Ray Mc Govern at the UN Security Council on Nordstream/S.Hersh

Wow, an old CIA analyst with compelling testimony at the UN Security Council on what is really going on with Ukraine. And of course, his testimony was not included in the summation of the proceedings. He also defended his friend Seymour Hersh and his piece on the Nordstream pipeline sabotage (act of war) by the US and Norway, and the US’s history with lying. Being a former CIA analyst, it’s extraordinary that he’s going against the agency and telling the truth in trying to stop the slaughter.

TRANSCRIPT:

On my way here in two airports this morning, I noticed a bunch of children, uh, little children and school-aged children, and maybe think back to my days as a school-aged child. I was one of those who hid under my desk because of the threat of the Russian atom bomb, as though that would protect me. Fast forward when I became a professional analyst and chief of the Soviet foreign policy Branch at CIA. I was able to tell the president and Henry Kissinger that the Russians were really interested in putting a cap on the arms race. Suffice it to say I was instrumental in the anti-ballistic missile treaty signed in May of 1972. I was there. 30 years of strategic stability, 30, count them, three decades when Mr Bush Jr decided he would leave the ABM Treaty without any real explanation, and then Mr Trump left the INF treaty, which I thought could never be concluded, because it, it involved the destruction, the destruction of a whole class of nuclear-tipped intermediate range ballistic missiles in Europe and in Siberia. Then we had the open Skies treaty from which the U.S left. And now we are warned that the new start [treaty] is also in danger. I must say that after the anti-ballistic missile treaty was signed, I was feeling euphoric. I need not worry about whether they’re building this building just to be demolished by the next nuclear weapon, and it’s very sad for me to watch what’s going on now, where people can’t get together and deal. That’s the German word for negotiate — deal. Uh, if you look at it, it comes from the word hunt, the hunt, the hunt you reach out the hands and you get to know, and you get to understand, what is bothering the other party. Now, I don’t want to get ahead of myself here. I do want to talk about Seymour Hersh’s, uh, article and I, I have to say up front, full disclosure, that I am a friend of Seymour Hirsh, and so I will not, uh, opine myself. I will cite a very distinguished former U.S ambassador and also assistant Secretary of Defense. These are the words he said about Seymour Hersh “Hersh attracts whistleblowers because he has a perfect record of protecting their identities and accurately publishing what they reveal after due diligence despite the government denials and slanderous attacks that invariably follow.” His reputation is such that people of conscience seek him out, people of conscience. As a U.S. army officer, and as a CIA employee, I took an oath, one oath. It was to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies foreign and domestic. Some of us took that oath seriously, and when we see this kind of thing going on we go to somebody who might be able to protect us, and might be able to get the word out. Now, it was two weeks ago [his new article came out]. Has the New York Times mentioned Sy Hersh’s article? Has it even reported the denials? No. Not yet. This is quite, the Germans would say, Matthew, this is very very remarkable. Now, let me go on here and and talk about uh well, um, how do we how do we evaluate those who are smearing, uh, Seymour Hirsch? Well, as Jeffrey Sachs already said, the CIA spokesperson said the claim is completely and utterly false quote-end-quote. Whoa, now! I have to confess, being an alumnus of the CIA, that our PR people, our public relations people, do not have a very good record. No one wants to go back 20 years to Colin Powell’s speech before this Security Council. We all know about that. What I would like to do is simply say: what happened before that speech: before that speech, some conscientious whistleblower gave the text of U.N debriefing of Hussein Kamel one of Saddam Hussein’s sons-in-law and who is, he, he was supervisor over the radiological biological chemical and nuclear program, such as it was in Baghdad, and he said to his interviewers: you and interviewers U.S interviewers, UK interviewers, he said the following: all nuclear chemical biological and missile programs have been destroyed. Now, they asked him, the interrogators did, well, how do you know? And Kamel said: well, I was in charge of them. I mean I don’t know how it works in your country, but when I order something destroyed, it gets destroyed. Yeah, how do you know? Did you check? Well, yeah, I checked. A couple — are you trying to get me to say they were not destroyed? This is 1995. Now, someone leaked, someone leaked that transcript to Newsweek. Newsweek on the 24th almost exactly 20 years ago. Newsweek published this report saying Hussein Kamel, the highest ranking Iraqi official ever to defect from Saddam Hussein’s Inner Circle, told the CIA and British Intelligence Officers, and U.S inspectors in the Autumn of 1995, that after the Gulf War, Iraq destroyed all its chemical and biological weapons and the missiles to deliver them. Kamel had direct knowledge of what he claimed for 10 years he ran: Iraq’s nuclear chemical biological and missile programs. And in a classic understatement the author John Barry in Newsweek says the defector’s tale raises questions about whether the WMD stockpiles attributed to Iraq still exist. Well, I guess what happened: Newsweek published this in a little blurb first on their on their site, their Website, then the members of the media went to a fellow named Bill Harlow who was CIA spokesperson for the agency, and he said, look … this report is incorrect. It’s bogus. It’s wrong, and it’s untrue. Incorrect bogus wrong and untrue. And what do the members of the press do? They breathed the sigh of relief and said I’m sure glad you told us that, because we were going to publish on that — it looked pretty documentary, it looked pretty authoritative It was indeed the transcript of that debriefing. So: just to worry about those who are smearing Sy Hersh: they don’t have a really good record for credibility.

Let me move on here: I’d like to talk a little bit about unprovoked. Now, we have heard more than a hundred times that the Russian invasion of Ukraine was unprovoked. This goes back to the widening of NATO despite the promise not to. I had a personal experience with one of Gorbachev’s chief advisors. His name is Kuvaldine Victor Borisovich, and about eight years [ago] I saw him in Moscow and I said Victor, I said Mr Kuvaldine, why is it, why is it that this, this agreement, was not written down, and he said Mr McGovern, I’ll tell you the usual reasons: the, the Germans hadn’t bought into it yet, and the Warsaw Pact still existed. But, really and truly, Mr. McGovern, here’s what it was: we trusted you. Now, we all know the history of how, how NATO more than doubled in size with all countries to the east, more than [SecState James Baker’s promised] one inch to the east. I want to not belabor that point. It’s simply that, uh, you know, it’s more than just NATO enlargement. When the Crimea was annexed by Russia, Mr Putin got up, uh, a month later, and he said: we had to annex Crimea because of the coup in Kiev in February of 2014, and, uh, even more important than NATO membership for Ukraine was the prospect that medium-range ballistic missiles would be put on the periphery of the United States [he meant here “Russia”] which indeed they [the U.S.] are capable of doing [this] because there are capsule holes in Romania and Poland that accommodate Tomahawk missiles, cruise missiles, and will eventually accommodate hypersonic missiles. This is very very serious. Mr Putin made this point in December of last year, not last year but the year before, in talking to his chief military.

Now, how do I, how do I end this? I would like to do a little human business here. The first thing: let me just point out that, when I was in Germany last, uh, there was a button that when put on the lapel, it said foreign okay. Now, those of you who know German know that means someone who understands Putin, and I thought to myself: wow, somebody is interested in understanding Mr Putin. and my friends are no no no; all right, for God’s sake, don’t wear that button pejorative, that means you’re in Putin, comes from the word stand to stand okay if you can’t understand where people stand you can’t understand what bothers them and what bothers, uh, Mr Putin as well as membership in NATO for Ukraine is the emplacement of these holes already operational in Romania and Poland, right on the periphery of the United States [again, he meant here Russia], they are disguised as ABM systems, but they can easily be put — accommodate — cruise missiles, and, as I say, hypersonic missiles now. There was a motto, uh, in the recent German demonstrations, it said now is the word for negotiate, to talk, hunt, the hunt, we reach out the hand to the other person, you try to understand them, she sent this to shoot okay that makes good sense, but I have to tell you that it’s not welcome in Germany. A good friend of mine, Heinrich, has been convicted of saying we ought to put ourselves in the shoes of Mr Putin, and we ought to realize the far-right influence in the government of Kiev. He was convicted in a German Court. He’s appealing but he’s not going to pay the the 2000 euro fine, so it’s likely he will end up in jail for several months. Now, that’s freedom of speech we enjoy, that, here, in the United States. I really am concerned of what will happen to my friend. Just suffice it to end here and to say that this, you know: reach your hand, let’s be human here, let’s, let’s not dust each other off. Let’s extend our hands. Well, you know, it was very very bleak in our country during the suppression of blacks, and I had the privilege of working with Vincent Harding, Dr Harding, who was the the author of Martin Luther King’s speech on Vietnam. He had a song, and the song was: we got to keep on moving forward, never turning back. Well, what I would suggest is that we need to, we need to keep on moving forward, uh, and I, I would recommend the second stanza of this to you all, and if you would listen, I would really very appreciate it: we’re going to keep on moving forward, we’re going to keep on loving our enemies, we’re going to keep on loving our enemies, gonna keep our love and our enemy, never turning back, never turning back.

In closing, I will just refer to those children like what I noticed, more than I usually notice children in the airports today. And when I ask you all, because you have the power to do so, given to you after the last major world war: I ask you to do what’s necessary, so that no one kills the children anymore.

Thank you very much.