Dayton Daily News

Trump holds high ground: top clearance a privilege

- Pat Buchanan He writes for Creators Syndicate.

In backing John Brennan’s right to keep his top-secret security clearance, despite his having charged the president with treason, the U.S. intel community has chosen to fight on indefensib­le terrain.

Former Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper seemed to recognize that Sunday when he conceded that ex-CIA Director Brennan had the subtlety of “a freight train” and his rhetoric had become “an issue in and of itself.”

After Donald Trump’s Helsinki summit with Vladimir Putin, Brennan had called the president’s actions “nothing short of treasonous.”

The battle is now engaged. Trump cannot back down. He must defy and defeat the old bulls of the intel community. And he can.

For a security clearance is not a right. It is a privilege, an honor and a necessity for those serving in the security agencies of the U.S. government — while they serve.

Brennan is not being deprived of his First Amendment rights. He can still make any accusation and call the president any name he wishes.

But to argue that a charge of treason against a president is not a justificat­ion for pulling a clearance is a claim both arrogant and absurd.

Brennan is now threatenin­g to sue the president. Bring it on, says national security adviser John Bolton.

With 4 million Americans holding top-secret clearances, and this city awash in leaks to the media from present and past intel and security officials, it is time to strip the swamp creatures of their special privileges.

The White House should press upon Congress a policy of automatic cancellati­on of security clearances, for intelligen­ce and military officers, upon resignatio­n, retirement or severance.

Clearances should be retained only for departing officers who can demonstrat­e that their “need to know” national secrets remains crucial to our security, not merely advantageo­us to their pursuit of lucrative jobs in the military-industrial complex.

Officials in the security realm who take clearances with them on leaving office are like House members who retain all the access, perks and privileges of Congress after they step down to earn seven-figure salaries lobbying their former congressio­nal colleagues.

Trump is said to be evaluating pulling the security clearances of Clapper, ex-FBI Director James Comey, former CIA Director Michael Hayden, former Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe, former FBI counterint­elligence official Peter Strzok and former FBI lawyer Lisa Page.

This is a good start. Some of these individual­s have been fired. Some are under investigat­ion. Some were involved in the FBI’s “getTrump” cabal to prevent his election and then to abort his presidency.

Some have become talking heads on cable TV, exploiting the credibilit­y of their former titles and offices to undermine an elected president.

They should be stripped of their clearances to show the nation that the president is dealing with insiders who have joined the Resistance.

For Trump, a truce or a negotiated peace with these people is never going to happen. But this issue of security clearances is a battlefiel­d where the president cannot lose, if he fights wisely.

Americans sense that these are privileges that should be extended to those who protect us, not perks for former officials to exploit and monetize while they attempt to bring down the commander in chief.

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