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Critics see White House double
standard on leaks
Washington -
The Bush administration, which has responded swiftly and angrily to
suspected leaks of classified information by officials in other
branches of government, is under fire for being slow to react to an
apparent breach by one of its own.
In numerous instances since Sept. 11,
2001, the Bush White House has been quick to condemn others for
failing to safeguard national secrets. Officials have scolded
lawmakers for their allegedly loose tongues, fired off memos to
military commanders seen as too cozy with the media, and backed up
those admonitions with calls for investigations or threats to curtail
access to classified data.
Even as the FBI opened
aninvestigation of the administration last week, lawmakers and
staffers on Capitol Hill were entering their second year in the
crosshairs of a separate FBI investigation launched after the White
House complained that congressional sources were to blame for
classified Al Qaeda communications finding their way into the media.
Given that track record, many in
Washington have been mystified that the White House didn't respond
publicly until last week to a leak dating to mid-July, when a
syndicated columnist "outed" a clandestine CIA operative and
attributed the information to "senior administration officials." It
only reacted after news reports that the CIA had formally requested a
criminal investigation.
President Bush last week condemned
all leaks of classified information and ordered his staff to cooperate
with the FBI inquiry, but by then the gesture was seen by critics as a
belated attempt to contain the political fallout from a leak more than
two months old.
The perceived disparity in the White
House reactions has stoked criticism of the administration among
members of Congress as well as current and former intelligence
officials, who accuse the White House of applying a double standard
when it comes to policing leaks to the media.
Many Democrats on Capitol Hill say
that the White House has itself used selective leaks — and selective
outrage at the alleged leaks of others — to advance its policies,
particularly relating to the war in Iraq.
Some senior Democrats complain that
they have been forced repeatedly to defend their stewardship of secret
information and to fight to maintain access to it, even as the White
House ignored an apparent violation by administration insiders.
"People are very upset about it up
here," said Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), the ranking Democrat on the
Senate Armed Services Committee.
"The contrast between their rhetoric
and the casual way in which the president first treated this
[disclosure of the CIA operative's name] is incredible," Levin said.
"Here's a leak that is not only a felony but directly can jeopardize
lives."
Even some Republicans say they have
found the White House response to the matter lacking. Sen. Pat Roberts
(R-Kan.), chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the
administration should have been faster to take the offensive.
"You want to expedite this and get to
the bottom of it and get it out of the way," Roberts said in a
telephone interview Friday. "I think it took them a little long."
The White House defends its handling
of the matter. Spokesman Scott McClellan said the administration can't
be expected to react to leaks attributed to anonymous sources that
show up "every day in the news."
"Going back to July there was
absolutely no information that had been brought to our attention
beyond anonymous sources in media reports to suggest any White House
involvement," McClellan said. "The president has directed the staff to
cooperate fully because no one wants to get to the bottom of this
sooner than he does."
The controversy centers on
allegations that the administration leaked the classified information
to punish a critic, former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV, who in a
July 6 New York Times opinion article called into question Bush's
claim that Iraq had sought to acquire uranium from Africa.
A year before Bush made that claim in
his State of the Union address in January, Wilson had traveled to
Africa on assignment for the CIA to investigate the allegation,
concluded it was baseless, and reported his findings to the agency. He
also said he believed his findings had been reported up the chain of
command to the White House.
Columnist Robert Novak defended Bush
on July 14, writing that the White House didn't know of Wilson's trip,
and asserting that Wilson likely got the assignment because his wife
was an "operative" at the CIA. Novak identified her as Valerie Plame,
attributing the information to two "senior administration officials."
If Novak's account is true, those
officials may have committed a felony by exposing a clandestine
operative's identity, ending her ability to work under cover and
perhaps endangering people she had worked with overseas.
Wilson has said he believes the
disclosure was designed to punish him and discourage other critics of
the administration from coming forward. On Sunday, he said that the
leak may have endangered his wife's life.
"There have been a number of other
people who have come out and suggested that this does make her a
target," he said on CBS' "Face the Nation." "We ... have begun to
rethink our own security posture" as a result of those suggestions, he
said. He did not elaborate other than to say that "nobody has offered
security from the government."
On the same program, Sen. Charles
Hagel (R-Neb.), a member of the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence, said that if there is "the most remote possibility of
her life being in danger, then the government owes that person
protection and security."
Administration supporters, including
Roberts, say they believe the disclosure was likely inadvertent,
perhaps a slip by administration officials who were unaware the
officer was undercover and only mentioned her name to bolster their
case that the White House had nothing to do with Wilson's trip.
Either way, the disclosure has
outraged many in the close-knit intelligence community, particularly
veterans of the CIA's clandestine service.
"The whole thing is just so
distressing," said a retired CIA case officer who spent his career
working under cover overseas and asked to remain anonymous. "If some
idiot in the White House set out to do this malevolently, he ought to
have his tongue cut off."
Bush said Tuesday that if the leak
came from someone within his administration, "the person will be taken
care of." But the White House also spent much of last week deflecting
calls for a special counsel and declining to press officials inside
the administration for answers.
When leaks have appeared to come from
other corners of government, the White House has often responded
immediately and aggressively.
In the immediate aftermath of Sept.
11, the White House briefly cut off classified briefings to all but a
few members of Congress after complaining that too many secrets were
showing up in the media. The policy was quickly rescinded after
protests from lawmakers.
Last year, amid news reports claiming
to present details from the Iraq war plan, Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld frequently excoriated the anonymous sources cited in such
stories and issued a memo to senior military staff telling them leaked
information is "damaging our country's ability to stop terrorist acts
and is putting American lives at risk."
Perhaps the most striking example
came last year when CNN, citing congressional sources, reported that
one day before the Sept. 11 attacks, the National Security Agency had
intercepted Al Qaeda communications warning that "The match is about
to begin" and "Tomorrow is zero hour."
The CNN report came one day after the
head of the agency, Lt. Gen. Michael V. Hayden, discussed the
intercepts in closed-door testimony on Capitol Hill.
An outraged Vice President Dick
Cheney promptly called the then-chairmen of the intelligence
committees, Sen. Bob Graham (D-Fla.) and Rep. Porter J. Goss (R-Fla.),
chastised them for lax security and again threatened to cut off
congressional access, according to aides familiar with the
conversations.
Stung by the criticism in the midst
of their inquiry into the Sept. 11 attacks, the lawmakers invited the
Justice Department to open an investigation.
The FBI investigation of the
congressional panels, which appeared to have been dormant for much of
the last year, has recently been revived.
Congressional sources said the FBI
has conducted new interviews in recent weeks with some staffers. And
several aides said they have been told that a grand jury has been
convened in the case.
The Justice Department and the FBI
declined to comment on the matter, citing the confidentiality of
investigations. Roberts, Goss and other lawmakers said they were
unaware of the status of the inquiry.
Many Democrats in Congress say the
White House used selective leaks or declassification of intelligence
to bolster its case for going to war with Iraq. They cite reports of
alleged Iraq weapons procurement efforts that showed up in the media
at key junctures in the debate.
They are particularly suspicious
about the timing of a Sept. 8, 2002, story reporting that fresh
intelligence showed that Iraq had sought to purchase large quantities
of aluminum tubes, allegedly for use in reviving its nuclear weapons
program.
That same day, Cheney cited the
report in his appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press" as evidence that
Iraq was jump-starting its nuclear program. The aluminum tubes claim
has since been widely discredited.
"That was such a source of
frustration to me, the selective leaking," said Sen. Richard Durbin
(D-Ill.), a member of the intelligence committee, who voted against
the war resolution. "It angered me to watch as people within the
administration leaked selective information about the threat in Iraq,
leaving out many other important details."
The lawmakers also complain that
intelligence that undercut the administration's claims was kept
classified, while information that supported the contention that Iraq
posed a threat was cleared for release.
Some of those details — including
disagreements within the intelligence community over conclusions about
Iraq's nuclear ambitions and alleged efforts to develop a fleet of
unmanned aerial vehicles — have since come to light and are fueling a
debate about the justification for going to war with Iraq.
-- Los Angeles Times
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