This is from the New York Times which is one of the most liberal newspapers on the planet. What the heck is going on?
Obama is using the Espionage Act to silence and prosecute federal workers.
Blurred Line Between Espionage and Truth
The New York Times By DAVID CARR
Last Wednesday
in the White House briefing room, the administration’s press secretary, Jay
Carney, opened on a somber note, citing the deaths of Marie Colvin and Anthony
Shadid, two reporters who had died “in order to bring truth” while reporting in
Syria.
Jake Tapper, the White House correspondent for ABC
News, pointed out that the administration had lauded brave reporting in distant
lands more than once and then asked, “How does that square with the fact that
this administration has been so aggressively trying to stop aggressive
journalism in the United States
by using the Espionage Act to take whistle-blowers to court?”
He then suggested that the administration seemed to
believe that “the truth should come out abroad; it shouldn’t come out here.”
Fair point. The Obama administration, which promised
during its transition to power that it would enhance “whistle-blower laws to
protect federal workers,” has been more prone than any administration in
history in trying to silence and prosecute federal workers.
The Espionage Act, enacted back in 1917 to punish those
who gave aid to our enemies, was used three times in all the prior
administrations to bring cases against government officials accused of
providing classified information to the media. It has been used six times since
the current president took office.
Setting aside the case of Pfc. Bradley Manning, an Army
intelligence analyst who is accused of stealing thousands of secret documents,
the majority of the recent prosecutions seem to have everything to do with
administrative secrecy and very little to do with national security.
In case after case, the Espionage Act has been deployed
as a kind of ad hoc Official Secrets Act, which is not a law that has ever
found traction in America, a place where the people’s right to know is viewed
as superseding the government’s right to hide its business.
In the most recent case, John Kiriakou, a former C.I.A.
officer who became a Democratic staff member on the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, was charged under the Espionage Act with leaking information
to journalists about other C.I.A. officers, some of whom were involved in the
agency’s interrogation program, which included waterboarding.
For those of you keeping score, none of the individuals
who engaged in or authorized the waterboarding of terror suspects have been
prosecuted, but Mr. Kiriakou is in federal cross hairs, accused of talking to
journalists and news organizations, including The New York Times.
Mr. Tapper said that he had not planned on raising the
issue, but hearing Mr. Carney echo the praise for reporters who dug deep to
bring out the truth elsewhere got his attention.
“I have been following all of these case, and it’s not
like they are instances of government employees leaking the location of secret
nuclear sites,” Mr. Tapper said. “These are classic whistle-blower cases that
dealt with questionable behavior by government officials or its agents acting
in the name of protecting America.”
Mr. Carney said in the briefing that he felt it was
appropriate “to honor and praise the bravery” of Ms. Colvin and Mr. Shadid, but
he did not really engage Mr. Tapper’s broader question, saying he could not go
into information about specific cases. He did not respond to an e-mail message
seeking comment.
In one of the more remarkable examples of the
administration’s aggressive approach, Thomas A. Drake, a former employee of the
National Security Agency, was prosecuted under the Espionage Act last year and
faced a possible 35 years in prison.
His crime? When his agency was about to spend hundreds
of millions of dollars on a software program bought from the private sector
intended to monitor digital data, he spoke with a reporter at The Baltimore
Sun. He suggested an internally developed program that cost significantly less
would be more effective and not violate privacy in the way the product from the
vendor would. (He turned out to be right, by the way.)
He was charged with 10 felony counts that accused him
of lying to investigators and obstructing justice. Last summer, the case
against him collapsed, and he pleaded
guilty to a single misdemeanor, of misuse of a government computer.
Jesselyn Radack, the director for national security and
human rights at the Government Accountability Project, was one of the lawyers who
represented him.
“The Obama administration has been quite hypocritical
about its promises of openness, transparency and accountability,” she said.
“All presidents hate leaks, but pursuing whistle-blowers as spies is
heavy-handed and beyond the scope of the law.”
Mark Corallo, who served under Attorney General John D.
Ashcroft during the Bush administration, told Adam Liptak of The New York Times
this month that he was “sort of shocked” by the number of leak
prosecutions under President Obama. “We would have
gotten hammered for it,” he said.
As Mr. Liptak pointed out, it has become easier to
ferret out leakers in a digital age, but just because it can be done doesn’t
mean it should be.
These kinds of prosecutions can have ripples well
beyond the immediate proceedings. Two reporters in Washington
who work on national security issues said that the rulings had created a chilly
environment between journalists and people who work at the various government
agencies.
During a point in history when our government has been
accused of sending prisoners to secret locations where they were said to have
been tortured and the C.I.A. is conducting remote-controlled wars in far-flung
places, it’s not a good time to treat the people who aid in the publication of
critical information as spies.
And it’s worth pointing out that the administration’s
emphasis on secrecy comes and goes depending on the news. Reporters were
immediately and endlessly briefed on the “secret” operation that successfully
found and killed Osama bin Laden. And the drone program in Pakistan
and Afghanistan
comes to light in a very organized and systematic way every time there is a
successful mission.
There is plenty of authorized leaking going on, but
this particular boat leaks from the top. Leaks from the decks below, especially
ones that might embarrass the administration, have been dealt with very
differently.
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