Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump’s take on leaks takes leap

- LOUIS JACOBSON Louis Jacobson is a reporter for PolitiFact.com. The Journal Sentinel’s PolitiFact Wisconsin is part of the PolitiFact network.

During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, Donald Trump couldn’t get enough of the private emails of senior Democrats released by WikiLeaks.

“Boy, I love reading those WikiLeaks!” Trump said on Nov. 4 at a rally in Wilmington, Ohio. He also touted the fruits of WikiLeaks disclosure­s on Oct. 31 in Warren, Mich., on Nov. 2 in Orlando and Pensacola, Fla., and Nov. 6 in Sioux City, Iowa.

Trump even called on Russia to locate and release emails by his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton.

But now Trump is assailing leaks from the intelligen­ce community to the New York Times that led to the quick departure of Trump’s national security adviser, Michael Flynn. The articles cited anonymous officials saying that during the presidenti­al transition, Flynn had been in contact with Russia about the sanctions that recently had been imposed by the Obama administra­tion.

At a Feb. 15 news conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump lamented that Flynn — “a wonderful man” — had been treated “very, very unfairly” by the media.

“Papers are being leaked, things are being leaked,” Trump said. “It’s criminal actions ... and it’s been going on for a long time — before me. But now it’s really going on, and people are trying to cover up for a terrible loss that the Democrats had under Hillary Clinton.”

He followed up with several tweets. And at a Thursday news conference, he spent time criticizin­g leaks.

“The press should be ashamed of themselves” for running stories based on leaks, Trump told reporters. So is this a flip-flop? In this case, there are some difference­s between the election leaks and the leaks by the intelligen­ce community. However, experts on national security told us that Trump has shown inconsiste­nt standards.

We’ll note that Trump doesn’t think it’s a change in position. Pressed on the question at his news conference, Trump drew a distinctio­n between the release of classified informatio­n (the leaks on Flynn and Russia) and the release of personal emails (WikiLeaks and the Democratic National Committee).

“In one case, you’re talking about highly classified informatio­n,” Trump said. “In the other case, you’re talking about (DNC chairman) John Podesta saying bad things about the boss (Clinton).”

Trump has a point about the distinctio­n. But that’s not the whole story.

Though the DNC releases weren’t classified, WikiLeaks has released classified informatio­n previously. That includes 750,000 pages of documents stolen by Chelsea Manning, then known as Bradley Manning.

In other words, during the campaign Trump praised an organizati­on that made its name by leaking classified informatio­n. Now he’s criticizin­g leaking.

“He went from ‘I love WikiLeaks,’ an organizati­on that publishes leaked classified informatio­n, to his current position,” said Barnett Rubin, associate director of the Center on Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n at New York University.

“A few months ago, leaks were getting him elected — now they are destroying” his presidency, agreed John Pike, director of globalsecu­rity.org.

Robert F. Turner, associate director of the University of Virginia’s Center for National Security Law, said he understand­s the distinctio­n between leaking classified material and informatio­n that is merely private. He also made clear that he is almost always dead-set against leaking. Regardless of who makes or broadcasts the leak, “good people die and freedom is placed in jeopardy,” he said.

However, Turner added that “it seems clear to me that Russia was trying to influence the outcome of our election, which I view as a serious national security issue.”

If a disgruntle­d Democratic National Committee official had copied some documents and leaked them, “I think Trump could have drawn a reasonable distinctio­n between those garden variety disclosure­s of private informatio­n (arguably by ‘whistle-blowers’) and disclosure­s derived from classified national security programs that were apparently disclosed by government employees in violation of their security agreements.”

However, “because of the Russian role, I don’t think that distinctio­n holds up,” Turner said. “Bottom line, I would call this a flip-flop.”

Benjamin H. Friedman, a research fellow in security studies at the libertaria­n Cato Institute, went even further.

“Trump has done something worse than flip-flop,” he said. “He’s showed that his stance of leaks depends on whether it helps him. Flip-floppers change their mind; Trump has showed that he doesn’t have a stance on leaks independen­t from his interests. He’s pretending otherwise now, but it’s not credible.”

Our rating

During the campaign, Trump praised WikiLeaks, an organizati­on that exists to publicize private, and at times classified, informatio­n. Now, as president, he’s criticizin­g federal officials who have leaked secret or classified informatio­n to the news media. Trump has a point that the leaked material from the DNC wasn’t classified. Still, the underlying principle is the same: Trump was praising the release of private informatio­n during the campaign but criticizin­g it after he became president. The situations are substantia­lly similar, but Trump’s sentiments are not. We rate it a Full Flop.

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