Threatening e-mails discover
CIA boss' extra-marital affair
By Alex P. Vidal
LOS ANGELES, California -- If she did not send threatening
e-mails to another woman believed to be also romantically linked to resigned
CIA director David Petraeus, biographer Paula Broadwell’s extra-marital affair
with the decorated military general would not be uncovered.
This was the report we have gathered here days after
President Barack Obama accepted Petreaus’ resignation.
Heavy writer Neil Prospect confirmed that the
investigation they made that uncovered Petraeus' extramarital affair “may have
been spurred by Paula Broadwell anonymously sending harassing emails to people
close to him. It has now been reported by the Washington Post that Paula
Broadwell did indeed send threatening emails to another woman connected to
Petraeus.”
Prospect said the woman who received the emails “was
so shaken by them that she sought FBI protection. The FBI investigated the
emails and tracked them back to Paula Broadwell.”
When Petraeus' name came up, Prospect added, investigators
thought his email might have been hacked, but the sexual nature of the emails
between Petraeus and Broadwell caused them to discover that, in fact, they were
having an affair.
Investigators say that the emails sent by Broadwell to
the woman close to Petraeus show that Broadwell perceived the woman as a threat
to her relationship with the four-star general and CIA director.
DOCTORAL
Broadwell is a research associate at Harvard's Center
for Public Leadership and a doctoral candidate in the Department of War
Studies, King's College, London, according to the Penguin Speakers Bureau, which
schedules her appearances, according to the research made by another Heavy
writer Sandy Fitzgerald.
Broadwell is a 1995 graduate of the West Point
Military Academy with degrees in Political Geography and Systems Engineering,
and she has earned a master's degree with honors from the University of
Denver’s Josef Korbel School of International Studies and an MPA degree from
Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.
“Other than where Petraeus is concerned, she's brilliant,”
Fitzgerald wrote. “She could probably
kick your ass.”
Fitzgerald addede that Broadwell is a lieutenant
colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves, having graduated in 1995 from the U.S.
Military Academy at West Point. While there, she graduated with academic and
leadership honors, but most importantly for this point, she graduated at the
top of her class for physical prowess. And she hasn't slacked much during the
years since.
KICKBOXING, WEIGHT LIFTING
She also reportedly enjoys running, skiing, cycling,
triathlon, surfing, kayaking, weight lifting and kickboxing. She has lived
worked in or traveled in more than 60 countries during her 15 years of military
service, including serving with the U.S. Intelligence community, U.S. Special
Operations Command and the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces.
While much has been said about the book "All
In" being like a "valentine" to the disgraced CIA leader, it's
not like Broadwell had an affair with the guy and wrote nice things about him
without having a set of highly impressive credentials first, revealed Fitzgerald.
“She has
written for the Kings of War and Foreign Policy’s Best Defense blogs, and she
has published op-eds in The New York Times, International Herald Tribune,
Christian Science Monitor, and The Boston Globe. She's written chapters in
books on counterinsurgency, transformational leadership, and women in defense,
and has contributed to national TV networks, BBC radio and National Public
Radio on similar topics,” wrote Fitzgerald.
Here’s another facts about Paula, as narrated by
Fitzgerald:
Army Corporal David Bixler never got to jump out of a
plane when he was assigned to the 101st Airborne Division in Afghanistan, but
instead lost both legs in an explosion in 2010. Thanks to Broadwell, he's got
his chance. She was supposed to have gone up for her birthday — ironically, it
was today, Nov. 9, while all the big news was coming out — but she donated her
jump to Bixler, who jumped on Nov. 2.
Oh, and while the rest of the world was finding out
all the dirt on her? She was in Charlotte, meeting Bixler and saying she and
her husband would help him find a job when he’s ready.
“He’s so amazingly positive, it just makes you cry,”
she said.
TRAVEL WITH PETRAEUS
Broadwell traveled to Afghanistan to travel with
Petraeus and "I got a great perspective of the war through his eyes. That
is what I wanted, was the war through the commander's eyes."
But did she get too close? Apparently. She went on
runs with him, followed him to battlefield visits and watched how he handled
the burden of command. Among other things.
She says her attire made her stand out, not her gender
or role as a writer:
“I never felt threatened as a Westerner, nor did I
feel that out of place as a female journalist. As you know, many female
journalists have covered Afghanistan over the years, and a significant number
of women serve in the military ... so I wasn't that much of an anomaly. In the
field, however, I was probably more of a curiosity for the children, who rarely
saw other women, much less a Western woman, and much less a woman in jeans and
Kevlar.”
She Wanted to Bring Attention to Wounded Warriors. “My
intention with this tour is to bring attention to ‘Wounded Warriors.' Over half
a million soldiers have debilitation post-traumatic stress disorder, and as a
society we need to draw attention to that and welcome them back.”
Her husband, Dr. Scott Broadwell, is a prominent
doctor in the Charlotte, North Carolina, area. The couple have two small
children.
She's a lot younger than Petraeus and his Wife, Holly.
Broadwell just turned 40 years old, but Petraeus is 60 and his wife is of
similar age. They've been married for 37 years, or if you want to do the math,
for about as long as Broadwell has been alive. Holly's father was the
superintendent at West Point when Petraeus graduated.
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