El término inglés
whistleblower admite variadas interpretaciones: alertador, denunciante,
delator, soplón. Suele aplicarse a aquellas personas que, habiendo pertenecido
a instituciones en las que se cometieron o cometen determinadas tropelías,
salen a denunciarlas públicamente. Philip Giraldi, ex agente de la CIA y actual
director del Council of National Interest, actuó como un whistleblower el
pasado 30 de Julio, al publicar la siguiente nota en el sitio web The American
Conservative. Nada que uno no sepa ya, pero sorprende leerlo así, tan clarito y explícito. Los subrayados son nuestros:
Título: Deep
State America
Epígrafe:
Democracy is often subverted by special interests operating behind the scenes.
Texto: It has
frequently been alleged that the modern Turkish Republic operates on two
levels. It has a parliamentary democracy complete with a constitution and
regular elections, but there also exists a secret government that has been
referred to as the “deep state,” in Turkish “Derin Devlet.”
The concept of
“deep state” has recently become fashionable to a certain extent, particularly
to explain the persistence of traditional political alignments when confronted
by the recent revolutions in parts of the Middle East and Eastern Europe. For
those who believe in the existence of the deep state, there are a number of
institutional as well as extralegal relationships that might suggest its
presence.
Some believe that
this deep state arose out of a secret NATO operation called “Gladio,” which
created an infrastructure for so-called “stay behind operations” if Western
Europe were to be overrun by the Soviet Union and its allies. There is a
certain logic to that assumption, as a deep state has to be organized around a
center of official and publicly accepted power, which means it normally
includes senior officials of the police and intelligence services as well as
the military. For the police and intelligence agencies, the propensity to
operate in secret is a sine qua non for the deep state, as it provides cover
for the maintenance of relationships that under other circumstances would be
considered suspect or even illegal.
In Turkey, the
notion that there has to be an outside force restraining dissent from political
norms was, until recently, even given a legal fig leaf through the Constitution
of 1982, which granted to the military’s National Security Council authority to
intervene in developing political situations to “protect” the state. There
have, in fact, been four military coups in Turkey. But deep state goes far
beyond those overt interventions. It has been claimed that deep state
activities in Turkey are frequently conducted through connivance with
politicians who provide cover for the activity, with corporate interests and
with criminal groups who can operate across borders and help in the mundane
tasks of political corruption, including drug trafficking and money laundering.
A number of
senior Turkish politicians have spoken openly of the existence of the deep
state. Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit tried to learn more about the organization
and, for his pains, endured an assassination attempt in 1977. Tansu Ciller
eulogized “those who died for the state and those who killed for the state,”
referring to the assassinations of communists and Kurds. There have been
several significant exposures of Turkish deep state activities, most notably an
automobile accident in 1996 in Susurluk that killed the Deputy Chief of the
Istanbul Police and the leader of the Grey Wolves extreme right wing
nationalist group. A member of parliament was also in the car and a fake
passport was discovered, tying together a criminal group that had operated
death squads with a senior security official and an elected member of the
legislature. A subsequent investigation determined that the police had been
using the criminals to support their operations against leftist groups and other
dissidents. Deep state operatives have also been linked to assassinations of a
judge, Kurds, leftists, potential state witnesses, and an Armenian journalist.
They have also bombed a Kurdish bookstore and the offices of a leading
newspaper.
As all governments—sometimes
for good reasons—engage in concealment of their more questionable activities,
or even resort to out and out deception, one must ask how the deep state
differs. While an elected government might sometimes engage in activity that is
legally questionable, there is normally some plausible pretext employed to
cover up or explain the act.
But for players
in the deep state, there is no accountability and no legal limit. Everything is
based on self-interest, justified through an assertion of patriotism and the
national interest. In Turkey, there is a belief amongst senior officials who
consider themselves to be parts of the status in statu that they are guardians
of the constitution and the true interests of the nation. In their own minds,
they are thereby not bound by the normal rules. Engagement in criminal activity
is fine as long as it is done to protect the Turkish people and to covertly
address errors made by the citizenry, which can easily be led astray by
political fads and charismatic leaders. When things go too far in a certain
direction, the deep state steps in to correct course.
And deep state
players are to be rewarded for their patriotism. They benefit materially from
the criminal activity that they engage in, including protecting Turkey’s role
as a conduit for drugs heading to Europe from Central Asia, but more recently
involving the movement of weapons and people to and from Syria. This has meant
collaborating with groups like ISIS, enabling militants to ignore borders and
sell their stolen archeological artifacts while also negotiating deals for the
oil from the fields in the areas that they occupy. All the transactions include
a large cut for the deep state.
If all this
sounds familiar to an American reader, it should, and given some local
idiosyncrasies, it invites the question whether the United States of America
has its own deep state.
First of all, one
should note that for the deep state to be effective, it must be intimately
associated with the development or pre-existence of a national security state.
There must also be a perception that the nation is in peril, justifying
extraordinary measures undertaken by brave patriots to preserve life and
property of the citizenry. Those measures are generically conservative in nature,
intended to protect the status quo with the implication that change is
dangerous.
Those
requirements certainly prevail in post 9/11 America, and also feed the other
essential component of the deep state: that the intervening should work
secretly or at least under the radar. Consider for a moment how Washington
operates. There is gridlock in Congress and the legislature opposes nearly
everything that the White House supports. Nevertheless, certain things happen
seemingly without any discussion: Banks are bailed out and corporate interests
are protected by law. Huge multi-year defense contracts are approved. Citizens
are assassinated by drones, the public is routinely surveilled, people are
imprisoned without be charged, military action against “rogue” regimes is
authorized, and whistleblowers are punished with prison. The war crimes
committed by U.S. troops and contractors on far-flung battlefields, as well as
torture and rendition, are rarely investigated and punishment of any kind is
rare. America, the warlike predatory capitalist, might be considered a virtual
definition of deep state.
One critic
describes deep state as driven by the “Washington Consensus,” a subset of the
“American exceptionalism” meme. It is plausible to consider it a post-World War
II creation, the end result of the “military industrial complex” that Dwight
Eisenhower warned about, but some believe its infrastructure was actually put
in place through the passage of the Federal Reserve Act prior to the First
World War. Several years after signing the bill, Woodrow Wilson reportedly
lamented, “We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most
completely controlled and dominated governments in the civilized world, no
longer a government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a
government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men.”
In truth
America’s deep state is, not unlike Turkey’s, a hybrid creature that operates
along a New York to Washington axis. Where the Turks engage in criminal
activity to fund themselves, the Washington elite instead turns to banksters,
lobbyists, and defense contractors, operating much more in the open and,
ostensibly, legally. U.S.-style deep state includes all the obvious parties,
both public and private, who benefit from the status quo: including key players
in the police and intelligence agencies, the military, the treasury and justice
departments, and the judiciary. It is structured to materially reward those who
play along with the charade, and the glue to accomplish that ultimately comes
from Wall Street. “Financial services” might well be considered the epicenter
of the entire process. Even though government is needed to implement desired
policies, the banksters comprise the truly essential element, capable of providing
genuine rewards for compliance. As corporate interests increasingly own the
media, little dissent comes from the Fourth Estate as the process plays out,
while many of the proliferating Washington think tanks that provide deep state
“intellectual” credibility are similarly funded by defense contractors.
The cross
fertilization that is essential to making the system work takes place through
the famous revolving door whereby senior government officials enter the private
sector at a high level. In some cases the door revolves a number of times, with
officials leaving government before returning to an even more elevated
position. Along the way, those select individuals are protected, promoted, and
groomed for bigger things. And bigger things do occur that justify the
considerable costs, to include bank bailouts, tax breaks, and resistance to
legislation that would regulate Wall Street, political donors, and lobbyists.
The senior government officials, ex-generals, and high level intelligence
operatives who participate find themselves with multi-million dollar homes in
which to spend their retirement years, cushioned by a tidy pile of investments.
America’s deep
state is completely corrupt: it exists to sell out the public interest, and
includes both major political parties as well as government officials.
Politicians like the Clintons who leave the White House “broke” and accumulate
$100 million in a few years exemplify how it rewards. A bloated Pentagon churns
out hundreds of unneeded flag officers who receive munificent pensions and
benefits for the rest of their lives. And no one is punished, ever. Disgraced
former general and CIA Director David Petraeus is now a partner at the KKR
private equity firm, even though he knows nothing about financial services.
More recently, former Acting CIA Director Michael Morell has become a Senior
Counselor at Beacon Global Strategies. Both are being rewarded for their
loyalty to the system and for providing current access to their replacements in
government.
What makes the
deep state so successful? It wins no matter who is in power, by creating
bipartisan-supported money pits within the system. Monetizing the completely
unnecessary and hideously expensive global war on terror benefits the senior
government officials, beltway industries, and financial services that feed off
it. Because it is essential to keep the money flowing, the deep state persists
in promoting policies that make no sense, to include the unwinnable wars
currently enjoying marquee status in Iraq/Syria and Afghanistan. The deep state
knows that a fearful public will buy its product and does not even have to make
much of an effort to sell it.
Of course I know
that the United States of America is not Turkey. But there are lessons to be
learned from its example of how a democracy can be subverted by particular
interests hiding behind the mask of patriotism. Ordinary Americans frequently
ask why politicians and government officials appear to be so obtuse, rarely
recognizing what is actually occurring in the country. That is partly due to
the fact that the political class lives in a bubble of its own creation, but it
might also be because many of America’s leaders actually accept that there is
an unelected, unappointed, and unaccountable presence within the system that
actually manages what is taking place behind the scenes. That would be the
American deep state.
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