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http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-oe-boot21dec21,1,6250343.column
'Plame Platoon' is AWOL on New Leaks
December 21, 2005
By Max Boot
Source: LA Times

It seems like only yesterday that every high-minded politician, pundit and 
professional activist was in high dudgeon about the threat posed to national 
security by the revelation that Valerie Plame was a spook. For daring to reveal 
a CIA operative's name — in wartime, no less! — they wanted someone 
frog-marched out of the White House in handcuffs, preferably headed for the 
gallows.

Since then there have been some considerably more serious security breaches. 
Major media organs have broken news about secret prisons run by the CIA, the 
interrogation techniques employed therein, and the use of "renditions" to 
capture suspects, right down to the tail numbers of covert CIA aircraft. They 
have also reported on a secret National Security Agency program to monitor 
calls and e-mails from people in the U.S. to suspected terrorists abroad, and 
about the Pentagon's Counterintelligence Field Activity designed to protect 
military bases worldwide.

Most of these are highly classified programs whose revelation could provide 
real aid to our enemies — far more aid than revealing the name of a CIA officer 
who worked more or less openly at Langley, Va. We don't know what damage the 
latest leaks may have done, but we do know that past leaks about U.S. successes 
in tracking cellphones led Al Qaeda leaders to shun those devices.

So I eagerly await the righteous indignation from the Plame Platoon about the 
spilling of secrets in wartime and its impassioned calls for an independent 
counsel to prosecute the leakers. And wait … And wait …

I suspect it'll be a long wait because the rule of thumb seems to be that 
although it's treasonous for pro-Bush partisans to spill secrets that might 
embarrass an administration critic, it's a public service for anti-Bush 
partisans to spill secrets that might embarrass the administration. The 
determination of which secrets are OK to reveal is, of course, to be made not 
by officials charged with protecting our nation but by journalists charged with 
selling newspapers.

The New York Times sought to quell such concerns by noting in its big article 
on the NSA that "some information that administration officials argued could be 
useful to terrorists has been omitted." Forgive me if I'm not reassured by the 
implication that other information that might be useful to terrorists had not 
been omitted.

Aside from the possible harm that these leaks could do to the war on terror, 
what galls me is the utter lack of context in breathless news accounts. The 
Washington Post ran a 1,910-word article Sunday titled "Pushing the Limits of 
Wartime Powers" that had only one brief mention, near the end, of the 9/11 
attacks. There was no acknowledgment that this catastrophe revealed major 
vulnerabilities in our defenses created by post-Watergate reforms that 
eviscerated domestic intelligence gathering.

For instance, in August 2001, FBI agents in Minneapolis stumbled onto Zacarias 
Moussaoui, one of the Al Qaeda plotters. The 9/11 commission later concluded 
that a "maximum U.S. effort to investigate Moussaoui … might have brought 
investigators to the core of the 9/11 plot." But officials didn't seek a 
warrant to search his laptop because they lacked "probable cause" under the 
1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. FISA is the law that Bush is now 
accused of circumventing.

If Bush really broke the law, that is, of course, wrong. But the president has 
a strong legal case. (Even liberal legal scholar Cass Sunstein says, "I think 
the [congressional] authorization of use of military force is probably adequate 
as an authorization for surveillance.")

The president has an even stronger moral case. Before condemning him, ask 
yourself why there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil since 2001. 
Not one. It's hard to know the exact reason we've been spared, but surely part 
of our good fortune should be attributed to the very measures — the Patriot 
Act, the NSA surveillance, the renditions, the enhanced interrogation 
techniques — that are now being pilloried by self-righteous journalists and 
lawmakers.

Bush has not always gotten the balance between "life" and "liberty" exactly 
right. He erred by not granting terrorist detainees any recourse to the courts 
— a mistake fixed by the Supreme Court. But the president has been a lot more 
right than his most perfervid critics, who seem to think that we can defeat a 
vicious foe without compromising any peacetime rights and without keeping any 
secrets.

The way things are going, with Congress refusing to reauthorize the Patriot Act 
and banning "degrading" interrogation methods, we may soon find out if the 
civil libertarians are right. Heaven help us if they're not. 




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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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