Friday, January 4, 2019

Cocktails & Popcorn: Day 92.1 Valerie Plame Says Paul Whelan May Be A Spy

I will update with links.

But hey, what do I know?

I know LeAnn Kirrmann says this is fake news, but have no fear, I have provided her with direct contact information to the Detroit FBI and Detroit Free Press to correct the record. 

If you have any information about this story, please, reach out to the Detroit FBI  313-965-2323  or phoward@freepress.com.

Detroit needs more cocktails & popcorn because we are just getting started.


Ex-CIA agent Plame: 'It's not inconceivable' Paul Whelan is a spy


Paul Whelan of Novi, imprisoned in a czarist-era Russian prison on spy charges, would attract the notice of any seasoned intelligence team, a former CIA covert operations officer told the Free Press on Thursday.

"As long as there are nation states, there will be espionage. It is a very real threat and even more so today," said retired agent Valerie Plame, now an author who was famously outed as a spy during the second Bush administration.

"The Cold War was a bipolar world. We had one big enemy. Now, with the rise of nuclear terrorism, rogue nation states and a very active Russia and China, in the espionage realm," said Plame, who lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Plame, who noted she was a little sore from hiking the Grand Canyon, described an unpredictable international landscape where anything is possible and everything must be considered.

Whelan, 48, an executive with the auto parts manufacturer BorgWarner in Auburn Hills, was picked up by Russian authorities on Dec. 28 on suspicion of spying. His twin brother said the ex-Marine, whose military record included a larceny conviction, was in Russia for a friend's wedding. The Russians indicted Whelan on Thursday.

Russian media said Friday he was arrested in a Moscow hotel after receiving a flash drive with the names of workers at a classified security agency.

"There do seem to be real question marks around this story, at least in the public domain," Plame said. "That he was discharged from the military, from the Marines, dishonorably. That he's got this big interest in Russia; he travels there a lot. Huh? He's an auto parts guy? Really? I don't know. He could be completely innocent. The Kremlin could be trying to be provocative. Or there could be something there."

As a career CIA agent who can't safely confirm publicly the length of her undercover career, Plame said international threats are real. And Americans must take them seriously.

It is quite possible Russia is using Whelan as a pawn, said Plame, whose being publicly named as a CIA operative in 2003 led to the conviction of Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff Scooter Libby. President Donald Trump pardoned Libby in April, drawing Plame's ire.

"By and large, I am quite alarmed at the intensity and depth that Russia has gone to disrupt all of our systems," she said. "They have sown chaos and they have done it really well. They have sown doubt in our electoral system. I think that is very serious.  It goes to the very heart of our belief in our democracy and our way of life."

Plame expressed concern about America's ability to navigate the geopolitical situation with so much transition in Washington, including the government shutdown. She said the U.S. State Department has "really atrophied and really suffered under this presidency."

"For all we know, the people that might be in that office might not be reporting to work because of the government shutdown," Plame said.

She hoped that State Department officials were communicating regularly with the Whelan family.

"They're probably best advised to say nothing right now. The situation is so muddy that I think adding to it would be detrimental to Mr. Whelan's eventual release from captivity."

Is it possible he could be a spy? "It is not inconceivable," Plame said.

She noted, "There are many Americans that seek to serve their country in various ways. That's probably all I should say."

History of spying

Spy agencies in America have a history of relying on global companies to assist with intelligence collection, say historians who specialize in espionage.

To date, no evidence has been made public that ties Whelan to the CIA or the National Security Agency. The American, who had a work history in law enforcement, faces up to 20 years behind bars if convicted of espionage.

He has been a security specialist for the automotive parts supplier BorgWarner since 2017.

Previously, he worked for Kelly Services, a temporary staffing agency that touts itself as a “global leader” with an ability to place workers “in top companies across a variety of industries” across the world since 1968.

While BorgWarner has customers all over the world and employs 29,000 people in the U.S., Europe and Asia, none of the company's international sites is in Russia, said company spokeswoman Kathy Graham.

International analysts have suggested that Whelan is being held hostage by Russian President Vladimir Putin in hopes of negotiating the freedom of a Russian cooperating with special counsel Robert Mueller in the ongoing investigation into U.S. election manipulation. Whelan is being held in Lefortovo detention center, built in the late 1800s and later used as a KGB prison.

Whelan was apprehended during a vacation trip, not work. Professionally, he is not responsible for cybersecurity nor was he in charge of industrial espionage duties as part of his job description.
He was responsible for the security of facilities, assets owned by the company and its people, Graham confirmed. Whelan did not work in information technology, Graham said.

In a 2013 deposition in an age discrimination suit against Kelly Services, he described his role this way: “Kelly Services is a global company, and we work with federal agencies all the time ... at the foreign embassies, or we work with HUD or DEA, FBI, ATF, whomever in the United States. We work with federal agencies in Canada, and what have you, all over the place. So we come in contact with federal agencies and officers all the time.”

'Whelan is being framed'

However, Chris Costa, executive director of the International Spy Museum, a nonprofit organization based in Washington, D.C., said, “My analysis suggests that this individual Paul Whelan is being framed” by Russia's Federal Security Service, known as FSB.

The spy museum collects and shares intelligence artifacts and stories to provide a global perspective on an all-but-invisible profession that has shaped history and continues to have a significant impact on world events.

“From a historical standpoint, whether we’re talking about the FSB or former KGB, our museum puts stories together that illustrate the cat-and-mouse game of counterintelligence,” he said. “The FSB is very, very pervasive and a solid security service. They’re very adept at dirty tricks."

Costa, like others nationally and internationally, including Plame, suggested that Putin could be "looking for leverage" in hopes of swapping the American for the Russian Maria Butina, who has pleaded guilty to acting as an unregistered agent of Russia.

“It’s an embarrassment, the fact that the Russians have got their hands caught in the cookie jar,” he said, citing the poisoning of a Russian former spy and his daughter in Britain, in addition to tampering with U.S. politics.

“The Russians are going back to their playbook that they used throughout the Cold War. They’re very aggressive,” Costa said. “They’re taking shots at the United States.”

The claim that a businessman could actually work as a spy is not lost on fans of novelists John Le Carré or Robert Ludlum. History shows that the scenario is plausible.

Globally, corporations do passively work with intelligence services, Costa said. It may be a simple question during a crisis, and “of course, companies are going to cooperate in most cases.”
Not only have companies cooperated in the past, but they’ve been essential.

Finding people who can speak a foreign language fluently, cultivate cultural resources and develop social contacts was, and continues to be, important, said Professor Brian Hayashi, chairman of the Department of History at Kent State University in Ohio.

Whelan may be a logical target because he fits the profile, said Hayashi, author of an upcoming book being published by Oxford University Press about the little-known recruitment of Americans who were of Chinese, Japanese and Korean descent who worked as U.S. spies during World War II.

The book documents corporate cooperation with the intelligence community, too.

“Western Union was heavily involved in the transmission of telegrams,” he said. “They were able to get different radio companies involved with American intelligence.”

The U.S. government would scan for coded messages in telegrams going abroad, particularly between Berlin and Tokyo, Hayashi said. “In some cases, they allowed for American intelligence to look at the telegrams.”

He continued, “American intelligence will go to various communications companies, in the past and even today, and try to get information.”

Missionaries as spies

Apart from formal cooperation, American intelligence can filter communications by capturing keyword searches and targets using technology.

“You never really know what’s going on,” Hayashi said. “We just don’t know.”

Top CIA agents have been journalists, religious missionaries and English teachers, he said. More and more, “sad to say,” nongovernmental organizations are included too — “the CIA may try to slip somebody in there.”

The automotive industry isn't immune, Hayashi said.

“It included one of the spies that the Office of Strategic Services — the predecessor to the CIA — used during World War II in China," he said. "One of the automotive executives went to China, and slipped in and was ostensibly working to re-establish the American car industry in China. In reality, he was there as an agent for the OSS.”

In that case, the agent double-crossed the U.S. to serve British interests. He was Canadian and his boss was an influential executive whose work led to the creation of the American International Group (AIG) in finance and insurance, Hayashi discovered.

More recently, the Daily Mail of Britain reported in August 2015 that "enemy spies" were attempting to recruit civil servants in a bid to steal Britain’s secrets by "befriending" them on LinkedIn, the social network site for hundreds of millions of professionals.

Secret agents working for countries including Russia and China created fake profiles on the site to lure unsuspecting victims, British intelligence warned.

News reports have noted that Whelan had an active Russian social media account and had connected with Russian soldiers.

These days, coverage of the Whelan case has inspired countless press calls to BorgWarner from throughout the U.S., England, Russia and France, Graham said.

News of the Russian police action didn’t actually surprise Hayashi, he said.

“I know something of the KGB — I had to deal with them in my book,” he said. “I can assure you, if the FSB is similar to its predecessor, the KGB, then the wider issue of Russian interference in American elections and politics is nothing new. The KGB had an entire section devoted to such activities. ... They got as high as the next prime minister of the Labour Party to Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s.”

Meanwhile, America hasn’t had a lot of trouble getting its own agents inside Russia because the new, younger generation opposes old-school KGB thinking that Putin, a former agent in the spy agency, represents, Hayashi said.

BorgWarner Powertrain Technical Center in Auburn Hills.
“I doubt Mr. Whelan was there to spy but, still, one does not know for sure without seeing any evidence," he said. "The likelihood is that he is innocent but happened to be in Russia at the wrong time. It is also possible he might have stumbled onto something accidentally and the Russians may want to cover that up.”

As it all unfolds, BorgWarner — which builds products that make vehicles move, from clutches and friction plates to transfer cases to turbochargers to electric motors and parts for combustion, hybrid and electric vehicles — is quietly awaiting the return of its executive.


Aaron Retish, a Wayne State University professor who has taught modern Russian and post-Soviet history for 16 years, is in England now, and watching the Whelan case.

It's unusual for the Russian government to arrest any American visiting the country on a tourist visa, Retish said.

Butina connection? 

“Russia has arrested some people for coming in on a wrong visa or not registering. But this, the Russian media reports, was a spy sting," he said. "So something must have happened. Who knows? They’ve done this a couple of times with some U.S. diplomats and some British diplomats, but they were all eventually deported and not arrested.”


There is wide speculation that Whelan’s arrest in Russia could somehow be tied to Butina, who was trying to influence American political groups, including the National Rifle Association, but Retish said it’s too soon to make any such connection.

“I know that American news outlets have been trying to link the two, saying that this is some setup for a swap, but … there are so many other moving wheels,” Retish said, in the geopolitical landscape.

Butina, he noted, was not charged with espionage, which the Russian government alleges against Whelan.

“She was arrested for being a foreign agent," Retish said. "That makes it a lot different."

Comparisons are being made, he said, between Butina and the Russian spy Anna Chapman, who was arrested in the United States nearly a decade ago and pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges.

“She was a Russian woman who was married and living in the United States and was also kind of this classic spy. She was living the normal life, but she was also spying for Russia and then she was eventually caught,” Retish said. “Even her husband supposedly didn’t know about it. She was eventually released and came back to Russia for a while and became a celebrity. She was praised by Putin.

“That’s kind of where the similarities end between the two. Chapman was a spy. Butina was a foreign agent, an unregistered foreign agent. It could be eventually that Butina actually has more significance on the political field because of all the connections that she had, than Chapman. But that is the only other big swap that you had.

“This is just a weird case with Whelan because Putin just came out saying … he hoped to have neither conversation and a meeting with Trump. And you could see that there could be a potential upswing in U.S.-Russian relations, especially with the U.S. pulling out of Syria, which is also something that Putin praised.

“It’s an odd time to arrest someone, but you never know what is happening behind the scenes. This is also how Putin works. When you least expect it, something like this happens.”

Contact Phoebe Wall Howard: phoward@freepress.com or 313-222-6512. Follow her on Twitter @phoebesaid. Free Press staff writer Kristen Jordan Shamus contributed to this report.

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