The
‘Whistleblower’ Probably Isn’t
It’s an insult to real whistleblowers to use the
term with the Ukrainegate protagonist
By Matt Taibbi
October 07, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - Start with the
initial headline, in the
story the Washington Post “broke” on
September 18th:
TRUMP’S COMMUNICATIONS WITH FOREIGN LEADER ARE
PART OF WHISTLEBLOWER COMPLAINT THAT SPURRED
STANDOFF BETWEEN SPY CHIEF AND CONGRESS, FORMER
OFFICIALS SAY
The unnamed person at the center of this story
sure didn’t sound like a whistleblower. Our
intelligence community wouldn’t wipe its ass with a
real whistleblower.
Americans who’ve blown the whistle over serious
offenses by the federal government either spend the
rest of their lives overseas, like Edward
Snowden, end up in jail,
like Chelsea Manning, get arrested and ruined
financially, like
former NSA official Thomas Drake, have their
homes raided by FBI like
disabled NSA vet William Binney, or get charged
with espionage like ex-CIA
exposer-of-torture John Kiriakou. It’s an insult
to all of these people, and the suffering they’ve
weathered, to frame the ballcarrier in the Beltway’s
latest partisan power contest as a whistleblower.
Drake, who was the first to expose the NSA’s secret
surveillance program, seems to have fared better
than most. He ended up
working in an Apple Store, where he ran into
Eric Holder, who was shopping for an iPhone.
I’ve met a lot of whistleblowers, in both the
public and private sector. Many end up broke, living
in hotels, defamed, (often) divorced, and lucky if
they have any kind of job. One I knew got turned
down for a waitressing job because her previous
employer wouldn’t vouch for her. She had little
kids.
The common thread in whistleblower stories is
loneliness. Typically the employer has direct
control over their ability to pursue another job in
their profession. Many end up reviled as traitors,
thieves, and liars. They often discover after going
public that their loved ones have a limited appetite
for sharing the ignominy. In virtually all cases,
they end up having to start over, both personally
and professionally.
With that in mind, let’s look at what we know
about the first “whistleblower” in Ukrainegate:
- He or she is a “CIA
officer detailed to the White House”;
- The account is at best partially based upon
the CIA officer’s own experience, made up
substantially by information from “more than a
half dozen U.S. officials” and the “private
accounts” of “my colleagues”;
- “He or she” was instantly celebrated as a
whistleblower by news networks and major
newspapers.
That last detail caught the eye of Kiriakou, a
former CIA Counterterrorism official who blew the
whistle on the agency’s torture program.
“It took me and my lawyers a full year to get
[the media] to stop calling me ‘CIA Leaker John
Kirakou,” he says. “That’s how long it took for me
to be called a whistleblower.”
Kirakou’s crime was talking to ABC News and the
New York Times about the CIA’s torture
program. For talking to American journalists about
the CIA, our federal government charged Kiriakou
with espionage. That absurd count was ultimately
dropped, but he still did 23 months at
FCI Loretto in Western Pennsylvania.
When Kiriakou first saw the “whistleblower
complaint,” his immediate reaction was to wonder
what kind of “CIA officer” the person in question
was. “If you spend a career in the CIA, you see all
kinds of subterfuge and lies and crime,” he says.
“This person went through a whole career and this is
the thing he objects to?”
It’s fair to wonder if this is a one-person
effort. Even former CIA official Robert Baer, no
friend of Trump, said as much in an early
confab on CNN with Brooke Baldwin:
BAER: That’s what I find remarkable, is that
this whistleblower knew about that, this attempt to
cover up. This is a couple of people. It isn’t just
one.
BALDWIN: And on the people point, if the
allegation is true, Bob, what does it say that White
House officials, lawyers, wanted to cover it up?
BAER: You know, my guess, it’s a palace coup
against Trump. And who knows what else they know at
this point.
That sounds about right. Actual whistleblowers
are alone. The
Ukraine complaint seems to be the work of a
group of people, supported by significant
institutional power, not only in the intelligence
community, but in the Democratic Party and the
commercial press.
In this century we’ve lived through a president
lying to get us into a war (that caused
hundreds of thousands of deaths and the loss of
trillions in public treasure), the deployment of
a vast illegal
surveillance program, a
drone assassination campaign, rendition,
torture, extralegal detention, and other offenses,
many of them mass human rights violations.
We had whistleblowers telling us about nearly all
of these things. When they came forward, they
desperately needed society’s help. They didn’t get
it. Our government didn’t just tweet threats at
them, but proceeded straight to punishment.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Bill Binney, who lost both his legs
to diabetes, was dragged out of his
shower by FBI agents. Jeffrey Sterling,
like Kiriakou, was charged with
espionage for
talking to a reporter. After
conviction, he asked to be imprisoned
near his wife in St. Louis. They sent
him to Colorado
for two years. Others tried to talk
to congress or their Inspectors General,
only to find out
their communications had been captured
and cc’ed to the very agency chiefs they
wanted to complain about (including
former CIA chief and current MSNBC
contributor John Brennan).
The current “scandal” is a caricature version of
such episodes. Imagine the mania on the airwaves if
Donald Trump were to have his Justice Department
arrest the “whistleblower” and charge him with
35 years of offenses, as Thomas Drake faced.
Trump incidentally still might try something like
this. It’s what any autocrat of the Mobute Sese Seko/Enver
Hoxha school would do,
for starters, to mutinying intelligence
officials within his own government.
Trump almost certainly is not going to do that,
however, as the man is too dumb to realize he’s the
titular commander of an executive branch that has
been jailing people for talking too much for over a
decade. On the off chance that he does try it, don’t
hold your breath waiting for news networks to tell
you he’s just following an established pattern.
I have a lot of qualms about
impeachment/“Ukrainegate,” beginning with this
headline premise of the lone, conscience-stricken
defender of democracy arrayed against the mighty
Trump. I don’t see it. Donald Trump is a jackass who
got elected basically by accident, campaigning
against a political establishment too blind to its
own unpopularity to see what was coming.
In 2016 we saw a pair of electoral revolts, one
on the right and one on the left, against the
cratering popularity of our political elite. The
rightist populist revolt succeeded, the Sanders
movement did not. Ukrainegate to me looks like a
continuation of Russiagate, which was a reaction of
that defeated political elite to the rightists. I
don’t feel solidarity with either group.
The argument that’s supposed to be galvanizing
everyone right now is the idea that we need to
“stand up and be counted,” because failing to rally
to the cause is effectively advocacy for Trump. This
line of thinking is based on the presumption that
Trump is clearly worse than the people opposing him.
That might prove to be true, but if we’re talking
about the treatment of whistleblowers, Trump has a
long way to go before he approaches the brutal
record of the CIA, the NSA, the FBI, as well as the
cheerleading Washington political establishment.
Forgetting this is likely just the first in what
will prove to be many deceptions about a hardcore
insider political battle whose subtext is a lot more
shadowy and ambiguous than news audiences are being
led to believe.
Matt Taibbi is a contributing editor for
Rolling Stone and winner of the 2008 National
Magazine Award for columns and commentary. His most
recent book is ‘I Can’t Breathe: A Killing on Bay
Street,’ about the infamous killing of Eric Garner
by the New York City police. He’s also the author of
the New York Times bestsellers 'Insane Clown
President,' 'The Divide,' 'Griftopia,' and 'The
Great Derangement.'
This article was originally published by "Rolling
Stone"- -
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