Addict (drugaddict) wrote,
Addict
drugaddict

Nation Article on Brady Kiesling--12/25/06

   Brady Kiesling's Tale

by SCOTT SHERMAN

[from the December 25, 2006 issue]

In January 2003 John Brady Kiesling, political counselor at the US
Embassy in Greece, hosted a dinner party for a dozen European artists
and intellectuals at his apartment in Athens. Most of the guests were
friendly to the United States, but none of them could fathom the Bush
Administration's inexorable march to war in Iraq. As a career diplomat
obligated to defend his country's foreign policy, Kiesling reflexively
counterattacked with prowar arguments, but the rhetorical effort left
him exhausted and irritable. "At the end of the evening," he later
explained, "I realized how threadbare and unconvincing my arguments had
been. And these were people who like Americans!"

A few weeks later Kiesling resigned from the State Department. "Our
fervent pursuit of war with Iraq," he wrote in an eloquent letter to
Secretary of State Colin Powell, "is driving us to squander the
international legitimacy that has been America's most potent weapon of
both offense and defense since the days of Woodrow Wilson." That letter
turned Kiesling into an antiwar celebrity and brought him an admiring
handwritten note from Bill Clinton.

"My personality," Kiesling says with a wan smile, "is not really that
suited to going out and being a rock star." That's true: He has none of
the swagger and charisma we tend to associate with whistleblowers and
mavericks like Daniel Ellsberg and Joseph Wilson. With his light blue
button-down shirt, khaki pants, black loafers and round glasses,
Kiesling, youthful at 49, carries himself like an assistant professor of
English or an earnest young librarian. One senses a steeliness in him,
but also a sense of fragility. Did he make the correct decision to
terminate his twenty-year career in the foreign service? "Yes, I'm much
happier now," he responds without hesitation. "Everyone has to punch
some ticket in life that says they have made a difference."

Kiesling was recently in New York City to promote his new book,
/Diplomacy Lessons/, and I met him at an apartment across from
Washington Square Park, where he was staying with an old friend.
/Diplomacy Lessons/ is three things: an autopsy of the Bush
Administration's foreign policy by a man whose job was to help implement
it; a primer on the art (and necessity) of first-rate diplomacy in an
era of unilateral gunslinging; and a memoir of Kiesling's years as a
foreign service officer in Israel, Armenia, Morocco and Greece, the
country he loves the most and the place he now calls home. The pages
devoted to Kiesling's career are among the most gripping in the book.

In those pages, we see an idealistic young man, with a newly minted
graduate degree from Berkeley in Mediterranean archeology and ancient
history, who took the foreign service exam in 1983. We see a hapless
diplomat in Morocco who, with the best of intentions, once tried to
broker a deal between a restless neighbor (a proud, impoverished Islamic
university student) and a US intelligence officer, a deal that quickly
collapsed. We see him gaining confidence as a junior diplomat:
schmoozing with power brokers and literati, scanning the Greek press for
political minutiae and making the long drive every few months to the
headquarters of the Communist Party of Greece, where, near a huge bust
of Lenin, he would spend an hour arguing with the Politburo member in
charge of international relations.

And finally we witness his growing disillusionment with US diplomacy
after 9/11 and the ways those sentiments expanded his political
consciousness and drove him to despair. Strolling through the old
quarter of Ankara in the weeks after the US assault on Falluja, Kiesling
saw signs in tourist shops that read "Americans Not Welcome." In light
of these and other incidents, some old shibboleths in his mind began to
crumble. In 2001 he smugly assured the publisher of a left-wing
newspaper in Athens that Noam Chomsky was "clinically insane." Writes
Kiesling in his new book, "I feel more charitably disposed toward
Chomsky now."

It wasn't principle alone that inspired Kiesling's act of rebellion.
/Diplomacy Lessons/ chronicles the administrative and bureaucratic
imbroglios that preceded his decision to resign. It's a tangled and
psychologically complex story. In 2002 Kiesling ran into difficulty with
the diplomatic security division of the Embassy in Athens, which
routinely sends young Marines to offices after hours in search of
unsecured classified material. If an unsecured document is located, a
pink slip is deposited. Kiesling's pink slips began to proliferate, and
he was informed that he was ineligible for promotion for one year.
"Almost certainly," he writes, "the lapses were my fault, the result of
working too late with too little sleep." But he also felt he was being
punished arbitrarily. "Every political officer who actually does any
work runs afoul of this system once or twice," he says now. When he
sought the support of his Ambassador, Thomas Miller, and was rebuffed,
Kiesling felt he no longer had "absolute faith in the integrity of the
system I worked for." His anger toward Miller, combined with the
queasiness he felt about the imminent war in Iraq, gave him the courage
to resign, he says.

Doing so meant sacrificing a steady career. With his savings depleted,
he is scrambling to build a new life for himself, writing for an
English-language Athens newspaper and researching a book about the
November 17 organization--a "little tiny terrorist group," he relates,
"that for twenty-five years tied the US government in knots in Greece."
Eventually he would like to support himself as a freelance writer in
Greece, where he says the cost of living is less than in the United
States and where he appears to be held in high esteem, but his anxiety
about the future is palpable.

Kiesling may have lost faith in the Bush-era State Department, but he
remains idealistic about the diplomatic profession. His book is
dedicated to "the new generation of the US Foreign Service, whose faith
in their country and curiosity about the planet will bring new pride to
a proud profession." Already he's in contact with that new generation.
"I recruited a couple of potential new foreign service officers on my
book tour these last few days," explains Kiesling. "A really bright guy
working on War News Radio at Swarthmore College now says he wants to
take the foreign service exam and he e-mailed me on how to do it."

--
Subscribe
  • Post a new comment

    Error

    default userpic

    Your reply will be screened

    Your IP address will be recorded 

    When you submit the form an invisible reCAPTCHA check will be performed.
    You must follow the Privacy Policy and Google Terms of use.
  • 0 comments