Classification Games Hiding the Afghan Defeat
Amidst all the discussion of the Administration’s crack-down on leaks, two details have made it clear the Administration is using its own abuse of classification to hide reports of our impending defeat in Afghanistan.
Administration leaks to enforce and protect our pro-corruption policy
One of those comes from Sarah Chayes, the former Stanley McChrystal advisor. She was last seen on the pages of this blog complaining about CIA support for corruption in Afghanistan. In a new piece, she offers one of the most interesting takes on the Administration’s pursuit of leaks.
While her main point is that if reporters were as exposed as their sources to legal consequences for leaks, they might better judge the truly important leaks, she throws some fascinating details showing how broken the classification system is.
Far too much information is protected by unwarranted classification. It’s hard to take a system seriously that places so many gigabytes of material that are not critical to national security under the same umbrella as the few nuggets that are. I’ve seen a New Yorker article included among prep documents for a National Security Council meeting stamped SECRET//NOFORN (meaning that only cleared U.S. citizens were allowed to read it).
[snip]
In September 2010, a flurry of coverage in major U.S. newspapers reported a supposed government decision on how corruption in Afghanistan would be handled. Perusing the articles with growing wonder, I looked down at a memo on my desk. Not only were passages quoted from it classified, the document was also watermarked DRAFT. No decision had been made yet because debate on the draft had not even reached the level of Cabinet secretaries. It was a classic Washington case of offensive leaking. For months, I was convinced that the perpetrator was the late Richard Holbrooke, then special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan. But I kept asking reporters. Finally I traced the leak to a senior White House official, whose career has progressed untroubled.
She makes it very clear what the second example of classification abuse is. While she links to this early September 2010 WaPo article describing a decision to ignore corruption in Afghanistan, in her own account of what happened, she points to mid-September as the period when it became clear top figures in the Administration had bought off on supporting corruption in exchange for “progress” towards wiping out the Taliban.
Effectively, Chayes is suggesting that a top White House figure effectively won the debate in support of ignoring corruption in Afghanistan by leaking a draft classified decision as a fait accompli. Given her suggestion that this person’s career has “progressed,” it’s a safe bet that it is one of the people — like current National Security Advisor Tom Donilan, current CIA Director John Brennan, or current Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes — who got promoted since this leak.
Chayes doesn’t provide much guidance about which New Yorker article was classified SECRET and used in a National Security Council meeting, but I’m betting it was this Dexter Filkins article that rehearses the same issues of corruption. As I’ve noted, while the NYT (where Filkins had recently departed) only hinted at how badly the collapse of the Kabul Bank implicated Hamid Karzai’s corrupt administration, Filkins provided extensive details. The Filkins article, like the earlier series of articles, arises out of the decision to capitulate to CIA bagman Muhammad Zia Salehi’s blackmail to avoid prosecution.
Salehi telephoned Karzai from his jail cell. “He told Karzai, ‘If I spend one night in jail, I’ll bring the whole thing down,’ ” the Western official recalled.
Out of fear Salehi would “bring the whole thing down,” it seems, the Obama Administration chose to abuse the classification system to ignore — while hiding the true extent of — the corruption of our Afghan partners.
Selective protection of CIA’s efforts to convince our allies to remain in Afghanistan
Meanwhile, one of the things the government convinced Bradley Manning trial judge Denise Lind to keep secret even after it had been inadvertently released once appears to relate to CIA’s efforts to shore up support for the Afghan War among our European allies.
Alexa O’Brien makes a compelling argument that one of the witnesses who will testify to the harm allegedly caused by Manning’s leaks in secret is Robert Roland. She further argues that Roland will testify about 2 CIA Red Cell Memos, one of which strategizes how to ward off political opposition to the Afghan War of the kind that got our coalition partners in the Netherlands ousted (the other, which I wrote about here, pertains to concerns that other countries will figure out we export terrorism). The analysis of the memo itself is rather unsophisticated; it argues if we emphasize the benefit for women of our continued presence in Afghanistan and the support one poll showed Afghans had for our presence, it’ll be enough to keep French and German voters in line.
But I guess it is rather embarrassing to have CIA’s reflections, however naive, on how to counter democratic opposition to war out there. And I suppose Roland’s identity might have been protected until whatever reviewer missed it in one of Manning’s defense filings.
At this point, however, both are public. Yet Roland’s identity and the CIA reports are being treated with far more sensitivity than far more damning State reports that will be discussed publicly.
Ah well. The report I want to see is the CIA plan to shore up support for the Afghan war as it becomes more and more clear the war serves only to prop up the crooks the CIA has been bribing for 12 years.
I’ve had the probably false notion for years that a part of our incursion in Afghanistan was a nod to the Republican evangelical base at the time. More likely just a convenient by-product.
http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/09/20/gen.bush.transcript/
“Transcript of President Bush’s address
September 21, 2001
. . . And tonight the United States of America makes the following demands on the Taliban:
— Deliver to United States authorities all of the leaders of Al Qaeda who hide in your land.
— Release all foreign nationals, including American citizens you have unjustly imprisoned. ”
There were more demands, but perhaps the order implies the priorities.
http://www.bpnews.net/printerfriendly.asp?ID=12171
” ‘Today we’ve got incredibly good news,’ President George W. Bush said in an impromptu news conference Nov. 15, interrupting a dinner with Russian President Vladimir Putin at Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas.
‘Our United States military rescued eight humanitarian workers who have been in prison in Afghanistan.’ ”
“President Bush, who had rejected attempts by the Taliban to use the aid workers as bargaining chips in the U.S.-led military campaign against the Afghan rulers and Osama bin Laden’s Afghan-based terror network, said in his comments to the media, ‘There have been a lot of people praying for the eight — eight innocent folks. … [A lot] of the Waco citizens have been in deep prayer that they be rescued, and their prayers were answered.’ ”
“The nighttime rescue of the aid workers was accomplished by U.S. troops aboard three Special Forces helicopters who flew across 100 miles of hostile territory to make the pickup, ABC News reported.”
http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2001/11/images/20011126-1.html
http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/attack/2001/11/25/aidworkers.htm
“Heather Mercer, 24, and Dayna Curry, 30, each spoke briefly, thanking God and Bush for helping them.”
Second billing.
Very nice weaving of the threads into a coherent pattern, EW. many thanks.
This Robert Roland?
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/dr-bob-roland/8/ab/418
@America’s Life Coach: Pretty sure, yeah. When I first read Alexa’s piece, there was a page showing he was DOD assigned at CIA. Can’t find it now.
let’s see now,
which numbered cia complete fuckup is this?
beginning our numbering with, say, arbenz and m. mosadegue?
isn’t it comforting to understand how our gov’s passion for secrecy protects us from knowing how incompetent and non-protecting our cia “dark-side” agents and administrators are?
and how childishly absurd the ever-burning hope among u.s. politicians that secret, manly, “bond, james bond” activities can save us from the latest incarnation of folk unhappy with grasping, insensitive exercise of american power in their land and culture.
@omphaloscepsis:
Why are we in Afghanistan? To keep the Chinese from getting its rare earths and other mineral goodies. That’s basically it — the godbothering is window dressing.
The LA Times is running a ‘feel good’ story about an Afghan farmer who’s inspiring his neighbors to resist the Taliban. They have a photo of him out in his field … of poppies. I think the idea is to make us believe we’re winning hearts and minds and thus the war, but I don’t buy it.
@P J Evans:
Here’s another version of that story. It’s certainly more detailed.
The UK has an Official Secrets Act. It is considered to be designed to protect the bureaucracy from informed criticism. aka: Embarrassment.
The same purpose as over classification of government workings int he US.
I wonder who the naive official was who came out with this gem: “If this were America, fifty people would have been arrested by now,” one American official said.
Apparently s/he isn’t acquainted with the crimes of our banksters and the lack of prosecutions.
Much as I would like to believe it true that the U.S. thinks it has lost in Afghanistan, or if it does think so, that it is planning to leave, I think it would be self delusion at this time to think so. After all, the geopolitical goals of obstructing and containing Russia and China and overturning the Iranian regime, and the trillions in natural resources that are located in Afghanistan and its neighbors, and the access routes and pipelines we still want to build through Afghanistan still stand, and are things the Administration and the energy and mining companies, the military contractors, and banks that finance them, still have their eye on and their teeth in.