Greg Palast. (photo: Zach D. Roberts)
The US Government Told Me Bin Laden Read My Book. But
What Is It Not Telling Us?
By
Greg Palast, Guardian UK
21 May 15
Finding out that The Best
Democracy Money Can Buy was on the Bin Laden bookshelf confirms my fears about
America’s war on whistleblowers
already knew that Osama bin Laden read my book
before the headlines this week — but I’m still angry that he gave The Best
Democracy Money Can Buy only four-and-a-half stars on his Amazon review.
Obviously, something in the book pissed him off, because he never friended me
on Facebook.
It was actually quite embarrassing to learn that Bin
Laden was reading my tome — and a few by my homie Noam Chomsky. It’s embarrassing because it’s
clear that Bin Laden was more well-read than our president of the time (though,
in George W Bush’s defence, there’s much to be learned from My Pet Goat).
I do hope Osama made it to page 229. I talk about a
guy who worked at my office, Clinton Davis. Before I left to write for the
Guardian and Observer, my office was in Tower 2 of the World Trade Center.
Davis, a cop, was safe at ground level, but he ran upstairs to save others —
and disappeared, forever. Did Bin Laden get a little laugh out of that one? At
least he got to know his victim’s name.
And what did Bin Laden think of my investigation of
the 9/11 attack? While working at Newsnight, a few weeks after the towers fell,
a little birdie dropped off a 30-page memo marked “SECRET,” “eyes only” and
“1-99I WF”, which is code for “national security document”. The document
suggested that FBI agents were blocked from investigating the Bin Laden family
well before 11 September 2001.
Calls to the Defense Intelligence Agency, CIA and FBI
insiders authenticated this bombshell of a devastating intelligence failure.
No, the evidence did not show that President Bush knew
about the 9/11 attack in advance. But here was something still quite damning:
we learned that the Bush family connection to the Bin Laden family business
might have been a shield against government probes. Did Bin Laden, reading
that, make a note to himself to thank the Bushes for their unintended
protection? I assumed the FBI would deny the authenticity of the document.
Instead of denying that the Bin Laden investigation had been spiked, the FBI spokesman told Newsnight these chilling
words: “There are a lot of things the intelligence community knows and other
people ought not to know.”
Ought not to know? What else ought we not to know? What
else is government hiding from us — and when will it kill us?
The US government has charged Edward Snowden with
“willful communication of classified communications and intelligence
information to an unauthorised person”. CIA agent Jeffrey A Sterling
has just received a three-year sentence for passing information to a reporter.
This suggests that, today, Newsnight’s releasing the FBI document would land me
or my informants in the slammer.
Why? Is there really a fear that terrorists will read
our information? Well, in my case at least, I know Bin Laden probably did in
fact read secret national security documents — in my book. Did he learn some
great state secret that would allow him to escape? Obviously not. Did Bin Laden
learn the secret that our leaders are incompetent and craven and that our
intelligence agencies are poisoned by commercial and political interests? I
suspect he knew that already.
Finding that Bin Laden read my book, with its several
chapters revealing state secrets, confirms for me that the new official war on
whistleblowers and reporters is not about keeping information out of the hands
of terrorists, but making sure that “the public ought not to know” where the
fools at the helm are leading us.
© 2015 Reader Supported News
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"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class
has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives."
Eugene Victor Debs
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