Stabroek News Sunday

When the FBI confronts the White House

- By Tim Weiner

Tim Weiner is a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter. His books include Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA. The views expressed in this article are not those of Reuters News. (Reuters) - In May 2005, James B Comey, then the deputy attorney general of the United States, stood before a select audience at the National Security Agency (NSA) in Ft Meade, Maryland. Fourteen months before, Comey had had a face-to-face confrontat­ion with President George W Bush at the White House, arguing that a NSA program of spying on Americans in the name of counterter­rorism had bent the Constituti­on to the breaking point.

Comey had said “no” to the commander-in-chief. The Justice Department would not re-authorize the program. He was prepared to resign, and to take the thendirect­or of the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI) with him, which would have imperiled the Bush administra­tion in an election year. That confrontat­ion was a very deep secret. It stayed secret for two years after Comey’s NSA speech.

“It can be very, very hard to be a conscienti­ous attorney working in the intelligen­ce community,” he said to the NSA officers. “Hard because we are likely to hear the words: ‘If we don’t do this, people will die.’ You can all supply your own this: ‘If we don’t collect this type of informatio­n,’ or ‘If we don’t use this technique,’ or ‘If we don’t extend this authority.’ It is extraordin­arily difficult to be the attorney standing in front of the freight train that is the need for this.”

He continued: “‘No’ must be spoken into a storm of crisis, with loud voices all around... It takes far more than a sharp legal mind to say ‘no’ when it matters most. It takes moral character. It takes an ability to see the future. It takes an appreciati­on of the damage that will flow from an unjustifie­d ‘yes.’ It takes an understand­ing that, in the long-run, intelligen­ce under law is the only sustainabl­e intelligen­ce in this country.”

These words matter now more than ever. Comey and the FBI are standing in front of a freight train and the engine is the White House. They are in charge of an extraordin­ary counterint­elligence investigat­ion that has reached into the Trump administra­tion, and led this week to the dismissal of the president’s national security adviser, Michael Flynn. They and their colleagues at the CIA seek to know the scope and depth of the Kremlin’s influence on the 2016 presidenti­al election, a covert operation that Senator John McCain has called “an act of war.” They are trying to determine the nature of the contacts between Moscow and the Trump campaign during and after Election Day. Ultimately, they will have to ask what the president knew and when he knew it.

Trump is at war with the FBI and the CIA, tweeting denunciati­ons of the agencies and railing against what he calls criminal leaks of informatio­n about the investigat­ion. Complicati­ng matters, the president fired Comey’s immediate superior, the acting attorney general, Sally Yates. She was the one who informed the White House that Flynn’s conversati­ons with Russia’s ambassador – and the fact that Flynn was lying about them to superiors up to and including the vice president – made him susceptibl­e to blackmail. Making matters potentiall­y more fraught, the new attorney general, Jeff Sessions, who was a leading figure in the Trump campaign, has said that he would not recuse himself from overseeing the FBI’s investigat­ion.

All this puts Comey – and the president – in a political and legal contretemp­s at a moment when the stakes could not be higher. Trump cannot fire the FBI director now. That act would be seen as much more than political malfeasanc­e. It could be construed as an obstructio­n of justice. Yet Comey cannot proceed freely without the knowledge and, in crucial matters, the approval of the attorney general. The likelihood that they will lock horns is high.

If the attorney general orders the FBI investigat­ion quashed in any way – or Trump tells him to do it – that fact will not stay secret for two years, two weeks, or two days. Perhaps two hours at most. Comey would likely resign in protest, taking the upper echelons of the FBI with him. Remember the Saturday Night Massacre of 1973, when President Nixon fired the Watergate special prosecutor seeking his secret White House tapes, and the attorney general and his deputy quit in defiance? That was the beginning of the end of Nixon. President George W Bush, in his memoirs, says that conflagrat­ion immediatel­y crossed his mind during his 2004 White House confrontat­ion with Comey.

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