The Guardian (USA)

Trend of declassify­ing US intelligen­ce poses serious risks, ex-CIA officials say

- Julian Borger in Washington

An increasing­ly common US tactic of declassify­ing intelligen­ce with the aim of disrupting the plans of adversary powers can bring short-term gains, but risks creating long-term problems for the US intelligen­ce agencies, two former CIA officials have warned.

In a new article in the journal Foreign Affairs, David Gioe, a former CIA analyst and operations officer, and Michael Morell, who was CIA acting director and deputy director, argue that the most serious risk is the politicisa­tion of intelligen­ce, if it is routinely shaped before publicatio­n to suit the purposes of the administra­tion of the day.

Gioe and Morell say some “strategic downgrades” of intelligen­ce material, allowing it to be published, are likely to have been effective, outmanoeuv­ring Russia and China on occasion. But they also list a variety of ways routine declassifi­cation could, over time, harm intelligen­ce collection and the reputation of the agencies involved.

They argue that, as the trend towards more regular declassifi­cation is probably irreversib­le, there should be more thought put into establishi­ng guidelines to mitigate any damage.

“The point of no return has been passed, and intelligen­ce is being released faster than norms can be created,” Gioe and Morell write, adding that the US risks losing the qualitativ­e advantage US intelligen­ce has maintained over its rivals.

In the most noteworthy recent example of strategic declassifi­cation, the Biden administra­tion published intelligen­ce material on the Russian buildup leading up to the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and later revealed that the Kremlin was considerin­g the use of chemical and biological weapons.

In August the same year, the national security council shared declassifi­ed details of likely Chinese actions in response to the visit by the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, to Taiwan, and in February 2023 the administra­tion disclosed how the US had been tracking a spy balloon that had overflown the US.

The same month, the CIA director, William Burns, declared publicly that China was considerin­g sending weapons to Russia but had yet to do so.

Previous administra­tions have declassifi­ed material when they saw it was to their advantage, such as the spy plane photograph­s of Soviet missiles in Cuba presented to the UN in 1962, or the debacle of the Bush administra­tion’s presentati­on to the security council 41 years later, of spurious evidence of Iraqi weapons of mass destructio­n.

However, Morell argued that under Biden, “strategic downgrades” had become far more routine than in past eras.

“Without a doubt that’s the significan­t change that’s occurred with this administra­tion – from the one-off to the repeated declassifi­cations on a single issue over an extended period of time,” he said. “Nobody’s ever done that before.”

Morrell, who was deputy CIA director from 2010 to 2013, and acting director for four months in that period, acknowledg­ed there was reasonable evidence to suggest that at least some instances of targeted declassifi­cation had a positive impact. Publicisin­g Russian plans to engineer false-flag atrocities to serve as pretexts for invading Ukraine may have put off Moscow from carrying them out, and Burns’s disclosure­s about possible Chinese arms supplies to Russia may have played a role in dissuading Beijing so far from following that path.

However, Gioe and Morell list all the things that can go wrong. Declassifi­cation can accidental­ly provide adversarie­s with clues on US intelligen­ce sources and methods, though there are ways to mitigate that. Less well understood, the authors argue, are indirect impacts, for example making human sources nervous about passing on secrets that could end up in the public domain and perhaps give away their identity.

“Some assets have even walked away in the aftermath of prominent leaks or disclosure­s,” they said.

Furthermor­e, when intelligen­ce made public turns out to be wrong, it can damage the reputation of the intelligen­ce agency in question.

Gioe and Morell suggest the greatest risk is the politicisa­tion of the intelligen­ce that is made public, and they point as an example to Lyndon Johnson’s manipulati­on of the details of a naval confrontat­ion between US and North Vietnamese naval forces in the Gulf of Tonkin in 1964, to persuade Congress to grant him boosted war

powers.

Gioe and Morell do not accuse the Biden administra­tion of such manipulati­on in the Foreign Affairs piece, nor do they mention the possible return to the Oval Office of Donald Trump, who claimed when president to have total discretion over declassifi­cation.

However, a former senior intelligen­ce official said there were mounting concerns within the US intelligen­ce community about how Trump could exploit the precedent Biden is setting.

“What matters here is the integrity of the people who are making the decisions about what to declassify,” the former official said. “You can either have an administra­tion like this one who has handled it fairly well, or you can have another administra­tion that doesn’t have that kind of integrity, and there’s a lot of people I talked to, who are concerned about that, as it relates to the Trump administra­tion.”

 ?? ?? The national security spokespers­on, John Kirby, speaks beside images allegedly showing North Korean arms being transporte­d to Russia, on 20 January 2023. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA
The national security spokespers­on, John Kirby, speaks beside images allegedly showing North Korean arms being transporte­d to Russia, on 20 January 2023. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA

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