December 30, 2005
NSWBC Call
to Patriotic Duty
By Sibel Edmonds &
William Weaver
Without whistleblowers the public would never know of the many abuses of
constitutional rights by the government.
Whistleblowers, Truth Tellers, are responsible for the disclosure that
President George W. Bush ordered unconstitutional surveillance of American
citizens. These constitutional
lifeguards take their patriotic oaths to heart and soul: Rather than complying
with classification and secrecy orders designed to protect officials engaging
in criminal conduct, whistleblowers chose to risk their livelihoods and the
wrath of their agencies to get the truth out.
But will they be listened to by those who are charged with
accountability?
The Whistleblowers Law of
Congressional Hearings holds that the higher ranking the official who testifies
the less the likelihood that the truth will be revealed. With this in mind, it is impossible to
proceed to the viscera of what happened to whom and when without asking those
who are charged with putting policy decisions into the actual stream of
practice. High officials have perverse
incentives to hide what is done in their orders by the employees below
them. It is indispensable that Congress
reach deep inside the National Security Agency and other agencies, seeking out
employees at the operational level to determine how the President’s illegal
order was carried into action. To
assure that this occurs, we need for people with information from the agencies
involved to come forward and ask to be interviewed by Congress. The National Security Whistleblowers
Coalition calls on people with knowledge of unconstitutional surveillance of
American citizens to contact NSWBC and let us know that they are willing to
provide congress with information and testimony. Anonymity, if desired, will be scrupulously honored. NSWBC will provide contact information to
Congress and investigative authorities, and will follow up to ensure that these
witnesses were in fact interviewed in good faith by congressional staff and
committees and allowed to participate in the hearing process. NSWBC will be the conduit between agents
and Congress for those like Russ Tice, a former intelligence agent at the
National Security Agency, who announced his willingness to disclose to Congress
illegal acts by officials at his former employer. At NSWBC we know what we are asking people to do: Our
organization is made up exclusively of veteran intelligence and law enforcement
officers, agents and analysts.
Now is the time to come
forward, not to reveal legitimately classified information, but to make
yourselves available as witnesses and to serve the true supervisor of us all:
the Constitution. Ordinarily one would expect the congress to be the guardian
of our freedom by living up to its storied role as a check and balance to the
President and the Executive Branch. But for four years, members of our Congress
in supposed oversight committees were aware of illegal spying on American
citizens. Co-opted by an unscrupulous
commitment to secrecy and the state, intelligence oversight committees in
Congress must step out of the way for a People’s hearing on the matter of presidentially
ordered illegal surveillance. Congress
must engage in a broad, public hearing of these matters.
Accountability, in the end,
always comes down to the public’s right to know, the right to have the most
basic knowledge about what its servants are doing with its money and its
authority. Ambassador Maxwell Taylor, when asked what he thought about the
public’s right to know of what the government is doing on its behalf,
infamously responded the he did not “believe in that as a general rule.” Fortunately, that is not a general rule that
comports with our system of government.
Citizens cannot make informed choices if they do not have the
facts. Public servants should not be
forced to choose between career and conscience, between commitment to oath and
commitment to colleagues, and if we live by our words, laws, and principles
they will not have to. Protecting all
employees of the People are that:
•
Their
higher loyalty is to the Constitution and the rule of law;
•
Information
may never be classified as secret merely because it is embarrassing or
incriminating, or to cover up criminal and unlawful conduct;
•
There
is no agreement that public servants may sign that will require them lie to the
Congress or courts;
•
The
United States’ Code of Ethics for Government Service explains carefully and
clearly in an assured voice that "Any person in government service should
put loyalty to the highest moral principles and to the Country above loyalty to
persons, party, or Government department."
Contact: Sibel Edmonds-Director, National Security Whistleblowers
Coalition, sedmonds@nswbc.org
Sibel
Edmonds, NSWBC Founder & President, sedmonds@nswbc.org
Sibel
Edmonds, a former FBI language specialist, was terminated from the bureau after
reporting security breaches, cover-up, and blocking of intelligence with
national security implications. Since that time, court proceedings in her
whistleblower case have been blocked by the imposition of “State Secret
Privilege,” and Congress has been prevented from discussion of her case through
retroactive reclassification by the Department of Justice. Edmonds, fluent in
Turkish, Farsi and Azerbaijani; holds an MA in Public Policy and International
Commerce from George Mason University, and a BA in Criminal Justice and
Psychology from George Washington University.
Professor William Weaver, NSWBC Senior Advisor, wweaver@nswbc.org
Bill Weaver served in U.S. Army signals
intelligence for eight years in Berlin and Augsburg, Germany, in the late 1970s
and 1980s. He holds a law degree and Ph.D. in politics from the University of
Virginia. He currently is an associate professor and associate director of
faculty for the Institute for Policy and Economic Development and an Associate
in the Center for Law and Border Studies at the University of Texas at El Paso.
He specializes in executive branch secrecy policy, governmental abuse, and law
and bureaucracy.
About National Security Whistleblowers Coalition
National Security Whistleblowers Coalition (NSWBC), founded in
August 2004, is an independent and nonpartisan alliance of whistleblowers who
have come forward to address our nation’s security weaknesses; to inform
authorities of security vulnerabilities in our intelligence agencies, at
nuclear power plants and weapon facilities, in airports, and at our nation’s
borders and ports; to uncover government waste, fraud, abuse, and in some cases
criminal conduct. The NSWBC is dedicated to aiding national security
whistleblowers through a variety of methods, including advocacy of governmental
and legal reform, educating the public concerning whistleblowing activity,
provision of comfort and fellowship to national security whistleblowers
suffering retaliation and other harms, and working with other public interest
organizations to affect goals defined in the NSWBC mission statement. For
more on NSWBC visit www.nswbc.org