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Wednesday, April 24, 2002





FAITH UNDER FIRE
Army strips Jewish major
of security clearance
Former Ranger, counterintelligence expert claims 'anti-Israeli' bias in military



Posted: April 24, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Jon Dougherty



© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com

A U.S. Army Reserve counterintelligence officer with dual citizenship in the United
States and Israel has had his security clearance revoked by what he believes is an
"anti-Israeli" bias within the military.

Maj. Shawn Pine, in an interview with WorldNetDaily, said that his revocation was not
only improper in terms of his citizenship – he said others in a former unit he
commanded also had dual citizenship – but because the revocation also failed to
meet the Army's own regulations.

Pine, a former member of the U.S. Army Rangers, commanded the 300th Military
Intelligence Company [Linguist] in Austin, Texas, when his Top Secret security
clearance was revoked. He told WND he had his clearance revoked last fall after he
told Army officials he performed reserve military duty for the Israel Defense Force
[IDF] for a short time in 1996.

Born in the U.S., his family emigrated to Israel when he was 17, where he was
conscripted for military service and served in the Golani Brigade. After his discharge,
he left Israel and came back to the U.S. to attend college. He chose a career in the
military and served a total of nine years in the U.S. Army.

Then, in 1995, he went back to Israel for two years to attend Hebrew University, to
study for his doctorate. The following year the IDF called him up for a brief period of
active duty.

At the time he said he told Israeli authorities that he had renounced his Israeli
citizenship and that he was currently an officer in the U.S. Army Reserve. He also
said he contacted the U.S. Embassy in Israel and sought advice from American
officials, but they told him he was "required to obey Israeli laws."

He also said he voted in the 1996 Israeli elections, then left to return to the U.S. in
1997 on an Israeli passport, as required by Israeli law.

Upon his return to the U.S. he said he reenlisted in the active Army Reserve and
assumed command of the 300th MI Company. But Pine said his trouble began last
summer when a normal periodic reinvestigation for his security clearance came up
and he divulged that he had done reserve time in the IDF four years earlier, patrolling
the Israel-Jordan border for 30 days.

"It is not like my service and affiliation with Israel was kept a secret. I have always
been very forthcoming in disclosing all of my interactions with Israel," he said.

"As with many Americans, the events of September 11 reinvigorated my sense of
patriotism," he says. But instead of using his counterintelligence experience and
education, "the U.S. intelligence community is mired in a paranoid abyss in which it
perceived every Jew to be Jonathan Pollard."

Since then, Pine says he has been fighting an uphill battle to get his clearance
reinstated. "Undoubtedly, the most tragic aspect of my situation is that precisely at a
time when my country needs my nearly two decades of experience and education in
counterterrorism and experience in the Middle East, I find myself embroiled in this
situation," said Pine.

Army officials say the problem with Pine is not his education, but procedure; some
factors make soldiers and officers "ineligible" for counterintelligence work.

Lt. Col. Stan Heath, a spokesman for the Army's personnel command, said he was
familiar with Pine's case but could not provide specifics from his file. But there were
indications the Army may have believed Pine's past – and the fact that he still has
family in Israel -- left him vulnerable to blackmail and other pressures exerted by the
Jewish state.

"He has the reasons [why clearance was revoked]," Heath said. "He knows the
reasons why."

Regarding concerns over suspected espionage, Heath was again non- specific.

"I'm going to give you, in writing, what you can use [in any resulting news story], and
much of it deals with foreign influence and foreign preference," he said. "Just
understand that there is more than that, but I can't violate his privacy."

Army cites violations

In an Army "Subject of Investigation" report supplied by Pine, military officials said 
his
clearance was revoked for reasons of "foreign influence" and "foreign preference."

The report said Pine informed Israeli officials that he had renounced his citizenship
and was still a reserve U.S. Army officer when they attempted to call him back to
active duty in the IDF in 1996. But Israeli officials said they still considered him a
citizen and called him up anyway.

The report also said Pine admitted voting in an Israeli election in 1996 and obtained
an Israeli passport before returning to the U.S. April 6, 1997.

Army officials say regulations prohibit giving "Top Secret" security clearances to
people whose "conduct … may make the individual vulnerable to coercion,
exploitation, or pressure by a foreign government."

Also, "the exercise of dual citizenship, possession and/or use of a foreign passport,
military service or a willingness to bear arms for a foreign country," and "voting in
foreign elections" all violate regulations governing the issuance of security
clearances, the Army report said.

Finally, the report cited the fact that Pine still has family residing in Israel.

But the CI officer says he doesn't buy all that.

Different standards?

"In the unit I commanded, I had some of my own soldiers that were dual nationals
and had foreign passports," Pine told WND. "Additionally, I worked with civilians in
other organizations that worked in military intelligence fields that required a top 
secret
clearance."

Even more egregious, he claims, "is that we routinely hire foreign nationals, as
translators and interpreters, in our missions overseas and give them clearances."

"These people generally have no loyalty towards the U.S.," said Pine. "So in
essence, I am being told that a foreign national with no historic loyalty to the U.S. 
is
more trustworthy than myself."

An Aug. 6, 1999, letter from the Army's Space and Missile Defense Command in
Huntsville, Ala. – where Pine did two weeks of active duty before losing his clearance
– described his service as "exemplary."

"He has assisted this office immeasurably with his initiative and counterintelligence
[CI] expertise," said the letter, signed by Lt. Col. Keith E. Ryan, assistant deputy 
chief
of staff for intelligence. "During this period, his performance has been exemplary."

According to the letter, Pine's duties included developing "an Israeli country brief
reviewing the existing political-social environment and CI threats to … personnel
traveling in that country."

Also, Pine "researched, identified and collated CI threat assessment documents
relating to the Theater [Tactical] High Energy Laser, Theater High Altitude Air
Defense [THAAD], Arrow, Sensors, and National Missile Defense Directorates,"
Ryan wrote.

"I would not hesitate to have him work here again," Ryan concluded, "in either a
reserve or active duty capacity."

Hard and fast rules

According to documentation sent to WND by Heath, conditions that would "mitigate
security concerns" about a soldier include:

"A determination that the immediate family member(s) (spouse, father, mother, sons,
daughters, brothers, sisters), cohabitant, or associate(s) in question are not agents 
of
a foreign power or in a position to be exploited by a foreign power in a way that could
force the individual to choose between loyalty to the person(s) involved and the
United States";
Contact with foreigners comes as a result of "official" U.S. government business;
Contact and correspondence "with foreign citizens" that are "casual and infrequent";
Prompt compliance "with existing agency requirements regarding the reporting of
contacts, requests, or threats from persons or organizations" from a foreign country;
Foreign financial interests that are "minimal."

In a written rebuttal to Army officials following his security revocation, Pine said he
proved he was loyal.

"In the few times that my job as a counterintelligence officer required that I act to
protect U.S. classified information, I performed my duty in an exemplary manner," he
told WND. "Thereby, notwithstanding my affiliation with Israel, I demonstrated my
loyalty and preference for the U.S."

"That is the ultimate irony, that on numerous occasions the army used my
experience and affiliation with Israel to help protect our nation's secrets, and then
screwed me precisely because of that affiliation and experience," he said.

Pine's case comes amid earlier reports detailing personnel and training problems at
the Army's counterintelligence (CI) and interrogation school at Fort Huachuca in
Arizona.

Sources said the school was suffering from a chronic lack of CI and linguist
instructors, and often uses what some described as "grossly unqualified" personnel
as trainers.

Linguists and counterintelligence personnel are considered increasingly valuable to
the military as the U.S. continues to wage its war against global terrorism.



If you'd like to sound off on this issue, please take part in the WorldNetDaily poll.



Related stories:

Army to cut funding for intelligence school?

Army school settles contractor rift

Fewer interpreters blamed on lack of funds

Army linguist stuck in postal job



Jon E. Dougherty is a staff reporter and columnist for WorldNetDaily, and author of
the special report, "Election 2000: How the Military Vote Was Suppressed."
End<{{{

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