The Betrayal Narrative
Graham Swanson
to B.
I – Storm
Wayward Storm grunted under dim fluorescent lights. Blue glow from three monitors turned her face white. No windows, no phone, a card access lock on the door, the SCIF allowed no room for the mind to wander. American flags all over. She focused and waited for the cell phone call. She logged in, she logged out.
"Someday, I'll leave the Air Force. I'll get out of here." She thought as the white noise started humming again. Lines of radio chatter crossed the screen. Complaints about food and tea. Chatter. Fuel trucks. Supply delays.
Her real name was Monica Witt. She came from a prestigious family that honored professional pride and patriotism. Her story is used today to train intelligence officers to identify warning signs of a defector. The study of her psychology has led to the development of the "Betrayal Narrative". Her defection caused the deaths of American intelligence officers, the collapse of American intelligence systems in Iran, and a number of cyber attacks on high profile targets like HBO. She was also present at the 2016 Naval Incident in the Persian Gulf. Some have even suggested she was involved in the hacking of Donald Trump's election campaign in 2020.
Witt attended prestigious George Washington University. During her time at this school her views were described as “radical” by her peers, but she impressed faculty with her advanced proficiency of Farsi, of which she was self taught. Her skills were quickly put into use in the field as a military linguist. Her former professor of Science in Cyber Security at George Washington University said, "Linguists typically have very high clearances and regularly work with 3 letter agencies."
She is currently WANTED by the FBI and remains at large to this day.
The stingray caught the call. Wayward Storm quit daydreaming and got to work. It came in fast, but she had taught herself Farsi. She understood the nuance and context.
"Prepare the shipment." The intercepted call made a strange voice.
Wayward’s pen stopped.
“Falcon Two, this is Atlas. Switch to contingency call signs. Execute package three at 0400". The voice on the phone call said.
"Oh my God!" She clutched her access card and threw her headset off. She buried her face in her fists. She rushed to her feet to go tell the CO but she hesitated and floated over the equipment. Something was off about the translation.
An analyst in the room glanced up.
"Play that again."
II- Slang
The lights of the security briefing room came back on. Wayward Storm finished her power point, but her heart sank. Three officers sat at a broad table before her, neither one took their eyes from the tablets or packets in their hands. The radio chatter was right in front of them.
“It’s operation, not shipment,” Witt said, leaning over the console.
The security officer frowned. “Could be just slang.”
“In this context? I know what I heard,” she shot back.
The CO didn’t look up from the map. “We need corroboration before we start freaking out.”
Witt tightened her grip on the laser pointer. “I’ve been on these nets for years. This pattern doesn’t lie. ‘Clear the area for shipment’? That’s weapons in motion—right now.”
“Routine logistics,” the CO said, glancing at the room. The analysts stayed silent, pens hovering over pads, eyes fixed on their screens.
It's not clear when or why Monica Witt decided the U.S Government betrayed her but she left the briefing room with every muscle in her body wound up. She smoked cigarettes all night. In the early morning hours a missile struck a helicopter and killed 6 Americans and one interpreter. To her utter disgust, it was an interpreter she considered a friend.
"I could have prevented this." She told herself as the flight status was updated. She took a marker she hated to touch and colored a green area on the map red.
One thing is clear. At some point in her career, she realized bureaucracy and skepticism allowed danger to slip through the cracks.
III- Spy
This is what was on Monica Witt's resume when she left the Air Force.
Monica Elfriede Witt
Professional Summary
Former U.S. Air Force intelligence specialist and cultural analyst with extensive experience in Middle Eastern affairs, language interpretation, and counterintelligence support. Skilled in Farsi translation, geopolitical analysis, and interagency coordination. Proven ability to operate in high-pressure environments requiring discretion, analytical thinking, and cross-cultural communication.
Core Skills
Farsi (Persian) Language Proficiency Intelligence Analysis Counterintelligence Awareness Cultural & Regional Expertise (Middle East)Government & Military Briefings Strategic Communications Information Security & Classified Handling Public Speaking & Training
Professional Experience
U.S. Air Force – Intelligence Specialist
United States Department of Defense
2000 – 2008
Conducted intelligence analysis related to Middle Eastern political and military developments. Provided cultural and language expertise for operations involving Persian-speaking regions. Assisted with translation and interpretation of Farsi-language materials for intelligence assessments. Participated in briefings for senior personnel regarding regional dynamics and emerging threats. Supported information security and counterintelligence initiatives.
Defense Contractor / Intelligence Consultant
2008 – 2012
Provided subject-matter expertise on Iranian culture, language, and media. Assisted with analysis of foreign communications and information campaigns. Participated in conferences and training programs related to counterterrorism and regional stability. Contributed to educational presentations on Middle Eastern geopolitics and cultural awareness.
Education
Bachelor’s Degree (Field of Study: Middle Eastern Studies / International Relations – coursework emphasis on Persian language and culture)
Languages
English – Native
Farsi (Persian) – Advanced Proficiency
Professional Interests
International relations
Cultural diplomacy
Media analysis and communication strategy
Cross-cultural education
"Ms. Witt," The Taco Bell Manager asked. "What exactly does a military linguist do?"
"Intellegence Analysis."
"Ok, well, can you tell about a time when you had to translate some intelligence?"
"No, that's classified." She bit her lip.
"Well then, what about your time in the Air Force?"
"Classified." She kept her spine straight and face forward.
"Ok, you say you worked with security systems. Can you tell me which ones?"
"Nope."
"Listen, I want to help you out but I can't analyze this resume if you can't tell me anything. This is Taco Bell, I'm not going to send this information to the Kremlin. No one's gonna know."
"I can't. It's classified." She clenched her hands.
"Right." He wrote something down only he could see. "We'll keep you on file."
She took the bus home. She lived in a slummy apartment. She got home. No power. No hot water. She ate ramen for dinner. Before she went to sleep she went online and stayed up all night applying for fake online jobs.
During her time in civilian life she moved to three different cities with no more luck than the last city. She could not pay off her debt. She couldn't find work. She went to a party to relax. Her first party since coming back to civilian life.
Snow clung to the windows of the apartment while music and laughter filled the room. Someone had turned the lights low. Someone else was passing around cheap beer.
“I saw a movie with a spy in it last night,” a guy near the kitchen said, grinning. “Guy was jumping out of helicopters and stuff.”
A few people laughed.
Then someone pointed toward Witt.
“Hey, weren’t you in the Air Force?”
The room didn’t go quiet exactly, but the conversation bent toward her.
Witt smiled politely. “Yeah. A while back.”
“What’d you do?”
“Intelligence work.”
That word landed heavier than she meant it to.
“Ooooh,” someone said. “Like a spy?”
A couple people leaned closer now, curious.
“So what’s that like?” another asked. “Did you ever, you know… intercept secret messages or anything?”
Witt took a sip from her drink. She could feel the old training snap into place—the reflex to keep things vague.
“Mostly translation work,” she said. “Nothing exciting.”
But they weren’t satisfied.
“Come on,” the guy from the kitchen said. “You must have some crazy stories.”
“Yeah,” someone added. “Were people’s lives actually on the line?”
Witt stared into the plastic cup in her hand.
In her head she could still hear the radio traffic—the clipped Farsi voices, the static, the words that had once meant rockets, patrols, ambushes. Things that never made it into movies.
She could feel everyone watching her.
Waiting.
Finally she shrugged.
“Sometimes,” she said quietly. “Yeah. Life or death.”
The room went silent. Not the excited silence they expected—something heavier.
Witt set the cup down on the counter.
“Excuse me,” she said.
No one stopped her as she grabbed her coat.
Outside, the night air cut sharp across her face. Snow fell in slow drifting sheets across the streetlights.
She walked home alone, boots crunching in the snow, the voices from the party fading behind her.
IV- Phosphurus
The plane touched down in Tehran just after sunrise. Witt had expected interrogation, suspicion, maybe even hostility. Instead, a young man holding a sign with her name greeted her at the airport.
“Welcome to Iran,” he said warmly.
No one had said that to her in years.
Witt traveled to Tehran in 2012 to attend a film festival called the "Hollywoodism Conference". The conference is held in February in the city's finest luxury hotel. It is put on by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and hosts audiences from around the world, including former U.S Senator from Alaska, Mike Gravel. At this conference she went on State Media to accuse the US of drone striking children. It was an all expenses paid trip.
Witt caught the eye of a film maker. He didn't look Persian. He was white, blonde, and spoke brilliant English. Blue eyes. She went to the showing of his film. They presented him- Half American, half Iranian. Fluent in English and Farsi. An independent filmmaker. A critic of Hollywood. A man who builds bridges between cultures ---- Kevin Rahimi.
Kevin came to the stage. Black blazer, no tie.
Kevin spoke to the audience first about the film "Argo" and how the Western media distorts Iran to make them seem dangerous. He criticised the war narrative in Western film. He mentioned how Western media ignored the suffering of civilians, and highlighted many cultural misunderstandings between Iran and America.
Witt listened carefully to him. He was different from some of the other speakers. He didn't deny the Holocaust. He didn’t blame anyone else for causing suffering. He just criticized the media.
The film he presented was called "Shadow Screens". The film argued that Hollywood war movies simplify the Middle East into heroes and villains, while ignoring the human consequences of conflict.
“Hollywood often tells us who the heroes and villains are." Kevin told the audience, seeing Witt in the corner of his eye. "But reality is rarely so simple. Many soldiers return from war knowing the truth is more complicated than the stories they were given.”
They met at a reception after the film. Some nice old lady started talking to Witt and offered to introduce her to the director. Kevin seemed to barely notice Witt, and he shyly hid his face when she approached.
"I liked your film." She smiled. "Every ninth second on the 14 minute mark you added that cute song."
"Thank you. I'm told you served in the Air Force." He smiled.
"A long time ago."
"Personel or information?"
"Oh, information."
"Then you know the region better than most people here." He raised an eyebrow and gave her a cup of tea. "You speak wonderful Farsi. Are you self taught?"
"Huh?"
"It's just I noticed you do something no one else does. It sounds perfect, but your tongue doesn't touch your teeth."
"Yes, I taught myself. I'm surprised you noticed."
"It seemed important."
Witt stirred her tea.
"Your film made a great point."
"Stories tend to simplify things, turn them into cartoons. Real life can be... less cooperative. You saw that first hand."
"More than you would believe."
Kevin nodded and let the silence stretch.
"That must make coming home complicated."
"Yeah." Wiit carefully looked at him. "You could say that."
He pressed no further
Instead he quietly said
"People who understand two worlds often find they belong fully in neither.”
Witt studied him for a moment. "That's... not wrong."
Kevin nodded, not in approval, not to her, but as if confirming a suspicion.
If you ever want to return to Iran,” Kevin said casually over tea, “there are many opportunities for cultural research here.”
When she got to her room in the hotel, she undressed, bathed, and got into bed. She noticed an email on her laptop that wasn't there when she left. She opened it.
From: Phosphurus
"Did you like the film?"
V- Charming Kitten
The FBI met with Witt when she came back to the United States. They sat her down and informed her that she had been contacted by recruiters for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard and that if she continued contacting them, she'd be under their suspicion.
However, It's not illegal to visit a foreign land. It's not illegal to talk to foreigners. She no longer worked for the Air Force. All they could do was warn her.
By the time intelligence agencies learned about the risk, she was already in Dubai. With nowhere else to turn, the FBI met with her former CO.
"What can you tell us about Code Name: Charming Kitten?"
But by then there was no legal course to take. She at the gate for her plane to Iran to board.
X
When the flight from Dubai landed in Tehran Witt was covered in a gentle sheet before she left the terminal, and led to a car hidden off the tarmac. She didn't get to take her luggage. She didn’t see their faces. They did not speak. All that mattered was the USB. They drove her into the city, and escorted her into a freshly finished apartment. They pulled the sheet off. The first thing Monica saw when she arrived in Iran was new flooring, new counters, big bright windows and a cascading flood of sunlight. A beautiful view of Tehran and the Caspian Sea majestically swayed from a balcony outside. White walls. No furniture other than a desk chair, a desk, and the soft blue glow of a laptop.
X
The soft glow of monitors highlighted The CO as he explained it to the FBI.
“She knows the operation’s code name. She knows the code name of every operative assigned to it. She’s connected with half of them on Facebook. She’s got their names, phone numbers, and home addresses memorized. Every system we run, she knows it and what it’s used for. Her brain works differently than most people’s—like a damn filing cabinet. Nothing gets lost in there. Do not underestimate someone like her."
He slammed his laptop shut.
X
Phosphorus waited in the back of a van with his laptop glowing under his chin.
X
One man stayed in the apartment with her. A small, quiet guy, but one who did not take his eye off her. In the next room a team of soldiers monitored the situation. Even the mouse was encrypted. Digital chatter on the monitor chirped. The computer hummed.
I could've prevented this
They could've prevented this
I am not betraying my country
They betrayed me first!
Charming Kitten paused over the keyboard, finger hovering. The cursor blinked like a heartbeat. She thought of the SCIF, the warnings, the convoy, the analysts who ignored her. She inserted a USB she had prepared. She double checked it. Copy. Paste.... Send. For years she had carried secrets like weights in her chest. Now, the world would carry them too.
The computer hum filled the room. Outside, traces of snow fell. She stared at her reflection in the dark screen. She wondered what the Taco Bell Manager with her resume on file would think. What her friends from GWU would think. What the people she served with would think. The room was silent except for the hum of the machine. She slumped forward in her chair. Outside, snow drifted over Tehran. She spun around, crumpled up, her stomach twisted in pain. She watched the snow.
The cursor blinked while the laptop siphoned trickles of data from the USB.. What lies within invisible walls were things never meant to be seen. She knew the process. She taught it to others.
A van parked outside.
A knock on the door in the middle of the night.
Footprints in the snow.
VI- Resolution
During the 2016 naval incident in the Persian Gulf, the captured American sailors were taken ashore to a small, wind-beaten building on a remote island. One by one they were led inside and questioned. Witt made sure her former CO waited the longest. When the guards finally brought him in, his hands were bound and his face tight with bruising.
The interrogator wore a black mask. She sat across a high table. She said nothing as the guards forced him into the chair. She watched him for a moment in silence, tapping her finger on the desk, for each tap a new spring of questions opened in her mind.
“David.”
The soldiers were released within days. The incident dissolved into chatter but it did not end there. Years passed. Networks shifted. Cyber attacks multiplied. The people she trained went on to build elaborate cyber theft systems in the DPRK and in Russia. The world grew colder. By the time the missiles launched, the silent war had been underway for a long time.
Silent like snow and ash.
Snow and ash from a missile falling from the sky.
Snow and ash drifted through the air, carried by the whiplash wind from the explosions outside. The city groaned in the distance, punctuated by sharp concussions that rattled the windows. Witt sat on the edge of her bed, shoulders tense, hands wrapped around a mug of bitter tea that had gone cold.
Witt didn’t turn on the lights. The room was half-shadows, half-glare from fires down the street. On her laptop, encrypted messages scrolled past unread; she couldn’t focus on them. Not yet. Not while the world seemed to be crumbling around her.
The executives of the Islamic Revolutionary Government were dead. Posphuros was silent.
Each distant boom brought a tight twist to her spine.
Did I do the right thing? How am I any different from Snowden?
She hit refresh on her computer.
No new messages.
No mission.
No Acknowledgement.
Another explosion rolled across the city skyline. Her cursor blinked. In the other room, the soldiers made decisions with her life. She became a piece of data in someone’s report.
Witt opened a blank email. A fresh message. The cursor blinked patiently.
She didn’t know who she was writing to.
https://www.fbi.gov/wanted/counterintelligence/monica-elfriede-witt
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-47230150
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/2/13/us-ex-air-force-officer-faces-spy-charges-after-defecting-to-iran