The Secrets Behind ‘State Secrets’: How Turkey's Mafia-like 'Deep State' (and its Neocon Friends) Penetrated the
American Government
By Mike Mejia
French
filmmaker Mathieu Verboud is set to release a new documentary for European
television this fall, which will reveal important new insights into the case of
former FBI translator and president of the National
Security Whistleblower’s Coalition Sibel
Edmonds. Edmonds, a Turkish-American
whose wrongful termination lawsuit was suppressed by the government’s
invocation of the all-too-common
“state secrets privilege”, reported to her superiors espionage and
deliberate mistranslations on the part of fellow Turkish translator, Melek Can
Dickerson. It seems Ms. Dickerson had
relationships with targets of FBI investigation working at the Turkish Embassy
and the American Turkish
Council, a fact which meant that anything she translated was likely to be
false. However, instead of receiving a
promotion for bringing Ms. Dickerson’s’ espionage to the attention of her
bosses, Edmonds was fired after she went in frustration to the U.S.
Senate. The FBI refused to investigate
Edmonds’ claims, at least in part, because the contract linguist had discovered
quite a messy scandal: the content of
the mistranslated documents revealed that some very powerful people in the U.S.
government, including House Speaker Dennis Hastert, were connected to foreign
organized crime. Even worse, these
foreign criminals connected to the high and mighty in the U.S. were also
connected internationally, through the heroin trade and associated money laundering,
to international terrorist organizations like al Qaeda.
Okay,
take a deep breath and take a step back: it’s not a pretty picture. According to what we know so far from Sibel
Edmonds’ many interviews and from the groundbreaking story on her case from Vanity Fair, “An
Inconvenient Patriot” , Edmonds found that within the U.S. a nest of
Turkish spies, some working at the Turkish embassy, others affiliated with
namely the Assembly of Turkish American
Associations (ATAA), the American Turkish
Associations (ATA) and the
American Turkish Council (ATC), were involved in espionage, bribery,
illegal lobbying, drug trafficking and the infiltration of U.S nuclear research
labs. Separately, from
a former CIA Counterterrorism official, Phillip Giraldi, who himself was
once based in Turkey, we know that some arms sales meant for Turkey and Israel
were actually meant for resale to countries like China and India- and perhaps
even to international terrorists- using fake
end-user certificates. So we have
Turkish nationals at the Embassy and NGOs stealing U.S. secrets for sale to the
highest bidder, re-selling arms meant for Turkey, bringing in drugs from
Europe, and pouring money into bribes and lobbying activities.
To
understand how these activities fit together- Americans must first understand
what Europeans call the Turkish ‘deep state’.
In 1996, a car crash in
a town called Susurluk revealed “link between politics, organized crime and the
bureaucracy” in Turkey. As it turns
out, its crippled economy in the 1990s meant Turkey had become the European
equivalent of Colombia- a state almost completely dependent on the Turkish
mafia and by extension, the Southwest Asian Heroin trade. Which is where the Turkish ‘deep state’
comes in- it becomes very difficult to determine where the ‘government’ ends
and the ‘mafia’ begins. What we do know
from Sibel Edmonds and other sources is this: Turkey’s secular establishment, including
the Turkish military and intelligence services (MIT), as well as political
parties associated with former
Prime Minister Tansu Ciller, appear to have been more connected to the
Turkish mafia than the Turkish Islamic Parties that Washington
abhors. Furthermore, it appears
from reading into some of Edmonds’ statements that the Turkish mafia was
partnered with Osama Bin Laden’s al Qaeda network in the drug trade- meaning
Turkey’s secular establishment was more connected to al Qaeda- pre/9-11- than
were the Islamists in Turkey. Which is
quite ironic, to say the least.
If
you think this story sounds too convoluted to be true, and you feel the
instinct to dismiss Edmonds’ claims, think again. Every investigation into the whistleblower’s charges- from the Senate
Judiciary Committee to the Department
of Justice’s Inspector General Report, has found that Edmonds’ story is
corroborated within the FBI, which means her translations, not those of Melek
Can Dickerson, were the correct
ones. This also means that the
aforementioned Turkish organizations, and certain Turkish diplomats, were indeed under FBI
investigation. And all this put
together means that people like
Dennis Hastert probably were- and perhaps still are- on the payroll of Turkish ‘deep state’ interests.
A recent article published in the
U.K. Guardian about the well-connected Kurdish Baybasin clan also gives
important backing to the former translator’s story. The article details how Europe’s “Pablo Escobar”, Huseyin
Baybasin, has “alleged that he had received the assistance of Turkish embassies
and consulates while moving huge consignments of drugs around Europe, and that
Turkish army officers serving with NATO in Belgium were also involved."
This information, of course, dovetails most precisely with what Sibel Edmonds
has been hinting at for over 3 years now; that targets of FBI investigations
linked with the Turkish embassy and Turkish organizations were involved in
narcotics trafficking. It is clear the
Baybasin gang and the secular factions in Turkey had a seemingly symbiotic
relationship, with the government providing the traffickers diplomatic
passports and thus free reign to travel around the world without fear of
prosecution. Also involved in the
scandalous Turkish drug running are the very notorious, Pope-killing Grey
Wolves, a fascist organization connected to human rights abuses in Turkey.
As
for who else besides Hastert might have been on the payroll of Mr. Baybasin and
friends- we turn next to the Executive Branch.
In an interview
with Chris Deliso of antiwar.com, Edmonds hinted at key roles played by
some powerful unelected officials-important Neoconservatives like Marc Grossman of
the State Department, and Richard
Perle and Douglas
Feith, formerly of the Defense Department. If we hit the rewind button and go back to a CBS
60 Minutes’ interview in October, 2002, we remember the ex-contract
linguist stated that Turkish targets of FBI investigation had spies inside the
U.S. State Department and at the Pentagon in order to “obtain the United States
military and intelligence secrets.” It
doesn’t take a genius to conclude that Grossman, Feith and Perle might have been the persons to whom she
was referring in 2002. Furthermore, the
language specialist has repeatedly stated in past interviews that investigations
into pre-9/11 terrorist financing activities were blocked “per State
Department request”, leaving open the question whether it was Mr. Grossman,
then Undersecretary of State for European Affairs, who actively hindered
investigations into the Turkey-Bin Laden link.
Perle
and Feith are an interesting case in this hidden scandal. Their consultancy, International
Advisors (IA), has done extensive work for the Republic of Turkey, though
it is questionable who is
paying the invoices. Ms. Edmonds
rhetorically asked the question of Phoenix radio personality Charles Goyette in
January 2006, “For what [were they paid]?
One could imagine, hypothetically, that passing state secrets might be
one “service” provided to the Turkish mafia/government by IA. But would Perle and Feith have gone beyond
that? Would they have introduced the
Turkish mafia types to Denny Hastert, and counseled “deep state” interests in
how to skirt U.S. campaign finance laws?
After all, the Turks were reported to have made their initial payments
from 1996-1998 through “unitemized (less than $200) contributions”, after which
they allegedly delivered suitcases of cash to the Speaker’s front door. Someone had to teach them the intricacies of
campaign finance law: was it IA? What
we do know is that Perle was a key architect of the Israeli/Turkish alliance
forged in the late 90s, and that Edmonds case also is connected to the
AIPAC spy scandal- leaving lots of room for speculation on how the rest of
the story pans out.
As messy and ugly
as this, for lack of a better phrase, “Turkish DeepState Gate” scandal appears,
the consequences of continuing to do nothing about it- of allowing the
government’s outrageous use of ‘state secrets’ to insure Dennis Hastert,
Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, Marc Grossman and others are never investigated,
could be horrific. Ms. Edmonds plans to take petitions
to the Senate Judiciary Committee in the coming months to finally force full
and open hearings on her case. She will
try to do the type of lobbying that does not involve foreign bribery or
ill-gotten gains. This will be the
simple type of petitioning guaranteed of every citizen in the Constitution
under the First Amendment, a long forgotten portion of the Bill of Rights. Americans aware of the situation can only
hope, and do everything in their power to insure, that Ms. Edmonds’ type of
lobbying prevails.
Mike
Mejia is a freelance writer with a Master’s in International Policy Studies
from the Monterey Institute of International Studies, where he specialized in
International Trade and Arms Proliferation.
He currently resides in an undisclosed location in the American
Heartland and can be contacted at lenlarga@yahoo.com
.