Editor Of Major Newspaper Says
He Planted Stories For CIA
By Ralph Lopez
February 04,
2015 "ICH"
-
Becoming the first credentialed,
well-known media insider to step
forward and state publicly that
he was secretly a
"propagandist," an editor of a
major German daily has said that
he personally planted stories
for the CIA.
Saying he
believes a medical condition
gives him only a few years
to live, and that he is
filled with remorse,
Dr. Udo Ulfkotte,
the editor of Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung, one of
Germany's largest
newspapers, said in an
interview that he accepted
news stories written and
given to him by the CIA and
published them under his own
name. Ulfkotte said the aim
of much of the deception was
to drive nations toward war.
Dr. Ulfkotte
says the corruption of
journalists and major news
outlets by the CIA is
routine, accepted, and
widespread in the western
media, and that journalists
who do not comply either
cannot get jobs at any news
organization, or find their
careers cut short.
Dr. Ulfkotte
is the author of a book
currently available only in
German,
"Bought Journalists"
(Kopp 2014.) Aged 55, he was
also once an advisor to the
government of German
Chancellor Helmet Kohl.
The book has
become a bestseller in
Germany but, in a bizarre
twist which Ulfkotte says
characterizes the disconnect
caused by CIA control of the
western media, the book
cannot be reported on.
Ulfkotte
says:
"No German
mainstream journalist is
allowed to report about [my]
book. Otherwise he or she
will be sacked. So we have a
bestseller now that no
German journalist is allowed
to write or talk about."
Among the
stories Ulfkotte says he was
ordered to plant in his
newspaper over the years was
a story that Libyan
President Moammar Gaddafi
was building poison gas
factories in 2011. Ulfkotte
also says he was an
eyewitness to Saddam
Hussein's use of poison gas
against Iranians in the war
between Iran and Iraq, but
that the editors he worked
for at the time were not
interested, because Iraq was
a US ally at the time.
Ulfkotte says
he is better positioned to
come forward than many
journalists because he does
not have children who could
be threatened. Ulfkotte told
the
Russian newspaper Russian
Insider (RI):
"When I
told the Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung (Ulfkotte's
nwspaper) that I would
publish the book, their
lawyers sent me a letter
threatening with all legal
consequences if I would
publish any names or secrets
– but I don’t mind. You see,
I don’t have children to
take care of. And you must
know I was severely injured
during the gas attack I
witnessed in Iran in 1988.
I'm the sole German survivor
from a German poison gas
attack. I’m still suffering
from this. I’ve had three
heart attacks. I don’t
expect to live for more than
a few years."
Ulfkotte says
that remorse of having
"lied" to mass audiences
over the years drove him to
come forward. He told RI
that he was:
"taught to
lie, to betray and not to
tell the truth to the
public."
Ulfkotte
says:
"I'm ashamed
I was part of it.
Unfortunately I cannot
reverse this."
Among the
admissions that Ulfkotte
makes in the interview are
putting his own name to
articles completely written
by intelligence agencies. He
said:
"I ended up
publishing articles under my
own name written by agents
of the CIA and other
intelligence services,
especially the German secret
service."
Ulfkotte
detailed the pattern of
cajolery and outright
bribery used by the CIA and
other US-allied intelligence
agencies, for the purpose of
advancing political agendas.
Ulfkotte said:
"once
you're connected, you make
friends with selected
Americans. You think they
are your friends and you
start cooperating. They work
on your ego, make you feel
like you're important. And
one day one of them will ask
you 'Will you do me this
favor'..."
Ulfkotte
noted that a journalists on
international press trips
paid for by organizations
close to the government are
unlikely to submit a
storyline not favorable to
the sponsor.
Dr. Udo
Ulfkotte
hungarytoday.hu
Of the
gassing of Iranians he had
witnessed in the Eighties,
Ulfkoppe said:
"they
asked me to hand over the
photos that I had made to
the German association of
chemical companies in
Frankfurt, Verband der
Chemischen Industrie. This
poison gas that had killed
so many Iranians was made in
Germany."
In an
interview with
Russia Today, Ulfkotte said
that it was "not right" what
he had done, and that his
fear was that politicians
were
actively driving the world
toward war:
"it is not
right what I have done in
the past, to manipulate
people, to make propaganda
against Russia, and it is
not right what my colleagues
do, and have done in the
past, because they are
bribed to betray the people
not only in Germany, all
over Europe. … I am very
fearful of a new war in
Europe, and I don’t like to
have this situation again,
because war is never coming
from itself, there is always
people who push for war, and
this is not only
politicians, it is
journalists too. … We have
betrayed our readers, just
to push for war. … I don’t
want this anymore, I’m fed
up with this propaganda. We
live in a banana republic,
and not in a democratic
country where we have press
freedom..."
In his book
"The CIA and the Media,"
Watergate reporter Carl
Bernstein quotes William B.
Bader, former CIA
intelligence officer, in his
testimony before the Senate
Intelligence Committee.
Baeder said:
"There is
quite an incredible spread
of relationships. You don’t
need to manipulate Time
magazine, for example,
because there are [Central
Intelligence] Agency people
at the management level."
Bernstein
writes:
"The
Agency’s relationship with
the Times was by far its
most valuable among
newspapers, according to CIA
officials. From 1950 to
1966, about ten CIA
employees were provided
Times cover under
arrangements approved by the
newspaper’s late publisher,
Arthur Hays Sulzberger. The
cover arrangements were part
of a general Times
policy—set by Sulzberger—to
provide assistance to the
CIA whenever possible."
Ulfkotte was
on the staff of the Konrad
Adenauer Foundation from
1999 to 2003, according to
his
Wikipedia entry. He won
the
civic prize from the Annette
Barthelt Foundation in
2003.
|
Click for
Spanish,
German,
Dutch,
Danish,
French,
translation- Note-
Translation may take a
moment to load.
What's your response?
-
Scroll down to add / read comments
|
Support Information Clearing House
|
|
|
Please
read our
Comment Policy
before posting -
It is unacceptable to slander, smear or engage in personal attacks on authors of articles posted on ICH.
Those engaging in that behavior will be banned from the comment section.
|
|
|