The leak trial of CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling never got
near a smoking gun, but the entire circumstantial case was a smokescreen.
Prosecutors were hell-bent on torching the defendant to vindicate Operation
Merlin, nine years after a book by James Risen reported that it “may have been
one of the most reckless operations in the modern history of the CIA.”
That
bestselling book, State of War, seemed to leave an indelible
stain on Operation Merlin while soiling the CIA’s image as a reasonably
competent outfit.
The prosecution of Sterling was a cleansing service for the
Central Intelligence Agency, which joined with the Justice Department to depict
the author and the whistleblower as scurrilous mud-throwers.
In the courtroom,
where journalist Risen was beyond the reach of the law, the CIA’s
long-smoldering rage vented at the defendant.
Sterling had gone through channels
in 2003 to warn Senate Intelligence Committee staffers about Operation Merlin,
and he was later indicted for allegedly giving Risen classified information
about it.
For CIA officials, the prosecution wasn’t only to punish Sterling and
frighten potential whistleblowers; it was also about payback, rewriting history
and assisting with a PR comeback for the operation as well as the agency.
Last
week, the jury — drawn from an area of Northern
Virginia that is home to CIA headquarters, the Pentagon and a large number of
contractors for the military-industrial-intelligence complex — came back with
guilty verdicts on all counts.
The jurors had heard from a succession of CIA
witnesses as well as former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, extolling
Operation Merlin and deploring any effort to lift its veil of secrecy.
During
the first half of the government’s six days of testimony, the prosecution
seemed to be defending Operation Merlin more than prosecuting Jeffrey Sterling.
Prosecutors defamed Sterling’s character in opening and closing arguments, but
few CIA witnesses had anything bad to say about him.
The notable exception, CIA
official David Cohen — who ran the agency’s New York office when Sterling
worked there — testified that “his performance was extremely sub-par.”
Cohen’s
affect on the stand gave new meaning to the term hostile witness.
He exuded major antipathy toward Sterling, who had been one of the CIA’s few
American-American case officers. Sterling filed a racial bias lawsuit before
the agency fired him.
“In the wake of 9/11, Cohen moved from the CIA to the
NYPD,” Marcy Wheeler wrote. “In 2002, he got a federal court to
relax the Handschu guidelines, which had been set up in 1985 in response
to NYPD’s targeting of people for their political speech. … After
getting the rules relaxed, Cohen created teams of informants that infiltrated
mosques and had officers catalog Muslim-owned restaurants, shops, and even
schools.”
From the government’s standpoint in the courtroom, the worse it could
make Sterling look, the better the CIA and Operation Merlin would look, and
vice versa.
Throughout the trial, prosecutors put forward their case as a kind
of seesaw, elevating the operation while pushing Sterling into the dirt —
repeatedly depicting the defendant as a bitter malcontent who failed to appreciate
the nobility and great expertise that went into Operation Merlin.
“It was a
brilliant operation,” a Russian scientist exclaimed in a videotaped deposition.
Known as Mr. Merlin during the trial, he had played a central role in Operation
Merlin, delivering flawed design materials for a nuclear weapon component to an
Iranian office in Vienna back in 2000. (The scientist was a recipient of
several hundred thousand dollars as a CIA “human asset.”)
In theory, those
materials would send Iran’s government down a dead-end technical path. Mr.
Merlin’s testimony, passably smooth under government questioning, turned into a
hash during cross examination.
Well before the defense was done with the
Russian, the unraveling of his performance made it
easy to see why the government had tried to exclude him as a witness, claiming
he was too ill to testify. Few reporters covered the bulk of the trial’s
several dozen hours of testimony. (In the courtroom each day, I usually saw no
more than three or four other journalists present.)
The dire shortage of
thorough coverage meant that news media did very little to illuminate the
profuse contradictions and disturbing implications that riddled the testimony
from more than 20 employees of the CIA.
From the crumbling credibility of Mr.
Merlin, to the wavering or contradictory testimony of “Zach W,” “Bob S,” “Walter C” and other
CIA operatives, to the notably inaccurate testimony of former CIA
nonproliferation division honcho David Shedd, to many other witnesses, the
puzzle pieces that the CIA presented for Operation Merlin had gaping holes and
numerous disconnects.
The trial is over, and — although the proceedings did not
truly establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt — Jeffrey Sterling has been
convicted on nine felony counts, including seven under the egregiously
misapplied Espionage Act of 1917. His sentencing is scheduled for late April.
[Editor’s Note: Sentencing was originally scheduled for 24th April. One day earlier, a sentence of no more than two years’ probation plus a fine was given to David Petraeus, the former Director of the CIA who has a four-star General had previously overseen all coalition forces in Iraq, for the felony of providing classified information to an unauthorised person. Sterling's lawyers submitted a plea that Sterling “not receive a different form of justice” from Petraeus, but instead a similarly lenient sentence rather than the 19 to 24 years’ imprisonment sought by the federal prosecutors. On 11th May, U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema sentenced Sterling to three and a half years in prison.]
But the issues raised at the trial are far from settled. And the stakes remain
huge. In the words of Risen’s book, Operation Merlin “has been conducted in the
darkest corner of the American national security establishment.”
Today, that corner is even dimmer and more dangerous. Since the end of the Clinton administration, the CIA has expanded its missions and heightened its impunity.
An agency that insists it can do no wrong has amassed a grisly 21st century record of torture, rendition and drones, fueling the kind of terrorism that Presidents Bush and Obama have claimed to be combating.
If Operation Merlin is supposed to be some kind of exemplar for covert CIA actions that must be shielded from public scrutiny, the government is further undermining its case for cracking down on whistleblowers.
The Sterling trial record — far from being exculpatory for Operation Merlin — indicates that the CIA program was, if anything, even more shoddy and irresponsible than Risen’s book reported. More secrecy can only breed more impunity.
The trial of Jeffrey Sterling shook loose more serious questions about Operation Merlin than it laid to rest. The last big shoe in this real-life saga has yet to drop.
Norman Solomon is a journalist, media critic, and antiwar activist, and he was a candidate for the United States House of Representatives in 2012. He is the executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy and the author of books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. He is a co-founder of RootsAction.org, which has encouraged donations to the Sterling Family Fund. He blogs here. This article originally appeared here, and is reproduced at the kind suggestion of the author.
Today, that corner is even dimmer and more dangerous. Since the end of the Clinton administration, the CIA has expanded its missions and heightened its impunity.
An agency that insists it can do no wrong has amassed a grisly 21st century record of torture, rendition and drones, fueling the kind of terrorism that Presidents Bush and Obama have claimed to be combating.
If Operation Merlin is supposed to be some kind of exemplar for covert CIA actions that must be shielded from public scrutiny, the government is further undermining its case for cracking down on whistleblowers.
The Sterling trial record — far from being exculpatory for Operation Merlin — indicates that the CIA program was, if anything, even more shoddy and irresponsible than Risen’s book reported. More secrecy can only breed more impunity.
The trial of Jeffrey Sterling shook loose more serious questions about Operation Merlin than it laid to rest. The last big shoe in this real-life saga has yet to drop.
Norman Solomon is a journalist, media critic, and antiwar activist, and he was a candidate for the United States House of Representatives in 2012. He is the executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy and the author of books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. He is a co-founder of RootsAction.org, which has encouraged donations to the Sterling Family Fund. He blogs here. This article originally appeared here, and is reproduced at the kind suggestion of the author.
No comments:
Post a Comment