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Inside
the Spy Game
With the Man Who
Knew Too Much
BY GARY S BEKKUM
Sunday,
October 7, 2007
MINNEAPOLIS (STARpod.org) -- "...publicly
accusing a
person with
seven current
contracts with
the Intelligence
Community, four
classified...with
a distinguished
career in
Intelligence to
boot, and who is
the current
Chair of the
Science Board
for the
Undersecretary
of Defense for
Chem/Nuclear/Biological
matters...as
being in the pay
of a Foreign
Power who is
wittingly
passing them
classified
material..."
Mr. Dan Smith is either breaking
the spy game rules or playing by
someone else's covert game plan.
At issue: Smith's allegations
(that a meeting with physicist
Robert Park, arranged by Smith
at the request of a Senior
Intelligence Official at the DIA,
who reports to the Director of
National Intelligence) was about
potential misuse of government
resources for research into
high-frequency gravity waves.
A
response to Mr. Smith's
allegations from a physicist,
and another top former
intelligence officer and
professional consultant to the
U.S. Government, exposed a more
serious allegation of
impropriety on the part of the
Senior Intelligence Official.
Physicist Robert Park is a
well-known skeptic of all things
paranormal. He is the author of
the book "Voodoo Science: The
Road from Foolishness to Fraud."
Park failed to respond to our
request for his comments.
Citizen Smith's involvement in
an elastic affair involving the
Intelligence Community began
shortly after the torn curtain
that once divided east and west
was permanently dissolved by the
frenzy of electronic
communication over the Internet.
Mr. Smith is known for his
allegorical twisting of
behind-the-scenes spy games,
posted at his blog, which has
received attention recently from
UFO researchers and forum
members.
And Mr. and Mrs. Smith are not
strangers to Washington
politics.
Mr. Smith's father, Harvard
economist Dan Throop Smith, was
the Treasury Department's number
one tax adviser during the
Eisenhower White House. He has
two sisters, one that once
taught in a one-room school in
Montana, and according to
Smith's Blog, lives without the
luxury of television or the
Internet. Mr. Smith's other
sister, the wife of business
executive Charles Leighton, is a
friend of President George W.
Bush's aunt, Nancy Bush Ellis.
Mr. Leighton earned a Jack
Anderson story in the Washington
Post over a bizarre cuff link
affair.
Dan Smith posted what appear to
be sensitive email messages to a
public Internet web site, the
Open Minds Forum, and in the
process transmuted private
messages into open source
material. As a result it appears
that Smith's actions helped to
sabotage the alleged meeting
with Park.
What are we to make of Mr.
Smith's new role as saboteur?
Smith's attempt to effectively
blackmail his handler has tied a
rope around his personal agenda,
strangling the intended
disclosure for the time being.
It's all downhill from here.
One area of concern regarding
the latest series of 'leaks'
coming from email messages
distributed by Mr. Smith, is
that some of the emails appear
to have originated with the
Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA).
The addresses in question end
with "@dia.mil." Mr. Smith's
posting of the email addresses
clearly identifies two
individuals at the DIA.
If verified, the use of official
government email servers in
communications to Mr. Smith
would confirm that Smith is not
a 'psycho' acting out a bizarre
fantasy on the Internet. The
Senior Intelligence Official's
modus operandi often appears to
involve Smith, which is strange
given previous statements to
Internet journalists that Mr.
Smith's state of mind is
questionable.
Smith posted a message to Park,
apparently from the Senior
Intelligence Official, that
appears to confirm Dan Smith's
role in the spy game:
"Dan received degrees from the
University of Maryland in
physics and philosophy. He
occasionally provides pro bono
counsel to the US Government,
providing a representational
perspective from the lunatic,
scamming, and general fringe
science communities. He
currently appears to be too
unstable to provide a valuable
contribution but may recover
over the weekend. I'll check
with him and decide whether or
not he should participate."
The latest spy fiasco, in what
superficially appears to be a
CIA family plot to coerce the
rich and strange to sabotage
government disclosure, has given
Mr. Smith a bout of stage
fright, causing him to withdraw
from public forums to his
personal blog:
"It was my contention that we
were headed to a new level in
the acclimation effort via the
R&D protocol. But when I put Ron
on the spot w.r.t. to a meeting
with a known skeptical academic,
he opted to cut me out of that
meeting. I have not heard from
him since. For the time being, I
have removed myself from
contention on the disclosure
front."
R&D refers to "Ron," the Senior
Intelligence Official at DIA,
and Dan Smith. The academic
referred to by Mr. Smith is
Robert Park. "Ron" is well known
for his interest in alternative
scientific subjects, and for
shutting down government
programs rooted in
pseudo-science.
In an email from "Ron" earlier
this year, I was advised to
refrain from "revealing methods
and sources" and later received
a request from a private
investigator associated with
"Ron":
"I am kindly asking that you
please do as Ron requests and
retract the obviously specious
information Dan provided to you
about him."
Smith has run afoul of a few of
the birds from the AVIARY --
intelligence officers past and
present, stigmatized by bird
names once used to casually
conceal their identities during
the research phase of a Fox TV
special about UFOs that aired in
the late 1980s.
Without a shadow of a doubt,
some members of the AVIARY
appear to be under suspicion of
more than spreading rumors of
top-secret government liaisons
with extraterrestrial lifeforms.
Allegations from one of "Ron's"
associates, a former senior
intelligence officer at CIA who
continues to consult for the U.S
Government, suggest "Ron's"
actions over the past year are
intended to 'out' a spy stealing
government secrets. To catch a
thief, "Ron" appears to keep
Smith spellbound with the
promise of government
disclosure. But did "Ron" pick
the wrong man?
Our foreign correspondent, Caryn
Anscomb, who is based in the
United Kingdom, told us that
"Ron's" associate "seems a bit
upset with it all."
A physicist known for his
research in fringe areas,
including psychic remote viewing
and alternative energy sources,
reacted to the allegation from
Smith that the meeting with
Robert Park was to discuss the
waste of government funds for
gravity wave research. Smith
immediately posted the emails to
the public forum at Open Minds.
Smith wrote, "It seems that the
Soap Opera has been
transmographied into a
slight-of-hand act. It might
also be called misdirection. By
taking that ever so cheap-shot
at [the physicist], and by
having ["Ron's" associate] get
on his High Horse to come
charging to [the physicist's]
defense, we have become a
conspiracy of dunces or
geniuses, depending on one’s PoV."
The physicist's response to
Smith's allegations of misuse of
government resources, "to accuse
a scientist of fraud is legally
actionable," triggered a
reaction from "Ron's" associate,
the former intelligence
official:
"Indeed. As is publicly accusing
a person with seven current
contracts with the Intelligence
Community, four
classified...with a
distinguished career in
Intelligence to boot, and who is
the current Chair of the Science
Board for the Undersecretary of
Defense for Chem/Nuclear/Biological
matters...as being in the pay of
a Foreign Power who is wittingly
passing them classified
material. Later denials that
what was meant was that it might
be a 'hypothetical' that was
really meant is not exculpatory
in a Tort Action for personal
and professional libel. When
written confirmation exists that
the person doing the posting was
doing it as part of an agreed
'Protocol' with a sitting Senior
member of the DNI, by name...it
becomes rather important for
other reasons. Most courts would
not see it as an innocent
'mistake' when the identical
pattern is repeated three times
in one year."
Smith appears to be suffering
from vertigo as he assails the
heights of counter-intelligence,
in his quest for a cosmic
lifeboat. In the process, his
goal of moving government
disclosure to the forefront of
Washington politics has receded
into the horizon, revealing the
precipice beneath him.
My advice for Mr. Smith: be
careful with your next step. If
you slip the drop can be murder.
As for the spies, they continue
to chatter past each other over
the web, like strangers on a
train, destined to stare out the
rear window at the receding
landscape of the real world.
Bon voyage!
Note: I was included in the some
of the original emails from
Smith. The replies were later
posted at Open Minds Forum.
They are reproduced at the
Spies, Lies, and Polygraph Tape
blog, without comment:
www.starpod.org
I confess a bit of hesitation in
bringing this tale to the
general public, having earned a
notorious reputation for not
obeying the rules of journalism
when it comes to anonymous
sources. Once you enter the spy
game, you are always under
suspicion of being a secret
agent, no matter how young and
innocent you appear on the
surface. One thing I have
learned from the lessons of
others caught up in the shadowy
tales of intrigue and real-life
espionage: when you become
involved in spy games, you
should always tell your wife. |
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