Texarkana Gazette

Congress may make CIA less accountabl­e

- Los Angeles Times

It’s already a crime to identify a covert intelligen­ce agent or confidenti­al informant working overseas. But even though the law has only been used twice in 37 years— and even though no persuasive case has been made that it needs to be toughened or expanded—Congress is now proposing to broaden it, imposing new restrictio­ns on free speech.

It needs to slow down and demand evidence that a new version of the 1982 Intelligen­ce Identities Protection Act is necessary and that it won’t be wielded to silence whistleblo­wers or make it harder for the press to report on abuses.

In its present form, the law allows for the prosecutio­n of anyone who discloses the identity of a covert agent who has served outside the United States during the previous five years or a foreign-based U.S. citizen whose relationsh­ip with an intelligen­ce agency is classified. The law assumes that operatives posted in foreign countries face a special danger from exposure of their identities.

Even though the law has only been used twice in 37 years, Congress is now proposing to broaden it, imposing new restrictio­ns on free speech.

But at the behest of the CIA, Congress is considerin­g removing the requiremen­t that an agent or informant live outside the United States; that way, the law would apply to operatives in the U.S. as well. The change could be voted on this week.

The CIA argued that the changes are necessary in light of “ever-evolving threats, including cyberthrea­ts” and pointed to disclosure­s by WikiLeaks as well as revelation­s about the agency’s treatment of suspected terrorists. An agency spokesman told the New York Times that in the last five years, “hundreds of covert officers have had their identity and covert affiliatio­n disclosed without authorizat­ion.”

Rep. Adam B. Schiff, the chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said he didn’t believe the expanded law would be used against journalist­s, and noted that the earlier version hadn’t been either.

Journalist­s aren’t so sanguine. The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press has warned that the proposed amendments would “upset the balance carefully struck by Congress and make journalist­s, especially national security and investigat­ive reporters, more vulnerable to potential criminal liability for disclosing classified informatio­n.”

On another front, one of the two uses of the 1982 law was to prosecute former CIA officer John Kiriakou, who provided a reporter with the name of an undercover operative who had been linked to brutal interrogat­ion tactics during the George W. Bush administra­tion.

Before approving any change in the law, Congress should listen to those concerns—and demand from the CIA proof that new restrictio­ns are necessary to protect the lives of its operatives. So far the case has not been made.

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