Karen Kwiatkowski

Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski, is a retired U.S. Air Force officer whose assignments included work as a Pentagon desk officer and in a variety of roles for the National Security Agency. Since retiring, she has become a noted critic of the U.S. government's involvement in Iraq. Colonel Kwiatkowski has an MA in Government from Harvard and a MS in Science Management from the University of Alaska. She is currently candidate for a Ph.D. in World Politics at Catholic University; her thesis is on overt and covert war in Angola, titled A Case Study of the Implementation of the Reagan Doctrine. Kwiatkowski began her military career in 1978. As a second lieutenant, she served at Eielson Air Force Base in Alaska, providing logistical support to missions along the Chinese and Russian coasts. She served in Spain and Italy, and was then assigned to the National Security Agency, eventually becoming a speechwriter for the agency's director. After leaving the NSA in 1998, she became an an analyst on sub-Saharan Africa policy for the Pentagon. From May, 2002 to February, 2003, she served in the Pentagon's Near East and South Asia directorate (NESA).http://www.mcsweeneys.net/2004/9/21Kwiatkowski.html While at NESA, she wrote a series of anonymous articles, "Insider Notes from the Pentagon", that appeared on the website of David Hackworth.http://www.lewrockwell.com/kwiatkowski/kwiatkowski28.html Kwiatkowski left NESA in February, 2003 and retired from the Air Force the following month. In April, 2003, she began writing a series of articles for the libertarian website LewRockwell.com. In June of that year, she published an article in the Ohio Beacon Journal, "Career Officer Does Eye-Opening Stint Inside Pentagon" http://www.mindfully.org/Reform/2003/Kwiatkowski-Pentagon-Kinght-Ridder31jul03.htm, which attracted additional notice. Since February, 2004, she has written a biweekly column, "Without Reservations", for the website MilitaryWeek. Kwiatkowski is primarily noted for openly and publicly denouncing what she sees as a corrupting political influence on the course of military intelligence leading up to the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Her most comprehensive writings on this subject appeared in a series of articles in The American Conservative magazine in December, 2003 and in a March, 2004 article on Salon.com. In the latter piece, titled "The New Pentagon Papers", she wrote:
I witnessed neoconservative agenda bearers within OSP usurp measured and carefully considered assessments, and through suppression and distortion of intelligence analysis promulgate what were in fact falsehoods to both Congress and the executive office of the president.
Kwiatkowski exposed how a clique of officers led by retired Navy Captain Bill Luti, assistant secretary of defense for NESA, and former aide to Dick Cheney when the latter was Secretary of Defense, took control of military intelligence, and how the "Office of Special Plans" (OSP) grew and eventually turned into a censorship and disinformation organism controlling the NESA.http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0310-09.htm Following the American Conservative and Salon articles, Kwiatkowski began to receive criticism from several conservative sources that supported President Bush's policies. Michael Rubin of the National Review argued that she had exaggerated her knowledge of the OSP's workings and that she had ties to Lyndon LaRouchehttp://www.nationalreview.com/rubin/rubin200405180836.asp. U.S. Senator John Kyl criticized her in a speech on the Senate floor http://rpc.senate.gov/_files/iraq%20pentagon%20csis%20speech.pdf. On a Fox News program, host John Gibson and former Republican National Committee communications director Clifford May described her as an anarchisthttp://www.defenddemocracy.org/in_the_media/in_the_media_show.htm?doc_id=215712. Kwiatkowski responded, saying, among other points, that she had never supported or dealt with LaRouche http://www.nathancallahan.com/kwiatletter.html. In addition to her writings, Colonel Kwiatkowski has appeared as a commentator in the documentaries Hijacking Catastrophe and Honor Betrayed. She has been a registered member of the U.S. Libertarian Party since 1994 and spoke at the party's national convention in 2004.http://www.lp.org/lpnews/0406/convention-speaker.html She currently lives with her family in the Shenandoah Valley and works part-time as a farmer.

Quotations

  • "I came to share with many NESA colleagues a kind of unease, a sense that something was awry. What seemed out of place was the strong and open pro-Israel and anti-Arab orientation in an ostensibly apolitical policy-generation staff within the Pentagon" http://www.amconmag.com/12_1_03/feature.html
  • "At the end of the summer of 2002, new space had been found upstairs on the fifth floor for an "expanded Iraq desk." It would be called the Office of Special Plans. We were instructed at a staff meeting that this office was not to be discussed or explained, and if people in the Joint Staff, among others, asked, we were to offer no comment. We were also told that one of the products of this office would be talking points that all desk officers would use verbatim in the preparation of their background documents."
  • "By August, only the Pollyannas at the Pentagon felt that the decision to invade Iraq, storm Baghdad, and take over the place (or give it to Ahmad Chalabi) was reversible."
  • ""It wasn't intelligence -- it was propaganda. They'd take a little bit of intelligence, cherry-pick it, make it sound much more exciting, usually by taking it out of context, often by juxtaposition of two pieces of information that don't belong together." http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2004/01/12_405.html
On the Office of Special Plans:
  • "It's a propaganda office."

Books

  • African Crisis Response Initiative: Past Present and Future (US Army Peacekeeping Institute, 2000)
  • Expeditionary Air Operations in Africa: Challenges and Solutions (Air University Press, 2001)

External links

 

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