Monterey Herald

Freedom of the press, whistleblo­wers are still at risk

- By Amy Goodman and Denis Moynihan

Legendary whistleblo­wer

Dan Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers 50 years ago, a courageous act of truth-telling for which he later faced life in prison. He hasn’t stopped since. Last May, just weeks after turning 90 years old, Ellsberg made yet another disclosure of classified national security informatio­n. He was speaking on a panel at the University of Massachuse­tts’ “Truth, Dissent, & the Legacy of Daniel Ellsberg” conference with whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden, which one of us [Amy] moderated.

“Let me tell a truth that I’ve had for 50 years,” Ellsberg said, before reading from a secret 1958 report describing the willingnes­s of U.S. officials to launch a nuclear war. “I copied that study. It was in my top-secret safe in 1969. And I’ve had it ever since,” he continued.

Ellsberg was working at the RAND Corporatio­n and as a consultant to the Kennedy administra­tion. He was also a U.S. Marine officer, and participat­ed in combat missions in Vietnam.

In 1969, inspired by the growing anti-war and draft resistance movements, Ellsberg photocopie­d the Pentagon Papers, a secret, 7,000-page history of U.S. decision-making during the Vietnam war. Unable to find a U.S. senator willing to take the documents, he leaked them to the New York Times.

The Times published its first Pentagon Papers piece on June 13th, 1971. Two days later, a federal court granted President Richard Nixon’s request for an injunction, blocking further publicatio­n. After Ellsberg’s identity as the leaker became public, he and his wife Patricia went undergroun­d, as he continued to distribute copies of the documents to other newspapers.

Nixon’s national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, called Ellsberg “the most dangerous man in America.” Nixon, in a recorded Oval Office conversati­on with his Attorney General, said, “we’ve got to keep our eye on the main ball. The main ball is Ellsberg. We’ve got to get this son of a bitch.”

On June 30th, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the New York Times, barring government censorship of the press and allowing continued publicatio­n of the Pentagon Papers.

Nixon intensifie­d his campaign targeting the whistleblo­wer, afraid of what he might release next. As Ellsberg recounted on Democracy Now!,

“He burglarize­d my former psychoanal­yst’s office, sent 12 Cuban assets of the Bay of Pigs up to incapacita­te me totally on the steps of the Capitol. On May 3rd, he overheard me on illegal, warrantles­s wiretaps.” When the Nixon administra­tion’s misconduct was revealed, the judge threw out the espionage case against him.

Dan Ellsberg’s example has encouraged other whistleblo­wers, among them Edward Snowden, who, while a contractor at the National Security Agency (NSA), participat­ed in the developmen­t of the government’s secret, global, dragnet surveillan­ce program. He leaked a massive trove of documents in 2013, and has lived in exile in Russia ever since.

At the conference on May 1st, Snowden said of whistleblo­wers who inspired him, “They had stood up at great personal risk to tell the public an essential truth that was being intentiona­lly denied to them for political purpose. Eventually, you believe that this is what looks more right than going back into the office and perpetuati­ng a system of injustice quietly, day after day.”

Snowden continued, “Reality Winner and Daniel Hale and Chelsea Manning, Thomas Drake, Terry Albury and others who have come forward in the last decades have vindicated Daniel Ellsberg’s approach … because the abuse of power is not something that’s going away.”

Reality Winner was an NSA contractor when she leaked informatio­n to the press describing alleged Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 elections. Imprisoned for over four years, she was released on June 2nd to a half-way house for the remaining months of her sentence. Her family is demanding a pardon.

Daniel Hale pled guilty to leaking documents about the

U.S. drone program of targeted assassinat­ions in Afghanista­n, Syria and Iraq, which he participat­ed in while in the Air Force. He will be sentenced in mid-July.

Ellsberg’s May 1st disclosure was about a 1958 conflict over several small islands, between mainland China and Taiwan.

The U.S., Ellsberg revealed, drew up plans to launch nuclear weapons against China to support Taiwan. The report predicted that a U.S. first-strike on China would provoke a nuclear counter-strike by the Soviet Union, killing millions.

At 90, Ellsberg is still tirelessly advocating for the rights of whistleblo­wers and a free press, calling on the Biden administra­tion to drop its case against Julian Assange, the Wikileaks founder who published leaked informatio­n documentin­g war crimes, and its prosecutio­n of Daniel Hale.

He concluded his recent interview on Democracy Now!, “I’ve certainly been led, more than almost anyone, to appreciate the necessity of our First Amendment, the protection of the freedom of the press, the freedom of thought. You can’t have democracy without it.”

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