Karen Kwiatkowski Deep Throats Bush
By Anthony
Gancarski
FrontPageMagazine.com | June 16, 2005
Former Air Force Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski,
writing at Hate
America Right website LewRockwell.com, makes the self-serving and somewhat ahistorical argument
that Deep Throat was just another "whistleblower," just as she and
others who abdicated their positions to rat out their superiors are.
Whistleblowers in government
can learn one thing from the current interest story about former FBI Deputy
Director W. Mark Felt. The
Who are these
“whistleblowers” Kwiatkowski extols? Among them are Sibel Edmonds, who in
Kwiatkowski’s euphemistic words “spoke out about FBI incompetence and possible
collusion in advance of 9/11. She has been and continues to be legally gagged
and verbally abused by the FBI, the Justice Department, and the White House.
Phoenix-like, she has responded to the dangerous leviathan by mobilizing hundreds
of National
Security Whistleblowers who are indeed
having an important impact on the cowardly and corrupt Congress and the
cowering tail-between-its-legs mainstream American media.”
As with the bulk of her previous
work, Kwiatkowski echoes the rhetoric of Lyndon LaRouche. (Kwiatkowski has repeatedly denied a connection with
LaRouche.) I
pointed out the roots of Kwiatkowski’s
crackpot theories about administration motives in the run-up to the Iraqi War
here on FrontPage Magazine, as did Michael Rubin of National Review.
However, the best article yet on Kwiatkowski's
dubious ties has been written by Edwin Black, an award-winning reporter and New
York Times contributor, for the History News Network. It is important to note that Black is not personally
ill-disposed towards Kwiatkowski: he describes her as an “simple-speaking,
amiable woman” even as he documents the former Pentagon staffer's penchant for
speaking loosely and naively about the "Zionist political cult in the
Pentagon."
Recent events have drawn attention
to another of Black’s observation: that Kwiatkowski, like W. Mark Felt, saw
herself as someone who had to circumvent both the established chain of command
and the democratic electoral mandate to make spurious and loathsome claims about
a sitting president and his lieutenants. She went so far, in 2002, as to begin
writing her columns anonymously. Entitled "Deep Throat Returns,"
subheaded "Insider Notes from the Pentagon," Kwiatkowski’s screeds
were heavy with Zionist and Israel conspiracy-theory references. For example:
"U.S. intentions in Iraq have been criticized for a lot of reasons...a
Zionist political cult that has lassoed the E-Ring [the most senior offices of
the Pentagon] and parts of Washington...using war to resolve years of piss-poor
U.S. energy policies."
His notes, “her column
activity probably amounts to the first time a sensitive security-cleared
Pentagon analyst regularly published such commentary to the world at large
while still on active duty and openly allowed it to be attributed to an
anonymous ‘Pentagon insider.’” This speaks volumes about the dubiousness of
Kwiatkowski’s “whistle blowing” as well as the gravity of what she was trying
to do – namely, hamstring the duly-elected Bush administration in its efforts
to carry out legitimate, in fact vital, activities on behalf of this country.
Did Kwiatkowski have the legal
right to disseminate inside baseball info about the inner workings of the
Pentagon? As Black contended, probably not:
Despite her repeated claims that
she is and was a “conservative,” it was Salon.Com – a redoubt of
the Left and no great friend to President Bush’s reelection campaign
– that spotlighted Kwiatkowski’s work most vividly last year, in
cooperation with the Soros-funded MoveOn.Org. As I wrote at the time:
Of course, Felt’s FBI engaged in
activities that made what the Watergate Burglars did look tame by comparison.
But in becoming a “whistleblower,” and having that status confirmed by the
anti-Nixon, anti-Republican media, Felt somehow was exonerated for his
excesses. The media has claimed Deep Throat was a hero, an intrepid
representative of the best of
President Nixon’s considerable successes as president, as well as the Horatio
Alger aspects of his story – a poor boy from a California farming family
pulls himself up by his bootstraps to become the leader of the free
world – were obscured by the muck kicked up by careerist Felt.
The likelihood of the Bush
presidency being destroyed similarly by 21st century Deep Throat
Karen Kwiatkowski, and the theories she has put forth, is unlikely. But it is
instructive to look at the work of this self-styled heir to Deep Throat’s
legacy, to see both how well-motivated would-be saboteurs work – and how
“mainstream” media outlets go out of their way to lionize them.