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Secrecy Expert: Harman Leakers Likely Committed Felony
Did the people -- whoever they may be -- who leaked details about Rep. Jane Harman's wiretapped conversation with a suspected Israeli agent, break the law?
The law quite clearly prohibits the unauthorized disclosure of classified information "concerning the communication intelligence activities of the United States or any foreign government." And Steven Aftergood, the director of the Project on Government Secrecy, confirmed to TPMmuckraker: "It seems crystal clear that if this was a FISA wiretap," as appears to be the case, "then whoever disclosed it committed a felony."
Aftergood explained that under FISA, the communications of American citizens "are supposed to be minimized". But in this case, he said, "they were publicly revealed. It seems to be the clearest violation of law in the whole episode."
Aftergood added that it's "all but certain that the wheels are turning at the Justice Department to investigate the leak."
And Melvin Goodman, a former CIA analyst who's now a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy, underlined the extent to which a leak of this nature would violate national security protocol. "When American names came up on these intercepts, they were handled very carefully," Goodman told TPMuckraker. "The names would be blacked out."
Goodman added: "The investigation of the leak from a counter-intelligence standpoint would be a requirement."
Asked by TPMmuckraker whether it has begun an investigation, a Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment.
Taking Stock
Before we consider just who such an investigation might implicate, let's take a minute to review what we know about the story at this point, and what it might all add up to.
First, here's the Cliff's Notes version of the key factual elements in the story, thanks to that original story by CQ's Jeff Stein, an earlier story by Time in 2006, as well as recent follow ups from Stein and others:
- Harman was picked up on a 2005 government wiretap, telling a suspected Israeli agent that she would urge the Bush White House to go easy in the AIPAC spying case, in exchange for AIPAC's help lobbying Nancy Pelosi to give Harman the job of House intelligence committee chair. Before signing off, she's alleged to have said: "This conversation doesn't exist."
- Haim Saban, a major Democratic fundraiser and AIPAC supporter, later called Pelosi and threatened to withhold contributions if Harman wasn't given the intel chair post.
- Porter Goss, at the time the director of central intelligence, read the transcript of Harman's conversation, and signed off on the Justice Department's application for a FISA warrant to wiretap Harman herself. (Ed Note: See update at bottom of post.)
- But Alberto Gonzales, at the time the attorney general, quashed an investigation into Harman, because he needed her to defend the administration's warrantless wiretapping program, and didn't want her credibility damaged. (Harman did indeed go on to defend the program, after the New York Times had revealed its existence.) John Negroponte, then the intelligence czar, also stepped in to get the investigation called off.
- Both Pelosi and then House Speaker Dennis Hastert learned about Harman's wiretapped conversation. Pelosi has said she did not notify Harman.
- Ultimately, Harman didn't get the intel chair job, which went to Rep. Silvestre Reyes, and Saban didn't withhold contributions to Democrats.
- Since CQ's story came out, Harman has claimed not to remember the conversation in question, but has given vague denials that she would have offered a quid pro quo of the kind described by CQ's sources. She has also denied intervening in the AIPAC case, and no information has emerged suggesting she did. In addition, Harman has called on the Justice Department to release all information connected to any investigation into her, including transcripts of wiretapped calls.
- Harman has hired Lanny Davis -- a former Clinton White House counsel who's close to AIPAC -- as a "media advisor".
- Reyes has announced that the committee will investigate the circumstances under which Harman's conversation was wiretapped.
- The AIPAC case that Harman agreed to try to intervene in -- in which two former AIPAC lobbyists were charged with espionage, after receiving classified information from a Pentagon source -- was dropped last week.
Parallel Tracks
So, what does it all mean? That's the harder question.
Among reporters and observers, two parallel ways of approaching the story -- what we might call the "face-value" track, and the "meta" track -- have quickly emerged.
The face-value track is concerned -- as the sources for CQ's original report appear to have intended -- with Harman's potential culpability.
As a legal issue, it's a crime for a public official to pledge to use his or her position to exert influence in exchange for anything of value, but it's far from clear that a credible case could have been built against Harman. Still, as an ethical matter, for a member of Congress to tell a possible foreign agent that she's willing to intervene in an ongoing DOJ case, and, in the same conversation, to talk about how her interlocutor could help her advance her own political ambitions, doesn't look great, to put it mildly.
Kos, for one, has called on Harman to resign. And Michael Scheuer, who resigned from the CIA in 2004 after a 22-year career, told TPMmuckraker that Harman committed a serious breach of national security, and that the incident underlined Israel's outsized influence in Washington. "This country's foreign policy is controlled by Israel," said Scheuer -- who recently wrote in an online op-ed that he was dismissed from the Jamestown Foundation, a foreign policy think-tank, thanks to his outspoken views on the US-Israeli relationship.
But, as Aftergood's comments to TPMmuckraker suggest, the meta track -- which focuses on the identity and motive of the sources for CQ's original report -- may be more consequential.
Flight Of The Gosslings?
So: where might an investigation on that subject lead? Over the last week, several writers -- including Foreign Policy's Laura Rozen, the JTA's Ron Kampeas, and us here at TPMmuckraker -- have been taking a close look at Porter Goss, one of Harman's prime political opponents, both when Goss chaired the intel committee from 1997 to 2004, and when he went on to run the CIA from 2004 before his forced resignation in 2006.
As we wrote last week, Goss's staff, known as the Gosslings, earned a reputation as vicious partisan schemers -- with close ties to the Bush White House -- who were known to use selective leaks to advance their political agenda. We also noted that the investigation into Harman was first reported in October 2006, just three days after Harman had released a report on the Duke Cunningham imbroglio, which further tarnished Goss's legacy.
"Goss was totally inept and corrupt," Ray McGovern, who was a CIA analyst for 27 years, told TPMmuckraker.
Goodman, the former CIA analyst, agreed, telling TPMmuckraker that Goss was "one of the worst committee chairman and one of the worst CIA directors" in history. While he was on the committee, said Goodman, Goss made clear that supporting the Bush administration was his only priority. "Goss was extremely partisan on the committee," Goodman continued. "The agency could do no wrong."
As for whether the Goss camp could have leaked Harman's wiretapped conversation to CQ, Goodman said: "All these people have very long memories, and long knives. The Gosslings were particularly bitter about the way he was cashiered. So I think if they have a chance to extract some sort of price, I'd expect them to do it."
Goodman noted, as others have, that Harman had been one of the few members of Congress to have challenged the Bushies' torture policy -- a subject that, perhaps not incidentally, has been back in the news -- earlier this decade. "Harman went on record questioning whether this was the right policy to be adopting," he said. "I would think that would be remembered."
Goss did not respond to TPMmuckraker's request for comment last week.
Still, the Gosslings are hardly the only possible culprits. CQ's report came just twelve days before the Justice Department announced it was dropping the AIPAC case. According to Goodman, some within the FBI were "incredibly bitter about the way [Attorney General Eric] Holder dropped the case." It's not far-fetched to think that there were those in law enforcement who calculated that leaking Harman's conversation might help put pressure on DOJ to keep the case alive.
So right now, there are still more questions than answers. But it's at least possible that it may soon be the federal government -- not just little old TPMmuckraker -- asking some of those questions.
Late Update 05/05/09, 10:30am: CQ's Jeff Stein, who broke the original story of the wiretapped call, told TPMmuckraker this morning that Goss did not in fact sign off on a Justice Department application for a FISA warrant to wiretap Harman herself, as we wrote above and as his original report suggested. Rather, says Stein, his sources tell him that Goss signed off on DOJ's application to renew its tap on the suspected Israeli agent, merely certifying that, from CIA's viewpoint, it was a legitimate national security tap. Stein blamed the confusion on poor wording in his original story.
"I could have been more precise on this point," Stein said. "I did not mean to imply that Goss had approved of a Justice Department investigation of Harman. He would have no role to play in that. At this point I do not know for sure what DOJ did specifically about Harman, beyond the fact that the FBI wanted to question her about her conversation with the wiretap target. The main point, which I could have made clearer, is that Goss was obligated to notify Hastert and Pelosi that the FBI intended to question her about the conversation."

















Zack, you have done a sterling job here in this post! Highly recommended for its clarity, its comprehensiveness, and for your excellent analysis!
May 4, 2009 6:57 PM | Reply | Permalink
TheraP beat me too it, so, yeah, what she said! Thank you!
May 4, 2009 7:44 PM | Reply | Permalink
Jeff Stein to jail until he tells us who the leaker is!
May 4, 2009 7:37 PM | Reply | Permalink
Don't F**K with Nancy the P dawg Pelosi.
Is there IAPAC in Israel?
May 4, 2009 7:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
What strikes me immediately about this story is the strange concept the Bush administration held regarding secrets. Specifically the idea that they kept the ones that should have seen the light of day (torture, yellowcake acquisition, no connection between Iraq and Al-Queda) and leaked the ones they should have kept (Harman, Valerie Plame's covert status, etc.) Very bizarre.
May 4, 2009 7:53 PM | Reply | Permalink
Bizarre? Hardly. They hid the secrets that would hurt them and leaked the secrets they believed would help them. That's what open government is all about, isn't it?
May 5, 2009 7:36 AM | Reply | Permalink
ok lets find the leaker.
in the meantime the spy harman , needs to resign or lets see a full investigation of her and if this is SOP in the congress.
May 4, 2009 7:54 PM | Reply | Permalink
What spy?
Harman was only doing what all Representatives and Senators in Washington do - selling influence.
If that is a crime, then everyone in Congress is guilty. That is the major business of Congress.
May 6, 2009 7:05 PM | Reply | Permalink
Zach,
Not only have "you ... done a sterling job here in this post!", as TheraP rightly noted; but you are apparently "the man" relative to this story. I have read references and links to your reports on a number of sites I regularly visit.
Thanks
May 4, 2009 8:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
The other thing, I think, which should be noted in this whole story is the extent to which inside the Beltway crowd spends their time engaging in intrigue and vendettas, rather than spending its time pursuing the "general welfare" and their other Constitutional duties.
May 4, 2009 8:29 PM | Reply | Permalink
"the extent to which inside the Beltway crowd spends their time engaging in intrigue and vendettas, rather than spending its time pursuing the "general welfare" and their other Constitutional duties."
That was the downfall of the Republican party and it is beginning to look like it will be the downfall of the Democrats also.
Republicans were so enamoured with the "Permanent Republican Majority" that they forgot that they were in Washington at the pleasure of "We the People" and were there to do the people's business rather than to serve corporate interests.
.
May 6, 2009 7:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
And here I thought the bad guys were the Israeli agents who are trying to corrupt our system, and the people like Jane Harman who are allowing them to succeed.
Thanks, Zachary, for opening my eyes.
May 4, 2009 8:44 PM | Reply | Permalink
And what may we ask will Harman be charged with? Treason?
Call your Reps ask them to pressure Harman to resign and encourage them to support the investigation into her actions
May 4, 2009 9:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
Isn't that backward?
Placing the resignation ahead of the investigation?
May 6, 2009 7:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
Zach sez:
"According to Goodman, some within the FBI were "incredibly bitter about the way [Attorney General Eric] Holder dropped the case."
JTA reports:
"Lawyers for the two former AIPAC staffers charged four years ago with dealing in government secrets credited the Obama administration for dropping the case.
“We are extremely grateful that this new Administration, in coordination with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Virginia, has taken seriously their obligation to evaluate cases on the merits and not to allow an unjust prosecution to continue solely due to momentum,” said the joint statement by lawyers for Steve Rosen and Keith Weissman issued Friday, hours after the government filed for a dismissal of the charges against the two former senior staffers for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee."
........
"JTA has learned that the defense lawyers two months ago launched an intensified effort to get Obama appointees at the Justice Department to review the case."
http://jta.org/news/article/2009/05/01/1004853/lawyers-credit-obama-team-for-dismissing-aipac-case
Oh well, as Jeff Stein keeps trying to remind us, this isn't about vengence or poor waddle Jane:
"To be sure, a number of former senior counterintelligence officials remain convinced that Rosen and Weissman were engaged in far more nefarious activities than they were charged with. One called the charges against them “an Al Capone case,” i.e., the equivalent of prosecuting the legendary Chicago gangster with tax evasion.
But with Rosen and Weissman taking a walk now, they’re just going to have to shut up. The way the law works, they are innocent of any wrongdoing.
“I am now convinced that an investigation of Israel’s [covert lobbying] operations here can never succeed,” said a veteran national security lawyer over the weekend. “It’s all political.”
http://www.cqpolitics.com/wmspage.cfm?docID=hsnews-000003108925
No kidding.
May 4, 2009 9:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
Why did Holder drop the AIPAC case? I haven't seen any rationale for that in the "news". Is AIPAC immune from prosecution? Seems that way here in the US and Israel. And it doesn't matter which party happens to be on top in either country. What's that all about?
Just curious. Very, very curious.
May 4, 2009 10:12 PM | Reply | Permalink
Mr. Roth's readers should be reminded that, were it not for those evil whistle-blowers who informed the Congressional leadership of the facts of the conversation, Jane Harman would in all likelihood be the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee today, with acess to EVERY national secret about our Middle East policy.
Do you think her friend from that wiretap might be giving her another call?
May 4, 2009 10:34 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Jane Harman would in all likelihood be the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee today, "
It could have been worse:
"Members of Mr. Obama’s transition also raised concerns about other candidates, even some Democratic lawmakers with intelligence experience. Representative Jane Harman of California, formerly the senior Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, was considered for the job, but she was ruled out as a candidate in part because of her early support for some Bush administration programs like the domestic eavesdropping program."
http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/01/05/panetta-to-be-named-cia-director/
"in part".
May 5, 2009 12:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
Because they haven't been in office long enough to reevaluate the Bush positions so their just continuing them for now ... hey, wait ...
May 5, 2009 7:34 AM | Reply | Permalink
Her friend?
There is still a distinct possibility that the "friend" knew that the phone being used was "tapped" and was setting Harman up for a fall.
.
May 6, 2009 7:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
I got it now. Its because we need to look forward not backward. Holding people accountable for breaking the law would be too much of a threat to our democracy.
May 5, 2009 7:39 AM | Reply | Permalink
Not holding people accountable for their crimes is a much worse threat to democracy.
Had Dick Cheney been prosecuted for his role in the Iran-Contra scandal, the last eight years would have been totally different.
May 5, 2009 8:38 AM | Reply | Permalink
Johann, I am unpleasantly surprised that you seem not be be aware that of the 'CIA Secret Experiments on Humans' and to my recollection, our own US Military Troops in the 1950's and the subsequent Rockefeller Commission on these exect matters in the 1970's.
It was widely reported that the Rockefeller Commission had and has to this day many factual errors, many ommissions and ambiguious and also alleged then that Dick Cheney (CIA?) and Rumsfeld (CIA?) also withheld relevant facts and information and that then President Gerald Ford (seemingly un-constitutional and un-timely pardons, Nixon) blocked all further attempts at hearings, Adjudication ecetra.
Therefore, as seemingly could esaily be surmised that Cheney and Rumsfeld could and/or should (or could be today) have been held in US Congressional Contempt of witholding of at least Congressional Documents, ecetra? and most likely have been successfully prosecuted and therefore at least would not have been available to ever serve in any sworn position our US Government and/or would have been in jail, prison, or appropriate confinement today, if alive. Also with a proper and forthright Transparency and with the mandated US Constitutional, Bill of Rights 'Oversight and Accountability' our Country would have had the availability and ability to also achieved a more proper substantiated US Constitutional course of direction.
Please, US Executive, Legislative and Judicial Leaders and all, please today allow for at least 'Federal Employee Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Restoration Act and for all prior cases to be opened and/or re-opened, as applicable.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
May 5, 2009 2:08 PM | Reply | Permalink
I am aware of the reporting on the 'CIA Secret Experiments on Humans' and on our own US Military Troops in the 1950's and the subsequent Rockefeller Commission on these exect matters in the 1970's. Those "secret" experiments are no longer such a big secret.
That is not the point of my comment. The point of my comment was that:
"Not holding people accountable for their crimes is a much worse threat to democracy than looking forward without recognizing where we were looking forward from and prosecuting those people who are responsible for those crimes.
I stand by my statement: "Had Dick Cheney been prosecuted for his role in the Iran-Contra scandal, the last eight years would have been totally different.
If the perpetrators of torture are not held accountable, they will one day return to the halls of power in Washington knowing that they will never be held accountable for anything.
God help us, the USA, and the world then.
May 6, 2009 7:02 PM | Reply | Permalink
Johann,
I agree with your statements and sentiment.
If I was successful when I went to many of our Officials and said that then President Ford should not be allowed to pardon at that period in time that Dick Cheney, Rumsfeld, (Wolofowitz?) and many, many other similar people would never have been in power in the Iran/Contra era.
Johann, in my efforts to allow for at least some and/or the last remaining reasonable attempt to request our Executive, Legislative and Judicial Branches of our US Government to do the right thing(s) and for the 'Change We Can Believe In' is for them to immediately bring to a full floor, 'up or down' 'Vote' on the 'Federal Employee Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Restoration Act' and that will allow to re-open, open all past cases, files, concerns, ecetra
as applicable.
[Incidentally, If I remember correctly I was even given his (after his Presidency) President Ford home address (which I recall to this day) by a FBI Agent or another official in the Federal Building if my memory is correct and as a casual walk in and whom seemingly he did not know].
Thank you for your patient and tolerant, kind and gracious, time and consideration.
May 6, 2009 9:05 PM | Reply | Permalink
Johann,
Most importantly, my apologies for my blatently harsh, rude and complete error of my initial sentence of ......unpleasantly surprise that you...which should have clearly read to more appropriately confirm your contributions..... such as 'Please note that in addition to your superb and excellent blog comment that in the 1950's......
Humbly and appreciatively, Good luck and Best wishes in your continuing endeavors and with hopefully many successful accomplishments.
Again, humbly and appreciativly, thank you for your kind and gracious, patient and tolerant, time and consideration.
May 6, 2009 10:38 PM | Reply | Permalink
I can't help but think of Obama's recent "SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY" bullsh*t.
Obama claims that We The People don't have any recourse when it comes to wiretaps/email-taps/etc...
If I recall... he claims that "They" (CIA, FBI, etc...) can tap our phones - EVEN WHEN THEY KNOW THEIR TAP IS ILLEGAL - and we can't do squat about it...
UNLESS what they learn is "Willfully Disclosed"
...
So... If it's "Accidentally Leaked" then there's nothing that can be done...
...
I wouldn't be surprised if we find out it was an "Accident" that this information was released...
Nothing to see here folks, keep moving...
May 5, 2009 11:08 AM | Reply | Permalink
"Obama claims that We The People don't have any recourse when it comes to wiretaps/email-taps/etc..."
Obama is full of crap on this issue. The recourse "We the People" have is to identify those elected officials who are responsible for allowing the tapping and recording of our communications, including Obama, and vote them out of office when they are up for re-election.
.
May 6, 2009 7:20 PM | Reply | Permalink