Paul Sperry of the Frontpage Magazine reports that a former FBI linguist has made potentially explosive allegations to the 9/11 Commission regarding the subversive actions of a key FBI Middle Eastern agent. Read the entire article, but here is tidbit:
When linguist Sibel Dinez Edmonds showed up for her first day of work at the FBI, a week after the 9-11 attacks, she expected to find a somber atmosphere. Instead, she was offered cookies filled with dates from party bowls set out in the room where other Middle Eastern linguists with top-secret security clearance translate terror-related communications.
She knew the dessert is customarily served in the Middle East at weddings, births and other celebrations, and asked what the happy occasion was. To her shock, she was told the Arab linguists were celebrating the terrorist attacks on America, as if they were some joyous event. Right in front of her supervisor, one translator cheered:
“It’s about time they got a taste of what they’ve been giving the Middle East.”
She found out later that it was her supervisor’s wife who helped organize the office party there at the bureau’s Washington field office, just four blocks from the J. Edgar Hoover Building.
The credibility of these allegations coming from a former (and presumably disgruntled) employee is still untested. However, given the U.S. intelligence failures documented in Gerald Posner‘s “Why America Slept,” Laurie Mylroie‘s “The War Against America” and “Bush vs. the Beltway,” and Robert Baer‘s “See No Evil,” these allegations need to be investigated carefully.
Meanwhile, in Policy Review, Richard L. Russell, professor of national security affairs at the National Defense University?s Near East-South Asia Center for Strategic Studies, provides an insightful analysis of the intrinsic problems in the U.S. intelligence apparatus and proposals for remedying them.