The Jerusalem Post

Cautionary tale: Biden-Trump confidenti­al papers

What’s true in the US is also true here, where numerous people have access to highly sensitive docs

- ANALYSIS • By HERB KEINON

Social, political, cultural and economic trends that begin in the United States – goes an old saying – eventually get to Israel, just with a few years lag time.

Examples abound: from music to fashion to political correctnes­s to cuisine to styles of election campaigns. Seven-Eleven convenienc­e stores, for example, just opened a branch in Tel Aviv.

It’s instructiv­e, therefore, to pay attention to what is going on in the US to gauge issues that are sure to pop up here in no time.

Even the current fight here over judicial reform has antecedent­s in the US, where in recent years vacancies on the Supreme Court lead to pitched and ugly battles in the Senate over the confirmati­on of the president’s nominee – with Democrats opposing a Republican president’s nominee and the reverse with Republican­s opposing the nominee if the president is a Democrat.

Then-US president Donald Trump’s nomination of conservati­ve jurist Amy Coney Barrett in September 2020 – just two months before the elections – triggered calls to expand the nine-seat Supreme Court to 13 justices to ensure a liberal majority.

In April 2021 – less than three months after being sworn into office – President Joe Biden even set up a bipartisan presidenti­al commission to look into reforming the Court, including the Court’s role in the Constituti­onal system, the tenure of justices, the Court’s case selection, rules and practices and the numbers of justices on the bench. The commission issued its 280-page report eight months later but held off giving unequivoca­l recommenda­tions on the hot-button issues.

Not much has moved on the issue since then, even though the US Supreme Court decision last year overturnin­g the constituti­onal right to abortion by a 6-3 vote brought back further calls to “pack the court” by adding judges to the bench.

In addition, moves toward granting statehood to Washington DC are rooted, in part, in trying to ensure a Democratic majority in the Senate, which would all but ensure for the foreseeabl­e future Supreme Court justices with a Democratic worldview. In recent years, cultural wars in the US have revolved around the makeup of the Court, just as the Court in Israel is now the fault line dividing this country.

HAD ISRAELIS been watching these battles play out in the US over the years, they would not have been surprised to see the same battles play out here as well.

With that in mind, it is worth paying close attention to how the most recent political affair rocking Washington unfolds – the one having to do with Biden’s handling of confidenti­al documents.

Since January 9 there has been a steady drip of reports emerging of classified documents showing up first in a Washington think-tank office used by Biden before he became president, as well as in his home and garage in Delaware.

The issue has taken on a solid partisan hue because of the noise made – including the seizure of – classified documents found in Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida. The Democrats made political hay over that issue, and the Republican­s are doing the same over the confidenti­al papers found on Biden’s premises.

In the US, the current debate about this, and its legal ramificati­ons, revolves around intent: did either man intentiona­lly remove the classified papers – some 11,000 documents in dozens of boxes in Trump’s case, compared to what are believed to be about a dozen documents found in Biden’s home, garage and former office. Another issue is how the two men reacted immediatel­y after finding out: Biden turned over the documents, while Trump stonewalle­d.

The concern in the US is that whenever someone takes classified material out of the office and into their homes, there is always a risk that the documents could end up in the wrong hands and serve as a severe security breach.

And what is true in the US is also true in Israel, where numerous ranking IDF officers, senior government officials and members of the security services have access to highly sensitive informatio­n.

The case involving Anat Kamm and Uri Blau was the last high-profile case of classified informatio­n being taken out of an office and then leaked to a journalist. Kamm, a soldier at the time, took classified documents from the central command and leaked them after finishing her army stint to Blau, a reporter for Haaretz. She was convicted in 2011 and served 26 months in jail for espionage.

The case in the US should serve as a warning sign in

Israel to pay close attention to the handling of classified documents. This is especially true during these volatile political times when there is a revolving door of government­s, ministers and senior civil servants. During such times there needs to be added vigilance and a strict accounting of who has access to what material and how it is protected.

What happens in the US does not stay in the US, and so often eventually happens here as well. Israel should look at the current classified document brouhaha in the US as a cautionary tale and not just brush it off as something that does not affect us – because eventually, something quite similar could happen here.

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