We don't recall seeing that information." Well, I can put out 20
    other cases. These are agents who worked for agencies such as FBI,
    CIA, some of them for 20 years, some for 18 years. I have their list,
    I have their affidavits that provided documents, and they were all
    omitted. But the media is treating it as if "oh, look, this one piece
    of information was omitted" from the 9/11 Commission report.

    SH: And as you pointed [out], some of this information has been
    confirmed in the public. I know when you speak about the Iranian
    informant...

    SE: Correct.

    SH: ...who warned in April of 2001 - that was even confirmed by
    Mueller, the director of the FBI.

    SE: Absolutely there was actually an article in the Chicago Tribune
    in July 2004 saying that even Mueller expressed surprise that during
    the hearings, the commissioners didn't ask about this. And guess
    what, nobody reported all these omissions. What would happen if you
    hit them with 20 cases? And I'm talking about 20 affidavits from
    experts and veteran agents

    SH: This is all about the question of prior knowledge and who knew
    what, when before the attack.

    SE: And also what happened afterward. I started working three days
    after Sept. 11 with a lot of documents and wiretaps that I was
    translating. Some of them dated back to 1997, 1998. Even after Sept.
    11, covering up these investigations and not pursuing some of these
    investigations because the Department of State says, "You know what,
    you can't pursue this because that may deal with this particular
    country. If this country that the investigation deals with are not
    one of the Axis of Evil, we don't want to pursue them." The American
    people have the right to know this. They are giving this grand
    illusion that there are some investigations, but there are none. You
    know, they are coming down on these charities as the finance of
    al-Qaeda. Well, if you were to talk about the financing of al-Qaeda,
    a very small percentage comes from these charity foundations. The
    vast majority of their financing comes from narcotics. Look, we had 4
    to 6 percent of the narcotics coming from the East, coming from
    Pakistan, coming from Afghanistan via the Balkans to the United
    States. Today, three or four years after Sept. 11, that has reached
    over 15 percent. How is it getting here? Who are getting the
    proceedings from those big narcotics?

    SH: Perhaps the same people who make it illegal [in order] to drive
    up the price? Maybe not, I don't know. Now listen, when you talk
    about the State Department cites diplomatic ties to foreign countries
    they would prefer not be stepped on. I'm sorry, but the word "Israel"
    is just screaming inside of my head here. I guess you can't give me
    any indication "yes" or "no" if that's what you're talking about?

    SE: Well, one of the interesting things about the Vanity Fair
    article... I don't know how many people picked up on that. But they're
    saying Turkish countries. It's plural people. And to say OK, we're
    looking at this region of the world that nobody is referring to [in]
    the War Against Terror. OK, you're looking at Kyrgyzstan, and
    Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, and these are the countries that now we
    are busy establishing bases in. And a large portion of their GDP
    depends on narcotics, and there is a huge al-Qaeda presence in their
    countries. We don't hear anything about Balkan countries, and again,
    their direct ties and direct relevance to al-Qaeda. They are not even
    naming these countries. The role that Pakistan played before and the
    role that Pakistan is playing today. So, as I have said before, there
    are several countries, there are several organizations, and you can't
    just isolate one country or one organization.

    SH: I want to get to your appearance on Democracy Now! earlier in the
    week, referring to officials at the State Department, you used the
    word "treason." And I wonder whether this is specifically referring
    to the Sept. 11 attacks and whether you have information that
    indicates complicity on the part of American elites who are part of
    these semi-legit organizations that funded Sept. 11, or are we
    talking seven degrees of Kevin Bacon here?

    SE: Again, it's hard to talk about this around the gag order, but
    this is what I have been saying for the past three years, that's why
    I refer to the transcript of CBS 60 Minutes. These people who call
    themselves Americans and these people are using their position, their
    official position within these agencies - some of them in the
    Department of Defense, some of them in the Department of State - and
    yet, what they are doing with their position, with their influence is
    against the United States' national security, it's against the best
    interests of its people, and that is treason. Be it giving
    information to those that are either quasi-allies - and I would
    underline quasi, who one day will be another al-Qaeda - and who are
    already are engaged in activities that are damaging to our country,
    its security and its interests - and that is treason. So that's what
    I was referring to. And what would you call someone who, let's say if
    they were to go after Douglas Feith, and if they were to establish
    that Douglas Feith with his access to information, willingly,
    intentionally used the information he had and gave it to those that
    would one day use it or maybe right now are using that information
    against the United States. Would you call that treason?

    SH: Well, if it's an overt act to benefit an American enemy then yes,
    that's treason.

    SE: Correct, and I as I said, those lines are so blurry because there
    are certain countries that we call allies but I wouldn't call them
    allies, these people are, these countries are, quasi-allies.

    SH: Okay, I'm going to go ahead and name some people whom I suspect
    inside the State Department and the Pentagon, and I suppose you won't
    be able to answer affirmative or negative on any of these, but I'm
    very curious when I read about this kind of corruption going on in
    the State Department, I immediately think of John Bolton and David
    Wurmser. Do those names mean anything to you?

    SE: Well, first of all, I'm not going to answer that question at all,
    but also you should pay attention to the fact that some of these
    people have been there for a while, and some of these people had
    their roots in there even in the mid-1990s.

    SH: So more career officials rather than political appointees.

    SE: Or maybe a mixture of both.

    SH: Maybe a mixture of both. Thank you very much for your time Sibel.
    I sure wish they'd let you talk.

    SE: Thank you, Scott. Maybe one day.
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