.KAREN
KWIATKOWSKI, A WOMAN OF CONSCIENCE,
INTERVIEW WITH MARK COOPER After two
decades in the U.S. Air Force, Lieutenant Colonel
Karen Kwiatkowski, now 43, knew her career as a
regional analyst was coming to an end when
in the months leading up to the war in Iraq
she felt she was being
propagandized by her own bosses.
With
masters degrees from Harvard in government
and zoology and two books on Saharan Africa to
her credit, she found herself transferred in the
spring of 2002 to a post as a political/military
desk officer at the Defense Departments
office for Near East South Asia (NESA), a policy
arm of the Pentagon.
Kwiatkowski
got there just as war fever was spreading, or
being spread as she would later argue, through
the halls of Washington. Indeed, shortly after
her arrival, a piece of NESA was broken off,
expanded and re-dubbed with the Orwellian name of
the Office of Special Plans. The OSPs task
was, ostensibly, to help the Pentagon develop
policy around the Iraq crisis.
She would
soon conclude that the OSP a pet project
of Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense
Secretary Don Rumsfeld was more akin to a
nerve center for what she now calls a
neoconservative coup, a hijacking of the
Pentagon.
Though a
lifelong conservative, Kwiatkowski found herself
appalled as the radical wing of the Bush
administration, including her superiors in the
Pentagon planning department, bulldozed internal
dissent, overlooked its own intelligence and
relentlessly pushed for confrontation with Iraq.
Deeply
frustrated and alarmed, Kwiatkowski, still on
active duty, took the unusual step of penning an
anonymous column of internal Pentagon dissent
that was posted on the Internet by former Colonel
David Hackworth, Americas most decorated
veteran.
As war
inevitably approached, and as she neared her
20-year mark in the Air Force, Kwiatkowski
concluded the only way she could viably resist
what she now terms the expansionist,
imperialist policies of the
neoconservatives who dominated Iraq policy was by
retiring and taking up a public fight against
them.
She left the
military last March, the same week that troops
invaded Iraq. Kwiatkowski started putting her
real name on her Web
reports and began
accepting speaking invitations. Im
now a soldier for the truth, she said in a
speech last week at Cal Poly Pomona. Afterward, I
spoke with her.
L.A.
WEEKLY: What was the relationship
between NESA and the now-notorious Office of
Special Plans, the group set up by Secretary of
Defense Rumsfeld and Vice President Cheney? Was
the OSP, in reality, an intelligence operation to
act as counter to the CIA?
KAREN
KWIATKOWSKI: The NESA office includes the
Iraq desk, as well as the desks of the rest of
the region. It is under Deputy Assistant
Secretary of Defense Bill Luti. When I joined
them, in May 2002, the Iraq desk was there. We
shared the same space, and we were all part of
the same general group. At that time it was
expanding. Contractors and employees were coming
though it wasnt clear what they were doing.
In August of
2002, the expanded Iraq desk found new spaces and
moved into them. It was told to us that this was
now to be known as the Office of Special Plans.
The Office of Special Plans would take issue with
those who say they were doing intelligence. They
would say they were developing policy for the
Office of the Secretary of Defense for the
invasion of Iraq.
But
developing policy is not the same as developing
propaganda and pushing a particular agenda. And
actually, thats more what they really did.
They pushed an agenda on Iraq, and they developed
pretty sophisticated propaganda lines which were
fed throughout government, to the Congress, and
even internally to the Pentagon to try and
make this case of immediacy. This case of severe
threat to the United States.
You
retired when the war broke out and have been
speaking out publicly. But you were already
publishing critical reports anonymously while
still in uniform and while still on active
service. Why did you take that rather unusual
step?
Due to my
frustration over what I was seeing around me as
soon as I joined Bill Lutis organization,
what I was seeing in terms of neoconservative
agendas and the way they were being pursued to
formulate a foreign policy and a military policy
an invasion of a sovereign country, an
occupation, a poorly planned occupation. I was
concerned about it; I was in opposition to that,
and I was not alone.
So I started
writing what I considered to be funny, short
essays for my own sanity. Eventually, I e-mailed
them to former Colonel David Hackworth, who runs
the Web page Soldiers for the Truth, and he
published them under the title Insider
Notes From the Pentagon. I wrote 28 of
those columns from August 2002 until I retired.
There you
were, a career military officer, a Pentagon
analyst, a conservative who had given two decades
to this work. What provoked you to become first a
covert and later a public dissident?
Like most
people, Ive always thought there should be
honesty in government. Working 20 years in the
military, Im sure I saw some things that
were less than honest or accountable. But nothing
to the degree that I saw when I joined Near East
South Asia.
This was
creatively produced propaganda spread not only
through the Pentagon, but across a network of
policymakers the State Department, with
John Bolton; the Vice Presidents Office,
the very close relationship the OSP had with that
office. That is not normal, that is a bypassing
of normal processes. Then there was the National
Security Council, with certain people who had
neoconservative views; Scooter Libby, the vice
presidents chief of staff; a network of
think tanks who advocated neoconservative views
the American Enterprise Institute, the
Center for Security Policy with Frank Gaffney,
the columnist Charles Krauthammer was very
reliable. So there was just not a process inside
the Pentagon that should have developed good
honest policy, but it was instead pushing a
particular agenda; this group worked in a
coordinated manner, across media and parts of the
government, with their neoconservative compadres.
How did
you experience this in your day-to-day work?
There was a
sort of groupthink, an adopted storyline: We are
going to invade Iraq and we are going to
eliminate Saddam Hussein and we are going to have
bases in Iraq. This was all a given even by the
time I joined them, in May of 2002.
You heard
this in staff meetings?
The
discussions were ones of this sort of
inevitability. The concerns were only that some
policymakers still had to get onboard with this
agenda. Not that this agenda was right or wrong
but that we needed to convince the
remaining holdovers. Colin Powell, for example.
There was a lot of frustration with Powell; they
said a lot of bad things about him in the office.
They got very angry with him when he convinced
Bush to go back to the U.N. and forced a
four-month delay in their invasion plans.
General Tony
Zinni is another one. Zinni, the combatant
commander of Central Command, Tommy Franks
predecessor a very well-qualified guy who
knows the Middle East inside out, knows the
military inside out, a Marine, a great guy. He
spoke out publicly as President Bushs
Middle East envoy about some of the things he
saw. Before he was removed by Bush, I heard Zinni
called a traitor in a staff meeting. They were
very anti-anybody who might provide information
that affected their paradigm. They were the spin
enforcers.
How did
this atmosphere affect your work? To be direct,
were you told by your superiors what you could
say and not say? What could and could not be
discussed? Or were opinions they didnt like
just ignored?
I can give
you one clear example where we were told to
follow the party line, where I was told directly.
I worked North Africa, which included Libya. I
remember in one case, I had to rewrite something
a number of times before it went through. It was
a background paper on Libya, and Libya has been
working for years to try and regain the respect
of the international community. I had
intelligence that told me this, and I quoted from
the intelligence, but they made me go back and
change it and change it. Theyd make me
delete the quotes from intelligence so they could
present their case on Libya in a way that said it
was still a threat to its neighbors and that
Libya was still a belligerent, antagonistic
force. They edited my reports in that way. In
fact, the last report I made, they said,
Just send me the file. And I
dont know what the report ended up looking
like, because I imagine more changes were made.
On Libya,
really a small player, the facts did not fit
their paradigm that we have all these enemies.
One person
youve written about is Abe Shulsky. You
describe him as a personable, affable fellow but
one who played a key role in the official spin
that led to war.
Abe was the
director of the Office of Special Plans. He was
in our shared offices when I joined, in May 2002.
He comes from an academic background; hes
definitely a neoconservative. He is a student of
Leo Strauss from the University of Chicago
so he has that Straussian academic perspective.
He was the final proving authority on all the
talking points that were generated from the
Office of Special Plans and that were distributed
throughout the Pentagon, certainly to staff
officers. And it appears to me they were also
distributed to the Vice Presidents Office
and to the presidential speechwriters. Much of
the phraseology that was in our talking points
consists of the same things I heard the president
say.
So Shulsky
was the sort of controller, the disciplinarian,
the overseeing monitor of the propaganda flow.
From where you sat, did you see him manipulate
the information?
We had a
whole staff to help him do that, and he was the
approving authority. I can give you one example
of how the talking points were altered. We were
instructed by Bill Luti, on behalf of the Office
of Special Plans, on behalf of Abe Shulsky, that
we would not write anything about Iraq, WMD or
terrorism in any papers that we prepared for our
superiors except as instructed by the Office of
Special Plans. And it would provide to us an
electronic document of talking points on these
issues. So I got to see how they evolved.
It was very
clear to me that they did not evolve as a result
of new intelligence, of improved intelligence, or
any type of seeking of the truth. The way they
evolved is that certain bullets were dropped or
altered based on what was being reported on the
front pages of the Washington Post or The New
York Times.
Can you be
specific?
One item that
was dropped was in November [2002]. It was the
issue of the meeting in Prague prior to 9/11
between Mohammed Atta and a member of Saddam
Husseins intelligence force. We had had
this in our talking points from September through
mid-November. And then it dropped out totally. No
explanation. Just gone. That was because the
media reported that the FBI had stepped away from
that, that the CIA said it didnt happen.
Lets
clarify this. Talking points are generally used
to deal with media. But you were a desk officer,
not a politician who had to go and deal with the
press. So are you saying the Office of Special
Plans provided you a schematic, an outline of the
way major points should be addressed in any
report or analysis that you developed regarding
Iraq, WMD or terrorism?
Thats
right. And these did not follow the intent, the
content or the accuracy of intelligence . . .
They were
political . . .
They were
political, politically manipulated. They did have
obviously bits of intelligence in them, but they
were created to propagandize. So we inside the
Pentagon, staff officers and senior
administration officials who might not work Iraq
directly, were being propagandized by this same
Office of Special Plans.
In the 10
months you worked in that office in the run-up to
the war, was there ever any open debate? The
public, at least, was being told at the time that
there was a serious assessment going on regarding
the level of threat from Iraq, the presence or
absence of WMD, et cetera. Was this debated
inside your office at the Pentagon?
No. Those
things were not debated. To them, Saddam Hussein
needed to go.
You
believe that decision was made by the time you
got there, almost a year before the war?
That decision
was made by the time I got there. So there was no
debate over WMD, the possible relations Saddam
Hussein may have had with terrorist groups and so
on. They spent their energy gathering pieces of
information and creating a propaganda storyline,
which is the same storyline we heard the
president and Vice President Cheney tell the
American people in the fall of 2002.
The very
phrases they used are coming back to haunt them
because they are blatantly false and not based on
any intelligence. The OSP and the Vice
Presidents Office were critical in this
propaganda effort to convince Americans
that there was some just requirement for
pre-emptive war.
What do
you believe the real reasons were for the war?
The
neoconservatives needed to do more than just
topple Saddam Hussein. They wanted to put in a
government friendly to the U.S., and they wanted
permanent basing in Iraq. There are several
reasons why they wanted to do that. None of those
reasons, of course, were presented to the
American people or to Congress.
So you
dont think there was a genuine interest as
to whether or not there really were weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq?
Its not
about interest. We knew. We knew from many years
of both high-level surveillance and other types
of shared intelligence, not to mention the
information from the U.N., we knew, we knew what
was left [from the Gulf War] and the viability of
any of that. Bush said he didnt know.
The truth is,
we know [Saddam] didnt have these things.
Almost a billion dollars has been spent a
billion dollars! by David Kays group
to search for these WMD, a total whitewash
effort. They didnt find anything, they
didnt expect to find anything.
So if, as
you argue, they knew there werent any of
these WMD, then what exactly drove the
neoconservatives to war?
The
neoconservatives pride themselves on having a
global vision, a long-term strategic perspective.
And there were three reasons why they felt the
U.S. needed to topple Saddam, put in a friendly
government and occupy Iraq.
One of those
reasons is that sanctions and containment were
working and everybody pretty much knew it. Many
companies around the world were preparing to do
business with Iraq in anticipation of a lifting
of sanctions. But the U.S. and the U.K. had been
bombing northern and southern Iraq since 1991. So
it was very unlikely that we would be in any kind
of position to gain significant contracts in any
post-sanctions Iraq. And those sanctions were
going to be lifted soon, Saddam would still be in
place, and we would get no financial benefit.
The second
reason has to do with our military-basing posture
in the region. We had been very dissatisfied with
our relations with Saudi Arabia, particularly the
restrictions on our basing. And also there was
dissatisfaction from the people of Saudi Arabia.
So we were looking for alternate strategic
locations beyond Kuwait, beyond Qatar, to secure
something we had been searching for since the
days of Carter to secure the energy lines
of communication in the region. Bases in Iraq,
then, were very important that is, if you
hold that is Americas role in the world.
Saddam Hussein was not about to invite us in.
The last
reason is the conversion, the switch Saddam
Hussein made in the Food for Oil program, from
the dollar to the euro. He did this, by the way,
long before 9/11, in November 2000 selling
his oil for euros. The oil sales permitted in
that program arent very much. But when the
sanctions would be lifted, the sales from the
country with the second largest oil reserves on
the planet would have been moving to the euro.
The U.S.
dollar is in a sensitive period because we are a
debtor nation now. Our currency is still popular,
but its not backed up like it used to be.
If oil, a very solid commodity, is traded on the
euro, that could cause massive, almost glacial,
shifts in confidence in trading on the dollar. So
one of the first executive orders that Bush
signed in May [2003] switched trading on
Iraqs oil back to the dollar.
At the
time you left the military, a year ago, just how
great was the influence of this neoconservative
faction on Pentagon policy?
When it comes
to Middle East policy, they were in complete
control, at least in the Pentagon. There was some
debate at the State Department.
Indeed,
when you were still in uniform and writing a Web
column anonymously, you expressed your bitter
disappointment when Secretary of State Powell
in your words eventually
capitulated.
He did. When
he made his now-famous power-point slide
presentation at the U.N., he totally capitulated.
It meant he was totally onboard. Whether he
believed it or not.
You gave
your life to the military, you voted Republican
for many years, you say you served in the
Pentagon right up to the outbreak of war. What
does it feel like to be out now, publicly
denouncing your old bosses?
Know what it
feels like? It feels like duty. Thats what
it feels like. Ive thought about it many
times. You know, I spent 20 years working for
something that at least under this
administration turned out to be something
I wasnt working for. I mean, these people
have total disrespect for the Constitution. We
swear an oath, military officers and NCOs alike
swear an oath to uphold the Constitution. These
people have no respect for the Constitution. The
Congress was misled, it was lied to. At a very
minimum that is a subversion of the Constitution.
A pre-emptive war based on what we knew was not a
pressing need is not what this country stands
for.
What I feel
now is that Im not retired. I still have a
responsibility to do my part as a citizen to try
and correct the problem.
LA WEEKLY
NEWS;mark cooperİfeb,2004
|