From the Los Angeles Times
Intelligence abuse déjà vu
By Gary Hart
December 21, 2005
THREE WEEKS after I took the oath of office in the Senate in 1975,
then-Majority Leader Mike Mansfield appointed me to a newly created
committee — the Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations With
Respect to Intelligence Activities, which soon came to be known as the
"Church Committee," after its chairman, the late Sen. Frank Church of
Idaho. Out of 11 members, I was by far the youngest.
The Senate had impaneled the committee because of increasing
reports of abuse of authority by the country's myriad intelligence
agencies under the Nixon administration as well as previous
administrations. For two years, the committee investigated broadly —
the CIA, FBI, DIA and NSA were all within its purview — and finally, in
1976, it issued a series of recommendations designed to prevent future
abuses.
Today, one has only to consider the behavior of the Bush
administration during the Iraq war to appreciate how soon we forget,
how little we learn and how pervasive is the tendency to violate civil
and constitutional liberties in the name of war. Virtually all of the
reforms recommended by the Church Committee — many of which were passed
into law — have been evaded, ignored or violated in the name of the
"war on terrorism."
It is often said that the first victim of war is the truth. In
fact, the first victim of American war is the liberty of Americans.
During our investigations of intelligence abuse, we discovered
that the government had engaged in widespread surveillance of a very
large number of American citizens. Civil rights leaders were monitored.
Antiwar groups were under surveillance. Domestic phones were tapped.
Mail was opened. The FBI conducted warrantless "black bag" break-ins of
private residences and offices. We wrote an entire report on
warrantless electronic surveillance by the FBI — exactly what the NSA
has now been authorized to do by the president.
One particularly egregious program, code-named COINTELPRO, went
beyond the mere collection of intelligence on domestic groups to
actually trying to "disrupt" or "neutralize" target groups. The excuse
given by the FBI and others was, "We are at war, and we need to do
everything we can to defeat our enemy." Sound familiar?
In some cases, the intelligence services even turned violent. The
CIA, for instance, conducted the infamous Phoenix program that resulted
in the systematic assassination of thousands of Vietnamese villagers
accused of collaborating with the Viet Cong. This was the 1970s version
of Abu Ghraib. During the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations we
tried (with obsessive insistence in the case of Fidel Castro) to
assassinate at least six foreign leaders. Too bad we didn't have the
Predator then. It would have been much simpler.
Our committee's work resulted in many reforms. The Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 required special intelligence
courts to approve national security wiretaps. The Bush administration,
however, has found that statute inconvenient and, predictably, has
ignored it.
Our committee also recommended presidential "findings" before
extraordinary covert operations were undertaken. This was not designed
to undermine the CIA but to protect it; until then it had been left
dangling in the wind when misused by presidents who wished to claim
"plausible deniability."
That reform surfaced during another period of political abuse —
the infamous Iran-Contra affair, involving Bible-shaped cakes, trading
with the enemy, lying to Congress and avoidance of accountability. It
turns out that President Reagan, contrary to his own memory, had signed
a "finding" authorizing the whole bizarre episode.
Again to support the CIA, our panel laid the groundwork for the
1982 Intelligence Identities Protection Act that prevented
identification of CIA operatives. This was the act that now appears to
have been violated by at least half of the Bush White House in its
demented efforts to punish Ambassador Joe Wilson by "outing" his
undercover wife.
So what goes around, comes around. Here we are again, 30 years
later, in yet another unwise war, no wiser and once again willing to
sacrifice constitutional liberties for security expediency. If there
was one lesson all of us who served on the Church Committee learned, it
was that there are no secrets, that everything comes out and that the
sacrifice of liberty is almost never justified by improved security.
If the U.S. is to prevail, it must grow up. It must learn from its
mistakes, and not repeat them. It must finally understand that our
security cannot be ensured by sacrifice of our own liberties.
Former Sen. GARY HART (D-Colo.) is the author of
"The Shield and the Cloak," to be published in February by Oxford
University Press.
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times