The Commercial Appeal

General targeted in leak probe

- Washington Post

WASHINGTON — A retired four-star Marine Corps general who served as the nation’s second-ranking military officer is a target of a Justice Department investigat­ion into a leak of informatio­n about a covert U.S.-Israeli cyberattac­k on Iran’s nuclear program, a senior Obama administra­tion official said.

Retired Gen. James Cartwright served as deputy chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and was part of President Barack Obama’s inner circle on a range of critical national security issues before he retired in 2011.

The administra­tion official said that Cartwright is suspected of revealing informatio­n about a highly classified effort to use a computer virus later dubbed Stuxnet to sabotage equipment in Iranian nuclear enrichment plants.

Stuxnet was part of a broader cyber campaign called Olympic Games that was disclosed by The New York Times last year as one of the first major efforts by the United States to use computer code as a destructiv­e weapon against a key adversary.

Cartwright, who helped launch that campaign under President Bush and pushed for its escalation under Obama, was recently informed that he was a “target” of a wide-ranging Justice Department probe into the leak, according to the senior official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Justice Department officials declined to comment on the case, as did Marcia Murphy, a spokeswoma­n for the U.S. attorney’s office in Maryland, which is in charge of the investigat­ion.

Neither Cartwright nor his attorney, former White House counsel Greg Craig, responded to requests for comment.

A target is a suspect in a criminal case who has not yet been indicted but is expected to be.

Federal prosecutor­s are not required to tell targets that they are under investigat­ion but it is not uncommon for them to do so in cases when an indictment is likely.

The leaks surroundin­g Stuxnet exposed details about what had been one of the most closely held secrets in the U. S. intelligen­ce community, an effort by the National Security Agency with Israel to devise computer code that could cripple Iran’s alleged effort to pursue a nuclear bomb.

Stuxnet is believed to have destroyed many of Iran’s nuclear centrifuge­s.

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