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Susan
Lindauer
Reproduced From Wayne
Madsen Report

October 12, 2006 -- EXCLUSIVE. It
sounds like a case from the old Soviet Union. An activist opposing the
government's policies is charged with crimes against the state, declared
mentally unbalanced, and forced to take psychotropic drugs in a military prison
hospital. However, this case occurred in the United States and involved a
Justice Department attempt to silence a one-time CIA asset who was engaged in
back channel negotiations with Saddam Hussein's government to avert a war.
On September 8, Susan Lindauer, a
one-time congressional staffer for Rep. Peter DeFazio and Sen. Ron Wyden or
Oregon [Wyden is a member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence], and
journalist, was ordered released from incarceration from the Bureau of Prisons
Carswell Federal Medical Center located at the Naval Reserve Air Station in Fort
Worth, Texas. Lindauer, who was never convicted of any crime, spent seven months
in the prison hospital and was transferred to New York City where she spent an
additional four months in prison.
Lindauer claims that from August 1996 to
the outbreak of the Iraq war, she served as a back channel intermediary with the
Iraqi Mission to the UN in New York and was constantly supervised by her
handlers in the CIA and Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). In March 2004,
Lindauer was arrested by the FBI at her Takoma Park, Maryland home and charged
with acting as an unregistered agent for the Iraqi government from October 1999
to February 2004 and engaging in illegal financial transactions with the Iraqis.
Federal prosecutors also charged Lindauer with meeting Iraqi intelligence agents
during a 2002 trip to Baghdad, including a meeting at the Al Rashid Hotel.
Lindauer claims that she was one of three CIA assets who were covering the Iraqi
Mission to the UN. She said she and the other two assets, who were also being
run by the FBI, were charged with being agents for Iraq.
From the beginning, the government's
case against Lindauer was unique. In his decision ordering Lindauer's release
from federal custody, Judge Michael Mukasey of the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York in Manhattan ruled that the government could not
force Lindauer to take psychotropic drugs in order for her to stand trial in the
case. In in a rare departure, Mukasey commented on the government's case against
Lindauer before the trial. He stated, "There is no indication that Lindauer ever
came close to influencing anyone or could have." The Justice Department
maintained that Lindauer attempted to influence her cousin to prevent a U.S.
military attack on Iraq. Lindauer's second cousin is none other than Andrew
Card, who served as George W. Bush's Chief of Staff and who is a major source
for Bob Woodward's revealing book about the Bush march to war, State of
Denial. Lindauer's father is John Lindauer, the 1998 GOP candidate for
governor of Alaska, who was defeated by Tony Knowles.
In rejecting the government's request to
force Lindauer to take drugs, Mukasey stated that the government's request
raised humanitarian concerns since the procedure "necessarily involves
physically restraining defendant so that she can be injected with mind-altering
drugs."
After her release from custody, Lindauer
said she was approached by an attorney who defended one-time CIA agent Edwin
Wilson, who was imprisoned for 20 years after being convicted of exporting arms
to Libya. Wilson was released in 2003 after a federal judge threw out perjured
government evidence that suggested Wilson was not working for the CIA while he
was exporting weapons to Libya. The attorney, who also represented imprisoned
former Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega, strongly advised Lindauer to remain
silent after her release.
Lindauer claims that her liaisons with
Baghdad proved successful for the FBI's anti-terrorism efforts. She said that
her CIA-sanctioned contacts with Saddam's officials resulted in tacit agreements
to have UN weapons inspectors return to Iraq and arranging for an FBI
anti-terrorism task force to go to Baghdad. That task force was to have arrived
in Baghdad six months before 911 to track terrorists known to the Mukharabat,
Iraq's Stasi-like intelligence service. These agreements between the CIA/DIA and
Baghdad, hammered out after the USS Cole bombing in Aden, Yemen, were
made before Bush's inauguration in January 2001. Lindauer said she briefed Card
on the arrangements between U.S. intelligence and Baghdad after he took over as
White House Chief of Staff and continued to do so for 18 months after Bush took
over the presidency. On the backchannel efforts with Iraq Lindauer stated, "Card
knew what was going on."

Bush Chief of Staff
Andrew Card: His second cousin Lindauer said Card "knew everything" about her
backchannels to Iraq.
In fact, Lindauer said Iraq passed her
intelligence on the planned bombing of the USS Cole and that this was
made known to Yemeni authorities. No action was taken by the U.S. Navy to
prevent to act on the "actionable intelligence."
Lindauer, who said she worked as a
journalist for U.S. News and World Report and Fox News Channel and as a
media consultant while working as a CIA asset in an unpaid capacity, went to
Card before the war and asked him what the White House wanted from Iraq to
prevent a war. Lindauer's contacts with Iraq were through the Iraqi Mission to
the UN, a relationship she said she cultivated since 1993. As an asset for the
CIA, Lindauer claims she was vetted, investigated, and cleared by the agency.
Lindauer identifies her two CIA "handlers" as Paul Hoven and Dr. Richard Fuisz
(pronounced "fuse'). Lindauer reports that Fuisz was the CIA Station Chief in
Damascus during the 1980s and that she first met him in 1994. Fuisz is a most
interesting character. An article in the August 10, 1998 issue of New York
magazine describes Fuisz as a "a former actor, psychiatrist, pediatrician,
congressional candidate, whistle-blower, and entrepreneur who declines to
comment on a published report that he has intelligence ties." The article states
that Fuisz was involved in a deal with then-Soviet ambassador Yuri Dubinin and
Mikhail Khodorkovsky (the head of the Young Communist League and the currently
jailed billionaire oil tycoon) to bring Soviet models to the fashion runways of
the United States.
Fuisz told Lindauer that it was the
Syrian- and Bekaa Valley-based Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP-GC),
led by Ahmed Jibril, and elements of Hezbollah that bombed Pan Am 103 in
December 1988 in retaliation for the July 1988 downing by the USS Vincennes
of an Iran Air passenger plane in the Persian Gulf. Iran's ambassador in Beirut
in 1988, Ayatollah Ali Akbar Mohtashemi, who became Iran's Interior Minister,
transferred $10 million to the PFLP-GC to fashion the Toshiba cassette player
into a bomb. Libya was fingered by the U.S. government in the bombing after
Syria joined George H. W. Bush's anti-Saddam military coalition in 1991 and Iran
remained neutral. Two Libyan intelligence agents -- Al-Amin Khalifa Fhimah and
Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi -- who happened to be in Malta at the same time as
Muhammad Abu Talb, a chief PFLP-GC suspect in the bombing, were charged and
prosecuted for the Lockerbie bombing.
Moreover, Lindauer contends there was
advance knowledge of the PanAm 103 bombing because the CIA was tracking heroin
out of the Bekaa Valley and was aware of the plot to down the airliner. Stephen
Green, a senior Drug Enforcement Administration official; John McCarthy, the
U.S. ambassador to Beirut; and officials of the U.S. embassies in Moscow and
Helsinki rescheduled their December 21, 1988 reservations on PanAm 103 at the
last minute. Lindauer said her work as a CIA asset began in 1995 when she made
initial approaches to Libya.
Fuisz's name also came up in reports in
the UK's Sunday Herald concerning U.S. and U.K. weapons sales to Saddam's
government.
Lindauer's other alleged CIA handler,
Hoven, is reported by Washington media sources to be a long-time "information
passer" among Capitol Hill and other DC circles. Lindauer said that Hoven was
more interested in Lindauer's personal safety. Lindauer said she was under
surveillance by elements close to Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman (the blind Egyptian
sheikh who was convicted in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and Hezbollah,
as well as Israeli intelligence.
Lindauer said that after her arrest she
had three choices: go to trial, plead guilty to being an Iraqi unregistered
agent, or be declared mentally incompetent. The last option could only be
successful for the Bush administration if Lindauer agreed to be given
psychotropic drugs. The staff at the Carswell prison hospital in Texas were
prepared to testify that Lindauer was perfectly sane. The Bush administration
could not accept a trial because Lindauer's intelligence contacts and Andrew
Card would be called to testify. That could prove embarrassing for Bush.
Lindauer is now out of prison on bail and in a legal limbo called "trial
pending." Lindauer's attorney, a federal public defender, told her not to have
any contact with Andrew Card because it would be considered "obstruction of
justice."
Lindauer brought her concerns about
pre-war intelligence on Iraq to the office of Mississippi GOP Senator Trent Lott
because of contacts she had within his office. She said that within 48 hours,
her case was turned over to a federal grand jury. The prosecutors never told the
grand jury that Lindauer was a CIA asset.
Lindauer scoffs at the conclusion of the
Presidential Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States
Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction (Robb-Silberman Commission) that the CIA
was risk averse and not imaginative in dealing with the Iraqi WMD issue. The
commission concluded that the CIA and other agencies were "prone to develop
self-reinforcing, risk averse cultures that take outside advice badly . . .
Rather than thinking imaginatively, and considering seemingly unlikely and
unpopular possibilities, the Intelligence Community instead found itself wedded
to a set of assumptions about Iraq, focusing on intelligence reporting that
appeared to confirm those assumptions."
Lindauer said she and her CIA handlers
did all the things the commission contended were not done. Lindauer claims her
two major contacts in Saddam's government were Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri
Ahmad Al-Hadithi and Deputy Foreign Minister Dr. Said Hassan. Lindauer said she
met her primary contact, Dr. Hassan, in New York while he was Iraq's ambassador
to the UN. Lindauer's stated relationship with Naji Sabri seems to have much
merit. In March of this year, NBC News reported that it was Sabri who was CIA
director George Tenet's "source who had direct access to Saddam and his inner
circle." Former CIA officer Tyler Drumheller told 60 Minutes in April of
this year that a "very senior Iraqi official" gave the CIA information on Iraqi
WMDs. 60 Minutes confirmed that official was Sabri. Sabri declined the
CIA's offer to have him defect to the United States. There were contacts between
Sabri and the CIA through the French government prior to the outbreak of the
war. Sabri now teaches journalism in Qatar. Lindauer's claims of CIA-sponsored
contacts with Sabri and Hassan are thus borne out by the facts.

Jailed CIA backchannel
to Iraq Susan Lindauer.
As far as imaginative ways to deal with
Iraq, Lindauer said she studied Islamic mysticism (Sufi'ism) to a great degree
before talking to Iraqi officials. She claims that this established a common
baseline in her dealings with both Iraqis and in a previous CIA-sponsored
mission, with the Libyans. Lindauer also claims the CIA set in motion a scheme
of "plausible deniability" in her dealings with Iraq. She said the CIA told her
to accept Iraq's financing of her 2002 trip to Baghdad, for which she was
reimbursed for $5000 by Iraqi officials. Lindauer said her CIA handlers said
that if she used her own money to go to Iraq, the Iraqis would "jerk her around"
as an emissary of the United States government. Lindauer then told the Iraqis
that they would have to pay for her trip to Iraq. She also said the CIA
absolutely did not want Lindauer to travel under the auspices of any
non-governmental organization (NGO) or anti-sanctions group. Lindauer said the
CIA was emphatic about "not mixing with people in the peace community."

Iraqi Foreign Minister
Naji Sabri, confirmed as CIA source, was also dealing with CIA asset Lindauer.
Lindauer said she was successful in
making contact with an Iraqi who had potential to serve as an agent or double
agent for the CIA. The diplomat wanted to bring his family to the United States
from Iraq. She said the diplomat, after returning to Iraq from the United
States, was successful in setting up arch-terrorist Abu Nidal, who lived in a
wealthy suburb of Baghdad after being expelled by Libya. Paying the diplomat
$1000 in money from a $10,000 fee she received from Saddam's government, the
gambit seems to have been worth it. On August 16, 2002, Abu Nidal was
assassinated by a Mukhabarat hit squad of 30 men (working for the Mukhabarat's
feared assassination unit -- Office 8) after Saddam's government was "tipped
off" Nidal was conspiring with Saudi Arabia and Kuwait in a plot to oust Saddam.
Reportedly "found" in Abu Nidal's house were "classified" U.S. documents on a
U.S. military attack on Iraq.
Lindauer claims that the US Intelligence
Community was operating adequately before the Iraq war. She said the CIA and DIA
were ensuring rogue regimes like that of Iraq were behaving responsibly.
However, she said that although there were backchannels between the CIA and
Baghdad, "no one in the Bush administration trusted Saddam." After her trip to
Baghdad and her determination that Iraq possessed no WMDs, Lindauer said she
passed this information to Fuisz, whose next door neighbor in McLean, Virginia
just happened to be Secretary of State Colin Powell. Lindauer insists that her
report on no Iraqi WMDs was passed directly to Powell. Lindauer claims that
after Powell criticized top people at the CIA for their pre-war intelligence he
was chiefly reposnible for having her indicted and sent to jail.

Colin Powell said to
be behind arrest of Lindauer.
Lindauer supported former UN weapons
inspector Scott Ritter's contention that the inspection process successfully
identified suspected targets that turned out not to be weapons-related. Lindauer
said she was working to get UN weapons inspectors back into Iraq. She also
maintains that Iraq was one of the U.S.'s best sources on anti-terrorist
information regarding such groups as Dawa, Al Qaeda, and other Islamist
fundamentalist groups.
***
We can add Susan Lindauer's name to a
long list of U.S. and foreign intelligence and law enforcement agents and assets
who were done in by the neo-con cabal that continues to rule Washington. It is a
long (and most assuredly incomplete) list indeed: Valerie Plame Wilson, Joseph
Wilson, Sibel Edmonds, Russ Tice, Kenneth W. Ford, Jr., Greg Ford, Dave DeBatto,
Bunnatine Greenhouse, Robert Isakson, William Baldwin, Rory Mayberry, Gen. Jay
Garner, Gen. Janis Karpinski, John Kokal, Dr. Gus Weiss, Paul O'Neill, John
O'Neill, Dr. David Kelly, Katharine Gun, Danish Major Frank Grevil and the list
goes on . . . after George W. Bush's denial that he is responsible for the
deaths of a three quarter million Iraqis, it is clear that the retribution of a
trial will one day be brought down on Mr. Bush -- whose name is now synonymous
with other grotesque human rights violators of our recent era -- Milosevic,
Pinochet, Suharto, Marcos, Hitler, Tojo, and Stalin.
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