This is an episode of Reality Asserts Itself, produced on April 21, 2015. On Reality Asserts Itself, former CIA official Mr. Kiriakou says that the Iraq War was motivated by the Bush administration wanting to send a message â no regime can defy U.S. power and survive.
PAUL JAY, SENIOR EDITOR, TRNN: Welcome back to Reality Asserts Itself on The Real News Network. Iâm Paul Jay. Weâre continuing our series of interviews with John Kiriakou. Thanks for joining us.
JOHN C. KIRIAKOU, FMR. CIA OFFICER: Happy to be here.
JAY: So Iâve introduced John at the beginning of every segment. If you look down below the video player, you will see a whole biography. So Iâm not going to do it again. Okay. So you leave Bahrain, and youâve started understanding that this fight in Bahrain, as youâve just put it in the last segment, was really rich versus poor. This whole thing about it being fundamentally religious, Shia-Sunni, was not true, that this was terrible violations of human rights. And even though you could see it and the U.S. ambassador could see it and you were reporting back to the State Department and youâre CIA, and, obviously, back to the president, the Fifth Fleet, port of the Fifth Fleet, and the arms sales trump the human rights issues, and so on and so on. So you startâit starts to eat at a bit of your Americanism, and you leave and you go back to Arlington, and youâre back on the Iraq file. This is at the height of sanctions. So a question Iâve always had about this period is: why didnât the United States give a damn, in the sense of leave Saddam alone? Thereâs dictators all over the world; who cares about this one? So he suppresses his people; thatâs never been a big deal for the United States, really. He still has to sell his oil on the world market; you have access to the oil. What is all this sanctions and everything about?
KIRIAKOU: It was a pissing match between Saddam Hussein and a series of American presidents is what it really came down to. The first President Bush, President Clinton, the second President Bush wanted Saddam to do what they told him to do, and he was unwilling to just fall in line.
JAY: So he had to say uncle.
KIRIAKOU: He had to say uncle.
JAY: So how many people died âcause he would say uncle?
KIRIAKOU: Oh, untold tens of thousands of people died. Whether it was as a result of sanctions or fighting or American airstrikes or whatever it was, thousands and thousands of people died just because of this personality conflict, for lack of a better term, between Saddam Hussein and three American presidents.
JAY: Itâs crazy. Thereâs an interview with Lyndon Johnson near the end of his presidency in the Vietnam War, and heâs asked, why do you keep continuing this? What is this about? And he actually, apparently, pulls down his fly and brings out his organâas this is how itâs described by one of his biographersâand he says, this is what itâs about.
KIRIAKOU: I believe that story.
JAY: At the time, how much do you understand thatâs what itâs about, that itâs just a pissing match?
KIRIAKOU: I did understand it, and I grew frustrated with it. I grew frustrated with American policy toward Iraq and decided Iâve got to do something completely different. And thatâs when I began looking for new job.
JAY: Within the CIA.
KIRIAKOU: Within the CIA.
JAY: And you go to Greece.
KIRIAKOU: Well, there was a position advertised that called for either a Greek or Arabic speaker. And it turned out that at the timeâ.
JAY: You know what? Iâm sorry. I want to go back to where you said you can believe the Johnson story. Alright. So youâre a professional analyst. Youâre analyzing whatâs going on in Iraq, what should be done. I mean, it sounds like youâre coming to the conclusion, like, all of this is unnecessary in terms of real U.S. national interest. Youâre saying this is essentially a pissing match. I mean, and I donât think we should make that too banal. What I mean by that: it isnât just a personality thing. I think ingrained in U.S. foreign policy is this, that we must make everyone believe we are stronger than they are. And itâs sort of like a loan shark. I said this in another interview. If you let someone get away with not paying back their interest that week, then everyone else isnât going to pay back. Thatâs the theory. So youâve got to break some knees, and if somebodyâs really defiant, for that, for its own sake, you have to prove you can put that person in their place. But, as an analyst, you can see this isnât good foreign policy.
KIRIAKOU: No, it was quite bad foreign policy. It was a waste of resources and people were getting killed. But at the same time, it goes beyond the president and the State Department and the Defense Department. You have congressional leaders hammering the president for being weak on Iraq and to bomb more and to fight harder and to make sure that Saddam is humiliated. And so you have this spiral of bad policy that you just canât get out of.
JAY: And how much do you think that for certain sectors of the economyââcause itâs certainly not true for all of the economy, but if youâre in fossil fuels or if youâre in military production and associated high tech, warâs damn good for business.
KIRIAKOU: It is good for business. And when you think about it, though, if weâ. Look at it this way. We bought much, much more Libyan oil than we ever bought Iraqi oil. Iraqi oil mostly went to Europe. And when Libya collapsed and their oil industry came to a screeching halt, it had virtually no effect on our own economy. Virtually none. So did we really need to hammer the Iraqis like this over more than a decade to protect the oil? We really didnât need the oil anyway.
JAY: But by fossil fuel I mean as long as thereâs conflict, the price of oilâs high.
KIRIAKOU: Mhm. It stays high.
JAY: We know big oil companies make more money the higher the price of oil.
KIRIAKOU: Thatâs right.
JAY: People selling arms, the more stuff you blow up, the more stuff youâve got to buy to replace it, and the more threat of conflict, the moreâ.
KIRIAKOU: Right. Itâs good for business.
JAY: How much do you think that drives U.S. foreign policy?
KIRIAKOU: I think thatâs an integral part of U.S. foreign policy. I really do. You know, weâve got not just arms manufacturers, but now we have drone manufacturers, for example, that are having to compete against Israeli drones and Chinese drones and Russian drones. So we need for there to be conflicts so we can sell our drones. Itâs the same with aircraft. You know, Boeing and other aircraft manufacturers would go under if we couldnât sell F-15s and F-16s and F-whatever they are, 23s, the new ones that are coming out, both for our own military and for foreign militaries. So war is good for business.
JAY: I mean, if youâre thinking of the current situation, the more potential conflict there is between the Saudis and the Iranians, thatâs a gold mine If youâre selling arms.
KIRIAKOU: Especially when the Saudis have a bottomless pit of money that they can dip into. The same with the Qataris and the Emiratis. Itâs very lucrative for us to be in the Gulf.
JAY: Now, letâs go back. As youâre leaving, you go back to Arlington. Youâre back on the Iraq file. Youâre starting to see how crazy all this stuff is. Are you starting to question now?
KIRIAKOU: Yeah, now Iâm starting to get frustrated. This policy is broken, itâs not working, and thereâs no hope of changing it. So I decided to do something completely different.
JAY: Okay.
KIRIAKOU: And that was operations.
JAY: Soâoh. Now youâre going to leave analysis go to operations. Now, this to me sounds a little contradictory. Youâre starting to see the pattern of some of the underlining rot of the policy, but now youâre going to go over to operations, where some of the dark stuff gets done.
KIRIAKOU: Yeah, but some of the dark stuff was meant to save and to protect American lives, and thatâs really what I wanted to focus on. I ended up going to Greece and spending two years in Greece. And my job in Greece was to try to disrupt terrorist attacks committed by a group that was called Revolutionary Organization 17 November. 17 November had murdered the CIA station chief in Athens in 1975. They murdered two defense attaches. They had shot and severely wounded several embassy officers. And they murdered an American Air Force technical sergeant who was justâthe poor guy was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. And they had murdered almost two dozen Greek nationals as well, important peopleâcabinet ministers, the heads of the central bank, university professors, prominent business leaders. And I thought, this is something I could sink my teeth into.
JAY: But when you decide to join ops, you donât know thatâs where youâre going.
KIRIAKOU: Oh, yeah.
JAY: You do?
KIRIAKOU: Oh, yeah.
JAY: Oh, you know itâs Greece.
KIRIAKOU: I applied specifically for that job.
JAY: And whatâs the training?
KIRIAKOU: It was all of the traditional operational training atâ.
JAY: Tradecraft they call it. Is that right?
KIRIAKOU: Tradecraft, right,â
JAY: Yeah.
KIRIAKOU: âat a facility they call âthe Farmâ, which is located south of here.
JAY: And how long is the training?
KIRIAKOU: Well, because I was midcareer, I didnât have to go through what they called CIA 101. So I went straight into the shooting and the car crashing and the explosives training. And that lasted four and a half months.
JAY: What was the most interesting of that training?
KIRIAKOU: I found that I had a real knack with firearms. On my first day in the firearms or the weapons training class, the instructor asked, who in the room does not own a gun? And I put my hand up and I looked around, and mine was the only hand up. And he said, you donât own a gun? And I said, truth be told, Iâve never actually touched a real gun. And he said, oh my God, weâve got to start at the beginning. Well, I ended up finishing the class with the highest score. I had a steady hand, and I just had a knack for it. And then we took a class called âCounterterrorist Drivingâ. I had a knack for that, tooâyou know, 60 miles an hour backwards, crashing through roadblocks. You learn a lot, and it could potentially save your life.
JAY: Now, when youâre learning how to shoot, you realize youâre learning how to shoot people,â
KIRIAKOU: Absolutely.
JAY: ânot to shoot targets.
KIRIAKOU: Absolutely.
JAY: Youâre okay with that.
KIRIAKOU: I had to be. If somebody puts a gun in my face with the specific intent to blow my brains out, Iâm going to kill him first.
JAY: But thatâs certainly not all. I mean, CIA is known for assassinating and shooting people who arenât necessarily shooting at you.
KIRIAKOU: Completely, totally different situation. That was not my thing.
JAY: But you could be ordered to do that.
KIRIAKOU: No, I could not be ordered to do it.
JAY: Why?
KIRIAKOU: Because I wasnât trained for it. And itâs not something you can be ordered to do. In the event that thereâs an assassination that takes place under these new executive orders that presidents Bush and Obama have signed, thereâs a paramilitary group thatâs perfectly willing to do that. Thatâs not what the average Joe case officer does. The average Joe case officer, of which I was one, is overseas to recruit spies to steal secrets. Thatâs the job.
JAY: So the gun, in theory, isâ
KIRIAKOU: It was for self-defense.
JAY: âto defend yourself if they figure outâ
KIRIAKOU: Yeah.
JAY: âtheyâre coming after you.
KIRIAKOU: It was for self-defense.
JAY: Which in Greece they did.
KIRIAKOU: They did.
JAY: There was attempts to shoot you. [incompr.]
KIRIAKOU: There was an attempt.
JAY: What happened?
KIRIAKOU: Well, in the end, instead of killing me, the group killed the British defense attachĂŠ who was a neighbor of mine. Our backyards connected. And I left for work one morning a little bit later than I normally did. I tried to leave at a different time every day, and I took a different route every day, but I slept in this one day. And so I thought, ah, damn it, Iâll just get on the main road, which youâre never supposed to do, and just go straight to the embassy. My house was in a neighborhood called Kifissia, which is exactly ten miles north of the center of Athens. And thereâs a main road, Kifissias boulevard, that goes straight from Kifissia directly to the embassy. You never have to get off the road. So, of course, thatâs the road I never wanted to take, because there are Jersey barriers on both sides, and if somebody was going to kill me, thereâs nowhere for me to run. I canât crash through the concrete barrier to get away. So I would always take neighborhood routes all the way into town. But I slept in this one day, and I thought, I donât have the extra 30 minutes to wind my way through the neighborhood; Iâm just going to get on Kifissias boulevard. But itâs a parking lot. And, you know, Athens has crazy traffic, you know, Cairo, Bangkok kind of traffic, but this was heavier than even that. So I put on the radio and I heard an announcement to avoid Kifissias boulevard because thereâs a traffic incident at Psychiko, which is closer to the city. And I thought, boy, Iâve never heard an announcement like that. But Iâm already committed to Kifissias boulevard, and I canât get off âcause of these Jersey barriers. So I stayed on, and Iâm inching my way down the mountain into Athens. And then aboutâ.
JAY: Youâre alone in the car?
KIRIAKOU: Alone in the car.
JAY: Why?
KIRIAKOU: I was always alone in the car. Armored car. Fully, heavily armored. And I have two guns on me. And in case everything goes to shit, I have a switchblade as well. So about a half an hour later I hear, âAvoid Kifissias boulevard because thereâs a police incident at Psychiko.â And I thought, thatâs odd. I wonder what that means? And then, finally, another half hour into it, âAvoid Kifissias boulevard because thereâs a terrorist incident at Psychiko.â And I thought, oh, for Godâs sake. So Iâm inching my way down the mountain, and I see a white car, a Rover, a British Rover, and all of the glass is blown out, and thereâs what looks like blood on the door and on the hood. And I looked at the license plate number, and it started with YBH. Well, all of our license plates began with the letters YHB, and I thought, oh my God, some poor Greek was killed because 17 November thought it was one of our cars. But then I remember that YBH was the British Embassyâs license plate numbers, and I recognize the Rover as belonging to Stephen Saunders, the newly arrived British defense attachĂŠ. So I called the office and I told them what I had seen. They didnât know what it was. They knew something had happened, but they didnât know what it was. I said, itâs Stephen Saundersâ car. I said, thereâs blood everywhere. So they called the British Embassy. The British said he had been shot. It turned out heâd been shot with a G3, with a tank-piercing round. It blew his hand completely off. And then he was shot multiple times with the same gun that was used to kill Dick Welch, our station chief, in 1975, called the Welch .45. 17 November used the Welch .45 in most of their assassinations to send a message. So Saunders was taken to Red Cross Hospital just a few blocks from the embassy, and he died there about three hours later.
JAY: Forget 17 November as a group. But you can understand the rage against the United States, âcause most people understood there wouldnât have been dictators without the United States.
KIRIAKOU: Sure. Absolutely. Absolutely. I have always believed that the military dictatorship was installed by the United States. And we know now, because of the release of classified information over the years through the Freedom of Information Act and through the natural declassification process, that the military junta was allowed to remain in power because Henry Kissinger wanted it so. So, sure, I understand the rage.
JAY: And you understood it then.
KIRIAKOU: Oh, yeah. I understood it then.
JAY: Is more of the pattern starting to be clear for you now?
KIRIAKOU: Yeah. It was starting to be more clear for me.
JAY: And just for those who havenât watched the earlier segments, weâre talking about the belief in Americanism.
KIRIAKOU: Right.
JAY: Please join us for the continuation Reality Asserts Itself on The Real News Network.
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âJohn Chris Kiriakou (born August 9, 1964) is an American author, journalist and former intelligence officer. Kiriakou is a columnist with Reader Supported News and co-host of Political Misfits on Sputnik Radio.
He was formerly an analyst and case officer for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), senior investigator for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, counterterrorism and a consultant for ABC News. He was the first U.S. government official to confirm in December 2007 that waterboarding was used to interrogate al-Qaeda prisoners, which he described as torture.
In 2012, Kiriakou became the first CIA officer to be convicted of passing classified information to a reporter. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 30 months in prison.â
			
			
		








