The Whistleblower Gets Whacked
22 April 2006 9:41 am by Taylor Marsh
The Whistleblower Gets Whacked –updated–
(cross-posted at firedoglake)
Okay, let me get this straight. The
Leaker in Chief, George W. Bush, can leak information to Lewis Libby, with
no repercussions whatsoever. Deadeye can do the same. But a whistleblower, a
member of the CIA’s Inspector General’s office, leaks the existence
of illegal black sites to a reporter, because she feels something wrong is being
done in the name of the American people, and she gets fired. Not only fired,
but pulled out and identified as nothing short of a traitor. In other words,
the Nixon rule really does apply. If the president does it it’s okay,
but if it’s done by a whistleblower she gets fired, with humiliation and
the “traitor” tag waiting for her on her departure. Even people who
don’t like Mary McCarthy are saying something
smells.
The case against the CIA Intelligence Officer, Mary McCarthy,
fired for her alleged role in leaking information about secret prisons to
the Washington Post's Dana Priest smells a little fishy. Let me state at the
outset that the officer in question, Mary McCarthy, is an old acquaintance.
I hasten to add that I do not consider her a friend. She was my immediate
boss in 1988-89 and was instrumental in my decision to leave the CIA and take
a job at the State Department's Office of Counter Terrorism. Mary, in my experience,
was a terrible manager. I left the CIA in 1989 despite having received two
exceptional performance awards during my last eight months on the job because
I could not stand working under her.That said, I take no delight in the news that she was fired. In fact, there
are some things about the case that puzzle me. For starters, Mary never worked
on the Operations side of the house. In other words, she never worked a job
where she would have had first hand operational knowledge about secret prisons.
She worked the analytical side of the CIA and served with the National Intelligence
Council. According to press reports, she subsequently worked at the Center
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) from 2001 thru 2005. That is
a type of academic/policy wonk position and, again, would not put her in a
position to know anything first hand about secret prisons.Sometime within the last year she returned to CIA on a terminal assignment.
I've heard through the grapevine that she was attending the seminar for officers
who are retiring while working with the Inspector General (IG). Now things
get interesting. She could find out about secret prisons if Intelligence Officers
involved with that program had filed a complaint with the IG or if there was
some incident that compelled senior CIA officials to determine an investigation
was warranted. In other words, this program did not come to Mary's attention
(if the allegations are true) because she worked on it as an ops officer.
Instead, it appears an investigation of the practice had been proposed or
was underway. That's another story reporters probably ought to be tracking
down.
As John Dean said on “Countdown” last night, Mary McCarthy has broken
the law by disavowing documents she signed to keep classified information secret.
No doubt she will pay a price for her actions. But a whistleblower sharing information
he or she knows in order to inform the public that something wrong, maybe even
illegal or criminal is going on within the U.S. government, certainly mitigates
the wrongful act of having leaked information in the first place. That is if
you believe the United States is still a democracy and that the president and
his people owe us more than they own themselves.
There is nothing more important than protecting national security secrets.
There are few things more important to the American people than the president
telling us the truth.
However, when President Bush decided to use national security as a political
tool, cherry picking intelligence to go to war, co-opting an entire federal
bureaucracy for his own private war plans, as well as ignoring analysts, analysis
and even the facts that didn’t support his case for war, we all started
down a road that now has no honorable end. But when George W. Bush, Deadeye
Dick and Donald Rumsfeld, with the help of the top cop in the land, Alberto
Gonzales, decided to sanction torture through law and presidential signing statements,
honorable people working in the government were put in untenable moral positions.
Mary McCarthy found out about the black sites, what was going on in them, possibly
through complaints from CIA officers, so she decided it was worth the cause
to make the information public.
The question is, do you look the other way when the President of the United
States and his administration are breaking international and U.S. law, or do
you stand up and tell the truth, willing to pay the price for breaking the law?
Because make no mistake about it, whether it’s noble or not, Mary McCarthy
broke the law in order for the American public and the world to know the truth.
If she’s not given whistleblower status the penalty will not be sweet.
Oddly enough, however, the wingnuts think the nabbing
of McCarthy might actually be a sting. A few weeks ago, I was on C-SPAN
debating Rick Moran (clips available here),
so I found it interesting that he offers that Dana
Priest's Pulitzer Prize winning story on the black sites was a set up. He's
also got an excellent wingnut round-up of what the Republicans think the firing
of McCarthy means. Malkin is at her wingnuttiest best, as she scoops that McCarthy
donated to John Kerry. Aha! She also makes sure to link to a screed coming out
of the print version of wingnut
central. But I ask you, has the Bush administration of anyone under their
thumb ever been that organized?
Senator Pat Roberts uses the McCarthy incident to squeal like a stuck pig.
The effort has been widely seen among members of the media, and some legal
experts, as the most extensive and overt campaign against leaks in a generation,
and has worsened the already-tense relationship between mainstream news organizations
and the White House.Dozens of employees at the CIA, the National Security Agency and other intelligence
agencies have been interviewed by agents from the FBI's Washington field office.
Others have been prohibited, in writing, from discussing even unclassified
issues related to the domestic surveillance program. Some GOP lawmakers are
also considering tougher penalties for leaking.Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), who chairs the Senate intelligence panel, welcomed
the CIA's actions. In a statement, he said leaks had “hindered our efforts
in the war against al Qaeda,” although he did not say how.“I am pleased that the Central Intelligence Agency has identified the
source of certain unauthorized disclosures, and I hope that the agency, and
the [intelligence] community as a whole, will continue to vigorously investigate
other outstanding leak cases,” Roberts said.CIA
Officer Is Fired for Media Leaks
The Post Was Among Outlets That Gained Classified Data
Secrecy just got a little deeper and broader under Bush. But the campaign against
whistleblowers has just begun.
UPDATE: Rick Moran makes a comment that he's walked back his post from yesterday re: a sting. Here's his walk back. (another one here) … Oh, and one more thing. Rick comments that his “sting” idea was “pure speculation.” With all due respect to him, because he seems like a very nice guy, I find this an excuse for putting forth information that was not worthy of discussion without more evidence, frankly. This is especially true in light of the reporter involved, Dana Priest, who is methodical and has incredible integrity. The free press is the only thing that stands between us and a deep black hole. To offer up such a detailed post that included such fantastical components goes far beyond “pure speculation.” It was unfortunate to say the least, but not surprising, given the depths to which most Republicans stoop these days.

