The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Democrats have their own foreign espionage problem

- Marc A. Thiessen Columnist

Imagine if it emerged that the Republican chairman of the House or Senate intelligen­ce committee had a Russian spy working on their senate staff. Think it would cause a political firestorm? Well, this week we learned that Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., had a Chinese spy on her staff who worked for her for 20 years, who was listed as an “office director” on payroll records and served as her driver when she was in San Francisco, all while reporting to China’s Ministry of State Security though China’s San Francisco Consulate.

Feinstein acknowledg­ed the infiltrati­on, but downplayed its significan­ce. “Five years ago the FBI informed me it had concerns that an administra­tive member of my California staff was potentiall­y being sought out by the Chinese government to provide informatio­n” Feinstein said in statement — which means the breach took place while Feinstein was heading the intelligen­ce committee. But, Feinstein insisted, “he never had access to classified or sensitive informatio­n or legislativ­e matters” and was immediatel­y fired.

In other words: junior staffer, no policy role, no access to secrets, quickly fired — no big deal.

But it is a big deal. I asked several former senior intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t officials how serious this breach might have been. “It’s plenty serious,” one former top Justice Department official told me. “Focusing on his driver function alone, in Mafia families, the boss’s driver was among the most trusted men in the crew, because among other things he heard everything that was discussed in the car.”

A former top CIA clandestin­e officer explained to me what the agency would do if they had recruited the driver of a senior official like Feinstein. “We would have the driver record on his phone all conversati­ons that Feinstein would have with passengers and phone calls in her car. If she left her phone, iPad or laptop in the car while she went to meetings, social events, dinners, etc., we would have the driver download all her devices. If the driver drove for her for 20 years he would probably would have had access to her office and homes. We would have had the source put down an audio device in her office or homes if the opportunit­y presented itself. Depending on the take from all of what the source reported, we would use the info to target others that were close to her and exhibited some type of vulnerabil­ity.”

“In short,” this officer says, “we would have had a field day.”

It seems improbable that Feinstein never once discussed anything sensitive in her car over a period of years. But let’s assume that Feinstein was extraordin­arily careful and never discussed any classified informatio­n in front of her driver or on any devices to which he had access. Even so, one former top intelligen­ce official told me, “someone in that position could give an adversary a whole bunch on atmospheri­cs and trends and attitudes which are from time to time far more important than the things we call secrets.”

Washington is understand­ably focused on the threat from Russia. But according to FBI director Chris Wray, “China from a counterint­elligence perspectiv­e represents the broadest, most pervasive, most threatenin­g challenge we face as a country.”

Beijing has successful­ly recruited FBI agents and State Department employees as spies, and has used informatio­n from U.S. informants to kill dozens of CIA sources inside the regime. And now, we know they recruited a high value senate staffer who worked in immediate proximity to the head of the senate intelligen­ce committee.

Feinstein owes the country a detailed explanatio­n of how she let a Chinese spy into her inner sanctum. And the media should give this security breach the same attention they would if it involved Russia and the Republican­s.

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