The U.S. Intelligence Ship Is Too Leaky To Sail

Christopher Furlong

The U.S. services have lost credibility by becoming the leakiest in the world.

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U.K. police investigating the Manchester terror attack say they have stopped sharing information with the U.S. after a series of leaks that have so angered the British government that Prime Minister Therese May wants to discuss them with President Donald Trump during a North Atlantic Treaty Organization meeting in Brussels. What can Trump tell her, though? The leaks drive him nuts, too.

Since the beginning of this century, the U.S. intelligence services and their clients have acted as if they wanted the world to know they couldn't guarantee the confidentiality of any information that falls into their hands. At this point, the culture of leaks is not just a menace to intelligence-sharing allies. It's a threat to the intelligence community's credibility.

In 2003, President George W. Bush reportedly authorized an aide to leak highly classified intelligence on Iraq to The New York Times to support his decision to go to war. It was an early indication that leaks would be used for political purposes and that U.S. political leaders would consider it par for the course.

Then, in 2010, WikiLeaks began releasing U.S. intelligence data, including an Army Counterintelligence Center report on how to stop the release of secret documents on WikiLeaks. That didn't stop Julian Assange's website from releasing secret data provided by Bradley (now Chelsea) Manning and, in 2013, by National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden -- two of the biggest troves of secret material the public has ever seen.

In 2010, China began wrapping up the Central Intelligence Agency's asset network there. The agents disappeared or died one after another for the next several years. The CIA never quite figured out how the Chinese found out: It could have been a mole, or they could have hacked a communication channel. Five years later, Chinese hackers stole data about millions of U.S. government employees.

In 2012, CIA chief David Petraeus resigned after it came out that he'd leaked classified information to his lover and biographer, Paula Broadwell.

In 2016, the U.S. intelligence services accused the Russian government of hacking the presidential election campaign, in particular the Democratic Party's. After Trump won the election, leaks intensified to a frenzy, with unnamed former and current intelligence officials talking daily to the press about the Trump campaign's contacts with Russians. Overheard telephone conversations with the Russian ambassador proved to be the downfall of National Security Adviser Michael Flynn. At the same time, NSA hacking tools were published online by a hacking group (leading to a recent WannaCry ransomware attack, which used a Windows vulnerability found in that trove), and WikiLeaks revealed a less advanced but still effective CIA hacking arsenal.

The leakorama has grown bizarre lately. Intelligence sources leaked the allegation that Trump leaked sensitive intelligence data related to Islamic State to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, without revealing what exactly Trump said. The next day, someone leaked the information leaked by Trump had come from Israel. Trump, on a trip to Israel, told reporters that he'd never "mentioned the word Israel" to the Russians, denying something no one ever accused him of doing.

Trump has railed against the leaks privately (that has leaked out, of course) and on Twitter, but he has been unable to stop it. All he can do is join the ranks of leakers and do what Bush did, firing his own salvos in the anonymous war.

If this history has taught the U.S. intelligence community anything, it's that leaking classified information isn't particularly dangerous and those who do it largely enjoy impunity. Manning spent seven years in prison (though she'd been sentenced to 35), but Snowden, Assange, Petraeus, the unknown Chinese mole, the people who stole the hacking tools and the army of recent anonymous leakers, many of whom probably still work for U.S. intelligence agencies, have escaped any kind of meaningful punishment.

If no one gets punished for leaking, why not give classified information to the media just for fun? The Manchester leaks -- the name of the terrorist, which the U.K. authorities hadn't been able to release, and gory pictures from the scene of the attack -- seem to fall into that category. The U.S. intelligence officials who provided that information to reporters had nothing to gain by doing it. They were just bragging they knew stuff.

To read more, please visit: https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2017-05-25/the-u-s-i...

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