The Sentinel-Record

Spies, White House have a history of running wild

- Charles Tiefer Charles Tiefer is a professor of Law at the University of Baltimore.

At the heart of the current crisis over President Donald Trump’s dealings with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is an intelligen­ce whistleblo­wer whose informatio­n has finally made it into public view.

The whistleblo­wer’s complaint about Trump’s interactio­n with Zelenskiy was initially withheld from the House Intelligen­ce Committee, something which the committee chairman protested was a violation of the law.

The complaint was ultimately turned over after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced an impeachmen­t inquiry of the president and almost two weeks after the committee subpoenaed it, and after the Senate had passed a unanimous resolution to provide the complaint to Congress.

For decades now, the evolving role of congressio­nal oversight of U.S. intelligen­ce has involved major clashes and scandals, from the Iran-Contra affair of the 1980s to the intelligen­ce abuses that led to the 2003 war in Iraq.

Central to all of these clashes are attempts by intelligen­ce agencies, the president and the executive branch to withhold damning informatio­n from Congress. Another common element is the use of civilians to carry out presidenti­al or intelligen­ce agency agendas.

Coups and assassinat­ions

“Intelligen­ce” is the government’s term for collection of informatio­n of military or diplomatic value. After World War II, large, new agencies — the CIA and the National Security Agency — were establishe­d to conduct informatio­n gathering and secret operations.

From the aftermath of World War II to the 1970s, there was virtually no congressio­nal oversight of this intelligen­ce apparatus. And there was only intermitte­nt presidenti­al direction. During the Cold War, intelligen­ce was considered too sensitive for Congress to know.

Some of the agencies’ intelligen­ce work, called “covert activities,” was not mere informatio­n-gathering. And some of the activities undertaken by these agencies had a profound impact around the world — without U.S. democratic institutio­ns playing a role.

For example, in 1953 the CIA overthrew the democratic­ally elected leader of Iran, Mohammad Mossadegh, and installed in his place the shah, an autocrat who proved happy to do what the U.S. wanted.

The public and Congress had little or no awareness that the CIA engineered this.

In the 1970s, between informatio­n uncovered in the Watergate hearings and some key investigat­ive journalism, the lid blew off the intelligen­ce agency’s secrecy about the CIA’s many covert interventi­ons both in other countries’ affairs and in the U.S.

A special temporary committee headed by Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) was establishe­d in 1975 to explore “the extent, if any, to which illegal, improper, or unethical activities were engaged in by any agency of the Federal Government.”

The activities uncovered included various unsuccessf­ul attempts to kill Fidel Castro, the communist leader of Cuba. The CIA’s plans for Castro’s assassinat­ion included help from organized crime figures like Santo Trafficant­e and other people who were not U.S. government officials. Rudy Giuliani is not an organized crime figure, but he’s similar in that he’s a civilian involved in foreign affairs: in this case, the president’s dealings with Ukraine.

The Church Committee discovered CIA plots that were known by presidents; they discovered some that were not. None was known by Congress. The very idea that intelligen­ce agencies could plot overthrowi­ng or murdering foreign leaders without congressio­nal oversight flabbergas­ted lawmakers.

Keeping Congress informed

The Church Committee and its sister committee in the House recommende­d a major reform: the creation of House and Senate Intelligen­ce Committees that would have oversight over intelligen­ce agency activities.

These oversight committees were to be kept fully and currently informed by the intelligen­ce agencies. Nothing was to be withheld from Congress.

The notion that President Trump could force a Ukrainian government investigat­ion of Joe Biden, and that this would be withheld from the House Intelligen­ce Committee, directly contradict­s the imperative of congressio­nal oversight establishe­d by Congress in the late 1970s.

In the 1980s, the House Intelligen­ce Committee faced one of its greatest challenges — the Iran-Contra affair. President Reagan had kept secret from the committee that he had approved arms-for-hostage deals with Iran and used the proceeds for resupplyin­g arms to the Contras, who were opponents of the Sandinista regime in Nicaragua.

These covert measures fulfilled some of Reagan’s major foreign policy goals. They were not matters of personal political benefit for the president, as the Ukraine affair represents with Trump. When the scandal broke from news about hostage-trading and about a plane crash in the Contra resupply operation, the House formed an Iran-Contra investigat­ing committee. I was special deputy chief counsel of that committee, which was a select committee drawn in part from the House Intelligen­ce Committee.

The Iran-Contra initiative­s, although led by Oliver North of the national security staff, also relied on civilians to carry out plans, not unlike Rudy Giuliani. These were Richard Secord, with a military background, and Albert Hakim, an accountant who spoke fluent Persian.

Such private figures have enormous power by virtue of their connection to the White House while simultaneo­usly being exempt from routine public sector oversight by congressio­nal intelligen­ce committees.

Scrutiny grows

After 9/11, when al-Qaida terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center, the CIA and President George W. Bush came under congressio­nal scrutiny for how much they had known in advance — and ignored.

Initially, they were reluctant to divulge what they knew, much like Trump at first fought oversight about his talks with Zelenskiy.

But eventually, it came out that President Bush’s daily briefing from the intelligen­ce community had warned of plots to crash airplanes into buildings.

In 2002 came what many consider one of the greatest abuses of intelligen­ce. President Bush and Vice President Richard Cheney bent the CIA’s intelligen­ce reporting to support a United States invasion of Iraq. Internally, the CIA knew its intelligen­ce was extremely weak about whether Iraq had weapons of mass destructio­n.

But the CIA served Bush and Cheney and made the public case to invade Iraq. Only after the war was over could the House Intelligen­ce Committee penetrate the secretiven­ess of the CIA and find out the case for the Iraq War was built on foundation­s like the extremely dubious tales of the informant known as “Curveball.”

Presidenti­al accountabi­lity

What can be learned from history about the Ukraine scandal?

One lesson is the enormous struggle Congress in general, and the House Intelligen­ce Committee in particular, has waged to exercise democratic accountabi­lity over presidenti­al actions. That accountabi­lity is made impossible when private citizens — Richard Secord, Albert Hakim, Rudy Giuliani — are used by presidents to carry out foreign affairs.

Another lesson is the power of the CIA to withhold from Congress what it knows would embarrass the president.

And yet another lesson is the disastrous foreign affairs repercussi­ons when the intelligen­ce system is abused by presidents.

The Ukraine affair is the latest intelligen­ce crisis in the troubled control of foreign affairs by the representa­tives of the American public.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States