Wednesday, December 30, 2009

A brief follow-up to the Recipe Stir Brewing Jinni series:

Late this summer, Sibel Edmonds finally had an opportunity to give testimony to what she heard in the Turkish language wiretaps during her breif employment with the FBI in 2001/2.

And, in the November 2009 issue of The American Conservative, she disclosed further details, including the following:

"The Turkish agents had a network of Turkish professors in various universities with access to government information. Their top source was a Turkish-born professor of nuclear physics at the Massachusetts Institutes of Technology. he was useful because he would place a bunch of Ph.D. or graduate-level students in various nuclear facilities like Sandia or Los Alamos, and some of them were able to work for the Air Force. He would provide the list of Ph.D. students who should get these positions. In some cases, the Turkish military attache would ask that certain students be placed in important positions. And they were not necessarily all Turkish, but the ones they selected had struck deals with the Turkish agents to provide information in return for money. If for some reason they had difficulty getting a security clearance, [Marc] Grossman would ensure that the State Department would arrange to clear them."

Following this lead concerning the "Turkish-born professor of nuclear physics," the most likely candidate would be A. Nihat Berker, who is no longer at M.I.T., but is currently President of Sabanci University in Istanbul. In his CV, we find that he was on sabbatical and extended leave from M.I.T. '99-04, and notably, he is "Founder and Director, M.I.T.-Turkey Freshman Scholars Program" beginning in 2003, which suggests a continuing role of facilitating Turkish students' entry into the U.S.

Pure speculation, we should add.

Moreover, we can wonder whether some of the Ph.D. students, now professors, included Bilge Yildiz or Nuh Gedik. An examination into their areas of research might tell us something about the nature of the technologies that were spirited away through the nuclear proliferation market.

But, again, we only speculate.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Christmas Riot

It might seem the most inappropriate time of the year, but in the XIXth Century, it was not terribly uncommon for civil disturbances to break out on Christmas day. More often than not, these might be described as bacchanals gone out of hand, under the Lord of Misrule. But the Christmas day riot of 1853 was decidedly of an anti-clerical inception, culminating with a pitched battle between German radicals and Irish police on the streets of Cincinnati, Ohio. So we read it described in The Serene Cincinnatians by Alvin Harlow, Pg. 49:

"In December of that year Mgr. Cajetan Bedini, who stood high in the Catholic hierarchy, spent Christmas with Bishop Purcell. The Freemen's Society blamed him for the death of Ugo Bassi, an Italian priest who had joined the revolutionaries under Garibaldi in 1849, but was captured and executed. The Freemen decided to hang Mgr. Bedini in effigy in robe and mitre in front of Bishop Purcell's home and then burn the effigy. News of the project reached the police. The procession of 1,200 persons, including 200 women and some children, left Frei Manner's Halle late in the evening and marched four abreast towards the Bishop's residence, led by a powerful fellow who carried the gallows on his shoulder. But at Ninth Street they were halted by a force of police under their chief, Captain Lukens. In the ensuing melee, shots were fired by the police, a number of the marchers were wounded, one fatally, and one policeman was injured, also fatally. Sixty-four paraders were arrested, charged with rioting, but public feeling was so high that they were discharged the next day... Meanwhile, effigies were burned in several of the suburbs, with parades and banners crying, "Down with Bedini!" "Down with Snelbaker" (the Mayor), "Down with the Cincinnati Police"; and another crowd of several hundred from the West End and Over the Rhine burned Mgr. Bedini once more, on a lot near St. Peter's Cathedral and squarely in front of a watch-house."