Kathimerini English

John Kiriakou: ‘N17 file will not be shelved’

Former CIA analyst talks about his stint in Greece, says authoritie­s are not finished with Greek terror group despite conviction­s

- BY MARIANNA KAKAOUNAKI

I rang the doorbell of John Kiriakou’s home shorty after noon. It was around Halloween and the entrance to his suburban Washington house was decorated with witches, pumpkins and black netting. He opened the door wearing jeans, a T-shirt and socks, holding a cup of coffee in one hand. He welcomed me with the warm affability of so many Americans, and nothing in his demeanor suggested that for over a decade this man had led a double life as a CIA agent.

“Sorry about the mess,” he said as we navigated our way through piles of boxes. After spending over a year in jail, and without a steady job, his family had been forced to move into a much smaller house.

“We had to rent out our home so we wouldn’t lose it. We just moved back and we don’t have a lot of furniture. I sold most of it to pay for the attorneys,” he said frankly.

The “nightmare,” as he described it, began in 2012, when Kiriakou was charged with disclosing classified informatio­n, including the name of a covert CIA officer and informatio­n revealing the role of another CIA employee in classified activities, to journalist­s. He believes his conviction was a pretext to punish him for speaking about the agency’s use of waterboard­ing to interrogat­e terror suspects.

“I paid a high price but, no, I don’t regret it. We like to tell the rest of the world that we Americans are a beacon of light and hope and respect for human rights, and that’s just not true,” said Kirakou.

Sitting on the kitchen counter was a collection of mementos from his time with the CIA: awards and medals from dangerous missions in the Middle East and also Greece, proof of a lengthy and successful career.

“Their goal is to ruin you, to write off everything I did. But I won’t give them the satisfacti­on,” he said.

He picked up one of the medals and showed it to me. “This is from my friends in EYP [Greece’s National Intelligen­ce Agency]. We had a very good cooperatio­n.”

He put on shoes and a jacket and drove us to his favorite restaurant. “I’ll take you where I had my last meal before going to prison. The best souvlaki in Washington! When I came out of prison I was under house arrest but I said that what I wanted more than anything was a gyro platter, so my poor wife drove all the way across town to bring me a gyro,” Kiriakou recalled.

When we arrived at the restaurant he looked around to see whether any of his Greek-American friends were there. Kiri- akou and both his parents were born in Pennsylvan­ia but hailed from the Greek island of Rhodes. I asked him about his relationsh­ip with Greece and to my surprise he answered in Greek.

“I grew up in a Greek home – Greek 24/7. We celebrated the saints’ days, ate the food, spoke the language.”

The first time he went to Greece was on holiday, traveling by train through Yugoslavia. Crossing the border, a young lady said, “Welcome home.”

“I’ll never forget that,” said the 52- year-old. “Ever since, this has been my goal: to return to Greece.”

Kiriakou joined the service at the age of 22, recruited by a professor serving as an agent at the university where he was studying. When asked whether he was interested, Kiriakou said “Why not?” – giving little thought to how much his life would change.

He started off as an analyst and one of his first jobs was an anlysis on the Persian Gulf. Nine months later, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait and Kiriakou was thrust among the CIA’s highest echelons in the White House.

He was climbing the ranks fast and soon realized that he needed to make allies in the competitiv­e environmen­t of the CIA. He turned to the GreekAmeri­can lobby.

“The Greek Americans in the CIA stick together more closely than any other ethnic group, to the point where we met for lunch every month. I was just the young kid at the time. I knew that if I had a question – maybe an ethical question or a moral question – if there was something that I was asked to do that bothered me, I knew that I could go to this Greek-American group and get advice and not have it hurt my career,” he said.

Moving to Athens

Kiriakou later heard of a special post at the US Embassy in Athens and asked some of the senior Greek-American CIA agents to put in a good word for him. He went through a tough selection process, but ultimately had to get the green light from his wife.

“I thought she’d hate another overseas assignment (I had just returned from Bahrain),” Kiriakou said. “But she also has Greek roots and was excited when I told her. I came home and found her packed and ready to go. ‘Are you nuts?’ I said. ‘We’re not going for another year!”

Kiriakou came to Greece on August 8, 1998. He started work the very next day: “I was thrown in at the deep end.” Just the previous year, Athens had been chosen to host the 2004 Olympic Games and domestic terrorism prob- lems had also become a problem for the Americans.

“Don’t forget that Greece at the time was considered to be a crossroad. Every Arab tied to every major terrorist group went through Athens at one point. And, of course, the members of November 17 were roaming around free,” he said in reference to the Greek terror group. “Over the years, the US spent tens of millions of dollars, maybe more, on technology, but more on trying to cultivate human resources.”

Kiriakou recruited five agents and traveled extensivel­y, investigat­ing new and old leads from the classified November 17 files. “A lot of things shocked me when I first read those files,” he said, pausing. It was the first time during our discussion that he seemed wary. “I have to be very careful how I say this because the informatio­n is still classified and, God knows, I’ve had enough trouble with the CIA,” he said.

“I was surprised at the depth that the files went into, where – how can I say this? – where the informatio­n pointed to a potential conspiracy – I’ll put it like that – that there were politician­s at the time that may have known far more than they were willing to let on about the creation of November 17 and about the group’s ongoing ability to launch operations in Athens. And they wouldn’t say it,” he said.

Kiriakou turned to all the suspects the CIA considered and said that one informant even claimed November 17 was run by marine biologist Jacques-Yves Cousteau.

“All jokes aside, we investigat­ed even the most unlikely suspects. There were so many conspiracy theories implicatin­g mainstream politician­s like Andreas Papandreou, Iosif Valirakis all the way to Vassilis Vassilikos, one of the most important and prominent Greek authors,” he said. “I would say that that the reason the CIA investigat­ed and in some cases cultivated these theories was out of desperatio­n. If you were to ask the CIA how many people it suspected of being November 17 members, it could have given you 5,000 names, 10,000 names. Everybody was a suspect.”

 ??  ?? member Savvas Xiros is escorted from an Athens courthouse in 2005 after his appeal for release was rejected. Xiros is currently serving five consecutiv­e life sentences. He was convicted in 2003 along with suspected group leader Alexandros Giotopoulo­s...
member Savvas Xiros is escorted from an Athens courthouse in 2005 after his appeal for release was rejected. Xiros is currently serving five consecutiv­e life sentences. He was convicted in 2003 along with suspected group leader Alexandros Giotopoulo­s...
 ??  ?? John Kiriakou and both his parents were born in Pennsylvan­ia but hailed from the Greek island of Rhodes.
John Kiriakou and both his parents were born in Pennsylvan­ia but hailed from the Greek island of Rhodes.

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