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Leaks and Leakers

Philip M. Giraldi, Ph.D., a friend of Larry Johnson’s, is the Francis Walsingham Fellow at The American Conservative Defense Alliance (www.ACDAlliance.org) and a former CIA counter-terrorism specialist and military intelligence officer. This article, originally published at AntiWar.com, is republished with the express permission of Dr. Giraldi.

……………………………………………………

Call me Saul on the road to Damascus. I have seen the light. As a former intelligence officer, I was initially appalled at the leak of a quarter of a million classified documents by someone who had responsibility for protecting them.

I was highly skeptical of the entire WikiLeaks and Bradley Manning saga but following the leaks has convinced me that there is a lot of material that deserves a public airing to demonstrate to the American people how Washington is pursuing a senseless policy almost everywhere in the world.

I have been particularly mortified in reading the accounts of meetings of US Ambassadors and Undersecretaries of State with their foreign counterparts, encounters revealing an unbelievable arrogance derived from the Bush Administration dictum "you are either with us or against us." Persian King of Kings Darius addressing his satraps could not do it any better.

The WikiLeaks plus Manning story has truly revealed that the US government will do anything necessary to silence its critics, legally or illegally. The way in which it is orchestrating a highly questionable international effort against both WikiLeaks and Julian Assange is despicable. There exists a sharp divide between those who believe government secrets should always be protected at all costs and those who believe that secrecy in government exists only to conceal official misbehavior. Obviously there is a middle ground hidden somewhere between the two, but those who favor the narrative that accepts that there is a nefarious government in Washington ruthlessly manipulating a world empire have pretty much gotten it right. The documents and the Obama Administration behavior together tell the tale.

There is an enormous amount of hypocrisy in those who are defending the government’s right to over-classify and deny access to the information that has been used to justify going to war, among other crimes. Insiders in government have no qualms about abusing classified information as long as it suits their purposes. Dick Cheney used insider secret information to "out" CIA officer Valerie Plame to punish her husband. The White House leaked intelligence that turned out to be bogus to Judith Miller at the New York Times to make the case for going to war against Iraq. George Tenet, former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, wrote a book called In the Eye of the Storm, which earned him in excess of $4 million. He worked in a SCIF (which stands for sensitive compartmented information facility) run by the defense and intelligence contractor SAIC and had access to all of his classified "papers" to help him write the book. Bear in mind that he was retired, with no official status at the time, was writing something for profit, and was using freely provided government resources to turn a buck. There was apparently no problem in his using classified material.

Unauthorized release of classified information and what becomes of it was also the focus in the trial that was terminated in May 2009 of Steven Rosen and Keith Weissman, AIPAC employees who passed sensitive intelligence to Israeli government officials and to Glenn Kessler at the Washington Post. The very same people at the Wall Street Journal and the Weekly Standard who are now calling on the federal government to declare war on WikiLeaks and to summarily execute Julian Assange were at that time complaining about the fact that Rosen and Weissman had been charged with a crime because "everyone" passes around classified information in Washington. Particularly to Israel, which is okay because it is an ally (which, in fact, it is not). Apparently the talking heads at the Wall Street Journal believe it is all right to trust classified information to the kleptocrats in Tel Aviv but not to the American public, which has been footing the outrageous bill for the bloated and ineffective intelligence and diplomatic communities during the past ten years. Newt Gingrich meanwhile is calling Assange, who has threatened no one, a "terrorist." By that standard what should he call former officials like Doug Feith and Paul Wolfowitz who started a war that has killed hundreds of thousands?

Specialist Manning is undeniably a whistleblower, though the government will try to portray him as someone engaged in espionage. Whistleblowers should be encouraged as a check on irresponsible government and should be protected by law when they reveal something that is either illegal or unconstitutional. Government is intrinsically opposed to such transparency, recently and increasingly using the states secret privilege to deny whistleblowers their day in court. Daniel Ellsberg did the right thing when he published the Pentagon Papers about Vietnam. Sibel Edmonds did likewise when she revealed details of foreign espionage and influence buying in the United States. Stories about CIA torture, renditions, and secret prisons as well as accounts of Army thrill killings and the goings on at Abu Ghraib all originated as leaks and were needed to reveal the war crimes being committed by the US government in its hideous "global war on terror."

Contrary to the message emanating from the chattering media, WikiLeaks has embarrassed many but it has neither killed nor endangered anyone. Washington’s relationships with most foreign nations are based on mutual interests and they will continue in spite of concerns expressed by Hillary Clinton and others. And the positive far outweighs any potential negatives. When WikiLeaks revealed how US helicopter crews had recklessly targeted and killed civilians in Iraq, a story originating with Manning, it was a good leak, showing just how dirty and amoral the American initiated war in Iraq had become. Likewise, its release of bundles of documents relating to the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan served a good purpose in revealing that the US government was lying about both wars and ignoring its own intelligence analysis to continue to blunder around like a blind elephant in a small room. As the documents continue to appear they tell a tale of how the American empire is run and how, like an iceberg, most of it is concealed beneath the surface, hidden from public view. Manning took it upon himself to release the hundreds of thousands of secret papers, reportedly because of his belief that the diplomatic documents expose "almost criminal political back dealings" and explain "how the first world exploits the third, in detail." He was right to do so. The American juggernaut must be stopped and the transparency provided by Manning and other whistleblowers is the best weapon to accomplish that.

My only remaining concern continues to be the possibility that WikiLeaks itself has an agenda beyond exposing the machinations of an essentially duplicitous government. If it does that will presumably emerge eventually, but for the present WikiLeaks is providing a necessary service. I do not know if Julian Assange is working for any intelligence service, as has been alleged in some circles. It does seem to me that the release of documents so far has been selective, but perhaps as more of them surface that impression will vanish. I have heard that the newly formed US cyber command aided by the Israelis is behind the hacking campaign directed against WikiLeaks and its servers, particularly ironic as President Barack Obama has several times extolled the freedom of the internet. Apparently that is only true if it is hosting criticism of Iran or China.

The United States should not be mounting a huge international campaign to silence WikiLeaks, nor will it be successful. Nor should it attempt to "regulate" the internet, which is the inevitable next step. And the attempts to personally punish Assange, which might succeed, are a measure of how low America and its allies in Europe and Australia have sunk. He has broken no law even in an age of Patriot Acts and Military Commissions and the charges against him in Sweden appear to be a set-up. Once upon a time there was a rule of law in the United States and a presumption of innocence until proven guilty, but no longer. Ultimately WikiLeaks will rise and fall based on its credibility and its ability to tell stories that are being suppressed elsewhere and that the public believes should be heard. WikiLeaks must be allowed to speak.

  • jwrjr

    The Swedish charges look very much like an unsubtle attempt to damage Assange’s credibility.  The only way to do that is to show that the Wikileaks documents are not authentic.  And it is too late for that.
    If not for the policy of equating “classified” with “the administration doesn’t want the Public to see this”, Assange would have no soapbox to stand on.

  • Tricia

    Thank you so much for your perspective, Mr. Giraldi.  Really fascinating and much appreciated.

  • surfered

    Why didn’t  those showing such animus towards WikiLeaks and Julian Assange feel the same about Robert Novak and Scooter Libby?

  • BIINKY

    I appreciate your perspective on the Wikileaks issue.

  • Betty

    Thank you.

  • Madame deFarge

    Since we’re talking security, perhaps you can tell us what sort of risk this may pose to the American citizenry?

    (Judicial Watch)As violent drug cartels take over Mexico and expand their criminal enterprises north, the United States has signed a “trusted traveler” agreement that allows pre-screened Mexican airline passengers to bypass lengthy airport security checkpoints.
    The foreigners will get “trusted traveler cards” with fingerprints and other biometric data and they must answer customs declarations questions on touch-screen kiosks before leaving airport inspection areas. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano claims it’s a way to enhance information sharing and mutual security in the face of “ever-evolving, multinational threats.”
    About 84 million Mexicans are expected to qualify for the trusted traveler program, according to Mexico’s Interior Ministry Secretary, who signed the agreement on behalf of his country this week. Celebrating the festive occasion, the Mexican government official assured that the new accord will facilitate the U.S. entry of business travelers and tourists who are key factors in economic development, growth of trade and cultural exchange.
    Mexicans will get the perk through the U.S. government’s Global Entry Program, which allows participants to obtain security clearance by presenting a “machine-readable” passport or resident card at airport “Global Entry kiosks.” The machines issue the foreign travelers a transaction receipt and directions to baggage claim and the exit into the United States. Applying is easy. Candidates fill out an online application, provide valid identification and answer a few questions from a Customs and Border Protection officer.
    While Napolitano was in Mexico finalizing the trusted traveler agreement this week, she also took the opportunity to sign a “letter of intent” to develop a plan for protecting immigrants from criminal attacks as they cross the border—illegally—into the U.S. Mexican officials have long complained that American law enforcement officers stand by as illegal immigrants are robbed, killed or violently beaten. Napolitano has committed to reducing the risk to life and security of migrants, according to the Mexican minister. 

    (my emphasis…American citizens?  not so much.)

    How does the Obama administration get away with doing this under the wire?  Is this has back door amnesty?  This scares the hell out of me…it’s as if the cartels have just been given free passage to the USA.

  • Madame deFarge

    make that “his” back door amnesty…

  • ~~JustMe~~

    WOW! About 84 million Mexicans are expected to qualify.

    Applying is easy. Candidates fill out an online application, provide valid identification and answer a few questions from a Customs and Border Protection officer.

  • ~~JustMe~~

    Sounds like they will be all handed “Green Cards”!???
    “passport or resident card at airport “Global Entry kiosks.”

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  • Mr. Natural

    Should drive down the price of yard work and assist the farming, meat packing, auto repair and construction industries!

    Somewhere, some Wall Street mullah will be able to trade off his G-IV for a new G-V and get a better-looking harlot to ride in his Maybach…

  • Fed Ritz Cracker Berfle

    We do need less secrets–that is self-evident. My concern, however, is with the rule of law and selective compliance and/or enforcement.  Declassification and release of information needs to be forced through legislative channels instead of willy-nilly by those of questionable character.

  • Fed Ritz Cracker Berfle

    Why didn’t  those showing such animus towards WikiLeaks and Julian Assange feel the same about Robert Novak and Scooter Libby?
    ===================
    Yet another irrelevant comment from the squatterbot. For your information, dink, I thought Libby and Novak shold have both gone to prison and still do. Cheney should also be behind bars.

  • Linda Anselmi

    What Tricia said.

    Thank you.

  • Coleen Rowley

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/coleen-rowley/could-wikileaks-have-help_b_772479.html

    Of course the response to WikiLeaks is what I predicted, they are going to go back to even more compartmentalization and restricted access.  Already there are orders restricting use of portable media, the clamp down on the “insider threat” hampering the ability to do the job.  http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/12/10/5623398-wikileaks-fallout-military-bans-thumb-drives

  • Justine

    “…allows pre-screened Mexican airline passengers to bypass lengthy airport security checkpoints.”

    Sounds insane if something similar is not offered to US citizens, doesn’t it?  Or, am I missing something?
    .

  • EllenD

    I don’t think that was directed specifically at you.
    No one in the press spoke up about Libby and Novak, but they haven’t shut up about Assange.

  • EllenD

    I’m not an expert (or anywhere near it) on intelligence but I remember reading articles in Canadian papers about the actions of Canadian intelligence which seemed idiotic.
    In one, a scientist’s clearance had been revoked without his knowledge and his crime was having a copy of a paper THAT HE HIMSELF HAD WRITTEN.
    Another was a file in which everything was stamped “TOP SECRET”. They were all NEWSPAPER ARTICLES!
    This is obviously all too Alice-in-Wonderland for me.

  • TeakWoodKite

    So it is ok if thumb drives turn up in Afghan markets? 

    When an individual takes an oath and signs a non-disclosure doc…where do you draw the line? What is the difference in you pointing out incomptence and disregarding US law in the case of Manning, in your experience.?

  • Fed Ritz Cracker Berfle

    Surferd asked a rhetorical question apparently directed at anyone who doesn’t like the “animus” directed towards Wikileaks.

    I stand by my comment.

  • propertius

    instead of willy-nilly by those of questionable character.

    Or by those lobyying for the interests of a foreign power – even if that foreign power is an ally.

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