Edmonds claims in the Times that even as she was providing evidence of
moles within the US State Department, the Pentagon, and the nuclear
weapons establishment, who were providing nuclear secrets for cash,
through Turkey, to Pakistan's intelligence agency, the Inter-Services
Intelligence, or ISI, agencies within the Bush administration were
actively working to block investigation and to shield those who were
committing the acts of treason.
Pakistan's ISI is known to have had, and to still maintain close
contacts with Al-Qaeda. Indeed, the Times notes that Pakistan's nuclear
god-father, General Mahmoud Ahmad, was accused of sanctioning a
$100,000 wire payment to Mohammed Atta, one of the 9/11 hijackers,
immediately before the attacks.
Edmonds claims, in the Times article, that following the 9-11 attacks,
FBI investigators took a number of Turkish and Pakistani operatives
into custody for questioning about foreknowledge of the attacks, but
that a high-ranking US State Department official repeatedly acted to
spirit them out of the country.
Edmonds was fired from her FBI translating job in 2002 after she
accused a colleague of having illicit contact with Turkish officials.
She has claimed that she was fired for being outspoken, and in 2005 her
position was reportedly vindicated by the Office of Inspector General
of the FBI, which concluded that she had been sacked for making valid
complaints.
One of those whom Edmonds claims in the Times report was being
investigated in connection with the nuclear information transfers was
Pentagon analyst Lawrence Franklin. Franklin was convicted and jailed
in 2006 for passing US defense information to American Israel Public
Affairs Committee lobbyists and sharing classified information with an
Israeli diplomat. Franklin, in 2001, was part of the Pentagon Office of
Special Plans, a kind of shadow intelligence unit set up by the Bush
administration inside the Pentagon whose job it was to gin up "evidence" to justify a war against Iraq. In that capacity, he (along
with several other OSP members and arch neocon schemer Michael Ledeen)
was also identified by Italian investigative journalists working for
the newspaper La Republican, as having been at a crucial meeting in
December 2001 in Rome with the Italian defense and intelligence service
ministers. La Republicca reports that at that meeting a plan was
hatched to fob off forged Niger embassy documents as evidence that
Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein was trying to buy uranium ore from Niger.
If Edmonds' story is correct, and Al-Qaeda, with the aid of Turkish
government agents and Pakistani intelligence, with the help of US
government officials, has been attempting to obtain nuclear materials
and nuclear information from the U.S., it casts an even darker shadow
over the mysterious and still unexplained incident last August 30, when
a B-52 Stratofortress, based at the Minot strategic air base in Minot,
ND, against all rules and regulations of 40 years' standing, loaded and
flew off with six unrecorded and unaccounted for nuclear-tipped cruise
missiles.
That incident only came to public attention because three as yet
unidentified Air Force whistleblowers contacted a reporter at the
Military Times newspaper, which ran a series of stories about it, some
of which were picked up by other US news organizations.
An Air Force investigation into that incident, ordered by Defense
Secretary Robert Gates, claimed improbably that the whole thing had
been an ³accident,² but many veterans of the US Air Force and Navy with
experience in handling nuclear weapons say that such an explanation is
impossible, and argue that there had to have been a chain or orders
from above the level of the base commander for such a flight to have
occurred.
Incredibly, almost five months after that bizarre incident (which
included several as yet unexplained deaths of B-52 pilots and base
personnel occurring in the weeks shortly before and after the flight),
in which six 150-kiloton warheads went missing for 36 hours, there has
been no Congressional investigation and no FBI investigation into what
happened.
Yet in view of Edmonds' story to the London Times, alleging that there
has been an ongoing, active effort for some years by both Al Qaeda and
by agents of two US allies, Turkey and Pakistan, to get US nuclear
weapons secrets and even weapons, and that there are treasonous moles
at work within the American government and nuclear bureaucracy aiding
and abetting those efforts, surely at a minimum, a major public inquiry
is called for.
Meanwhile, there is enough in just this one London Times story to keep
an army of investigative reporters busy for years. So why, one has to
ask, is this story appearing in a highly respected British newspaper,
but not anywhere in the corporate US media?
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based investigative journalist and
columnist. His latest book, co-authored by Barbara Olshansky, is "The
Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006 and now available in
paperback). His work is available at
www.thiscantbehappening.net