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tv   The Whistleblowers  RT  March 11, 2023 2:30pm-2:58pm EST

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ah so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy confrontation, let it be an arms race, his own offense. they're down and talk with . 2 0 analysts, especially in national security agencies, are generally acknowledged to be among the leading experts in their fields. in a perfect world, they provide informed analysis to policy makers to allow those policy makers to make the best informed decisions. that's the way the system is supposed to work.
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but what happens when policy makers ignore the analysis even worse? what happens when policy makers did their preconceived policies? i'll tell you what happens. it leads to war. i'm john kerry. aku, you're watching the whistleblowers. ah. welcome to the whistleblowers. i'm john kerry. aku, it's no secret that the american government during the george w bush administration made up its mind to go to war with iraq on the white house accused saddam hussein of being in league with osama bin laden and al qaeda. that also wasn't true. george w bush and vice president dick cheney wanted to overthrow saddam. they didn't care what the truth was. we're going to talk about how that cynical decision led to war with the whistleblower who tried to stop it. we're joined by air force, lieutenant colonel. karen quick koski. karen, welcome to the show. thanks so much for being with us. you were raised in
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a patriotic christian republican home and you freely entered into public service. as soon as you became an adult, karen, you join the military and you were commissioned as an officer. you eventually rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel, and you retired after 21 years of service in the u. s. air force and at the national security agency, like all national security whistleblowers you took your oath to the constitution seriously. and in the prelude to the iraq war, you spoke out about the corruption of political influence on the decision to go to war with iraq. tell us what that was like, what was it that led you to speak out? well, it actually started at the end of the cold war. i was in the military, of course, and i'm the, at my expectations were course that as the were so packed, had done collapsed. and the soviet was in the soviet union anymore, that nato would actually shrink and become
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a much smaller organization. and instead it was the opposite, so that surprised me. i didn't, i didn't really, i didn't really understand why that was. and then of course, they launched into us in nato wars with the was the balcony. so a little bit like they kind of woke me up a little bit like i expected one thing and something else happened. and i then, of course worked in an essay. and so the things it an essay was doing, ah, were unconstitutional even when i was there. and, and i, in, i didn't know i'm not a techie ah, but just some of the things that we talked about us doing. i'm, we're problem a constitutional problem. and yet nobody seemed to care that that, that was an issue. we just, you know, we wouldn't talk about that, but it wasn't really an issue. and then of course, so my last tour of course was at the office, the secretary defense in policy. and we will look, i was working north africa so we were sharing office space was the people doing the
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iraq and iran desks and that kind of thing. so i guess i had become a little more tired of just using the the government to play your games. i mean, this is what people seem to be doing these, these public servants, these bureaucrats. i'm not so much the guys in uniform. i guess i was allied with them and many of us would talk about, you know, none of this makes any sense, but you know, that's what they're doing. so what we're doing didn't have anything to do with national defense. increasingly i came to understand that and then especially what i saw in those final years as the, the run up to the invasion of iraq. i saw actual because i had access to the intelligence and the information. i could look at something on my desk classified secret and top secret. and the next day i would see the exact same thing in the new york times, and i knew i didn't share it. so who was, you know, doing it and,
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and who was celebrating it and, you know, we, i think it was, it had nothing to do with defense. it had to do is we have a military. let's play with it to make our own personal wish discuss to and who, who these people will neocons, which had been around for a while. been around since reagan, certainly, if not sooner and before then. and they were certainly populating the pentagon when i worked there. and, and they stayed throughout the bush administration, they stating at the obama administration. and they are, they stayed in the trumping station of john bolton, sir, to special security advisor and, and they're in there in the biden administration. so these people who manipulate the defense institutions that are supposed to be constitutionally bound and they're supposed to serve the country and serve the people, the people that pay for them. they don't, they don't do any that they just use those institutions. and so i guess i was, you know, when you've been in the military, we, you know, you've been in service for awhile. you pretty much lose patience with it. and so i,
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i really had overtime begun to trust my own gut and my own judgment. and yet it was not a problem for me to seek out ways to, to share the information that i had. it didn't even, it didn't bother me and i was eager to do it. you and i both worked with people from the defense department's office of special plans or o s p in the run up to the iraq war. this was an unusual and highly politicized group. in the defense department, that was led by a close former aid to vice president dick cheney by the name of bill ludy. i found ludy to be a dangerous ideologue and i think you did too. it was ludy and his cohorts in the office of special plans who pushed the idea of amid chelsea and iraqi dissident and one of the most corrupt people i have ever met in my life as a possible replacement for saddam hussein. when chela be fell apart under the weight of his own corruption, the c i dropped him. but bill ludy and
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o s p continued to support shelby. and the notion that chelsea could lead men into battle in iraq. that of course was a pipe dream. tell us what things were like in o. s p at that time, tell us about how the intelligence community analysis on iraq was politicized. in order to support a war agenda. they took little bits and pieces of intel. some approve and validated until in some just ra ra, information you know, we would think of it is stuff. we read the newspaper, unconfirmed things, and they, they promoted a storyline. they, they created a back story included a storyline that, um you know, would, would help them do what they wanted to do. which of course, was to install a puppet to get rid of sodomy, st, who really was standing up for not not, we're not was seeing that your rumsfeld was buddies with him only a few years before that. but whatever it was, a nationalist in many ways he was standing up for a strong racking. why did he,
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you know, he's fighting years ago before with kuwait because of oil because he says this is a national resource. and so he's doing things that, oh and of course decided to go off the petro dollar. that's really dangerous. but dumb. so soda machine is behaving as a independent nationalist person who isn't going to take orders from united states . that isn't please united states, not now. not then, not 40 years before that. so this how, you know, charlie b i, they said, well, we'll, we'll, we'll do what we say we'll, we'll sponsor him. you know, it's funny, i hate to say the split job. it is, it shall be, or, you know, kolinski which, why am i talking about? i don't, i don't even know but this pattern that the new kinds of people like, you know, john bolton, again, i mentioned him because he says, well, it's hard to do. coups yours are a lot of hard work to conduct these kooks cuz we've done it before. well, course that's, that's what they do. they figure out how they can control another country and
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specifically on other countries resources. and of course with iraq, those resources are primarily oil. but also with some with hussein, they could work with chalabi, they didn't have any other guy. so they nurture up this image. the storyline, hey, here's this guy. he's a freedom fighter. he's, you know, he's didn't, he's a democrat, he's all these people. he's all these. so, you know, the people love him in a wreck, which of course, i mean the stuff was even the until that we had was obviously false. but it didn't matter because if you could put it on the front page of the new york times in the washington post, you could influence congress. you could influence, think tanks, you could, you could shape a fantasy. and then, and then try to make that happen. and again, you know, i think that's pretty serious to use the military. i don't think it's, i think if you got to kill people, if you're gonna have a war and i be for
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a serious reason, it ought to be for a valid national defense justification. i mean, i'm still, i'm old fashioned. i think if, if this country goes to war, the congress should declare war, you know, that's what the constitution says. these folks, i don't believe any of that. and in fact, they are not with the constitution that is a dead letter to them. they are, they play a game, of course, so you and shall be, died of some years ago. am i not really tongue in cheek obituary, but i did write a column for lew rockwell and you know, i mean, he was a tool that the neocons used to promoting their fantasies and the things that they use and the people that they kill in the money that they spend to promote their fantasies. again, none of it is constitutional and none of it is, is moral. none of it is right. and yet it hasn't stopped. it has continued shelby's one example. you're watching the whistle blowers were speaking with former
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u. s. air force, colonel and pentagon intelligence analyst, karen quick koski. when we get back from a short break, we'll ask her about the fallout from that faithful decision to go to war with iraq . stay tuned. will be right back. ah. 2 2 ah, march, the 112011. the largest earthquake ever recorded in japan is registered. a 14 meter tsunami devastates the fukushima ichi nuclear power plant. a patient with the nuclear reactors of flooded sparking and horrific disaster with
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on decides to go to the area of the nuclear meltdown from fukushima immediately about the foot of the sure a job takeover. so i'd love to talk with somebody about the with a 4 year investigation starts to watch on r t o is the aggressor today i'm authorized with additional strong sanctions. today russia is the country with the most sanctions imposed against it. a number that's constantly growing up in the future. when was the course renewed as you speak on the bill in your senior, mostly mine, or wish you were banding all in ports of russian oil and gas, new g i g
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with info. let me know when you have regarding joe biden, imposing these sanctions on russia. jo has destroyed the american economy, so there's your boomerang self. 2 2 ah, welcome back to the whistle blows. i'm john. curiosity were speaking to former u. s. air force lieutenant colonel and pentagon intelligence analyst, karen quite cowski about the decision to go to war in iraq, based on false and politicized intelligence. karen, thanks again for being with us. karen in 2015, upon average shelby's death. you wrote a piece for lew rockwell dot com saying that in retrospect, the period just before the iraq war was something of an age of innocence. you wrote, quote, as painful as it was to watch the u. s. government beam in 2003 shelby was on track
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to become the new leader of iraq. just as soon as paul wolfowitz, his projected counties and the pentagon, the national security council, and the state department on quote. and then you said something that strikes me as critically important. even today. you see continued to advise the obama administration as late as 2015. and some of those people are still in government today. is it even possible to save ourselves from warmongers and war criminals when they're practically embedded, permanently in the government? no. as long as they are embedded permanently, which we have seen and it's not just victorian new and it's lots of are there in permanently embedded in the government and it is impossible to on it as long as they are there to have a different foreign policy. so if you want to different foreign policy, these individuals not just their philosophy because you know, it's a free country use free speech. you can think what you want to think. but
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neoconservatism is not what the american people want. that's not what they believe in. that's not the foreign policy they which to pursue. and yet we have non elected bureaucrats appointees who persist in his revolving door between government service think tank, government service, think tanks, sometimes of a position in congress back to the government service. can't be fired, keep getting appointed, keep getting confirmed in some cases. i mean there are confirming, i mean, this is a different subject. would you remember when they confirmed a gene, a hassle? what is the process? what is the purpose of this process? if they can confirm that one of the wire confirmation, just just pick the people you want, put them in there. why? why rubber stamp it's? it's humiliating. but yeah, these folks have to go and our foreign policy. in particular, our military policy is to a foreign slash military slash security policy. they take trillions of dollars
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a year. they cost trillions of dollars a year. don't do any good. so i'm ready for radical change. and i think really that, that they have to go and the budgets have to be shrunk to the levels that are the populist in this country believe we should have. and also what the constitution envision, which he didn't envision a standing army. it didn't vision if we went to war, it would be a people for congress would declare that were, you know, we didn't have that vietnam either in declared war since we're, we're to, so you take vietnam, very unpopular war, unpopular. and that unpopularity was memorialized in music and poetry and books and, and movies and riots and people getting killed by national car, you know, was not a popular war. and it was also, we could have prevented it if they had consulted with the congress and let the house have a vote and say, do we want to make war in vietnam?
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they would have to justify it. and guess what, that should that the, the bill of rights and some of these things in the framework of our government. it is something that other countries admire. it's something that we treasure, you know, we've lasted for 240 years we're, it's kind of a good thing. if you want to keep it. we've got to do something about washington because washington is not abide by that in any way, shape or form. they don't respect it and they basically pay lip service to the people's wishes and m it when i say cut their budget. so yeah, just and they may end up cutting it. but if the country does bankrupt, where they going to do pay them 1st, it probably will. but i don't think that the expense that the united states has and you know, this multi polar world that is already here. but let's say we're, we don't want to admit that it's coming, okay it's, it's either it's already here, which it is, or you can say it's coming. but in any case, united states won't be the global policeman. that may be an opportunity to have
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a more defensive and peaceful and pro trade and share the good things that make america great. but we're not trying to is totally what these to worse for pal, you know, we're not fighting for democracy. it, we've never, i can't think of any, maybe we have and you may know, but i can't think of any time we fight for democracy. we have fought for other people's resources. karen, you were inside the pentagon on 911. you later wrote that following the attack, and as the u. s. approached war with the rock, you quote witnessed neoconservative agenda bearers within o s p u circ measured and carefully considered assessments. and through suppression and distortion of intelligence analysis, promulgate what were in fact falsehoods. to both congress and the executive office of the president on quote, later you went on to become a source for knight ridder, the news agency that broke many of the stories related to the iraq war,
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knight ridder was always skeptical of the information being released by the bush administration and the pentagon, you also appeared in the award winning documentary film, why we fight? how did you make that transition from making your revelations within the chain of command to going public? well, i mean, it was the incredible amount of frustration, you know, seeing how information was being misused and manipulated in order to get us into a war. i mean, an actual, you know, not just like when we say, oh, you creased fighting a war and we're giving them billions and billions of dollars. this was a war where americans were going to go over there and fight. you know, something that, that should be a serious matter and it should be based on fact. and yet it, all this was created, you know, stories were told 2 different chains so that one guy would call the other guy and say, well, can you confirm this? oh, sure, i saw the same thing, must be true. it was a severe amount of frustration. and again, you know,
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if you have to be in the military for, you know, 15 or 16 years, you kind of have seen things. you kind of at least i had grown into my own i again, i trusted my assessment of things where i might not of his i'd been younger, but i'd seen enough that i, that i said this, this makes no sense. and plus the course was just me. i had lots of friends who would tell me their end of the story from other office is what was happening. and no, none of none of them know most people felt like they couldn't speak out, but i didn't feel that way. i was going to retire was playing to retires at my earliest opportunity, even before this. so and, and i wasn't going to work for these folks afterwards and i think that makes a difference. and you know, another thing, and i don't know if we've talked about it if it's been observed, but it's kind of a, i was the bread winner for my family for many, many years. but they say that women, this is maybe it's a stereotype,
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maybe it's changed, but i'm born in 1906 that women don't define, they're worse as much through their employment through their jobs as maybe men do. so for me, i didn't see this as this is really going to ruin my career. i mean it would of if i stayed there, no dad, i couldn't stayed in but them. but i didn't see that as a huge issue wasn't to me. it was far more important to to really share the information out with somebody that could see if it was worth anything and maybe combat some of the lives it just that that felt important to me. but also i did not, i wasn't totally, you know, i wasn't so worried about my reputation as a, as an officer. push it because and again, because i believed in the constitution,
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and i do think, and this is, you know, we see this, i'm not a big time whistleblower. like who's, who's really suffered from it. like you have and also snowden, you know, but all of us had some good. we put value in the constitution. we thought it was a serious document. we thought it was a document that our country would works would, would live by. it's particularly our leaders. and so on it, you know, really, i mean, it makes you ang that it's being ignored, that they don't care that there are countries going down a track that is lawless and testicle lies. and a manipulation of the media and the manipulation of congress is very upsetting. but i think it was upsetting to a lot of people, but again, i didn't see this is oh, this is going to ruin my career. and then people will be talking about me. they'll say, oh, what you know, she, she had a great group did she just threw it away? i didn't even that didn't even cross my mind. it had nothing to do with anything.
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and i say i wish we had more people who really would care more about their principles and what they know to be right and wrong. even if i don't agree with them, i don't care. i wish they would, would people just would trust their own sense of right and wrong, more than, than what their boss is. tell them because my boss is deluding was my direct boss. so what, you know, what does that say? yeah. you should, i should i have listened to him and, and looked up to him in such a way. oh, he knows better than me. i don't think so. and i hope i hope i hope that generations behind us, younger people than us have embraced that attitude. that they can make their own judgment. they can use their own brain. they can. now, you know, you want to be crazy, was it you, you know, if you're ignorant and you think crazy, think crazy things and you believe him, okay, fine. but really take the risk because of our country has gotten a really,
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really bad pass and it's not just been no recently, i mean it's been over the past really this past century. but my whole life time, we're going to 960 started military life. when i was in my early twenties, really my whole life time, i have witnessed terrible delegation of the constitution and terrible, a terrible future, a terrible presence of our country, bad behavior by united states of america. and it's, it's in, it's not right. i can't be proud of it and i should be able to be proud of my country. we should all we have the right to be proud of our country. and the fact that we can't mean social, they still work digit one can only hope that governments and the policy makers who lead them can learn from the mistakes of the past. but that may be too much to ask . we will probably never find ourselves in a position where people in positions of authority or power do something simply
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because it's the right thing to do. and sometimes when they make their decisions, especially when those decisions are based on cynical and false information. we find ourselves at war. we can't forget to that. those wars, no matter how short or how righteous they may seem, maintain a cost in human lives. always honesty is telling the truth, guessed karen, quite cowski. and thanks to you for joining us for another episode of the whistle blowers until next time. 2 2 ah ah
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with sir austin, wanted to start over to channel by josha took longer close with ah, the message is on the on the wall. no sequential program. so for you to use new was to the william, which is a new with
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ah, the largest us bank to collab since the 2008 financial crisis leave scores of companies and individual holding the bag with calls for immediate government intervention. also ahead fragments help the shell went right through the car right here. and right through this exceed as you can see, the blood is still there. a father and son are killed in don. yeah, that's really an infrastructure again. comes under ukrainian. shelly
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anger boils in the u. k as a b b c home that suspended from work over criticism of the government's new bill on illegal immigrant.
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