August10, 2018
The Central Intelligence Agency has
practiced a double standard for many years. Former CIA director David
Petraeus escaped a jail sentence despite providing eight notebooks of highly
classified information, including names of covert operatives, to his biographer-mistress.
Conversely, Reality Winner, a former Air Force linguist, has been in jail for
the past year, awaiting sentencing for leaking a classified report about
Russian interference in the 2016 elections. Everyone in the United States
is talking about Russian interference in the U.S. elections.
There is nothing new here,
however. Former CIA director John Deutch placed sensitive operational
materials on his home computer, which was used to access pornographic sites,
but he was pardoned by President Bill Clinton. Clinton’s national
security adviser, Samuel Berger, received a modest fine for stuffing into his
pants classified documents from the National Archives. And Attorney
General Alberto Gonzales was not even charged when he kept sensitive documents
about the NSA’s massive surveillance at his home. Conversely, my good
friend Tom Drake was charged with violations under the Espionage Act for
“mishandling” what turned out to be unclassified information
Now we have recent examples of a
double standard that is abetted by the media. Over the past week, former
high-level CIA officials have written opeds for the Washington Post dealing
with drone warfare and information warfare. On August 6, Bernard Hudson, the
former director of counterterrorism at the CIA, wrote about the “new peril” of
weaponized drones in the “hands of non-state actors.” There is a far
greater problem regarding drone warfare, and that is the secretive
counterterrorist infrastructure in the United States and elsewhere that sustains
endless, borderless wars in places far removed from actual battlefields.
The U.S. practice of “targeted killing”—the extrajudicial killing of suspected
terrorists and militants—raises serious moral and legal issues.
The CIA, however, would not allow me,
a former CIA officer to deal with such U.S practices. Material in one of
my books dealing with U.S. drone war was redacted. There have been
numerous articles in the mainstream media dealing with drone warfare, but the
CIA considers this discussion classified. The fact that President Barack
Obama discussed this issue publicly on many occasions had no impact on CIA’s
publications review process.
On August 8, Mike Morell, the former
deputy director at the CIA, wrote an oped on the dangers of Russian information
warfare against the United States. Morell is fully knowledgeable of U.S.
information warfare against Russia, but never would have received permission
from CIA’s Publication Review Board to discuss U.S. activities. It would
be useful to have an understanding of these programs in order to make the case
for bilateral dialogue to resolve differences and create ground rules for
behavior. Morell wants to “impose severe costs” on Russia; perhaps it
would be better to engage in constructive diplomacy before worsening bilateral
relations.
It is noteworthy that these opeds
appeared in the Washington Post, whose masthead proclaims that “Democracy
Dies in Darkness.” In fact, the Post is an enabler of such
darkness when it allows former intelligence officers to engage in polemical and
one-sided accounts of serious problems that deserve a fuller discussion.
Even more serious is the threat to
the First Amendment free speech rights when former intelligence officers are
not permitted to discuss sensitive matters that are no threat to American
national security. Several years ago, the CIA cleared for publication the
memoirs of two senior officers with more than 70 years of professional
experience who claimed there was no such thing as torture and abuse. John
Rizzo, a senior career lawyer at the CIA, and Jose Rodriguez, a senior
operative who ordered the destruction of the 92 torture tapes, denied that the
CIA conducted torture and abuse.
Recently, when I tried to write about
the confirmation process for CIA director Gina Haspel, I was prevented from
discussing aspects of her career that dealt with the issue of torture and
abuse. Once again, there was no threat to American national security and
there was ample documentation from the mainstream media, but the CIA considered
the issue to be classified. One way to address the darkness that beclouds
our democracy is to conduct a serious reform of government censorship of its
public servants.
More articles by:MELVIN GOODMAN
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