"I've been waiting 40 years for
someone like you.” Those were the first words Daniel Ellsberg spoke to
me when we met last year. Dan and I felt an immediate kinship; we both
knew what it meant to risk so much — and to be irrevocably changed — by
revealing secret truths.
One of the challenges of being a whistleblower is living with the
knowledge that people continue to sit, just as you did, at those desks,
in that unit, throughout the agency, who see what you saw and comply in
silence, without resistance or complaint. They learn to live not just
with untruths but with unnecessary untruths, dangerous untruths,
corrosive untruths. It is a double tragedy: What begins as a survival
strategy ends with the compromise of the human being it sought to
preserve and the diminishing of the democracy meant to justify the
sacrifice.
But unlike Dan Ellsberg, I didn’t have to wait 40 years to witness
other citizens breaking that silence with documents. Ellsberg gave the
Pentagon Papers to the New York Times and other newspapers in
1971; Chelsea Manning provided the Iraq and Afghan War logs and the
Cablegate materials to WikiLeaks in 2010. I came forward in 2013. Now
here we are in 2016, and another person of courage and conscience has
made available the set of extraordinary documents that are published in The Assassination Complex, the new book out today by Jeremy Scahill and the staff of The Intercept. (The documents were originally published last October 15 in The Drone Papers.)
We are witnessing a compression of the working period in which bad
policy shelters in the shadows, the time frame in which unconstitutional
activities can continue before they are exposed by acts of conscience.
And this temporal compression has a significance beyond the immediate
headlines; it permits the people of this country to learn about critical
government actions, not as part of the historical record but in a way
that allows direct action through voting — in other words, in a way that
empowers an informed citizenry to defend the democracy that “state
secrets” are nominally intended to support. When I see individuals who
are able to bring information forward, it gives me hope that we won’t
always be required to curtail the illegal activities of our government
as if it were a constant task, to uproot official lawbreaking as
routinely as we mow the grass. (Interestingly enough, that is how some
have begun to describe remote killing operations, as “cutting the
grass.”)
A single act of whistleblowing
doesn’t change the reality that there are significant portions of the
government that operate below the waterline, beneath the visibility of
the public. Those secret activities will continue, despite reforms. But
those who perform these actions now have to live with the fear that if
they engage in activities contrary to the spirit of society — if even a
single citizen is catalyzed to halt the machinery of that injustice —
they might still be held to account. The thread by which good governance
hangs is this equality before the law, for the only fear of the man who
turns the gears is that he may find himself upon them.
Hope lies beyond, when we move from extraordinary acts of revelation
to a collective culture of accountability within the intelligence
community. Here we will have taken a meaningful step toward solving a
problem that has existed for as long as our government.
Not all leaks are alike, nor are their makers. Gen. David Petraeus,
for instance, provided his illicit lover and favorable biographer
information so secret it defied classification, including the names of
covert operatives and the president’s private thoughts on matters of
strategic concern. Petraeus was not charged with a felony, as the
Justice Department had initially recommended, but was instead permitted
to plead guilty to a misdemeanor. Had an enlisted soldier of modest rank
pulled out a stack of highly classified notebooks and handed them to
his girlfriend to secure so much as a smile, he’d be looking at many
decades in prison, not a pile of character references from a Who’s Who
of the Deep State.
There are authorized leaks and also permitted disclosures. It is rare
for senior administration officials to explicitly ask a subordinate to
leak a CIA officer’s name to retaliate against her husband, as appears
to have been the case with Valerie Plame. It is equally rare for a month
to go by in which some senior official does not disclose some protected
information that is beneficial to the political efforts of the parties
but clearly “damaging to national security” under the definitions of our
law.
This dynamic can be seen quite clearly in the al Qaeda “conference
call of doom” story, in which intelligence officials, likely seeking to
inflate the threat of terrorism and deflect criticism of mass
surveillance, revealed to a neoconservative website extraordinarily
detailed accounts of specific communications they had intercepted,
including locations of the participating parties and the precise
contents of the discussions. If the officials’ claims were to be
believed, they irrevocably burned an extraordinary means of learning the
precise plans and intentions of terrorist leadership for the sake of a
short-lived political advantage in a news cycle. Not a single person
seems to have been so much as disciplined as a result of the story that
cost us the ability to listen to the alleged al Qaeda hotline.
If harmfulness and authorization make no difference, what explains the distinction between the permissible and the impermissible disclosure?
The answer is control. A leak is acceptable if it’s not seen as a
threat, as a challenge to the prerogatives of the institution. But if
all of the disparate components of the institution — not just its head
but its hands and feet, every part of its body — must be assumed to have
the same power to discuss matters of concern, that is an existential
threat to the modern political monopoly of information control,
particularly if we’re talking about disclosures of serious wrongdoing,
fraudulent activity, unlawful activities. If you can’t guarantee that
you alone can exploit the flow of controlled information, then the
aggregation of all the world’s unmentionables — including your own —
begins to look more like a liability than an asset.
Truly unauthorized disclosures are necessarily an act of resistance —
that is, if they’re not done simply for press consumption, to fluff up
the public appearance or reputation of an institution. However, that
doesn’t mean they all come from the lowest working level. Sometimes the
individuals who step forward happen to be near the pinnacle of power.
Ellsberg was in the top tier; he was briefing the secretary of defense.
You can’t get much higher, unless you are the secretary of defense, and
the incentives simply aren’t there for such a high-ranking official to
be involved in public interest disclosures because that person already
wields the influence to change the policy directly.
At the other end of the spectrum is Manning, a junior enlisted
soldier, who was much nearer to the bottom of the hierarchy. I was
midway in the professional career path. I sat down at the table with the
chief information officer of the CIA, and I was briefing him and his
chief technology officer when they were publicly making statements like
“We try to collect everything and hang on to it forever,” and everybody
still thought that was a cute business slogan. Meanwhile I was designing
the systems they would use to do precisely that. I wasn’t briefing the
policy side, the secretary of defense, but I was briefing the operations
side, the National Security Agency’s director of technology. Official
wrongdoing can catalyze all levels of insiders to reveal information,
even at great risk to themselves, so long as they can be convinced that
it is necessary to do so.
Reaching those individuals, helping them realize that their first
allegiance as a public servant is to the public rather than to the
government, is the challenge. That’s a significant shift in cultural
thinking for a government worker today.
I’ve argued that whistleblowers are elected by circumstance. It’s not
a virtue of who you are or your background. It’s a question of what you
are exposed to, what you witness. At that point the question becomes Do you honestly believe that you have the capability to remediate the problem, to influence policy?
I would not encourage individuals to reveal information, even about
wrongdoing, if they do not believe they can be effective in doing so,
because the right moment can be as rare as the will to act.
This is simply a pragmatic,
strategic consideration. Whistleblowers are outliers of probability, and
if they are to be effective as a political force, it’s critical that
they maximize the amount of public good produced from scarce seed. When I
was making my decision, I came to understand how one strategic
consideration, such as waiting until the month before a domestic
election, could become overwhelmed by another, such as the moral
imperative to provide an opportunity to arrest a global trend that had
already gone too far. I was focused on what I saw and on my sense of
overwhelming disenfranchisement that the government, in which I had
believed for my entire life, was engaged in such an extraordinary act of
deception.
At the heart of this evolution is that whistleblowing is a
radicalizing event — and by “radical” I don’t mean “extreme”; I mean it
in the traditional sense of radix, the root of the issue. At
some point you recognize that you can’t just move a few letters around
on a page and hope for the best. You can’t simply report this problem to
your supervisor, as I tried to do, because inevitably supervisors get
nervous. They think about the structural risk to their career. They’re
concerned about rocking the boat and “getting a reputation.” The
incentives aren’t there to produce meaningful reform. Fundamentally, in
an open society, change has to flow from the bottom to the top.
As someone who works in the intelligence community, you’ve given up a
lot to do this work. You’ve happily committed yourself to tyrannical
restrictions. You voluntarily undergo polygraphs; you tell the
government everything about your life. You waive a lot of rights because
you believe the fundamental goodness of your mission justifies the
sacrifice of even the sacred. It’s a just cause.
And when you’re confronted with evidence — not in an edge case, not
in a peculiarity, but as a core consequence of the program — that the
government is subverting the Constitution and violating the ideals you
so fervently believe in, you have to make a decision. When you see that
the program or policy is inconsistent with the oaths and obligations
that you’ve sworn to your society and yourself, then that oath and that
obligation cannot be reconciled with the program. To which do you owe a
greater loyalty?
One of the extraordinary things
about the revelations of the past several years, and their accelerating
pace, is that they have occurred in the context of the United States as
the “uncontested hyperpower.” We now have the largest unchallenged
military machine in the history of the world, and it’s backed by a
political system that is increasingly willing to authorize any use of
force in response to practically any justification. In today’s context
that justification is terrorism, but not necessarily because our leaders
are particularly concerned about terrorism in itself or because they
think it’s an existential threat to society. They recognize that even if
we had a 9/11 attack every year, we would still be losing more people
to car accidents and heart disease, and we don’t see the same
expenditure of resources to respond to those more significant threats.
What it really comes down to is the political reality that we have a
political class that feels it must inoculate itself against allegations
of weakness. Our politicians are more fearful of the politics of
terrorism — of the charge that they do not take terrorism seriously —
than they are of the crime itself.
As a result we have arrived at this unmatched capability,
unrestrained by policy. We have become reliant upon what was intended to
be the limitation of last resort: the courts. Judges, realizing that
their decisions are suddenly charged with much greater political
importance and impact than was originally intended, have gone to great
lengths in the post-9/11 period to avoid reviewing the laws or the
operations of the executive in the national security context and setting
restrictive precedents that, even if entirely proper, would impose
limits on government for decades or more. That means the most powerful
institution that humanity has ever witnessed has also become the least
restrained. Yet that same institution was never designed to operate in
such a manner, having instead been explicitly founded on the principle
of checks and balances. Our founding impulse was to say, “Though we are
mighty, we are voluntarily restrained.”
When you first go on duty at CIA
headquarters, you raise your hand and swear an oath — not to government,
not to the agency, not to secrecy. You swear an oath to the
Constitution. So there’s this friction, this emerging contest between
the obligations and values that the government asks you to uphold, and
the actual activities that you’re asked to participate in.
These disclosures about the Obama administration’s killing program
reveal that there’s a part of the American character that is deeply
concerned with the unrestrained, unchecked exercise of power. And there
is no greater or clearer manifestation of unchecked power than assuming
for oneself the authority to execute an individual outside of a
battlefield context and without the involvement of any sort of judicial
process.
Traditionally, in the context of military affairs, we’ve always
understood that lethal force in battle could not be subjected to ex ante
judicial constraints. When armies are shooting at each other, there’s
no room for a judge on that battlefield. But now the government has
decided — without the public’s participation, without our knowledge and
consent — that the battlefield is everywhere. Individuals who don’t
represent an imminent threat in any meaningful sense of those words are
redefined, through the subversion of language, to meet that definition.
Inevitably that conceptual subversion finds its way home, along with
the technology that enables officials to promote comfortable illusions
about surgical killing and nonintrusive surveillance. Take, for
instance, the Holy Grail of drone persistence, a capability that the
United States has been pursuing forever. The goal is to deploy
solar-powered drones that can loiter in the air for weeks without coming
down. Once you can do that, and you put any typical signals collection
device on the bottom of it to monitor, unblinkingly, the emanations of,
for example, the different network addresses of every laptop,
smartphone, and iPod, you know not just where a particular device is in
what city, but you know what apartment each device lives in, where it
goes at any particular time, and by what route. Once you know the
devices, you know their owners. When you start doing this over several
cities, you’re tracking the movements not just of individuals but of
whole populations.
By preying on the modern necessity to stay connected, governments can
reduce our dignity to something like that of tagged animals, the
primary difference being that we paid for the tags and they’re in our
pockets. It sounds like fantasist paranoia, but on the technical level
it’s so trivial to implement that I cannot imagine a future in which it
won’t be attempted. It will be limited to the war zones at first, in
accordance with our customs, but surveillance technology has a tendency
to follow us home.
Here we see the double edge of our uniquely American brand of
nationalism. We are raised to be exceptionalists, to think we are the
better nation with the manifest destiny to rule. The danger is that some
people will actually believe this claim, and some of those will expect
the manifestation of our national identity, that is, our government, to
comport itself accordingly.
Unrestrained power may be many things, but it’s not American. It is
in this sense that the act of whistleblowing increasingly has become an
act of political resistance. The whistleblower raises the alarm and
lifts the lamp, inheriting the legacy of a line of Americans that begins
with Paul Revere.
The individuals who make these disclosures feel so strongly about
what they have seen that they’re willing to risk their lives and their
freedom. They know that we, the people, are ultimately the strongest and
most reliable check on the power of government. The insiders at the
highest levels of government have extraordinary capability,
extraordinary resources, tremendous access to influence, and a monopoly
on violence, but in the final calculus there is but one figure that
matters: the individual citizen.
And there are more of us than there are of them.
Friday, 6 May 2016
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