Posted on 06/14/2012 4:25:51 AM PDT by Kaslin
It was gutsy for Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein to come out against Washington's recent rash of dangerous intelligence leaks last week; she made criticism of the leaks bipartisan. Flanked by the House Intelligence Committee's ranking Democrat, Dutch Ruppersberger, and GOP committee leaders, Feinstein declared: "This has to stop. When people say they don't want to work with the United States, because they can't trust us to keep a secret, that's serious."
A week later, Feinstein is more than halfway through New York Times reporter David E. Sanger's book "Confront and Conceal: Obama's Secret Wars and Surprising Use of American Power." She told me Wednesday, "You learn more from the book than I did as chairman of the intelligence committee, and that's very disturbing to me."
The Beltway has become a giant sieve. News reports outed a Pakistani doctor who had set up a phony vaccination program to obtain information on Osama bin Laden's location in Abbottabad. After an unusual proceeding last month, a Pakistani official found Dr. Shakil Afridi guilty of treason and sentenced him to 33 years.
Another leak revealed that a double agent had obtained a new and improved al-Qaida underwear bomb in Yemen. That leak, Feinstein said, endangered an ally and the individual who saved American lives by procuring the bomb.
Two recent New York Times stories hyped President Barack Obama's "will," "pragmatism over ideology" and hands-on role in drone strikes over Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. Those stories also revealed telling details about a computer worm that targeted Iranian nuclear centrifuges and the process used to cull the "kill list."
Former CIA spokesman Bill Harlow told me the two Times stories "left a trail that Helen Keller could follow," one that leads to "a small universe of people." National security adviser Thomas E. Donilon talked on the record, while other officials spoke on condition of anonymity.
The Obama administration has no trouble prosecuting low-level and midlevel leakers. Obama's feds have prosecuted six cases, double the number prosecuted by previous presidents. Yet the Department of Justice has been slow to respond to spin stories that play up Obama's national security acumen but also give away too much information.
This crusade can't be helpful to DiFi politically. Many in her liberal base regard accused leakers, such as Army Pvt. Bradley Manning, not as security threats but as heroic whistle-blowers. "As we all know," her political guru Bill Carrick conceded, "there are people who think they want to know all this stuff, and they don't want any restriction of information, no matter what the potential damage might be."
Sen. John McCain and other Republicans want an independent special prosecutor to investigate. Feinstein prefers Attorney General Eric Holder's decision to assign two U.S. attorneys to probe the leaks. For one thing, it's quicker.
But also, it's not clear that a special prosecutor could do much about leaks from political aides. Former Dick Cheney aide Scooter Libby was convicted not for leaking the identity of former CIA operative Valerie Plame but for lying about it. If aides say they didn't know something was classified or if they can show they were authorized to speak, it seems there is no crime.
At Friday's news conference, Obama said: "The notion that my White House would purposely release classified national security information is offensive. It's wrong." But what if aides leaked key intelligence accidentally on purpose?
Feinstein is working on new administrative procedures to curb leaks. Violators, she explained, might lose their security clearance -- or their jobs.
The real problem seems to be rot at the top. How do you impose the need for silence about underwear bombs or phony vaccines when White House stars are bragging about their exploits in The New York Times?
Remember the Libby trial. Washington clamored for Libby's scalp for a leak that did less damage than the likely fallout from leaks on thumb drives, double agents and vital assets. Considering what's at stake, there should have been 99 senators and one president standing with Dianne Feinstein.
Feinstein IS a symbol of “the culture of leaks”
Until she and the democrats appoint a special prosecutor to pursue criminal investigation and charges at the highest levels, they are the problem, not the solution
Not “gutsy”, just seemingly doing what she should do, unless it is just to lay blame on Bush.
In 1985, at a press conference, Feinstein revealed details about the hunt for serial killer Richard Ramírez, and in so doing angered detectives by giving away details of his crimes.
Political drama & nothing more.
Who in the hell is going to help us now, after this????? Instead of a $33million reward he gets 33 years in jail????
We should be doing EVERYTHING WE CAN to get this guy out of jail and bring him to USA... Twist every arm in pakistan if we have to- or NO ONE will hive up a suspect again
Herein, lies the problem. might???? lose their security clearance - or their jobs? How about, 'security clearance and job yanked as they're hauled off to jail'? Until these politicians start talking and acting seriously about these traitors to our Country, this is nothing more than political kabuki.
‘Gutsy’ my arse. Feinstien is running for re-election.
Pat Caddel said it is Tom Donilan, he is the NSA head. He said the guy is a “partisan hack” a delegate counter and BO fundraiser, how he ever got the job of top security guy he will never know and he is quoted extensively in the book.
Speechless...
I that like "exactly the same, but different." ???
(dangit)
IS that like “exactly the same, but different.” ???
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