14 August 2007. The article is now online at Radar:
http://www.radaronline.com/from-the-magazine/2007/08/cryptome_john_young_radar_anthony_haden_guest
_1.php
11 August 2007
Related:
http://cryptome.org/radar-spy.htm
The original Radar article below in colored PDF:
http://cryptome.org/radar-smear.pdf
(8.3MB)
RADAR
8/7/07
"John -
The long-awaited "smear"! Do keep in touch. Best, John"
RADAR
JOHN COOK Senior Writer
216 East 45th Street 6th Floor NY NY 10017
p 212.803.6817
t 212.661.2322
e jcook[at]radaronline.com
216 East 45th Street 6th Floor NY NY 10017
RADAR September 2007
SECRETS + LIES
FOR 13 YEARS, AN OBSCURE WEBSITE HAS BEEN INFURIATING GOVERNMENTS WORLDWIDE
BY PUBLISHING CLASSIFIED INTELLIGENCE AND EXPOSING COVERT AGENTS. WHEN
RADAR SET OUT TO PROFILE THE MAN WHO RUNS IT, WE WALKED RIGHT INTO
HIS TRAP.
BY JOHN COOK
"WHY SHOULD I BELIEVE YOU?"
John L. Young asks that question a lot. When he poses it to me, leveling
his intense, glassy blue eyes at mine across a barrom table on a muggy evening
in May, it is less a direct attack on my credibility than a cruel epistemological
riddle. Over the previous week, I had exchanged e-mails and spoke on the
telephone with Young, a 71-year-old architect, spy buff, and proprietor of
strange and engrossing website called Cryptome, to set up an interview. In
doing so, I supplied him with certain data: my name [John Cook], occupation
[reporter], employer [Radar magazine], location [216 E. 45th St.],
e-mail address [redacted]. Young craves data. He covets it, collects it,
triangulates it, and uploads it to Cryptome -- an online repository of forbidden
information -- where it collides with more data, gig after gig sloshing around
in chaotic digital clouds. There are high-resolution photos of President
Bush's Crawford ranch, technical documents detailing how the National Security
Agency spies on computer traffic, even the home addresses and telephone numbers
of government officials, including former Director of National Intelligence
John Negroponte.
[Photo]
BUNKER BUSTER. In 2002, John Young (below, photo) posted these photos of
Site R, a Pennsylvania mountain bunker that reportedly served as Dick Cheney's
"undisclosed location" after September 11, on his website, Cryptome, which
aims to publish forbidden information. Young took the street-level photos
himself during a 2002 field trip to the site; he found the satellite images
using MapQuest and TerraServer.
But Young knows that raw data is suspect. Before it is loosed on the Internet,
scrubbed, cross-referenced, and interrogated by the hive mind for inconsistencies
and cracks, it can be used to deceive. People lie. Misinformation is everywhere.
People will use you; they will try to get you to believe things that aren't
true in order to advance their own agendas. It is, as Young likes to say,
"standard tradecraft." I could hand him a business card, show him a magazine,
look him firmly and earnestly in the eye, and swear up and down that I am
who I say I am. "But," he'll replay with a caustic smile, "that's how liars
talk."
There is no way out of this for John Young. He has a very good reason to
suspect me, but he has good reasons to suspect everyone. Inquisitive reporters
could have ulterior motives. Even the most casual of social interactions
could be an attempt to shake him down for information. Every smiling stranger
could be a Trojan horse; each friendly e-mail the beginning of a sting. It
must be exhausting.
Cryptome is, in the words of the washingtonpost.com columnis and NBC News
military analyst William Arkin, "The Google of national security." It is
a meticuloulsly maintained online compendium of information -- some previously
available to the public, some not -- devoting to plumbing and exposing the
secrets of the intelligence world. With a clean, crisp design, it presents,
in no discernible order, simple red links to documents and text files against
a white background. Much of the material Young collects is stultifyingly
dull -- "RFC Keyed-Hash Message Authentication Code" will take the reader
to an announcement in the Federal Register concerning "a mechanism for message
authentication using cryptographic has functions and shared secrete keys"
from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, for instance --
but some of it is dangerous and even breathtaking.
[Photo]
EYEBALLING JFK. Young published these shots of JFK's jet-fuel tanks hours
after a terrorist plot to blow them up was unraveled.
[Photo]
At right is a close-up shot of Air Force One's anti-missile countermeasures.
DURING THE FIRST few years, Young has published detailed overhead satellite
imagery of Site R, a military installation in Pennsylvania that he claims
is Vice President Dick Chenev's undisclosed location. Hours after the FBI
announced charges in June against four men for plotting to blow up jet-fuel
tanks at John E Kennedy International Airport in New York, Cryptome ran photos
of the airport tank farms, pointing out the exact route of a jet-fuel pipeline
buried beneath nearby residential neighborhoods. He regularly publishes satellite
photos of the homes of intelligence officials, including CIA Director Michael
Hayden's Washington, DC, residence.
He has exposed the names of what he claims are 276 British agents covertly
working for M16, the names of 400 secret Japanese intelligence agents, and
the names and home addresses of what he claims are 2,619 CIA sources.
Young is a mad scientist of secrecy, working with little more than monomaniacal
focus and an Internet connection to turn the tables on the spooks and expose
what he regards as a worldwide criminal network of intelligence operatives.
And the spies don't like it. After he posted the MI6 list in 1999, the British
government reportedly asked his Internet service provider at the time to
shut the site down. The company refused, but in May of this year, his hosting
service suddenly, without explanation, announced that it would no longer
have anything to do with the site. (Young promptly relocated to another service.)
He says he has received three visits to his home from the FBI, including
one from a pair of agents with the Joint Terrorism Task Force. Young's enemies
have tried to shut the site down with denial-of-service attacks. Officials
at the National Security Agency read his site with interest, and everyone
wants to know where he gets his information.
So why should he believe me? As it turns out, I am not the first reporter
from Radar to interview Young. Anthony Haden-Guest, a British writer who
splits his time between New York and London and is known as a garrulous,
debonair, and well-traveled tippler, approached Young and spoke with him
at length one year ago for a Radar story that never materialized.
Young finds this curious. He doesn't understand why Radar is so interested
in Cryptome.
"It doesn't seem to be the kind of story that Radar would run," he says.
"You do this interesting, catty stuff. We don't do that. Radar is almost
the antithesis of what we do." (Though he runs his site independently, Young
says "we" to give credit to his sources, without whom he says Cryptome wouldn't
exist.) He watches me, gauging my reaction. He thinks there's a story here,
but it's not about him. It's about something else entirely. "People eat your
stuff up," he says.
"Congratulations on your success. The thing is, I'd like them to eat something
more toxic."
JOHN YOUNG DOESN'T look his age. He is fit and spry, and, with his coat,
tie, and close-cropped gray hair, the picture of upper-middle-class propriety.
Though he lives on Manhattan's Upper West Side, he wouldn't for a moment
look out of place standing on a train platform in a Connecticut suburb with
a briefcase in one hand and a Wall Street Journal in the other. He is
soft-spoken, polite, and capable of delivering vicious insults in a measured,
calm voice with just the hint of a twinkle in his eye.
He has a wicked sense of humor and an impish smile that he flashes like a
switchblade. He likes to fuck with people. Young cheerfully agreed to meet
me in the bar of New York's Princeton Club, where his wife is a member, last
spring.
It wasn't until halfway into our two-hour conversation, during which Young
was cryptic and reluctant to divulge anything but the most basic personal
details, that I realized that it wasn't an interview. It was an operation.
Young was born in 1935. His parents were "marginal people" and his father
worked at "menial tasks," he says, refusing to elaborate.
He grew up in West Texas. He didn't tell me where, exactly. WWe were at the
very bottom of the social scale," he says. "And authority was the enemy.
That's the psychological background." He attended Rice University in Houston
and did a stint in the Army Corps of Engineers before moving in 1967, at
age 32, with a wife and four children in tow, to New York to pursue a graduate
degree in architecture at Columbia University. He studied there under James
Marston Fitch, considered the father of the historic preservation movement.
'1im Fitch said he was the best student he ever had," says Tyler Smith, a
fellow student and friend of Young.
In 1968, Young participated in the week-long seizure of Avery Hall, which
housed the architecture school, during Columbia's student strike.
He wasn't particularly radical, and says he joined in the protest "mainly
because it seemed much more interesting than going to school." But the strike,
and the intellectual climate surrounding it, ignited something in him. "He
came to Columbia as a very traditional thinker -- a conservative," says Alan
Feigenberg, another student involved in the Avery Hall takeover. "A lot of
the stuff we were talking about was shocking to him. He went through a
metamorphosis." Young and his fellow Avery Hall activists founded Urban Deadline,
an activist group-cum-architecture practice that sought, improbably, to change
the world through design.
Throughout the early 1970s, Urban Deadline donated services to the poor,
built storefront schools for high school dropouts, and scraped by on whatever
paid contracts it could land.
Young, who was a few years older than his colleagues, reluctantly took on
a leadership role despite the group's nominally egalitarian structure. Everyone
wrote out their own paychecks at the end of each week. Young's first wife
died of cancer either shortly before or shortly after his arrival at Columbia
(memories of his former classmates differ, and Young wouldn't say), leaving
him to raise their children on his own. But, according to his fellow Urban
Deadliners, he was single-mindedly devoted to the group and its radical goals.
He delighted in his own political obstinacy, and in poking his finger in
the eye of whatever establishment figures were within reach. "The best term
that could convey a sense of him is erratic," says Feigenberg. "and eccentric."
When Columbia offered him a teaching position, he argued with the dean that
he shouldn't receive any payment since he had no prior teaching experience.
Young once took out a series of ads in the small type along the bottom of
the front page of the New York Times attacking I.M. Pei: "I.M. Pei: Why so
many bad buildings?" When he was invited to say a few words at an opening
at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, he told the audience of patrons, "I've
just had a chance to look around briefly, but if you move that Rubens and
the Rembrandt and store them down in the basement, we could put 32 units
of housing in here. We're prepared to start right now."
"I have no idea how John figured out how to make a living," says Tony Schuman,
another Urban Deadliner. "I remember times when the electricity was shut
off in his apartment because he was so wrapped up in this stuff that he hadn't
bothered to find paying work. We were eating rice and beans." Over the years,
financial necessity caused Young's classmates to peel off and start their
own practices, and Urban Deadline effectively dissolved in the late 1970s.
"I felt like you couldn't make a life of it," says Feigenberg, today a professor
of architecture at the City College of New York. "John felt differently.
He felt that it was his life." Cryptome started in 1994, when Young was a
member of an e-mail Listserv called Cypherpunks, whose members included such
online luminaries as John Gilmore, one of the earliest employees of Sun
Microsystems, and Tim May, a former chief scientist with Intel.
Young happened across the group when he first got online. The cypherpunks
concerned themselves with the policy implications of encryption technology,
which at the time was a hotly debated topic. For the first time in the history
of the electronic age, private citizens had access to powerful encryption
software that allowed them to communicate with one another \vithout government
agencies having the option of listening in. The NSA, which exists for no
other purpose than to listen in, objected, and a series of protracted legal
battles ensued between the federal government and privacy activists. Philip
Zimmermann, a cypherpunk and the creator of the Pretty Good Privacy e-mail
encryption software, was investigated by the federal government in 1993 for
making his software available online, on the grounds that doing so constituted
the criminal unlicensed export of a weapon (charges were never filed).
When cypherpunks, many of whom were engineers and mathematicians working
as government contractors, needed a way to leak classified technical documents
about encryption, Young volunteered as a conduit, first using the small hosting
space that his ISP provided and later launching Cryptome as a stand-alone
site.
"My defense is, I don't know what these documents are," he says. "It was
pretty arcane stuff. We said, 'We'll put up anything that no one else wants
to put up.' That was our motto." Within months, he started to see daily visits
from NSA computers. Hea gotten their attention. The site quickly shed its
focus on cryptography, becoming a catch basin for random bits of information
-- data -- about national security and government secrecy. Young and his
wife, Deborah Natsios, who helps him run Cryptome, assembled it all in one
permanent archive, where readers can fall through the rabbit hole for hours,
scanning presidential motorcade security procedures, reading declassified
CIA case ftles, and viewing enhanced photos of that mysterious bulge in the
back of President Bush's suit jacket caught on camera during the 2004 debates.
Young has posted 41,000 files so far and averages roughly 50,000 visitors
per day.
[Photo]
WHO'S LOOKING OUT? Bill O'Reilly's home in Manhasset, NY, published on Cryptome
last year.
[Photo]
EXPLODED VIEW. On the eve of Bush's second inaugural, Young published a "survey
of presidential protection," including this illustration of the presidential
Cadillac swiped from popularmechanics.com.
"There's a massive organization of hundreds of thousands of people around
the world totally counting on secrecy," he says of the intelligence agencies
he covers. "They are the most unreliable people in the world. And it's corrupted
our culture. There's nothing that should be secret. Period."
"He's a Johnny Appleseed of information," says Michael Ravnitzky, a former
investigative reporter who has made the results of his Freedom of Information
Act requests available to Young for posting. "Every time you go there, you
find things that alter your worldview and make you look at things in a new
light."
"He's a hero in a lot of ways," says Cindy Cohn, the legal director of the
Electronic Frontier Foundation. "He's done such an amazing thing in such
a quiet, steadfast way." Young reads the Federal Register every day, files
FOIA requests, electronically clips news coverage of the intelligence world,
and tracks down court documents. He once paid a court reporter $9,000 for
the complete transcripts of the New York trial of Osama bin Laden and 21
others for the Kenya and Tanzania embassy bombings. (He sells a DVD archive
of everything on Cryptome for $25 apiece and sells ads on the site; aside
from that, Young covers Cryptome's costs himself).
"Cryptome functions like a kind of scout in the field of national security,"
says Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy for
the Federation of American Scientists. "John Young sees many things that
others do not see, and posts things others do not, or would not, post. What
makes it most useful to me is not the wild stuff, but the day in and day
out monitoring of the national security landscape."
The wild stuff: In July of 2000, a disgruntled former agent of the Public
Security Intelligence Agency, Japan's version of the CIA, leaked Young a
list of more than 400 PSIA operatives, which Young promptly published. The
Japanese government complained about the list to the FBI, and two agents
called Young at his home to ask him to take it down. "It was very descriptive,
and that poses a safety risk," says an FBI spokesman. Young refused, and
published the names of the agents who called him. Three years later, two
agents with the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force dropped in on Young unannounced.
They asked him to stop posting detailed aerial and street-level photos of
nuclear installations, and to pass along any information he received that
might help them unravel terrorist plots. "The complaint was, 'Is there some
way to persuade you not to do these things?' " Young says. "They were nice
guys, always very polite. They were a little sheepish about it." Young refused
to take down the offending images, and told the agents that if he came across
any information about terrorist threats, they could read about it on the
site. After they left, he published the names of his visitors on Cryptome.
The British Secret Intelligence Service, also known as M16, was too canny
to approach him directly, but it did reportedly try to get him booted off
his ISP, after he published, in 1999, a list of more than 100 MI6 agents
that had been released originally by former agent Richard Tomlinson on sites
based in the US. and Switzerland. Those sites removed the list at the request
of the British government, but Young grabbed it before it went offline. Since
then he's added two more batches of names. "We don't discuss personnel,"
says an SIS spokesperson.
"But it's obviously unhelpful and dangerous when these names are published."
"I would regard the damage he's doing as considerable," says Peter Earnest,
a 36-year veteran of the CIA who now serves as the executive director of
the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C. Earnest is also the chairman
of the board of directors of the Association for Intelligence Officers, a
group of retired spies, military intelligence officers, and even some journalists
who cover intelligence, whose membership list -- complete with addresses
Young published in 2000. "I think it's serious. We just finished a trial
over Valerie Plame, and that was just one person. I don't know what purpose
it serves aside from aiding people who would do them harm."
Even Young's admirers admit he goes over the line. "I think it's irresponsible,"
says Aftergood. "Publishing the home address of the Director of National
Intelligence is not something I'd fight for. If an individual whose cover
was exposed on Cryptome comes to harm, or if a facility that's highlighted
-- I can't even say it." To Young, complaints about agents' safety is pure
tradecraft. You can't argue with spies, because everything they say is a
lie. Former covert operatives have told him as much, he says.
"They say, 'Don't believe that, it's just standard fare. It's a ploy.' If
you believe any of this, you don't understand how spies operate. They lie
so much and run so many false operations and plant so many false agents.
They expose their own agents so much -- there's nothing you can do that they
haven't already done. In fact, they hope you will do it. To muddy the waters."
FOR 90 MINUTES through one and a half salted margaritas, John Young has been
eyeballing me, speaking softly, fidgeting with the digital recorder I've
placed in front of him. He's heard all the questions I am asking before,
and he answers them carefully and pleasantly. Then he tells me why he's here.
A few years ago, Anthony Haden-Guest called Young and asked to meet him for
a drink.
Haden-Guest, who wrote a book about Studio 54's glory days and is a two-time
winner of Spy magazine's Ironman Nightlife Decathlon, is known in media circles
as something of a hapless rogue, full of astonishing, barely believable yarns.
His brother is Christopher Guest, one of the creators of This Is Spinal
Tap and the director of A Mighty Wind. Haden-Guest has a habit
of calling magazine editors out of the blue from Chad or Syria with a great
story. He is a contributor to Radar and a personal friend of
Radar's editor in chief. Haden-Guest wasn't on an assignment when
he called Young, he was just interested in Cryptome. Over drinks, Young says,
a loquacious Haden-Guest offered a confession: He has been accused of being
an agent for MI6, he told Young. In fact, Young says, Haden-Guest revealed
that he actually had on one occasion done some unpaid work, as a favor, for
British intelligence by writing a report while traveling in the Middle East.
This was all in the strictest of confidence, Young says: "He said, 'You must
never repeat this.'" Afterward, Haden-Guest wrote a brief, laudatory article
about Young for a British newspaper. Roughly one year prior to my interview
with Young, Haden-Guest called Young again and proposed doing a more involved
story on him for Radar. They met at Haden-Guest's New York apartment for
three hours, Young says, and Haden-Guest tape-recorded the conversation.
Young never heard from him again.
Young dribbles out this information in bits and pieces, changing the subject
abruptly before returning to Haden-Guest and suggestively dropping another
nugget -- did I know that he had been incarcerated by the Germans as a child
during World War II? -- and studying my reaction. Eventually, it dawns on
me what Young is getting at: He thinks Anthony Haden-Guest is a British agent.
He thinks MI6 sent HadenGuest to "ping" him -- "like a radar ping; try a
ping and see what comes back" -- using a fake Radar interview as a pretext.
And he thinks I have something to do with it.
As it happens, Haden-Guest had indeed written a 565-word story about Cryptome
for Radar. The piece was Radar's idea. When he became too busy
to work on the story, it was killed and reassigned to me.
For months and months, Young had sat on this data he'd collected, waiting
to hear back from Haden-Guest about the story. Nothing.
Then, out of the blue, I'd sent him an e-mail saying that, once again,
Radar would like to interview him. So he showed up to ping me.
"That's why I'm meeting you," he says matter-of-factly, locking eyes with
mine. "Don't forget, you're all supposedly suspect. The thing is, I told
[Haden-Guest] the full story, and he got it on tape. And it was sent off
somewhere else. Being a reporter is a standard cover story. So, if you don't
know that's out there -- that is what I think about you. It's what I think
about him, too." Young believes that Haden-Guest and I are both working on
stories about him. But for MI6, not Radar.
I glance around at the tables next to us, concerned that someone might overhear
our conversation. I don't know if it's because I don't want them to hear
the paranoid rantings of a lunatic, or because I don't want them to hear
the "truth" about Anthony Haden-Guest. It is a simple and harmless set of
facts: Radar killed Haden-Guest's story and handed it to me. That's
not evidence of espionage. And so what if he bragged that people think he's
a spy? Haden-Guest has been regaling acquaintances with fantastical-seeming
tales for decades. Why, if he really were an agent, would he volunteer --
to John Young, of all people -- that he's suspected of being an agent? "It's
standard tradecraft," Young explains. What seems like a reporter's effort
to butter up a subject by appealing to his interest is also a tactic used
by agents to inoculate themselves against being uncovered. It muddies the
waters. And why wouldn't MI6 send someone to ping the man who'd outed 276
of their agents, to see what clues he may inadvertently give up about his
sources? And who better than a reporter?
In John Young's world, Spy magazine's Nightlife Decathlete may well
be all actual spy.
The more Young talks about it, the less absurd it sounds. There are the random
phone calls from third world hotspots. There was the episode in the 1980s
when Haden-Guest was kidnapped in Beirut while traveling with a DEA informant
who claimed he was working undercover on a heroin sting. There was the strange
story in the British edition of Esquire about the Middle East
intelligence-gathering exploits of his friend "CK," who is "a mercenary,
if you like, one of the rare agents on the ground in this high-tech epoch."
But in the end, this was still the man who once appeared on a panel discussion
with Randy Jones of the Village People.
I slowly come to see the point of Young's constant references to "common
tradecraft," and "standard fare": He lives in this world every day. We see
headlines now and again. We know -- and quickly forget -- that the CIA tailed
Fox News Channel's Brit Hume, then a reporter for the late muckraking columnist
jack Anderson, in the 1970s. That it kidnapped German citizen Khaled el-Masri
in Macedonia, shoved a tranquilizer suppository up his ass, chained him to
the floor of a plane, and flew him to an Afghan secret prison in 2004. That
the NSA is capable of listening in on any communication, anywhere. This is
what they do.
It's not so crazy to imagine they'll check in on someone like Young. It's
standard. You just have to know what to look for.
As Young lays out his case, he oscillates abruptly, and at a disorienting
pace, between charm and hostility. He is furious at Haden-Guest. He feels
like he's been had. A relatively well-known media figure has all but told
him that he's an agent, using a magazine as cover, and for some reason --
Affection? Vanity? -- Young hasn't posted a word of it to Cryptome. "Now
Cryptome is on the hook," he says. "It was a terrible mistake not to out
this guy, like everybody else. I agreed to keep a secret. I'm opposed to
secrecy." He rants about the betrayal, then drops it, and tells me that he's
willing to put me in touch with good sources for national security stories.
Then he insults me. A half-hour ago he said he found Radar "delightful";
now he finds it insipid. I point out to him that he's alternating between
affability and belligerence, and he bangs on the table with glee, delighted
that I noticed. "That is a practiced technique," he says.
"It's called whipsawing." Young points out how easy it was for me to set
up the interview, how accessible he made himself to me. "See, it's standard
tradecraft in the spy world to be extremely cooperative to people who are
expecting resistance. You just offer all possible help, and they just walk
right into it. Did you really think I'd let you interview me, rather than
me interview you? I'm plumbing your data. I've learned a lot about how
Radar operates. I'm just doing the usual shit that agents do to recruit
other agents." Am I being recruited?
"Yes."
My mission, should I choose to accept it:
Find out what happened to Haden-Guest's story, and write about Haden-Guest's
alleged MI6 connection in Radar. If I don't, Young will write about
it on Cryptome. "I don't believe you for a minute that you're any different
from Haden-Guest," Young rants. "I'm about to get fucked over again.
Radar's behind this. Turns out, you're on my shit list. I'm only talking
to you to figure out what happened, and what I'm going to make of it. It
doesn't look good. Until you find out what this story was and why it was
killed, I only have vengeance in my mind against Radar and anyone
associated with it."
"Or you know," he says, flashing his teeth, "maybe it's a fucking con job
I'm giving you, and you're about to get eaten alive by Anthony Haden-Guest.
He's more famous than me. And so it's kind of interesting what you'll do
with this. I'll give you a month."
IN PERSON AND ONLINE. Young casts himself as an outsider and misanthrope.
There is some truth to this portrayal. At the same time, he has done
architectural work for some of the most powerful members of the political
establishment that he has sworn to attack.
"It's an easy way to make money in New York, to do corrupt work," he says
with a shrug. He has worked for the Council on Foreign Relations, the bete
noire of the conspiracy set. He was, for six years in the 1980s, the consulting
architect to the Pierre, a Fifth Avenue apartment hotel that has been home
to Sumner Redstone and Mohamed Al Fayed. His resume cites work on developer
Kirk Kerkorian's residence there. During the renovation of Grand Central
Terminal in the 1990s, he was hired to document the existing structure and
spent days in the rafters above the vaulted Main Concourse, meticulously
measuring beams. [Cryptome: Not true, never said that.] He is respected enough
in his field to have been selected, in 1998, for the nominating committee
for the Chrysler Award for Innovation in Design. He nominated James Bell,
a Washington man who was convicted in 2001 of stalking US. Treasury agents,
for Bell's online essay, "Assassination Politics," which Young described
as "an imaginative and sophisticated prospective for improving governmental
accountability by way of a scheme for anonymous, untraceable political
assassination."
If it's incongruous to imagine a paranoid, spy-hating anarchist going over
blueprints with Mrs. Kerkorian, consider the preposterous, cosmically
incomprehensible case of John Young's late father-in-law. Young has been
married at least three times; in 1993 he met his current wife, Deborah Natsios,
the daughter of Nicholas Natsios, a career CIA officer who served in Vietnam,
Iran, and elsewhere. Young disclosed the fact on Cryptome in 2000: "My
father-in-law was a longtime career officer in the Central Intelligence Agency,
one of its earliest members, and chief of station in several countries....
He's not talking to Cryptome, and that's regrettable, for I believe such
knowledgeable persons should disclose everything they know about the global
culture of secret intelligence and its profound effects-to better inform
citizens on the true way their governments function." When Young published
the membership list of the Association for Intelligence Officers four months
later, Nicholas Natsios's name and home address were on it. Natsios died
in 2004. When I called his daughter Christine Natsios -- Young's sister-in-law
-- to ask her what she thought of Cryptome, she replied, "This is a family
matter, and it's none of your business."
Deborah Natsios's cousin is Andrew Natsios, currently the State Department's
special envoy to Sudan and formerly the administrator of the Agency for
International Development, appointed by George W Bush. The CIA is commonly
thought to use USAID positions as cover overseas. Disclosing the relationship
on Cryptome, Young described him as a "low-paid hardworking honest guy mired
in a hopelessly venal fat-cat system."
The closest Young comes to explaining to me why he created Cryptome is this:
"I'm a pretty fucking angry guy." He describes it as a public education project.
But for every hard data point he offers, there's the ever-present admonishment
that secrecy corrupts everything.
"We caution people, don't believe anything we publish," he says. "Were totally
untrustworthy. We may be a sting operation, we may be working for the Feds.
If you trust us, you're stupid."
It's like a nihilist art project: Provide your readers with more than 40,000
files of data the government doesn't want you to have, data that exposes
the lies of the powerful, and then remind them that you can never, ever know
for sure who is lying.
JOHN YOUNG DIDN'T give me a month. The next day he wrote Haden-Guest an e-mail,
which he also posted on Cryptome: "I have recommended John Cook speak to
you about Cryptome and your dead article for Radar, and yourself Cook's
interview of me last night evening [sic] was vapid in the Radar mode
-- no preparation, ignorant, shallow. He has a recording of it, so you two
might exchange raw data." He didn't return further e-mails or phone calls.
Several days later, when Young started getting calls and e-mails from friends
alerting him to my inquiries for this story, he posted this: "Cook is sucking
up to a slew of folks in the US and elsewhere gathering material for a Cryptome
smear.... Excellent, feed him sewage, I urge.... I referred him to Anthony
Haden-Guest ... who got three hours on tape of my crap in 2006 for a
Radar story that never appeared. Well, never appeared in public; who
got it can be mused. Sucking up, Guest bragged of his periodic voluntary
work for MI6, and that he was suspected of being a spy around New York City
(standard bar pick-up talk) ... Cook said he didn't have the time or interest
to read Cryptome. Agreed, I said, it's off Radar's screen, so what's
your purpose? He said, 'Who are your sources?' literally pushing the recorder
closer to me."
Young continued to post his correspondence about me with various friends
and relatives I had contacted for this story. His daughter Anina Young, who
operates an online clothing store in New York, asked me to put my questions
in an e-mail; she never replied, but the e-mail showed up on Cryptome two
days later. Young called Radar a "vile magazine," accused me of "hounding"
his family, and advised his associates that I would tell them a "mixture
of truth and lies" in order to "seduce and betray" them. "Expect to [be]
abused and hurt by the process if you want to join the nasty fun," he wrote.
When I called Haden-Guest to let him know what Young had been saying about
him, he replied that he had never told Young that he was commonly suspected
of being a spy, or that he worked for British intelligence, and insisted
that he had never done a thing for British intelligence. He said he wished
he had let Young know about the disposition of his story, but had been
preoccupied with moving back to London from New York City. He was concerned
that someone like Young would spread a false rumor that he was MI6. "That's
heavy," he said.
A few days later, Haden-Guest sent Radar an e-mail elaborating on
Young's claims, chalking them up in part to anger over the fact that the
original story never appeared: "Clearly the nonpublication angered Young
greatly. At our second meeting, I had mentioned a piece of reporting I had
done at the beginning of the Iraq war. I had accompanied a buccaneering freelance
intelligence operation in Cyprus, Syria, and Lebanon, looking for WMD. My
presence had been cleared by a deputy undersecretary at the Pentagon, but
was not greeted with enthusiasm by his British counterpart. Very much the
reverse. The piece was published in Esquire. This is, I suppose, the
report to which Young refers."
Toward the end of my conversation with Young, he returned to the question
that plagues him: "Why do I believe you? Radar is a piece of shit.
Saying that you work for Radar and we're going to do this in September,
that's a bullshit story." Then he said he had to wake up early in the morning.
"It was good to see you," he said with a smile. "I don't get out much."
On our way out, he invited me upstairs to have a look at the Princeton Club's
second-floor lounge area. He had mentioned earlier in our conversation that
the club had gone downhill, and how pleasant the sitting area once was. I
let him lead the way. His insults were still reverberating in my head; I
was reeling from the notion that I was involved, unwittingly, tangentially,
in an operation to spy on this 71-year-old man. He had been berating me not
20 minutes earlier, and here he was, utterly charming, leading me up the
wide staircase into an empty room filled with stuffed chairs and reading
lamps.
It was late. We could barely hear the chatter from the bar downstairs. Was
he testing me, to see how I'd react if asked to follow him into a secluded
area? Was I about to feel a sharp pinch in my shoulder blade and fade to
black? Why was he doing this?
We walked into the lounge area. He stopped and let me walk a few feet ahead.
I turned back to look at him.
"It used to be much nicer," he sighed.
THE CRYPTOME FILES. For a full gallery of John Young's most controversial
posts, check out
http://www.radaronline.com/features/2007/08/best_of_cryptome_radar.php
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