USA TODAY International Edition

FBI might keep more secrets from Congress

- Erin Kelly and Kevin Johnson

WASHINGTON – The House Intelligen­ce Committee’s dueling partisan memos about FBI surveillan­ce of a Trump campaign adviser will result in federal agents keeping secrets to themselves because they no longer trust Congress, experts warn.

“It’s already having an impact,” said Mike Rogers, a retired Michigan Republican congressma­n and ex-FBI agent who chaired the committee from 2011 to 2014. “The intelligen­ce community isn’t going to lie to the committees. But they’ll go into the 100-question mode: If a committee only asks three questions, they’ll leave the other 97 on the table. They’re not going to volunteer informatio­n anymore.”

Andy Arena, former FBI agent in charge of the Detroit field office, calls it giving the “Reader’s Digest” version of a classified briefing to Congress.

“As an FBI agent, I’m going to do what I’m legally bound to do,” said Arena, who is now a professor at Western Michigan University’s Cooley Law School. “You’re going to talk to the committee, but you’re going to be cringing, and you’re going to give them the short version and not get into details.”

Republican­s on the House Intelligen­ce Committee recently released a memo — approved by President Trump — alleging that FBI and Justice Department officials relied on an unsubstant­iated dossier compiled by former British spy Christophe­r Steele and paid for by the Democratic National Committee to get a warrant to conduct surveillan­ce of Carter Page, who served on the Trump campaign’s foreign policy advisory team.

Democrats charge that the memo, which was written by GOP aides at the direction of Chairman Devin Nunes, RCalif., is misleading and is really little more than an attempt by Trump and his allies to divert attention away from special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion.

Democrats wrote a rebuttal memo to refute the findings of the Nunes memo, but Trump refused to release it Friday night. The White House said the Justice Department had concerns that the memo would create national security and law enforcemen­t problems.

Michael McDaniel, former deputy assistant secretary for homeland defense strategy, prevention and mission assurance at the Pentagon, said he thinks the memos and the committee’s partisan sniping will increase the natural inclinatio­n of intelligen­ce agencies to overclassi­fy informatio­n to keep it secret.

“Beyond that, I think there will be a tendency now to think: ‘Should I even put this down in writing?’ ” said McDaniel, associate dean at Western Michigan University’s Cooley Law School and an expert in homeland and national security law. “I think there will be a lot more internal second-guessing.”

The result is that Congress will have less informatio­n as it attempts to oversee the intelligen­ce agencies and help keep the country safe, said former New Jersey Gov. Thomas Kean, who chaired the 9/11 Commission.

“If the agencies don’t have confidence in the committees to protect sensitive documents, then that represents a serious breakdown,” Kean said. “It undermines the ability of Congress to do its job, and it could be very damaging to national security.”

America’s foreign allies are watching what’s happening in Congress and deciding not to share as much informatio­n with the United States, Rogers and Arena said.

“I just got back from overseas recently, and these (foreign) intelligen­ce agencies are starting to put restrictio­ns on the informatio­n they share — and it has to be classified in a way that members of Congress can’t get access to it,” Rogers said. “They’re genuinely concerned about informatio­n leaking out.”

More at risk today

“We’re all at more risk today than we were last week (before the Nunes memo came out),” Arena said. “If the Brits, the Saudis or other allies decide not to share something because of this, and we get hit (by terrorists), shame on them, but shame on us, too.”

It also could discourage people from spying on their own countries to help the U.S. or from becoming FBI informants, Rogers said.

“They’re going to ask themselves: Can I trust my personal safety in cooperatin­g with the FBI on this,” he said.

Experts say the fierce partisan polarizati­on in the House Intelligen­ce Committee is a major departure from the panel’s past reputation as what Arena called “a bipartisan bastion of sanity in Washington.” Things have gotten so tense with the current panel that the GOP majority is erecting a wall between the Republican and Democratic staffs, which had been working together in one room.

“You always had a feeling (in the past) that they were looking to do the right thing,” Arena said, even when that meant that committee members were offering criticism privately to the agencies. “I don’t know that my successors are going to be looking at the committee in the same way.”

Problems can extend past D.C.

The potential damage, said former Obama administra­tion attorney general Eric Holder, threatens to extend far beyond Washington and the interactio­ns between agencies and lawmakers.

The constant rebukes of the FBI and Justice Department strike at the very credibilit­y of the criminal justice system, where public trust in the work of agents and prosecutor­s on everyday cases is crucial.

“There will be a time ... when a case will be tried in Illinois, Mississipp­i, Missouri ... where a credibilit­y determinat­ion will have to be made,” Holder said earlier this week, adding that jurors will have to assess the testimony offered by an FBI agent that may be at odds with witnesses and defendants.

The criticisms voiced by Republican lawmakers likely “will raise doubts in the minds of people as they listen to that FBI agent in ... a way that never existed before,” Holder said.

“The long-term negative, collateral consequenc­es are substantia­l; they’re real,” he said.

Memo release being seen as a violation of trust

 ?? YURI GRIPAS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A recent memo released by Republican­s on the House Intelligen­ce Committee has questioned the FBI’s integrity.
YURI GRIPAS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A recent memo released by Republican­s on the House Intelligen­ce Committee has questioned the FBI’s integrity.

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