Mary McCarthy's Choice
Ray McGovern
April 24, 2006
Ray McGovern writes for Tell the Word, the publishing
arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in
Washington, DC. A 27-year veteran of the CIA, he is now
on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity.
As a 27-year-veteran of the CIA, I have one overwhelming
reaction to the news that senior intelligence analyst
Mary McCarthy has been fired for leaking information to
the press on CIA’s network of secret prisons abroad: She
must have seen no alternative to stop the abuses.
It appears that McCarthy was one of the sources upon
which Washington Post reporter Dana Priest relied for
the prison scoop that won her a Pulitzer. The Post
quoted an unnamed “former senior intelligence official”
yesterday saying he thought a majority of CIA officers
would probably agree with the firing of McCarthy. “A
small number might support her, but the ethic of the
business is not to leak,” said the former official,
adding that one should stay within official grievance
channels.
That’s what my colleague, CIA analyst Sam Adams, did 40
years ago—and came to rue the day. Through painstaking
research, Adams discovered that Gen. William
Westmoreland’s staff in Saigon had been ordered to keep
Communist force figures artificially low—about half the
actual strength—in order to project a picture of
progress. When the countrywide offensive at Tet in early
1968 gave the lie to Westmoreland’s figures and
vindicated Adams, Sam tried manfully to hold the
culprits accountable by going to the CIA’s and the
Pentagon’s inspectors general. He got the proverbial
run-around, and some 30,000 additional U.S. troops and a
million more Vietnamese fell before the war was over six
years later. Adams was never able to shake his nagging
remorse at the thought that he might have helped prevent
further carnage, had he gone out of “official channels”
and briefed his findings to the then-free mainstream
press. He died at 55 when his heart gave out.
The tragedy of Sam Adams is well known, even to those,
like Mary McCarthy, who joined the CIA many years after
Sam left. From his present perch, I relish the thought
that he is pleased that Mary may have learned a valuable
lesson from the frustration he encountered by “staying
within official grievance channels.”
Like Sam, Mary McCarthy was an independent thinker,
which she proved during her tenure as senior director
for intelligence programs at the White House from 1998
to 2001. There she achieved some notoriety for the
personal letter she sent President Bill Clinton,
criticizing the flimsiness of the “intelligence” that
led to the cruise missile strike on the Sudanese
pharmaceutical plant that some suggested might be
producing chemical warfare agent. She was correct, but
then-CIA Director George Tenet vouched for the
“evidence;” testosterone won the day; and they blew the
place up.
Those paying attention to the issue of torture by the
CIA and the Army will recall the tortured memorandum of
January 25, 2002, authored by David Addington (then
counsel to Vice President Dick Cheney and now Cheney’s
chief of staff) and signed by then-White House counsel
Alberto Gonzales. That memo argued that “Geneva ’s
strict limitations on questioning enemy prisoners” were
“obsolete” in the new war-on-terror paradigm. Still,
Addington/Gonzales felt compelled to remind the
president that U.S.criminal code—specifically the War
Crimes Act (18 U.S.C. 2441), with its draconian
penalties (including death)—could come into play.
That statute pins the “war crime” label on any grave
breach of Geneva, like “outrages against personal
dignity,” regardless of whether the detainee qualifies
as a prisoner of war. Addington and Gonzales warned the
president of the danger that he could be prosecuted
under that law by a future independent counsel, but
reassured him that there is a “reasonable basis in law
that Section 2441 does not apply, which would provide a
solid defense to any future prosecution.” That was good
enough for President George W. Bush, who on Feb. 7,
2002, signed a memorandum saying that detainees should
be treated humanely, “as appropriate and consistent with
military necessity.” And that is the loophole through
which Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld drove a Mack
truck.
That infamous memorandum of Jan. 25 was leaked to
Newsweek, which published it and others like it in May
2004. The reasoning was greeted with widespread scorn by
the U.S. legal profession and in August 2004 roundly
condemned by the American Bar Association, 12 former
federal judges, former Attorney General Nicholas
Katzenbach, former FBI Director William Sessions and
many others. The ABA formally condemned the
administration’s treatment of detainees and called upon
it to “comply fully” with the U.S. Constitution and
intern ational laws and conventions ratified by the U.S.
that outlaw torture. It was that same year, 2004, when
the torture of prisoners was depicted in the leaked
photos from Abu Ghraib, that Mary McCarthy returned to
the CIA from a sabbatical that followed her stint at the
White House.
Those who have worked with her testify to her respect
for law and regulation. That she had more than passing
interest in, and respect for the law is suggested not
only by her decision several years ago to attend law
school at night, but also by the hackles she reportedly
raised among operatives who saw her, in her White House
role, as an annoying hindrance to aggressive tactics
against terrorists.
Back at the CIA, Mary McCarthy assumed a position in the
office of CIA Inspector General John Helgersen, who is
responsible for intern al investigations of wrongdoing
by the agency and has extraordinary access to secrets
deprived to others under the need-to-know principle. It
is well known that agency personnel who witnessed
torture by the U.S. military in Guantanamo, for example,
complained to superiors and to the White House. It is a
safe bet that some agency officers also registered
objections to “extraordinary rendition,” including
kidnapping and transporting “terrorist suspects” to
so-called black prison camps for interrogation—“with the
gloves off,” in the swaggering words of then CIA chief
counter-terrorism official Cofer Black (now a vice
president with the defense contractor Blackwater USA).
In addition, some CIA officers may have learned of the
warrantless eavesdropping in violation of NSA’s
“eleventh commandment”—thou shall not spy on Americans.
In any event, it is certainly safe to say that
Helgersen’s IG account had become a growth industry,
with a requirement for all the professional help it
could muster. When Mary McCarthy came on board, she
became privy to complaints of a variety of abuses.
Sadly, common practice in such circumstances for someone
at retirement age, as McCarthy was, is to hunker down,
retire quietly with a healthy annuity, and then become
something of a celebrity by writing a tell-all book and
going on “60 Minutes.” Not McCarthy. Given the courage
and independence she showed in her earlier professional
life together with her sensitivity to the law, it is a
safe bet she tried hard to get management to address the
more egregious abuses—torture and rendition, for
example. It is an equally likely that she got no help
from former Director George Tenet or current Director
Porter Goss, both of them on the end of a tight leash
held by Vice President Dick Cheney.
But couldn’t McCarthy appeal to “independent” Inspector
General Helgersen? As statutory IG, Helgersen does enjoy
some unique prerogatives and autonomy, should he choose
to exercise them. Those familiar with his longstanding
penchant for sniffing the breezes from the White House
and director’s office and trimming his sails accordingly
would be shocked to see him actually exercise those
prerogatives. Rather, he has obediently acquiesced in
denying Congress the particulars of his
investigations—the one on the performance of CIA
officers before 9/11, for example, which reportedly
heaped criticism on Medal of Freedom awardee Tenet and
other senior agency officials. And according to today’s
New York Times, “independent watchdog” Helgersen
recently let himself be talked into submitting to a
polygraph exam by those he is supposed to be
“watch-dogging.” Remarkable.
It seems likely that Mary McCarthy quickly saw the lay
of the land and decided the Helgersen-Goss route held no
promise for success in addressing the abuses of torture
and rendition. Had she any doubts on that score, they
were presumably dispelled as she watched Director Goss
trot off with Cheney to the office of Sen. John McCain
to plead for an exception for the CIA from his draft
amendment banning torture. This particular mission was
not accomplished, but the president appended a “signing
statement” saying, in effect, that he feels free to
disregard the McCain amendment banning torture.
Where else to turn? The intelligence committees of
Congress? A fool’s errand. Indelibly imprinted on my
mind is a remark made by CIA darling former Congressman
Charlie Wilson, D-Texas, when he took the reins of the
House Intelligence Committee during the war with the
USSR in Afghanistan. Wilson wrote to his CIA friends,
“Well, gentlemen, the fox is in the hen house. Do
whatever you like.” Some 20 years later, the committee’s
current chairman, Pete Hoekstra, R-Mi., has proven a
worthy successor, occasionally sniping—as he did
yesterday on TV—at National Intelligence Director John
Negroponte, but essentially giving the intelligence
agencies free rein as long as they remain harnessed
tightly to White House policy.
For example, late last year, having bowed for over a
year to White House pressure to suppress New York Times
journalist James Risen’s Pulitzer-winning scoop on
warrantless wiretapping by NSA, the Times management
suddenly awoke to the fact that Risen’s book was about
to appear. In order to avoid the embarrassment of not
having carried such a critical story by one of its own
writers, the Times told the White House that the story
was about to be published. On Dec. 5, 2005, Times
publisher Arthur Sulzberger, Jr. and Washington bureau
chief Philip Taubman were summoned to an oval office
meeting with President Bush, who tried—this time in
vain—to dissuade the Times from publishing the
warrantless eavesdropping story, which then appeared 11
days later (and six weeks after Dana Priest’s expose in
the Post regarding secret CIA prisons for interrogating
suspected terrorists).
The White House, however, forgot to inform NSA Director
Lt. Gen. Keith Alexander that a new die was cast. The
next day, Dec. 6, the blindsided Alexander—still
following the old talking points—assured visiting House
intelligence committee member Rush Holt, D-N.J., that
the NSA did not eavesdrop on Americans without a court
order. When Holt later learned he had been purposely
misled about the NSA eavesdropping program, he wrote a
blistering letter to Alexander. Nothing has been heard
from Hoekstra, though, and there is not the slightest
sign he cared very much that his colleague was lied to
on a key aspect of his oversight responsibilities.
This fits in well with a pattern long familiar to senior
intelligence officers. And, as Mary McCarthy watched
this latest charade, she must have felt affirmed in her
apparent conviction that turning to the House
“oversight” committee, in present circumstances, would
be a feckless enterprise. And who more than she could
see the high farce attached to Hoekstra’s hyperbole
yesterday on FOX as he parroted (twice) the “McCarthy
talking points” from the White House:
“This person in the CIA thought that they were above the
law (sic). They thought that the law did not apply to
them. They have put America at risk. They have put our
troops on the front lines at risk because they broke the
law.”
With all due respect, Congressman Hoekstra, if you would
exercise your oversight responsibilities, the system of
checks and balances could work, and folks like McCarthy
would not have to go to the press.
Equally feckless would be recourse to the Senate
intelligence committee chaired by Pat Roberts, R-Kan.,
patsy for the White House since day one of his tenure.
No need to rehearse the evidence here. You may wish,
though, to check out Scott Ritter’s comments on the
Semper Fi senator from Kansas.
And so, assuming there is substance to press allegations
that McCarthy has admitted she talked with the press,
small wonder. I was intrigued by a remark the press has
attributed to former CIA deputy director Dick Kerr: “I
have no idea what her motive was.” Kerr added that
McCarthy was a “good, substantive person.”
Well, Dick, it’s a no-brainer. Is it not clear that she
thought the American people should be given the chance
to know of the kidnapping, rendition, torture and other
indignities being carried out in their name? Is it not
clear that Mary McCarthy is one of those unusually
courageous officers willing to take considerable
personal risk in order to help democracy work,
information being the oxygen of democracy?
But what about her secrecy agreement? I have not spoken
with Mary McCarthy in 10 years, but it seems clear to me
she realized that she was confronted by an unwelcome
choice between her oath to defend the Constitution of
the United States and the secrecy agreement. Her entire
record shows that she did not take such restrictions
lightly. None of us did; none of us do.
But agency alumnae, at least those of my vintage,
believe we must always give priority to the
Constitution. Mary chose well and, in so doing, offers
an example to emulate.
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Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) is
a coast-to-coast enterprise; mostly intelligence
officers from analysis side of CIA. ..