For sale: West’s deadly nuclear secrets
Insight: Chris Gourlay,
Jonathan Calvert, Joe Lauria
A WHISTLEBLOWER has
made a series of extraordinary claims about how corrupt
government officials allowed Pakistan and other states to
steal nuclear weapons secrets.
Sibel Edmonds, a
37-year-old former Turkish language translator for the FBI,
listened into hundreds of sensitive intercepted
conversations while based at the agency’s Washington field
office.
She approached The
Sunday Times last month after reading about an Al-Qaeda
terrorist who had revealed his role in training some of the
9/11 hijackers while he was in Turkey.
Edmonds described
how foreign intelligence agents had enlisted the support of
US officials to acquire a network of moles in sensitive
military and nuclear institutions.
Among the hours of
covert tape recordings, she says she heard evidence that one
well-known senior official in the US State Department was
being paid by Turkish agents in Washington who were selling
the information on to black market buyers, including
Pakistan.
The name of the
official – who has held a series of top government posts –
is known to The Sunday Times. He strongly denies the claims.
However, Edmonds
said: “He was aiding foreign operatives against US interests
by passing them highly classified information, not only from
the State Department but also from the Pentagon, in exchange
for money, position and political objectives.”
She claims that the
FBI was also gathering evidence against senior Pentagon
officials – including household names – who were aiding
foreign agents.
“If you made public
all the information that the FBI have on this case, you will
see very high-level people going through criminal trials,”
she said.
Her story shows just
how much the West was infiltrated by foreign states seeking
nuclear secrets. It illustrates how western government
officials turned a blind eye to, or were even helping,
countries such as Pakistan acquire bomb technology.
The wider nuclear
network has been monitored for many years by a joint
Anglo-American intelligence effort. But rather than shut it
down, investigations by law enforcement bodies such as the
FBI and Britain’s Revenue & Customs have been aborted to
preserve diplomatic relations.
Edmonds, a fluent
speaker of Turkish and Farsi, was recruited by the FBI in
the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. Her previous
claims about incompetence inside the FBI have been well
documented in America.
She has given
evidence to closed sessions of Congress and the 9/11
commission, but many of the key points of her testimony have
remained secret. She has now decided to divulge some of that
information after becoming disillusioned with the US
authorities’ failure to act.
One of Edmonds’s
main roles in the FBI was to translate thousands of hours of
conversations by Turkish diplomatic and political targets
that had been covertly recorded by the agency.
A backlog of tapes
had built up, dating back to 1997, which were needed for an
FBI investigation into links between the Turks and
Pakistani, Israeli and US targets. Before she left the FBI
in 2002 she heard evidence that pointed to money laundering,
drug imports and attempts to acquire nuclear and
conventional weapons technology.
“What I found was
damning,” she said. “While the FBI was investigating,
several arms of the government were shielding what was going
on.”
The Turks and
Israelis had planted “moles” in military and academic
institutions which handled nuclear technology. Edmonds says
there were several transactions of nuclear material every
month, with the Pakistanis being among the eventual buyers.
“The network appeared to be obtaining information from every
nuclear agency in the United States,” she said.
They were helped,
she says, by the high-ranking State Department official who
provided some of their moles – mainly PhD students – with
security clearance to work in sensitive nuclear research
facilities. These included the Los Alamos nuclear laboratory
in New Mexico, which is responsible for the security of the
US nuclear deterrent.
In one conversation
Edmonds heard the official arranging to pick up a $15,000
cash bribe. The package was to be dropped off at an agreed
location by someone in the Turkish diplomatic community who
was working for the network.
The Turks, she says,
often acted as a conduit for the Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI), Pakistan’s spy agency, because they were less likely
to attract suspicion. Venues such as the American Turkish
Council in Washington were used to drop off the cash, which
was picked up by the official.
Edmonds said: “I
heard at least three transactions like this over a period of
2½ years. There are almost certainly more.”
The Pakistani
operation was led by General Mahmoud Ahmad, then the ISI
chief.
Intercepted
communications showed Ahmad and his colleagues stationed in
Washington were in constant contact with attach�s in the
Turkish embassy.
Intelligence
analysts say that members of the ISI were close to Al-Qaeda
before and after 9/11. Indeed, Ahmad was accused of
sanctioning a $100,000 wire payment to Mohammed Atta, one of
the 9/11 hijackers, immediately before the attacks.
The results of the
espionage were almost certainly passed to Abdul Qadeer Khan,
the Pakistani nuclear scientist.
Khan was close to
Ahmad and the ISI. While running Pakistan’s nuclear
programme, he became a millionaire by selling atomic secrets
to Libya, Iran and North Korea. He also used a network of
companies in America and Britain to obtain components for a
nuclear programme.
Khan caused an alert
among western intelligence agencies when his aides met Osama
Bin Laden. “We were aware of contact between A Q Khan’s
people and Al-Qaeda,” a former CIA officer said last week.
“There was absolute panic when we initially discovered this,
but it kind of panned out in the end.”
It is likely that
the nuclear secrets stolen from the United States would have
been sold to a number of rogue states by Khan.
Edmonds was later to
see the scope of the Pakistani connections when it was
revealed that one of her fellow translators at the FBI was
the daughter of a Pakistani embassy official who worked for
Ahmad. The translator was given top secret clearance despite
protests from FBI investigators.
Edmonds says
packages containing nuclear secrets were delivered by
Turkish operatives, using their cover as members of the
diplomatic and military community, to contacts at the
Pakistani embassy in Washington.
Following 9/11, a
number of the foreign operatives were taken in for
questioning by the FBI on suspicion that they knew about or
somehow aided the attacks.
Edmonds said the
State Department official once again proved useful. “A
primary target would call the official and point to names on
the list and say, ‘We need to get them out of the US because
we can’t afford for them to spill the beans’,” she said.
“The official said that he would ‘take care of it’.”
The four suspects on
the list were released from interrogation and extradited.
Edmonds also claims
that a number of senior officials in the Pentagon had helped
Israeli and Turkish agents.
“The people provided
lists of potential moles from Pentagon-related institutions
who had access to databases concerning this information,”
she said.
“The handlers, who
were part of the diplomatic community, would then try to
recruit those people to become moles for the network. The
lists contained all their ‘hooking points’, which could be
financial or sexual pressure points, their exact job in the
Pentagon and what stuff they had access to.”
One of the Pentagon
figures under investigation was Lawrence Franklin, a former
Pentagon analyst, who was jailed in 2006 for passing US
defence information to lobbyists and sharing classified
information with an Israeli diplomat.
“He was one of the
top people providing information and packages during 2000
and 2001,” she said.
Once acquired, the
nuclear secrets could have gone anywhere. The FBI monitored
Turkish diplomats who were selling copies of the information
to the highest bidder.
Edmonds said:
“Certain greedy Turkish operators would make copies of the
material and look around for buyers. They had agents who
would find potential buyers.”
In summer 2000,
Edmonds says the FBI monitored one of the agents as he met
two Saudi Arabian businessmen in Detroit to sell nuclear
information that had been stolen from an air force base in
Alabama. She overheard the agent saying: “We have a package
and we’re going to sell it for $250,000.”
Edmonds’s employment
with the FBI lasted for just six months. In March 2002 she
was dismissed after accusing a colleague of covering up
illicit activity involving Turkish nationals.
She has always
claimed that she was victimised for being outspoken and was
vindicated by an Office of the Inspector General review of
her case three years later. It found that one of the
contributory reasons for her sacking was that she had made
valid complaints.
The US
attorney-general has imposed a state secrets privilege order
on her, which prevents her revealing more details of the
FBI’s methods and current investigations.
Her allegations were
heard in a closed session of Congress, but no action has
been taken and she continues to campaign for a public
hearing.
She was able to
discuss the case with The Sunday Times because, by the end
of January 2002, the justice department had shut down the
programme.
The senior official
in the State Department no longer works there. Last week he
denied all of Edmonds’s allegations: “If you are calling me
to say somebody said that I took money, that’s outrageous .
. . I do not have anything to say about such stupid
ridiculous things as this.”
In researching this
article, The Sunday Times has talked to two FBI officers
(one serving, one former) and two former CIA sources who
worked on nuclear proliferation. While none was aware of
specific allegations against officials she names, they did
provide overlapping corroboration of Edmonds’s story.
One of the CIA
sources confirmed that the Turks had acquired nuclear
secrets from the United States and shared the information
with Pakistan and Israel. “We have no indication that Turkey
has its own nuclear ambitions. But the Turks are traders. To
my knowledge they became big players in the late 1990s,” the
source said.
How Pakistan got
the bomb, then sold it to the highest bidders
1965 Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto, Pakistan’s foreign minister, says: “If India
builds the bomb we will eat grass . . . but we will get one
of our own”
1974 Nuclear
programme becomes increased priority as India tests a
nuclear device
1976 Abdul
Qadeer Khan, a scientist, steals secrets from Dutch uranium
plant. Made head of his nation’s nuclear programme by
Bhutto, now prime minister
1976 onwards
Clandestine network established to obtain materials and
technology for uranium enrichment from the West
1985 Pakistan
produces weapons-grade uranium for the first time
1989-91
Khan’s network sells Iran nuclear weapons information and
technology
1991-97 Khan
sells weapons technology to North Korea and Libya
1998 India
tests nuclear bomb and Pakistan follows with a series of
nuclear tests. Khan says: “I never had any doubts I was
building a bomb. We had to do it”
2001 CIA
chief George Tenet gathers officials for crisis summit on
the proliferation of nuclear technology from Pakistan to
other countries
2001 Weeks
before 9/11, Khan’s aides meet Osama Bin Laden to discuss an
Al-Qaeda nuclear device
2001 After
9/11 proliferation crisis becomes secondary as Pakistan is
seen as important ally in war on terror
2003 Libya
abandons nuclear weapons programme and admits acquiring
components through Pakistani nuclear scientists
2004 Khan
placed under house arrest and confesses to supplying Iran,
Libya and North Korea with weapons technology. He is
pardoned by President Pervez Musharraf
2006 North
Korea tests a nuclear bomb
2007 Renewed
fears that bomb may fall into hands of Islamic extremists as
killing of Benazir Bhutto throws country into turmoil