In his farewell
address in 1796, George Washington warned that America must be constantly
vigilant against “the insidious wiles of foreign influence . . . since history
and experience prove that foreign influence is one of the most baneful foes of
republican government.”
Today, foreign
influence, that most baneful foe of our republican government, has its
tentacles entrenched in almost all major decision making and policy producing
bodies of the U.S. government machine. It does so not secretly, since its
self-serving activities are advocated and legitimized by highly positioned
parties that reap the benefits that come in the form of financial gain and
positions of power.
Foreign governments
and foreign-owned private interests have long sought to influence U.S. public
policy. Several have accomplished this goal; those who are able and willing to
pay what it takes. Those who buy themselves a few strategic middlemen, commonly
known as pimps, while in DC circles referred to as foreign registered agents
and lobbyists, who facilitate and bring about desired transactions. These
successful foreign entities have mastered the art of ‘covering all the bases’
when it comes to buying influence in Washington, DC. They have the required
recipe down pat: get yourself a few ‘Dime a Dozen Generals,’ bid high in the
‘former statesmen lobby auction,’ and put in your pocket one or two
‘ex-congressmen turned lobbyists’ who know the ropes when it comes to pocketing
a few dozen who still serve.
The most important
facet of this influence to consider is what happens when the active and
powerful foreign entities’ objectives are in direct conflict with our nation’s
objectives and its interests and security; and when this is the case, who pays
the ultimate price and how. There is no need for assumptions of hypothetical
situations to answer these questions, since throughout recent history we have
repeatedly faced the dire consequences of the hijacking of our foreign and
domestic policies by these so-called foreign agents of foreign influence.
Let’s illustrate
this with the most important recent case, the catastrophe endured by our
people; the September Eleven terrorist attacks. Let’s observe how certain
foreign interests, combined with their U.S. agents and benefactors, overrode
the interests and security of the entire nation; how thousands of victims and
their loved ones were kicked aside to serve the interests of a few; foreign
influence and its agents.
Senator Graham’s Revelation
It has been
established that two of the 9/11 hijackers had a support network in the U.S.
that included agents of the Saudi government, and that the Bush administration
and the FBI blocked a congressional investigation into that relationship.
In his book, "Intelligence
Matters," Senator Bob Graham made clear that some
details of that financial support from Saudi Arabia were in the 27 pages of the
congressional inquiry's final report that were blocked from release by the
administration, despite the pleas of leaders of both parties on the House and
Senate intelligence committees.
Here is
an excerpt from Senator Graham’s statement from the July 24, 2003,
Congressional Record on the classified 27 pages of the Congressional Joint
Inquiry into 9/11: “The most serious omission, in my view, is part 4 of the
report, which is entitled Finding, Discussion and Narrative Regarding Certain
Sensitive National Security Matters. Those 27 pages have almost been entirely
censored. . . . The declassified version of this finding tells the American
people that our investigation developed information suggesting specific sources
of foreign support for some of the September 11 hijackers while they were in
the United States. In other
words, officials of a foreign government are alleged to have aided and abetted
the terrorist attacks on our country on September 11, which took over 3,000
lives.”
In his book Graham
reveals, “Our investigators found a CIA memo dated August 2, 2002, whose author
concluded that there is incontrovertible evidence that there is support for
these terrorists within the Saudi government. On September 11, America was not
attacked by a nation-state, but we had just discovered that the attackers were
actively supported by one, and that state was our supposed friend and ally
Saudi Arabia.” He then cites another case, “We had discovered an FBI asset who
had a close relationship with two of the terrorists; a terrorist support
network that went through the Saudi Embassy; and a funding network that went
through the Saudi Royal family.”
The most explosive
revelation in Graham’s book is the following statement with regard to the
administration’s attitude on page 216: “It was as if the President’s loyalty
lay more with Saudi Arabia than with America’s safety.” Further, he states that
he asked the FBI to undertake a review of the Riggs Bank records on the
terrorists’ money trail, to look at other Saudi companies with ties to
al-Qaeda, to plan for monitoring suspect Saudi interests in the United States;
however, Graham adds: “To my knowledge, none of these investigations have been
completed . . . Nor do we know anything else about what I believe to be a
state-sponsored terrorist support network that still exists, largely undamaged,
within the United States.”
What Graham is
trying to establish in his book and previous public statements in this regard,
and doing so under state imposed ‘secrecy and classification,’ is that the
classification and cover up of those 27 pages is not about protecting ‘U.S.
national security, methods of intelligence collection, or ongoing
investigations,’ but to protect certain U.S. allies. Meaning, our government
put the interests of certain foreign nations and their U.S. beneficiaries far
above its own people and their interests. While Saudi Arabia has been
specifically pointed to by Graham, other countries involved have yet to be
identified.
In covering up
Saudi Arabia’s direct role in supporting Al Qaeda, the 9/11 Commission goes
even a few steps further than the Congress and the Executive Branch. The report
claims "there is no convincing evidence that any government financially
supported al-Qaeda before 9/11." Their report ignores all the information
provided by government officials to Congress, as well as volumes of published
reports and investigations by other nations, regarding Muslim and Arab regimes
that have supported al Qaeda. It completely disregards the terrorist lists of
the Treasury and State Departments, which have catalogued the Saudi
government's decades of support for Bin Laden and al-Qaeda.
Why in the world
would the United States government go so far to protect Saudi Arabia in the
face of what itself declares to be the biggest security threat facing our
nation and the world today?
Why is
the United States willing to set aside its own security and interests in order
to advance the interests of another state?
How can a
government that’s been intent upon using the terrorist attacks to carry out
many unjustifiable atrocities, prevent bringing to justice those who’ve been
established as being directly responsible for it?
More
importantly, how is this done in a nation that prides itself as one that
operates under governance of the people, by the people, for the people?
How did
our government bodies, those
involved in drafting and implementing our nation’s policies, evolve into this
foreign influence-peddling operation?
In order to answer
these questions one must first establish who stands to lose and who stands to
gain by protecting Saudi Arabia from being exposed and facing consequences for
its involvement in terrorist networks activities. In addition to identifying
the nations in question, we must identify the interests as well as the actors;
their agents. Let’s look at Saudi Arabia as one of the successful foreign
nations that have mastered the art of ‘covering all the bases’ when it comes to
buying and peddling influence in Washington, DC, and identify its hired
‘agents’ and ‘agents by default.’
Foreign Agents by Default
Although when it
comes to our complex diplomatic threading with Saudi Arabia the easiest answer
appears to be the ‘oil factor,’ upon further inspection the Saudi’s influence
and role extends into other areas, such as the Military Industrial Complex and
the too familiar Lobbying Games.
According to the report published by the Federation of American Scientists (FAS), Saudi Arabia is America’s top customer. Since
1990 the U.S. government, through the Pentagon’s arms export program, has
arranged for the delivery of more than $39.6 billion in foreign
military sales to Saudi Arabia, and an additional $394 million worth
of arms were delivered to the Saudi regime through the State Department’s
direct commercial sales program. Oil rich Saudi Arabia is a cash-paying customer;
a compulsive buyer of our weaponry. The list of U.S. sellers includes almost
all the major players such as Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Boeing.
The report by FAS establishes that despite the show of U.S. support
demonstrated by this astounding quantity of arms sales, Saudi Arabia’s human
rights record is extremely poor; see the U.S. State Department’s 2000 Human Rights
Report. Saudi Arabia’s position as a strategic Gulf ally has blinded
U.S. officials into approving a level and quality of arms exports that should
never have been allowed to a non-democratic country with such a poor human
rights record.
Further, there are indications of Saudi’s active role as a player in the
nuclear black-market. According to Mohammed Khilewi, first
secretary at the Saudi mission to the United Nations until July 1994, the
Saudis have sought a bomb since 1975; they sought to buy nuclear reactors from
China, supported Pakistan's nuclear program, and contributed $5 billion to
Iraq's nuclear weapons program between 1985 and 1990. While the U.S. government
vocally opposes the development or procurement of ballistic missiles by
non-allies, it has been very quiet in Saudi Arabia’s case, considering the fact
that it possesses the longest-range ballistic missiles of any developing
country.
The Military
Industrial Complex certainly seems to be a winner in having the congressional
report pertaining to the Saudi government’s role in supporting the 9/11
terrorist activities being classified. The exposure would have meant grounds
for U.S. sanctions and retributions; it would have risked the loss of billions
of dollars in revenue from its ‘top customer.’ These companies don’t even have
to officially register as foreign agents; after all, their strong loyalty and
unbreakable bond with foreign elements exists by default; it is called mutual
benefit. They are ‘Foreign Agents by Default.’
This holds true for
other parties and players involved within the MIC network; the contractors and
the investors. Let’s look at one of these famous and influential players;
another foreign agent even if only by default; a man who defended the Saudis
against a lawsuit brought by the 9/11 victims’ family members; a man who
happens to be the senior counsel for the Carlyle Group, which invests heavily
in defense companies and is the nation's 10th largest defense contractor with
ties to the Saudi Royal Family, Enron, Global Crossing, among others; James
Baker; Papa Bush’s Secretary of State. On the morning of September 11, 2001,
Baker was reportedly at a Carlyle
investor conference with members of the Bin Laden family in the Ritz Carlton in
Washington, DC, while Bush Sr. was on the payroll of the Carlyle group.
The Carlyle Group,
a Washington, DC-based private equity firm that employs numerous former
high-ranking government officials with ties to both political parties, was the
ninth largest Pentagon contractor between 1998 and 2003, an ongoing Center for Public Integrity investigation
into Department of Defense contracts found. According to this report, overall,
six private investment firms, including Carlyle, received nearly $14 billion in
Pentagon deals between 1998 and 2003. Considering the fact that Saudi Arabia is
the top buyer of the U.S. weapons industry, Carlyle’s investment and its stake,
and of course Jimmy Baker’s far reaching influence within the Pentagon and
Congress, everything seems to come together and fit perfectly to shield this
foreign interest no matter the price to be paid by the American public.
The political
action committees (PACs) of the biggest defense companies have given $14.2
million directly to federal candidates since Clinton's first presidential bid,
according to the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP).
In 1997 alone the defense industry spent $49.5 million to lobby the nation's
decision-makers.
Between 1998 and
2004, for the six-year period, Boeing Company spent more than $57 million in lobbying.
For the same period of time, Lockheed Martin poured over $55 million into lobbying
activities. Northrop Grumman exceeded both by investing $83 million in lobbying, and based
on a report issued by POGO, it contributed over $4
million to individuals and PACs.
With ‘dime a dozen’
generals on their boards of directors, numerous high-powered ex congressmen and
senators at their disposal in the ‘K Street Lobby Quarter,’ tens of millions of
dollars in campaign donations, and billions of dollars at stake, the Military
Industrial Complex surely had all the incentives to act just as foreign agents
would, and fight for their highly valued client; the Saudi Government. They
appear to have had all the reasons to ensure that the report would not see the
light of the day; no matter what the effect on the country, its security, and
its interests.
K Street Lobby
Quarter
The fact that Saudi Arabia pours large sums into lobbying firms and
public relations companies with close ties to Congress does not come as a big
surprise. The FARA
database under the DOJ website lists Qorvis Communications as one of Saudi Arabia’s registered foreign
agents. In 2003, for only a six-month period, Qorvis received more than $11 million from the Saudi government.
Another firm, Loeffler Tuggey Pauerstein Rosenthal LLP, another registered
foreign agent, received more than $840,000 for the same six-month period, and
the list goes on. Just for this six-month period the government of Saudi Arabia
paid a total of more than $14 million to 13 lobbying and public relations
companies; all registered as foreign agents.
Why do the Saudis
spend nearly $20 million per year in lobbying activities in the U.S. via their
hired agents? What kind of return on investment are they getting out of the
United States Congress?
Let’s take
Loeffler’s group and examine its value for the Saudi government, since it was
paid over $3 million in three years, between 2003 and 2005. The firm was
founded by former Republican Congressman Tom
Loeffler of Texas. Loeffler served in the Republican
leadership as deputy whip, and as chief deputy whip during his third and
fourth term. He was a member of the powerful Appropriations
Committee, Energy and Commerce Committee and Budget Committee. In the two Bush
campaigns for governor, Loeffler, who contributed $141,000, was the largest donor. In 1998, he
served as national co-chair of the Republican National Committee's "Team
100" program for donors of $100,000 or more, and afterwards held the same
title during George W. Bush's presidential campaign. Loeffler’s generosity
extends to the members of congress as well. In six years, he has given more
than $185,000 to members of
Congress, 97 percent of it going to only Republican members. During the same
six-year period, Loeffler’s firm received more than $18 million in lobbying
fees.
The firm’s managing
director happens to be William L. Ball. Ball
served as chief of staff to Senators John Tower (R-TX) and Herman Talmadge
(D-GA). In 1985, he joined the Reagan administration as Assistant Secretary of
State for Legislative Affairs. Later he was assigned to the White House to
serve President Reagan as his chief liaison to the Congress. Wallace Henderson
is also a partner; he was chief counsel and chief of staff to Representative W.
J. Tauzin (R-LA), chief of staff to U.S. Senator John Breaux (D-LA).
By having foreign
agents such as the Loeffler Group, in addition to their foreign agents by
default, the MIC, the Saudis seem to have all their bases covered. Former
secretaries and deputy secretaries with open access to the current ones, former
congressmen and senators who used to be positioned on strategically valuable
committees and know the rules of the congressional game, and millions of
dollars available to be spent and channeled and re-channeled to various PACs go
a long way toward ensuring results. Money counts. Money is needed to bring in
votes. Professional skills and discretion are required to get this money to
various final destinations. The registered foreign agents, the lobby groups,
are geared for this task. The client is happy in the end; so are the foreign
agents and the congressional actors.
Other Savvy Nations
Of course, the
sanction and legitimization of far reaching foreign influence and strongholds
in the U.S., despite the many dire consequences endured by its citizens, is not
limited to the government of Saudi Arabia. Numerous well-documented cases can
be cited for others such as Turkey, Pakistan, and Israel, to name a few.
I won’t get into
the details and history of my own case, where the government invoked the State
Secrets Privilege to gag my case and the Congress in order to ‘protect certain
sensitive diplomatic relations.’ The country, the foreign influence, in this
case was the Republic of Turkey. The U.S. government did so despite the far reaching
consequences of burying the facts involved, and disregarded the interests and
security of the nation; all to protect a quasi ally engaged in numerous
illegitimate activities within the global terrorist networks, nuclear black
market and narcotics activities; an ally who happens to be another compulsive
and loyal buyer of the Military Industrial Complex; an ally who happens to be
another savvy player in recruiting top U.S. players as its foreign agents and
spending million of dollars per year on the lobbying groups headed by many
‘formers.’ Turkey’s agent list includes generals such as Joseph Ralston and
Brent Scowcroft, former statesmen such as William Cohen and Marc Grossman, and
of course famous ex-congressmen such as Bob Livingston and Stephen Solarz.
Turkey, too, seems to have all its bases covered.
Another well-known
and documented case involves Pakistan. Over two decades ago Richard Barlow, an intelligence analyst working for then-Secretary of
Defense Dick Cheney, issued a startling report. After reviewing classified
information from field agents, he had determined that Pakistan, despite
official denials, had built a nuclear bomb. In the March 29, 1993, issue of the New Yorker, Seymour Hersh
noted that “even as Barlow began his digging, some senior State Department
officials were worried that too much investigation would create what Barlow
called embarrassment for Pakistan.” Barlow's conclusion was politically
inconvenient. A finding that Pakistan possessed a nuclear bomb would have
triggered a congressionally mandated cutoff of aid to the country, and it would
have killed a $1.4-billion sale of F-16 fighter jets to Islamabad. A few months
later, a Pentagon official downplayed Pakistan's nuclear capabilities in his
testimony to Congress. When Barlow protested to his superiors, he was fired. A
few years later, the Executive Branch would slap Barlow with the State Secrets
Privilege.
As we all now know, Pakistan provided direct nuclear assistance to Iran and
Libya. During the Cold War, the U.S. put up with Pakistani lies and deception
about their nuclear activities, it did not enforce its restrictions on
Pakistan's nuclear program when it counted, and as a result Pakistan ended up
with a U.S.-made nuclear weapons system. Yet again, after 9/11, the Bush
administration issued a waiver ending the implementation of almost all
sanctions on Pakistan because of the perceived need for Pakistani assistance in
the fight against Al Qaeda and the Taliban, who ironically were brought to
power by direct U.S. support in the 1980s in the first place.
Weiss, in the May-June 2004 issue of
the Bulletin states: “We are essentially back where we were with Pakistan in
the 1980s. It is apparent that it has engaged in dangerous nuclear mischief
with North Korea, Iran, and Libya (and perhaps others), but thus far without
consequences to its relationship with the United States because of other,
overriding foreign policy considerations -- not the Cold War this time, but the
war on terrorism.” He continues: “But now there is a major political
difference. It was one thing for Pakistan, a country with which the United
States has had good relations generally, to follow India and produce the bomb
for itself. It is quite another for Pakistan to help two-thirds of the "axis
of evil” to get the bomb as well.”
FARA & LDA
An agent of a
‘foreign principal’ is defined as any individual or organization which acts at
the order, request, or under the direction or control of a foreign principal,
or whose activities are directed by a foreign principal who engages in
political activities, or acts in a public relations capacity for a foreign
principal, or solicits or dispenses any thing of value within the United States
for a foreign principal, or represents the interests of a foreign principal
before any agency or official of the U.S. government.
In 1938, in
response to the large number of German propaganda agents in the pre-WWII U.S.,
the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA)
was established to ensure that the American public and its lawmakers know the
source of propaganda intended to sway public opinion, policy, and laws. The act
requires every agent of a foreign principal to register with the Department of
Justice and file forms outlining its agreements with, income from, and
expenditures on behalf of the foreign principal. Any agent testifying before a
committee of Congress must furnish the committee with a copy of his most recent
registration statement. The agent must keep records of all his activities and
permit the attorney general to inspect them. However, as is the case with many
laws, the act is filled with exemptions and loopholes that allow minimization
of, and in some cases complete escape from, warranted scrutiny.
There are a number
of exemptions. For example, persons whose activities are of a purely commercial
nature or of a religious, academic, and charitable nature are exempt. Any agent
who is engaged in lobbying activities and is registered under the Lobbying Disclosure Act
(LDA) is exempt. The LDA of 1995 was passed after decades of effort to make the
regulation and disclosure of lobbying the federal government more effective.
However, LDA also has serious and important loopholes and limitations that can be
summed up as: Inadequate Disclosure,
Inadequate Enforcement, and Inadequate Regulation of Conduct. The recent
congressional scandals make this point very clear.
In addition, neither act deals with an important issue: Conflict of
Interest. Many of these agents, with their loyalty to the foreign hand that
feeds them, end up being appointed to various positions, commissions and
special envoys by our government. Recall Kissinger and his appointment to head
the 9/11 Commission, and of course the recent revelation by Woodward on his
advisory position to the current White House. Take a look at Jimmy Baker’s
current appointment on the Iraq commission. Same goes for the father of all the
‘dime a dozen generals,’ Brent Scowcroft, and one of his new protégés, General
Joseph Ralston. In short, neither FARA nor LDA creates meaningful oversight,
control, or enforcement; neither deals with conflict of interest issues, and
neither provides any deterrence or consequences for unethical or illegal
conduct.
It used
to be congressional ‘pork projects’ and ‘corporate influence’ that raised
eyebrows now and then; here and there. Gone are those days. Today the
unrestricted and uncontrollable money game and influence peddling tricks within
the major decision-making and
policy producing bodies of the U.S. government have
reached new heights; yet, no raised eyebrows are registered. Sadly, today, a
new version of ‘The Manchurian Candidate’ would have to be produced as a
documentary.
The
other day I received a request to sign on to a petition put forth by a group of
9/11 family members urging the Congress to reopen the investigations of 9/11
and declassify the infamous 27 pages which deal with foreign governments, U.S.
allies, that provided support for those who carried out the attacks on our
nation. My heart goes out to them. I do sympathize with them. I am known to
take on similar propositions and methods of activism myself. However, looking
at the realities, seeing what it takes to get things done in Washington,
realizing how this beast works in the Real Sin City, I would encourage them to
look at the root cause, rather than the symptoms. There are only two ways I can
see that can bring about what they have been fighting for and what the majority
of us desire to see in terms of bringing about Truth, Oversight, and
Accountability; Justice.
The
family members, and their supporters, us, either have to tackle the major
cause; the corruption of our government officials via unrestricted and
undisciplined ‘revolving doors’ and ‘foreign influence and lobby’ practices,
and push for expedient meaningful reforms by the new ambitious Congress, and
have them prove to us their worth. Or, they may as well give up their long-held
integrity, go bid high for one or two former statesmen, hire a few dime a dozen
generals, and buy themselves a couple of ex-congressmen turned lobbyists; that
will do the job.
Copyright © 2006
National Security Whistleblowers Coalition. Information in this release may be
freely distributed and published provided that all such distributions make
appropriate attribution to the National Security Whistleblowers Coalition.
Sibel Edmonds is the founder and
director of National Security Whistleblowers Coalition (NSWBC). Ms. Edmonds worked as a language
specialist for the FBI. During her work with the bureau, she discovered and
reported serious acts of security breaches, cover-ups, and intentional blocking
of intelligence that had national security implications. After she reported
these acts to FBI management, she was retaliated against by the FBI and
ultimately fired in March 2002. Since that time, court proceedings on her case
have been blocked by the assertion of “State Secret Privilege”; the Congress of
the United States has been gagged and prevented from any discussion of her case
through retroactive re-classification by the Department of Justice. Ms. Edmonds
is fluent in Turkish, Farsi and Azerbaijani; and has a MA in Public Policy and
International Commerce from George Mason University, and a BA in Criminal
Justice and Psychology from George Washington University. PEN American Center
awarded Ms. Edmonds the 2006 PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award.