Turkey Pays Former CIA Director and Lobbyists
to Misrepresent Attacks on Kurds and ISIS
By Harut Sassounian
August 21, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "HP"
- Thousands of articles have been published
worldwide in recent weeks exposing Turkey's strategic trickery --
using the pretext of fighting ISIS to carry out a genocidal bombing
campaign against the Kurds who have courageously countered ISIS in
Syria and Iraq.
The Wall Street Journal reported on August 12 that
a senior US military official accused Turkey of deceiving the
American government by allowing its use of Incirlik airbase to
attack ISIS, as a cover for President Erdogan's war on Kurdish
fighters (PKK) in northern Iraq. So far, Turkey has carried out 300
air strikes against the PKK, and only three against ISIS! Erdogan's
intent in punishing the Kurds is to gain the sympathy of Turkish
voters in the next parliamentary elections, enabling his party to
win an outright majority and establish an autocratic presidential
theocracy.
To conceal its deception and mislead the American
public, within days of starting its war on the Kurds, Ankara hired
Squire Patton Boggs for $32,000 a month, as a subcontractor to the
powerful lobbying firm, the Gephardt Group. Squire Patton Boggs
includes former Senators Trent Lott and John Breaux, and retired
White House official Robert Kapla. The Gephardt lobbying team for
Turkey consists of subcontractors Greenberg Traurig, Brian Forni,
Lydia Borland, and Dickstein Shapiro LLP; the latter recently added
to its lobbying staff former CIA Director Porter Goss. Other
lobbying firms hired by Turkey are: Goldin Solutions, Alpaytac, Finn
Partners, Ferah Ozbek, and Golin/Harris International. According to
U.S. Justice Department records, Turkey pays these lobbying/public
relations firms around $5 million a year. Furthermore, several U.S.
non-profit organizations serve as fronts for the Turkish government
to promote its interests in the United States and take Members of
Congress and journalists on all-expense paid junkets to Turkey.
Among the U.S. lobbyists for Turkey, perhaps the
most questionable is Porter Goss, CIA Director from 2004 to 2006,
who has agreed to sell his soul and possibly U.S. national secrets
for a fistful of Turkish Liras.
It is noteworthy that in a report Mr. Goss filed
with the Justice Department under the Foreign Agents Registration
Act, he avoided answering the question regarding his compensation
from the Turkish government. He simply wrote: "Salary not based
solely on services rendered to the foreign principal [Turkey]"!
In the same form, filed on April 23, 2015, Mr.
Goss described his services for Turkey
as follows:
1) Provide counsel in connection with the
extension and strengthening of the Turkish-American relationship
in a number of key areas that are the subject of debate in
Congress, including trade, energy security, counter-terrorism
efforts, and efforts to build regional stability in the broader
Middle East and Europe;
2) Educating Members of Congress and the Administration on
issues of importance to Turkey;
3) Notifying Turkey of any action in Congress or the Executive
Branch on issues of importance to Turkey;
4) Preparing analyses of developments in Congress and the
Executive Branch on issues of importance to Turkey.
It is significant that Dickstein Shapiro LLP, Mr.
Goss's employer, misled the Justice Department, by reporting two
days prior to the start of his employment and three days before the
Armenian Genocide Centennial, that the former CIA Director had
already met on behalf of his lobbying firm with nine members of
Congress to discuss "US-Turkish relations."
Most probably, hiring Porter Goss as a lobbyist
for Turkey was a reward for his staunch support of Turkish issues,
while serving as a Republican congressman from Florida from 1989 to
2004. During the October 2000 debate on the Armenian Genocide
resolution in the House International Relations Committee, Cong.
Goss, the then Chair of the House Intelligence Committee, testified
against the adoption of the resolution, using the excuse that it
would harm U.S.-Turkey relations. Nevertheless, the genocide
resolution was adopted by a vote of 24 to 11.
It is bad enough that former Members of Congress
are selling themselves to anyone who is willing to pay them. But,
the former director of the CIA...? This is more than unethical; it
is a grave risk to U.S. national security. The American government
must not allow the sale of its top spymaster to the highest bidder!
What if North Korea offered him a higher price? Would Mr. Goss jump
ship and lobby for an enemy state just to make a few more dollars?
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