Van Buren writes: "...extreme as use of the Espionage Act against government insiders and whistleblowers may be, it's only one part of the Obama administration's attempt to sideline, if not always put away, those it wants to silence. Increasingly, federal agencies or departments intent on punishing a whistleblower are also resorting to extra-legal means."
Prior to Obama's presidency, there were only three cases of Americans charges under the Espionage Act. (photo: Guardian UK)
Silent State: The Campaign Against Whistleblowers
10 February 12
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n January 23rd, the Obama administration charged former CIA officer John Kiriakou under the Espionage Act for disclosing classified information to journalists about the waterboarding of al-Qaeda suspects. His is just the latest prosecution in an unprecedented assault on government whistleblowers and leakers of every sort.
Kiriakou's plight will clearly be but one more battle in a broader war to ensure that government actions and sunshine policies don't go together. By now, there can be little doubt that government retaliation against whistleblowers is not an isolated event, nor even an agency-by-agency practice. The number of cases in play suggests an organized strategy to deprive Americans of knowledge of the more disreputable things that their government does. How it plays out in court and elsewhere will significantly affect our democracy.
Punish the Whistleblowers
The Obama administration has already charged more people - six - under the Espionage Act for alleged mishandling of classified information than all past presidencies combined. (Prior to Obama, there were only three such cases in American history.)
Kiriakou, in particular, is accused of giving information about the CIA's torture programs to reporters two years ago. Like the other five whistleblowers, he has been charged under the draconian World War I-era Espionage Act.
That Act has a sordid history, having once been used against the government's political opponents. Targets included labor leaders and radicals like Eugene V. Debs, Bill Haywood, Philip Randolph, Victor Berger, John Reed, Max Eastman, and Emma Goldman. Debs, a union leader and socialist candidate for the presidency, was, in fact, sentenced to 10 years in jail for a speech attacking the Espionage Act itself. The Nixon administration infamously (and unsuccessfully) invoked the Act to bar the New York Times from continuing to publish the classified Pentagon Papers.
Yet, extreme as use of the Espionage Act against government insiders and whistleblowers may be, it's only one part of the Obama administration's attempt to sideline, if not always put away, those it wants to silence. Increasingly, federal agencies or departments intent on punishing a whistleblower are also resorting to extra-legal means. They are, for instance, manipulating personnel rules that cannot be easily challenged and do not require the production of evidence. And sometimes, they are moving beyond traditional notions of "punishment" and simply seeking to destroy the lives of those who dissent.
The well-reported case of Thomas Drake is an example. As an employee, Drake revealed to the press that the National Security Agency (NSA) spent $1.2 billion on a contract for a data collection program called Trailblazer when the work could have been done in-house for $3 million. The NSA's response? Drake's home was raided at gunpoint and the agency forced him out of his job.
�The government convinced themselves I was a bad guy, an enemy of the state, and went after me with everything they had seeking to destroy my life, my livelihood, and my person � the politics of personal destruction, while also engaging in abject, cutthroat character assassination, and complete fabrication and frame up,� Drake told Antiwar.com. �Marriages are strained, and spouses' professional lives suffer as much as their personal lives. Too often, whistleblowers end up broken, blacklisted, and bankrupted,� said the attorney who represents Drake.
In Kiriakou's case, the CIA found an excuse to fire his wife, also employed by the Agency, while she was on maternity leave. Whistleblower Bradley Manning, accused of leaking Army and State Department documents to the website WikiLeaks, spent more than a year in the worst of punitive conditions in a U.S. Marine prison and was denied the chance even to appear in court to defend himself until almost two years after his arrest. Former chief military prosecutor at Guantanamo Morris Davis lost his career as a researcher at the Library of Congress for writing a critical op-ed for the Wall Street Journal and a letter to the editor at the Washington Post on double standards at the infamous prison, as did Robert MacClean for blowing the whistle on the Transportation Security Administration.
Four employees of the Air Force Mortuary in Dover, Delaware, attempted to address shortcomings at the facility, which handles the remains of all American service members who die overseas. Retaliation against them included firings, the placing of employees on indefinite administrative leave, and the imposition of five-day suspensions. The story repeats itself in the context of whistleblowers now suing the Food and Drug Administration for electronically spying on them when they tried to alert Congress about misconduct at the agency. We are waiting to see the Army's reaction to whistleblower Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis, who documented publicly this week that senior leaders of the Department of Defense intentionally and consistently misled the American people and Congress on the conduct and progress of the Afghan War.
And this remains the most partial of lists, when it comes to recent examples of non-judicial government retaliation against whistleblowers.
Government bureaucrats know that this sort of slow-drip intimidation keeps people in line. It may, in the end, be less about disciplining a troublemaker than offering visible warning to other employees. They are meant to see what's happening and say, "Not me, not my mortgage, not my family!" � and remain silent. Of course, creative, thoughtful people also see this and simply avoid government service.
In this way, such a system can become a self-fulfilling mechanism in which ever more of the "right kind" of people chose government service, while future "troublemakers" self-select out � a system in which the punishment of leakers becomes the pre-censorship of potential leakers. At the moment, in fact, the Obama administration might as well translate the famed aphorism �all that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good people to remain silent� into Latin and carve it into the stone walls of the CIA's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, or NSA headquarters at Fort Meade, or the main office of the State Department at Foggy Bottom where I still fight to keep my job.
Silent State
I am told that, in its 223 years of existence, I am the only Foreign Service Officer ever to have written a critical book about the State Department while still employed there. We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People exposed what State did not want people to know: that they had wasted enormous amounts of money in Iraq, mostly due to ignorance and a desire for short-term successes that could be trumpeted back home. For the crime of writing this book and maintaining a blog that occasionally embarrasses, State Department officials destroyed my career, even as they confirm my thesis, and their own failure, by reducing the Baghdad Embassy to half its size in the face of Iraq's unraveling.
�The State Department was aware of Mr. Van Buren's book long prior to its release,� explains attorney Jesslyn Radack, who now represents me. �Yet instead of addressing the ample evidence of fraud, waste, and abuse in the book, State targeted the whistleblower. The State Department's retaliatory actions are a transparent attempt to intimidate and silence an employee whose critique of fraudulent, wasteful, and mismanaged U.S. reconstruction efforts in Iraq embarrassed the agency.�
Without allowing any rebuttal or defense, State suspended my security clearance, claiming my blogging was an example of �poor judgment,� transferred me from a substantive job into a meaningless telework position, threatened felony conviction over alleged disclosure of classified information, illegally banned me from entering the building where I supposedly work, and continues to try to harass and intimidate me.
My travel vouchers from as far back as the law allows have come under "routine" re-examination. My Internet activity is the subject of daily reports. My credit reports have been examined for who knows what. Department friends who email me on topical issues have been questioned by agents of Diplomatic Security, the State Department's internal police. My Freedom of Information Act request for documents to help defend myself and force State to explain its actions has been buried.
Without a security clearance, and with my Diplomatic Passport impounded, I will never serve overseas again, the lifeblood of being a Foreign Service Officer (FSO). A career that typically would extend another 10 years will be cut short in retaliation for my attempt to tell the truth about how taxpayer money was squandered in Iraq.
All of this has taken place in such a way that I cannot challenge it (except by writing and speaking about it in public � at additional risk). The State Department has standard disciplinary procedures that it could have invoked against me, but those leave room for public challenges and, in some cases, would allow me to force documents into the open that State would rather not share with you.
Hall Walkers: Ghosts in the Machine
Before �telework� existed as an option that allowed undesirable employees to be sent home and into a kind of benign house arrest, people like me at State were called �hall walkers.� They were the ones whom the Department no longer wanted as employees, but who could not be fired due to lack of evidence. So they would have their security clearances suspended without recourse, be removed from their assignments, and yet told that, to get paid, they needed to be physically present in the main State building eight hours a day.
Since they were not assigned to an office, State was wholly unconcerned about how they occupied themselves during those long empty days. And though as a �teleworker� I am not one, the hall walkers are still with us.
The main State building is enormous, with literally miles and miles of corridors, and the hall walker might wander them, kill time at the library, have a long lunch, stop in to chat with former colleagues still willing to be seen in his or her company. Even in the first FSO training course called A-100, young diplomats are advised that the most ignominious end to a career is not failing at your job, but being thrown into the purgatory of hall walking � still on the payroll but no longer a member of the tribe. Disowned, shunned, exiled in the ancient Greek tradition.
Hall walking is a far cry from being dragged through a trial or spending two years in solitary, but it exists on the same continuum. No one at State will say how many employees still exist in the shadow world of hall walking, but at least dozens is a reasonable guess.
I am told as well that State Department officials are increasingly moving to suspend security clearances for acts wholly outside the realm of security, like blogging they find offensive. One State Department Human Resources employee confided to me that this has, in fact, become the go-to strategy for winnowing out unwanted employees in the too-hard-to-fire category, a sad evolution, given the sorry history of the State Department in the McCarthy era.
Fighting Back
For a government employee being punished extra-legally by an agency ignoring its own rules, there is still one recourse: the Office of the Special Counsel. Created in 1979, it was to be an ombudsman meant to keep an eye on governmental nastiness and ensure the implementation of the Whistleblower Protection Act. Empowered, among other things, to investigate and �make right� instances of federal retaliation against legitimate whistleblowers, the office was sidelined through several administrations.
Under George W. Bush, it was embroiled in scandal when its head, Special Counsel Scott Bloch, instead purged its staff of lawyers who disagreed with him and announced that he would not follow up on cases of discrimination based on sexual orientation. Last summer, Bloch pleaded guilty to deleting evidence from his computer while under investigation for retaliating against his own staff.
At a moment when government extra-legal retaliation against whistleblowers and leakers is on the rise, call it ironic, but the Office of the Special Counsel has seen a rebirth under its current head, Obama appointee Carolyn Lerner. As the Washington Post recently described her, Lerner has �gone to the mat and tried to expand the boundaries of the law's protections for whistleblowers. She has lifted long-sagging morale at an agency that, instead of behaving as an independent watchdog, has treaded water for much of its existence.�
Specifically, Lerner reassigned staff members to review a backlog of cases against whistleblowers facing reprisals, including �veterans' hospital staff members reporting poor lab procedures [and] air traffic controllers claiming flight-pattern dangers.� She has enforced a 60-day limit on responses from federal agencies. The Office seems to have re-embraced its mission. �She's a pit bull,� says Tom Devine, legal director of the Government Accountability Project, which defends whistleblowers.
There are other signs of resistance in Washington to the urge to cloak the government in silence. For example, Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA) launched an investigation into the Food and Drug Administration's secret email monitoring of scientists warning that unsafe medical devices were being approved over their objections. Whistleblowers, said Grassley, often are treated �like skunks at a picnic.�
The Senator demanded that FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg disclose who authorized the monitoring, how many employees were targeted, and whether the agency obtained passwords to personal email accounts, allowing communications on private computers to be intercepted. He also wants to know whether the agency's two-year surveillance campaign is still ongoing.
In another recent case, the Office of the Special Counsel formally asked the Air Force to take harsher disciplinary action against supervisors at the Dover mortuary who had tried to fire two whistleblowers who raised accusations about the mishandling of soldiers' remains.
The Government Accountability Project has filed a complaint on my behalf with the Office of the Special Counsel demanding that the State Department cease its retaliatory personnel practices against me. The Department is particularly vulnerable, given its drumbeat of support for the rights of bloggers and other dissidents in the Middle East and China. State has already been forced to readmit me to the building and return my access badge. I remain an optimist, believing that my complaint will succeed and that, someday, I will return to work at a State Department where employees can talk openly about the bad as well as the good.
It Matters
Americans, who elect and pay for their government in Washington, deserve to know exactly what it does there � and elsewhere around the world � with their dollars. As in my case in Iraq, such information often is only available if some insider, shocked or disturbed by what he or she has seen, decides to speak out, either directly, in front of Congress, or through a journalist.
The Obama administration, which arrived in Washington promoting �sunshine� in government, turned out to be committed to silence and the censoring of less-than-positive news about its workings. While it has pursued no prosecutions against CIA torturers, senior leaders responsible for Abu Ghraib or other war crimes, or anyone connected with the illegal surveillance of American citizens, it has gone after whistleblowers and leakers with ever increasing fierceness, both in court and inside the halls of various government agencies.
There is a barely visible but still significant war raging between a government obsessed with secrecy and whistleblowers seeking to expose waste, fraud, and wrongdoing. Right now, it is a largely one-sided struggle and the jobs of those of us who are experiencing retaliation are the least of what's at stake.
Think of those victims of retaliatory personnel practices and imprisoned whistleblowers as the canaries in the deep mineshaft of federal Washington, clear evidence of a government that serves its people poorly and has no interest in being held accountable for that fact. This administration fears the noise of democracy, preferring the silence of compliance.
Peter Van Buren, a 23-year veteran Foreign Service Officer at the State Department, spent a year in Iraq as Team Leader for two State Department Provincial Reconstruction Teams. Now in Washington and a TomDispatch regular, he writes about Iraq and the Middle East at his blog, We Meant Well. His book, We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People (The American Empire Project, Metropolitan Books), has recently been published. To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest Tomcast audio interview in which Van Buren discusses what it means to be a governmental whistleblower, click here, or download it to your iPod here.
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The states equivalents of Fed'l Whistleblowers Protection Act, ie, NJ Conscientious Employee Protection Act, seemed 2 give implied instructions 2 turn any whistleblower's words against them, only with exponential force. If u WITNESSED CORRUPTION, THE FINGER POINTING WENT BOOMERANGING BACK AT U!
Instead of continuously being emotionally, etc., defensive (by either
being part of the problem of corruption OR part of what must be the RELATIVE "solution" of whistleblowing,)
perhaps there IS a way to ABSOLUTELY "dissent" prior 2 ever having to BE a defensive participant in the 1st place!
I'm trying a new paradigm & I hope it derails all defensiveness & all need TO BE a whistleblower because I'm going 2 use the energy spent on the drama & ego of relative whistleblowing to work (playfully, I hope, except when life or death issues demand otherwise,) towards absolute love & humor, risking being spontaneous in the ambiguity of optimal "flow".
What if language were not means for communication nor understanding, but words were only to be used randomly for inane meaningless ends? What if there were no such thing as relevance, and logic had none?
What if implication was not that at all, but only what you wanted to believe, and inference meant more than metaphysical reality? What if lies were truth and truth did not exist?
What if all decisions and choices were based upon superstition, and belief and hope, absent critical thinking, ruled the day?
... ... ...
What if a whistleblower -- let's call him, Bradley Manning -- became aware of inhumane activities and war crimes. He then brought that information to his "superiors," and was told to go back to work. After nothing was done to stop or adjudicate nefarious and illegal acts, and the work he was being asked to do was further contributing to these crimes, he -- allegedly -- passes classified information (evidence of wrongdoing) to a media source with the hope that raising public awareness will open dialogue and discussion, which would hopefully force an end to egregious and illegal activity; and all the while remaining drama-free and anonymous with his ego in check.
Personal happiness is not the solution to everything, obliviousness is not necessarily better, and some good deeds should go unpunished.
You say personal happiness is not the solution to everything, then what IS personal happiness the solution to/for? Of course happiness on the Maslow scale builds on and derives from actual survival, first and foremost, but if we CAN be made defensive about that primary state of survival, if we lack the confidence that while surviving we can be MADE to doubt that we are survivng at all, then any "enhancements" to that base survival "matrix", etc., is defensiveness! So what I theorize is that unless and until we HAVE ABSOLUTE confidence that we HAVE life, then, in all circumstances, contingent and or necessary, life HAS us! We may as well be robots, Artificial Intelligence, a como=uter "app" or even mere viruses! lol
I am saying people (sheeple?) want, or settle for the drama and ego of relative "happiness", ( the competitive rat race and "The american Dream" illusion, etc.), because HAVING limitless CONFIDENCE, truly experiencing the transcendent limitlessness that IS POSSIBILITY in the face of the anxiety of ambiguity, scares them into "sheepledom"!
First, I refer you back to my first response.
Second, on "people (sheeple?) want[ing], or settle[ing] for the drama and ego of relative "happiness", ( the competitive rat race and "The american Dream" illusion, etc."
I am reminded of stifling work environments because of issues that have importance, in terms of basic fairness, such as, discrimination, and harassment (sexual or otherwise), yet are turned against the intended or best result into legalistic power-mongering by otherwise weakly constituted and dispositioned, overly sensitive bureaucratic bottom dwellers whose sensibility is to use political correctness and litigiousness for hierarchical advantage or monetary gain at someone else's expense.
Is this the drams of which you speak?
Last, and most important, I don't agree that whistle-blowing -- and certainly not necessarily -- has ego nor drama attached to them, except, in that, it comes with the territory of taking on powerful interests.
Character, integrity, reputation, career, family, ... everything comes under assault when taking on the powerful and government institutions, which is primarily why whistleblowers are afforded legal protections. The first rule of power appears to be to destroy all perceived enemies, so in that regard, there will be drama. Whistle-blowing takes a special brand of courage, the polar opposite of "sheepledom," and they should be protected and applauded.
You mean like Newt's GOPAC memo from 1996, "Language: A Key Mechanism of Control" at http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4443.htm ? I didn't know about it at the time, but it seems a logical reason why a GOP fund raiser implored us to "fight dirtier than Democrats," the reason I left the despoiled Republican party about the same time Elizabeth Warren did.
Did anyone else notice the numbers of whistle blowers in the first Cheney/Bush administration compared to the almost total silencing of them after 2004? Whistle blowers aren't always right but I don't think we can live in a democracy without healthy paths for them to bring their information to either the public, or honest-broker internal channels that protect classified or sensitive information but get it to people who can and will act on it. Honest internal channels would preclude much of the need for the public exposure of information. I want, at the very least, protection of all complaints from purges of records like the Bush administration seems to have done on EPA information, the Vice Presidents required records, the Energy Task Force records, etc.
I heard that even Law school students, (who have to have a college degree to be admitted to law school) take remedial writing classes! lol So lets "blow the whistle" on all of higher education!
I'm not excusing Obama by any means...just adding perspective.
And I don't agree that Buch/Cheney feared the noise of Democracy, in the same sense that Obama may. Cheney/Bush hung Valerie Plame out to dry as retaliation for an Op-Ed Plame's Husband, Joe Wilson, penned to the NY Times entitled, What I Didn't Find in Africa.
Pure treason, conspiracy, and lies in the face of what they know to be, nothing more than, the appearance of equal justice under the law.
For Republicans, revelation is just a matter of time, and they have a process for that. Deny, deny, deny, lie, obscure, distract, ... support, defend, and pardon.
Democrats and Republicans govern in different spheres. Neo-cons govern with boldness, audacity, and virtual impunity (facilitated by Democratic complicity); it is that (neo-con ideology) which Obama is emulating, but he still does so as a Democrat -- or more accurately, under the letter D.
Rocky Anderson, Justice Party.
Look at his candidacy.
So why all the broken promises? He's not a monarch, nor even remotely capable of micro managing this enormous corrupt government we have. Recalling John Perkins "...Economic Hit Man", I wonder what and who is behind this and really calling the shots.
JFK got crosswise with the federal reserve and was going to reform it...so much for that plan.
Then I look at the things that he's caved on: defense, foreign policy, banking and Wall St. As for cultural issues he usually prevails or gives only a little. Curiouser and curiouser,
Granted, Obama is a mega-huge POS but so was Bush and look at the things Bill Clinton did such as getting rid of Glass-Steagall.
Obama hasn't caved on anything. He is getting exactly what he wants but uses the Republicans as his scapegoat - Obama as victim is merely political posturing a/k/a hogwash.
As for Democrats, they, too, are part of the one-party system that rules this fascist country. No politician is redeemable.
Only we the people can act to do something about this. Ignoring their theatrics and not buying into their schemes and scams as well as coming together as community in order to survive is one way. Which, btw, is the same as giving them the middle finger.
Thank you Mr. Van Buren