December 9, 2005
Sibel Edmonds' Quest For Truth
The
Sibel Edmonds case against the FBI and the United States government is
a very intriguing one. I certainly cannot determine the veracity of the
charges Edmonds makes but they deserve (and will not receive) a transparent and thorough
investigation. There are just too many inconsistencies present to simply toss Edmonds' charges aside.
The following is a lengthy article (please stay with it) that raises important and valid
questions about some very powerful political figures and institutions
in this country. Questions that will likely never be
answered because of those very same figures and institutions. After all, who investigates the FBI?
On my holiday wish list is a 'rendering' of John Ashcroft. Oh, the things we would learn. Not to push Al Franken's book but would Ashcroft lie about his lies?
An Inconvenient Patriot
By DAVID ROSE
Vanity Fair - September 2005
Love of country led Sibel Edmonds to become a
translator for the F.B.I. following 9/11. But everything changed when
she accused a colleague of covering up alleged illicit activity
involving Turkish nationals. Fired after sounding the alarm, she's now
preparing a Supreme Court appealand threatening some very powerful
people.
In Washington, D.C., and its suburbs, December 2,
2001, was fine but cool, the start of the slide into winter after a
spell of unseasonable warmth. At 10 o'clock that morning, Sibel and
Matthew Edmonds were still in their pajamas, sipping coffee in the
kitchen of their waterfront town house in Alexandria, Virginia, and
looking forward to a well-deserved lazy Sunday.
Since mid-September, nine days after the 9/11
attacks, Sibel had been exploiting her fluency in Turkish, Farsi, and
Azerbaijani as a translator at the F.B.I. It was arduous, demanding
work, and Edmondswho had two bachelor's degrees, was about to
begin studying for a master's, and had plans for a doctoratecould
have been considered overqualified. But as a naturalized
Turkish-American, she saw the job as her patriotic duty.
The Edmondses' thoughts were turning to brunch when
Matthew answered the telephone. The caller was a woman he barely
knewMelek Can Dickerson, who worked with Sibel at the F.B.I. "I'm
in the area with my husband and I'd love you to meet him," Dickerson
said. "Is it O.K. if we come by?" Taken by surprise, Sibel and Matthew
hurried to shower and dress. Their guests arrived 30 minutes later.
Matthew, a big man with a fuzz of gray beard, who at 60 was nearly
twice the age of his petite, vivacious wife, showed them into the
kitchen. They sat at a round, faux-marble table while Sibel brewed
tea...
For the rest of the article, go here.
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