By James Bovard
“Thank
God for the deep state,” declared former acting
CIA chief John McLaughlin recently while appearing
on a panel at George Mason University. A year ago,
the deep state was routinely reviled as a figment of
paranoid right-wingers’ imagination. But much of
the news media are now conferring the same sainthood
on the deep state that was previously bestowed on
special counsel Robert Mueller.
A New York Times article last
month gushed that “over the last three weeks,
the deep state has emerged from the shadows in
the form of real live government officials, past and
present ... and provided evidence that largely backs
up the still-anonymous whistleblower” on President
Donald Trump’s phone call to the president of
Ukraine. Times columnist James Stewart declared: “There
is a deep state, there is a bureaucracy in our
country who has pledged to respect the Constitution,
respect the rule of law ... protecting the American
people.” Times editorial writer Michelle Cottle
proclaimed that “the
deep state is alive and well” and hailed it as
“a collection of patriotic public servants.”
Intelligence agencies gone
rogue
Former CIA Director John
Brennan, appearing on the same panel as McLaughlin,
declared, “The
reason why Mr. Trump has this very contentious
relationship with CIA and FBI and the deep state
people ... is because they tell the truth.”
Much of the news coverage of
the Trump impeachment is following that storyline —
even though it is astonishing as an overheated Trump
tweet.
Five years ago, Brennan’s CIA
ignited what should have been a constitutional
crisis when it was
caught illegally spying upon the Senate
Intelligence Committee, which was compiling a
massive report on the CIA torture program. After
9/11, the CIA constructed an interrogation regime by
“consulting Egyptian and Saudi intelligence
officials
and copying Soviet interrogation methods,” The
Times reported in 2007. Secret Bush administration
torture memos “set the CIA loose to slam suspects’
heads into
walls up to 30 times in a row, to deprive
suspects of sleep for more than a week straight, to
confine them to small dark boxes for hours at a time
... and to suffocate them with water to induce the
perception that they are drowning,” Georgetown
University law professor David Cole noted. But the
only official who went to prison was John Kiriakou,
a former CIA operative who publicly
admitted that the CIA was waterboarding.
Is the deep state more
trustworthy when it is killing than when it is
torturing?
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Brennan declared
in 2016 that “the
president requires near certainty of
no collateral damage” before approving a
drone strike. Confidential CIA documents
revealed that the CIA had little or no
idea who it was killing most of the time
with its drone attacks in Pakistan,
Somalia, Afghanistan, Yemen and other
nations. A Salon analysis,
summarizing an NBC News report,
noted, “Even while admitting that the
identities of many killed by drones were
not known, the CIA documents asserted
that all those dead were enemy
combatants. The logic is twisted: If we
kill you, then you were an enemy
combatant.” Lying about drone killings
quickly became institutionalized
throughout the deep state. The Times
reported in 2015: “Every
independent investigation of the
(drone) strikes has found far more
civilian casualties than administration
officials admit.”
House Intelligence Committee chairman:
Trump betrayed America. Soon the public will hear
from patriots who defended it.
The deep state is practically
designed to destroy privacy that enable government
officials to deny illegalities. The National
Security Agency’s credibility was obliterated in
2013 when
former NSA analyst Edward Snowden revealed that
the agency can tap almost any cellphone in the
world, access anyone’s email and web-browsing
history, and crack the vast majority of computer
encryption. But the NSA’s definition of “terrorist
suspect” was ludicrously broad, including “someone
searching the web for suspicious stuff.” A few
months before Snowden’s revelations, national
intelligence director
James Clapper lied to Congress when he denied
that the NSA collects “any type of data at all on
millions, or hundreds of millions of Americans.”
Cover-ups at the Pentagon
Trump’s version of his call to
the Ukraine president has been challenged in closed
testimony to the House Intelligence Committee
by Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, the
Ukrainian-born officer who listened in to the call
while serving on the National Security Council.
There are plenty of honorable,
upright military officers, but the Pentagon per se
has as much credibility as a second-term
congressman. In the post 9/11 era, Pentagon
officials deluged the news media with false progress
claims on wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, perennially
covered up
killings of civilians, and also sought to bury
their own torture scandal (revealed in a
neglected 2008 report by a Senate investigation
co-chaired by John McCain).
The deep state has an
appalling record of abusing the whistleblowers who
are now being acclaimed. A draft Intelligence
Community Inspector General report last year found
that intelligence agencies refused to
recognize retaliation against whistleblowers in
99% of cases, according to The Daily Beast. A 2017
report by Foreign Policy magazine concluded that
“the intelligence community’s central watchdog is
in danger of crumbling thanks to mismanagement,
bureaucratic battles, clashes among big
personalities, and sidelining of whistleblower
outreach and training efforts.” After CIA Inspector
General John Helgerson compiled a damning report on
the CIA’s post 9/11 interrogation program, CIA chief
Michael Hayden
launched a major investigation of Helgerson in
2007, provoking outrage on Capitol Hill. (The CIA
managed
to delay the release of Helgerson’s report for
years, thereby keeping both Congress and the
American people in the dark regarding shocking
abuses.)
Scandal:Trump's
new impeachable offense is threatening the life of a
CIA officer
It is worse than naive to
expect the deep state to provide an antidote to the
venality of American politics. The agencies now
being exalted have some of the longest records of
deceit and crimes. The secrecy that has shrouded
U.S. intelligence, surveillance and military
operations has done nothing to make former Boy
Scouts and church choir members ascend to key
policymaking positions.
The Trump-deep state clash is
a showdown between a presidency that has become far
too powerful versus federal agencies that have
become fiefdoms that enjoy immunity for almost any
and all abuses. Regardless of the outcome of the
congressional impeachment investigation, can the
political system pull in the reins on imperious
agencies? It is unlikely.
James Bovard, author of "Attention
Deficit Democracy," is a member of USA TODAY’s
Board of Contributors. Follow him on Twitter:
@JimBovard
This article was originally published by "USA
TODAY" - -
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==See Also==
Lest we forget:
Could Trump be impeached shortly after he
takes office?: From 04/17/16:
“Impeachment” is already on the lips of pundits,
newspaper editorials, constitutional scholars, and
even a few members of Congress
Lest we forget:
Will Trump Be Impeached? 11/14/2016:
Do a LexisNexis search, and you’ll find
that “Trump” and some variant of “impeach” have
already appeared in 37 newspaper headlines.
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