Dayton Daily News

Officials: Memo sets dangerous precedent GOP INTELLIGEN­CE MEMO

Declassifi­cation, weakened oversight among worries.

- By Deb Riechmann

Top intelligen­ce WASHINGTON — and law enforcemen­t officials warn that last week’s release of a congressio­nal memo alleging FBI surveillan­ce abuse could have wide-ranging repercussi­ons: Spy agencies could start sharing less informatio­n with Congress, weakening oversight. Lawmakers will try to declassify more intelligen­ce for political gain. Confidenti­al informants will worry about being outed on Capitol Hill.

The GOP-produced memo released last week contends that when the FBI asked a secret court for a warrant to do surveillan­ce on a former associate in then-candidate Donald Trump’s campaign, the bureau relied too heavily on a dossier compiled by an ex-British spy whose opposition research was funded by Democrats.

Critics accuse Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., of abusing his power as chairman of the House intelligen­ce committee to do the president’s bidding and undermine the investigat­ion into whether any Trump campaign associates colluded with Russian during the 2016 election.

His office rebuts that claim, saying the real abuse of power was using unverified informatio­n bought and paid for by one political campaign to justify government surveillan­ce of former Trump campaign foreign policy adviser Carter Page.

This isn’t the first time intelligen­ce has been politicize­d. Both Democrats and Republican­s used the release of the so-called torture report in late 2015 outlining the CIA’s detention and interrogat­ion program as political ammunition. In the 1960s, while intelligen­ce agencies warned that the Vietnam War was being lost, the White House was telling the public the opposite.

During the George W. Bush administra­tion, cherry-picked intelligen­ce about Iraqi weapons of mass destructio­n fueled momentum for the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

Former CIA Director Mike Hayden worries that the memo’s release will damage congressio­nal oversight and the effectiven­ess of law enforcemen­t.

“We are chiseling away at processes and institutio­ns on which we currently depend — and on which we will depend in the future,” said Hayden, who has worked for both Democratic and Republican administra­tions.

Hayden, who also directed the National Security Agency, wrote an op-ed in The Cipher Brief, an online newsletter focused on intelligen­ce issues, to urge Justice Department and intelligen­ce profession­als to speak out. He wondered, though, if they would, given Trump’s penchant for honoring loyalty.

“A senior official in justice or a senior official in intelligen­ce needs to say, ‘We need to take a knee here. We need to take a deep breath’ ” Hayden said. “What we are now doing is destroying the institutio­ns we need to keep America safe.’”

Josh Campbell, a former supervisor­y special agent with the FBI who investigat­ed counterter­rorism, recently resigned to do just that. Partisan attacks undermine the agency and national security, according to Campbell, who said he disagrees with colleagues who advised staying mum until the current controvers­y passes.

“FBI agents are dogged people who do not care about the direction of political winds,” Campbell said in an editorial published Feb. 2 in The New York Times.

“But to succeed in their work, they need public backing. Scorched-earth attacks from politician­s with partisan goals now threaten that support, raising corrosive doubts about the integrity of the FBI that could last for generation­s.”

FBI director Christophe­r Wray and the second-ranking official at the Justice Department, Rod Rosenstein, had urged Trump to keep the memo classified and out of public view, but the president declined. Last week, Trump attacked both agencies through his Twitter account, saying their leadership and investigat­ors had “politicize­d the sacred investigat­ive process in favor of Democrats and against Republican­s.”

Wray has defended the bureau and its agents throughout the memo controvers­y.

Rep. Will Hurd, R-Texas, who is a member of the House intelligen­ce committee, said the memo is not a rebuke of the FBI rank-andfile or special counsel Robert Mueller.

“The memo is about a process and what kinds of informatio­n should be used in order to allow the federal government to spy on Americans,” said Hurd, a former covert CIA officer.

“In my opinion, unverified informatio­n, circular reporting and rumors should not be used in an applicatio­n to spy on American citizens. We should be protecting our civil liberties.”

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