by The American Conservative

November 1, 2009
Sibel Edmonds has a story to tell. She went to work as a
Turkish and Farsi translator for the FBI five days after 9/11. Part of
her job was to translate and transcribe recordings of conversations
between suspected Turkish intelligence agents and their American
contacts. She was fired from the FBI in April 2002 after she raised
concerns that one of the translators in her section was a member of a
Turkish organization that was under investigation for bribing senior
government officials and members of Congress, drug trafficking, illegal
weapons sales, money laundering, and nuclear proliferation. She appealed
her termination, but was more alarmed that no effort was being made to
address the corruption that she had been monitoring.
A Department of Justice inspector general’s report
called Edmonds’s allegations “credible,” “serious,” and “warrant[ing] a
thorough and careful review by the FBI.” Ranking Senate Judiciary
Committee members Pat Leahy (D-Vt.) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) have
backed her publicly. “60 Minutes” launched an investigation of her
claims and found them believable. No one has ever disproved any of
Edmonds’s revelations, which she says can be verified by FBI
investigative files.
John Ashcroft’s Justice Department confirmed Edmonds’s
veracity in a backhanded way by twice invoking the dubious State Secrets
Privilege so she could not tell what she knows. The ACLU has called her
“the most gagged person in the history of the United States of America.”
But on Aug. 8, she was finally able to testify under
oath in a court case filed in Ohio and agreed to an interview with The
American Conservative based on that testimony. What follows is her own
account of what some consider the most incredible tale of corruption and
influence peddling in recent times. As Sibel herself puts it, “If this
were written up as a novel, no one would believe it.”
PHILIP GIRALDI: We were very interested to learn of your
four-hour deposition in the case involving allegations that
Congresswoman Jean Schmidt accepted money from the Turkish government in
return for political favors. You provided many names and details for the
first time on the record and swore an oath confirming that the
deposition was true.
Basically, you map out a corruption scheme involving
U.S. government employees and members of Congress and agents of foreign
governments. These agents were able to obtain information that was
either used directly by those foreign governments or sold to third
parties, with the proceeds often used as bribes to breed further
corruption. Let’s start with the first government official you
identified, Marc Grossman, then the third highest-ranking official at
the State Department.
SIBEL EDMONDS: During my work with the FBI, one of the
major operational files that I was transcribing and translating started
in late 1996 and continued until 2002, when I left the Bureau. Because
the FBI had had no Turkish translators, these files were archived, but
were considered to be very important operations. As part of the
background, I was briefed about why these operations had been initiated
and who the targets were.
Grossman became a person of interest early on in the
investigative file while he was the U.S. ambassador to Turkey [1994-97],
when he became personally involved with operatives both from the Turkish
government and from suspected criminal groups. He also had suspicious
contact with a number of official and non-official Israelis. Grossman
was removed from Turkey short of tour during a scandal referred to as
“Susurluk” by the media. It involved a number of high-level criminals as
well as senior army and intelligence officers with whom he had been in
contact.
Another individual who was working for Grossman, Air
Force Major Douglas Dickerson, was also removed from Turkey and sent to
Germany. After he and his Turkish wife Can returned to the U.S., he went
to work for Douglas Feith and she was hired as an FBI Turkish
translator. My complaints about her connection to Turkish lobbying
groups led to my eventual firing.
Grossman and Dickerson had to leave the country because
a big investigation had started in Turkey. Special prosecutors were
appointed, and the case was headlined in England, Germany, Italy, and in
some of the Balkan countries because the criminal groups were found to
be active in all those places. A leading figure in the scandal, Mehmet
Eymür, led a major paramilitary group for the Turkish intelligence
service. To keep him from testifying, Eymür was sent by the Turkish
government to the United States, where he worked for eight months as
head of intelligence at the Turkish Embassy in Washington. He later
became a U.S. citizen and now lives in McLean, Virginia. The central
figure in this scandal was Abdullah Catli. In 1989, while “most wanted”
by Interpol, he came to the U.S., was granted residency, and settled in
Chicago, where he continued to conduct his operations until 1996.
GIRALDI: So Grossman at this point comes back to the
United States. He’s rewarded with the third-highest position at the
State Department, and he allegedly uses this position to do favors for
“Turkish interests”—both for the Turkish government and for possible
criminal interests. Sometimes, the two converge. The FBI is aware of his
activities and is listening to his phone calls. When someone who is
Turkish calls Grossman, the FBI monitors that individual’s phone calls,
and when the Turk calls a friend who is a Pakistani or an Egyptian or a
Saudi, they monitor all those contacts, widening the net.
EDMONDS: Correct.
GIRALDI: And Grossman received money as a result. In one
case, you said that a State Department colleague went to pick up a bag
of money…
EDMONDS: $14,000
GIRALDI: What kind of information was Grossman giving to
foreign countries? Did he give assistance to foreign individuals
penetrating U.S. government labs and defense installations as has been
reported? It’s also been reported that he was the conduit to a group of
congressmen who become, in a sense, the targets to be recruited as
“agents of influence.”
EDMONDS: Yes, that’s correct. Grossman assisted his
Turkish and Israeli contacts directly, and he also facilitated access to
members of Congress who might be inclined to help for reasons of their
own or could be bribed into cooperation. The top person obtaining
classified information was Congressman Tom Lantos. A Lantos associate,
Alan Makovsky worked very closely with Dr. Sabri Sayari in Georgetown
University, who is widely believed to be a Turkish spy. Lantos would
give Makovsky highly classified policy-related documents obtained during
defense briefings for passage to Israel because Makovsky was also
working for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).
GIRALDI: Makovsky is now working for the Washington
Institute for Near Eastern Policy, a pro-Israeli think tank.
EDMONDS: Yes. Lantos was at the time probably the most
outspoken supporter of Israel in Congress. AIPAC would take out the
information from Lantos that was relevant to Israel, and they would give
the rest of it to their Turkish associates. The Turks would go through
the leftovers, take what they wanted, and then try to sell the rest. If
there were something relevant to Pakistan, they would contact the ISI
officer at the embassy and say, “We’ve got this and this, let’s sit down
and talk.” And then they would sell it to the Pakistanis.
GIRALDI: ISI—Pakistani intelligence—has been linked to
the Pakistani nuclear proliferation program as well as to al-Qaeda and
the Taliban.
So the FBI was monitoring these connections going from a
congressman to a congressman’s assistant to a foreign individual who is
connected with intelligence to other intelligence people who are located
at different embassies in Washington. And all of this information is in
an FBI file somewhere?
EDMONDS: Two sets of FBI files, but the AIPAC-related
files and the Turkish files ended up converging in one. The FBI agents
believed that they were looking at the same operation. It didn’t start
with AIPAC originally. It started with the Israeli Embassy. The original
targets were intelligence officers under diplomatic cover in the Turkish
Embassy and the Israeli Embassy. It was those contacts that led to the
American Turkish Council and the Assembly of Turkish American
Associations and then to AIPAC fronting for the Israelis. It moved
forward from there.
GIRALDI: So the FBI was monitoring people from the
Israeli Embassy and the Turkish Embassy and one, might presume, the
Pakistani Embassy as well?
EDMONDS: They were the secondary target. They got
leftovers from the Turks and Israelis. The FBI would intercept
communications to try to identify who the diplomatic target’s
intelligence chief was, but then, in addition to that, there are
individuals there, maybe the military attaché, who had their own
contacts who were operating independently of others in the embassy.
GIRALDI: So the network starts with a person like
Grossman in the State Department providing information that enables
Turkish and Israeli intelligence officers to have access to people in
Congress, who then provide classified information that winds up in the
foreign embassies?
EDMONDS: Absolutely. And we also had Pentagon officials
doing the same thing. We were looking at Richard Perle and Douglas Feith.
They had a list of individuals in the Pentagon broken down by access to
certain types of information. Some of them would be policy related, some
of them would be weapons-technology related, some of them would be
nuclear-related. Perle and Feith would provide the names of those
Americans, officials in the Pentagon, to Grossman, together with highly
sensitive personal information: this person is a closet gay; this person
has a chronic gambling issue; this person is an alcoholic. The files on
the American targets would contain things like the size of their
mortgages or whether they were going through divorces. One Air Force
major I remember was going through a really nasty divorce and a child
custody fight. They detailed all different kinds of vulnerabilities.
GIRALDI: So they had access to their personnel files and
also their security files and were illegally accessing this kind of
information to give to foreign agents who exploited the vulnerabilities
of these people to recruit them as sources of information?
EDMONDS: Yes. Some of those individuals on the list were
also working for the RAND Corporation. RAND ended up becoming one of the
prime targets for these foreign agents.
GIRALDI: RAND does highly classified research for the
U.S. government. So they were setting up these people for recruitment as
agents or as agents of influence?
EDMONDS: Yes, and the RAND sources would be paid peanuts
compared to what the information was worth when it was sold if it was
not immediately useful for Turkey or Israel. They also had sources who
were working in some midwestern Air Force bases. The sources would
provide the information on CD’s and DVD’s. In one case, for example, a
Turkish military attaché got the disc and discovered that it was
something really important, so he offered it to the Pakistani ISI person
at the embassy, but the price was too high. Then a Turkish contact in
Chicago said he knew two Saudi businessmen in Detroit who would be very
interested in this information, and they would pay the price. So the
Turkish military attaché flew to Detroit with his assistant to make the
sale.
GIRALDI: We know Grossman was receiving money for
services.
EDMONDS: Yes. Sometimes he would give money to the
people who were working with him, identified in phone calls on a
first-name basis, whether it’s a John or a Joe. He also took care of
some other people, including his contact at the New York Times. Grossman
would brag, “We just fax to our people at the New York Times. They print
it under their names.”
GIRALDI: Did Feith and Perle receive any money that you
know of?
EDMONDS: No.
GIRALDI: So they were doing favors for other reasons.
Both Feith and Perle were lobbyists for Turkey and also were involved
with Israel on defense contracts, including some for Northrop Grumman,
which Feith represented in Israel.
EDMONDS: They had arrangements with various companies,
some of them members of the American Turkish Council. They had
arrangements with Kissinger’s group, with Northrop Grumman, with former
secretary of state James Baker’s group, and also with former national
security adviser Brent Scowcroft.
The monitoring of the Turks picked up contacts with
Feith, Wolfowitz, and Perle in the summer of 2001, four months before
9/11. They were discussing with the Turkish ambassador in Washington an
arrangement whereby the U.S. would invade Iraq and divide the country.
The UK would take the south, the rest would go to the U.S. They were
negotiating what Turkey required in exchange for allowing an attack from
Turkish soil. The Turks were very supportive, but wanted a three-part
division of Iraq to include their own occupation of the Kurdish region.
The three Defense Department officials said that would be more than they
could agree to, but they continued daily communications to the
ambassador and his defense attaché in an attempt to convince them to
help.
Meanwhile Scowcroft, who was also the chairman of the
American Turkish Council, Baker, Richard Armitage, and Grossman began
negotiating separately for a possible Turkish protectorate. Nothing was
decided, and then 9/11 took place.
Scowcroft was all for invading Iraq in 2001 and even
wrote a paper for the Pentagon explaining why the Turkish northern front
would be essential. I know Scowcroft came off as a hero to some for
saying he was against the war, but he was very much for it until his
client’s conditions were not met by the Bush administration.
GIRALDI: Armitage was deputy secretary of state at the
time Scowcroft and Baker were running their own consulting firms that
were doing business with Turkey. Grossman had just become
undersecretary, third in the State hierarchy behind Armitage.
You’ve previously alluded to efforts by Grossman, as
well as high-ranking officials at the Pentagon, to place Ph.D. students.
Can you describe that in more detail?
EDMONDS: The seeding operation started before Marc
Grossman arrived at the State Department. The Turkish agents had a
network of Turkish professors in various universities with access to
government information. Their top source was a Turkish-born professor of
nuclear physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was
useful because MIT would place a bunch of Ph.D. or graduate-level
students in various nuclear facilities like Sandia or Los Alamos, and
some of them were able to work for the Air Force. He would provide the
list of Ph.D. students who should get these positions. In some cases,
the Turkish military attaché would ask that certain students be placed
in important positions. And they were not necessarily all Turkish, but
the ones they selected had struck deals with the Turkish agents to
provide information in return for money. If for some reason they had
difficulty getting a secuity clearance, Grossman would ensure that the
State Department would arrange to clear them.
In exchange for the information that these students
would provide, they would be paid $4,000 or $5,000. And the information
that was sold to the two Saudis in Detroit went for something like
$350,000 or $400,000.
GIRALDI: This corruption wasn’t confined to the State
Department and the Pentagon—it infected Congress as well. You’ve named
people like former House Speaker Dennis Hastert, now a registered agent
of the Turkish government. In your deposition, you describe the process
of breaking foreign-originated contributions into small units, $200 or
less, so that the source didn’t have to be reported. Was this the
primary means of influencing congressmen, or did foreign agents exploit
vulnerabilities to get what they wanted using something like blackmail?
EDMONDS: In early 1997, because of the information that
the FBI was getting on the Turkish diplomatic community, the Justice
Department had already started to investigate several Republican
congressmen. The number-one congressman involved with the Turkish
community, both in terms of providing information and doing favors, was
Bob Livingston. Number-two after him was Dan Burton, and then he became
number-one until Hastert became the speaker of the House. Bill Clinton’s
attorney general, Janet Reno, was briefed on the investigations, and
since they were Republicans, she authorized that they be continued.
Well, as the FBI developed more information, Tom Lantos
was added to this list, and then they got a lot on Douglas Feith and
Richard Perle and Marc Grossman. At this point, the Justice Department
said they wanted the FBI to only focus on Congress, leaving the
executive branch people out of it. But the FBI agents involved wanted to
continue pursuing Perle and Feith because the Israeli Embassy was also
connected. Then the Monica Lewinsky scandal erupted, and everything was
placed on the back burner.
But some of the agents continued to investigate the
congressional connection. In 1999, they wiretapped the congressmen
directly. (Prior to that point they were getting all their information
secondhand through FISA, as their primary targets were foreigners.) The
questionably legal wiretap gave the perfect excuse to the Justice
Department. As soon as they found out, they refused permission to
monitor the congressmen and Grossman as primary targets. But the inquiry
was kept alive in Chicago because the FBI office there was pursuing its
own investigation. The epicenter of a lot of the foreign espionage
activity was Chicago.
GIRALDI: So the investigation stopped in Washington, but
continued in Chicago?
EDMONDS: Yes, and in 2000, another representative was
added to the list, Jan Schakowsky, the Democratic congresswoman from
Illinois. Turkish agents started gathering information on her, and they
found out that she was bisexual. So a Turkish agent struck up a
relationship with her. When Jan Schakowsky’s mother died, the Turkish
woman went to the funeral, hoping to exploit her vulnerability. They
later were intimate in Schakowsky’s townhouse, which had been set up
with recording devices and hidden cameras. They needed Schakowsky and
her husband Robert Creamer to perform certain illegal operational
facilitations for them in Illinois. They already had Hastert, the mayor,
and several other Illinois state senators involved. I don’t know if
Congresswoman Schakowsky ever was actually blackmailed or did anything
for the Turkish woman.
GIRALDI: So we have a pattern of corruption starting
with government officials providing information to foreigners and
helping them make contact with other Americans who had valuable
information. Some of these officials, like Marc Grossman, were receiving
money directly. Others were receiving business favors: Pentagon
associates like Doug Feith and Richard Perle had interests in Israel and
Turkey. The stolen information was being sold, and the money that was
being generated was used to corrupt certain congressmen to influence
policy and provide still more information—in many cases information
related to nuclear technology.
EDMONDS: As well as weapons technology, conventional
weapons technology, and Pentagon policy-related information.
EDMONDS: Okay. So these conversations, between 1997 and
2001, had to do with a Central Asia operation that involved bin Laden.
Not once did anybody use the word “al-Qaeda.” It was always “mujahideen,”
always “bin Laden” and, in fact, not “bin Laden” but “bin Ladens”
plural. There were several bin Ladens who were going on private jets to
Azerbaijan and Tajikistan. The Turkish ambassador in Azerbaijan worked
with them.
There were bin Ladens, with the help of Pakistanis or
Saudis, under our management. Marc Grossman was leading it, 100 percent,
bringing people from East Turkestan into Kyrgyzstan, from Kyrgyzstan to
Azerbaijan, from Azerbaijan some of them were being channeled to
Chechnya, some of them were being channeled to Bosnia. From Turkey, they
were putting all these bin Ladens on NATO planes. People and weapons
went one way, drugs came back.
GIRALDI: Was the U.S. government aware of this circular
deal?
EDMONDS: 100 percent. A lot of the drugs were going to
Belgium with NATO planes. After that, they went to the UK, and a lot
came to the U.S. via military planes to distribution centers in Chicago
and Paterson, New Jersey. Turkish diplomats who would never be searched
were coming with suitcases of heroin.
GIRALDI: And, of course, none of this has been
investigated. What do you think the chances are that the Obama
administration will try to end this criminal activity?
EDMONDS: Well, even during Obama’s presidential
campaign, I did not buy into his slogan of “change” being promoted by
the media and, unfortunately, by the naïve blogosphere. First of all,
Obama’s record as a senator, short as it was, spoke clearly. For all
those changes that he was promising, he had done nothing. In fact, he
had taken the opposite position, whether it was regarding the NSA’s
wiretapping or the issue of national-security whistleblowers. We
whistleblowers had written to his Senate office. He never responded,
even though he was on the relevant committees.
As soon as Obama became president, he showed us that the
State Secrets Privilege was going to continue to be a tool of choice.
It’s an arcane executive privilege to cover up wrongdoing—in many cases,
criminal activities. And the Obama administration has not only defended
using the State Secrets Privilege, it has been trying to take it even
further than the previous terrible administration by maintaining that
the U.S. government has sovereign immunity. This is Obama’s change: his
administration seems to think it doesn’t even have to invoke state
secrets as our leaders are emperors who possess this sovereign immunity.
This is not the kind of language that anybody in a democracy would use.
The other thing I noticed is how Chicago, with its
culture of political corruption, is central to the new administration.
When I saw that Obama’s choice of chief of staff was Rahm Emanuel,
knowing his relationship with Mayor Richard Daley and with the Hastert
crowd, I knew we were not going to see positive changes. Changes
possibly, but changes for the worse. It was no coincidence that the
Turkish criminal entity’s operation centered on Chicago.
_________________________________________
Sibel Edmonds is a former FBI translator and the founder of the National
Security Whistleblowers Coalition. Philip Giraldi is a former CIA
officer and The American Conservative’s Deep Background columnist.