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Lie to Congress; Get Fourth Star
U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Keith Alexander may well be harboring the thought attributed to prevaricator Oliver North upon being spared punishment -- and instead getting rewarded handsomely -- for lying about the Iran-Contra Affair: "Is this a great country or what!"
Gen. Alexander, Director of the National Security Agency since August 2005, is about to become what the Army describes as "dual hatted." The Senate is about to confirm him to another highly sensitive leadership position requiring the utmost integrity and fidelity to the Constitution when he has shown neither.
Despite that, after sizing up the enormous challenge of running the new U.S. cyber-warfare command, Sen. James Inhofe, R-Oklahoma, looked at Gen. Alexander and added, "And you're the right person for it."
Not for the first time, neither Inhofe nor his colleagues seem to have done their homework. Or maybe it is simply the case that Congress now accepts being lied to as part of the woodwork in the Capitol.
Alexander, you see, has a publicly established record of lying about NSA's warrantless wiretapping. Call me naïve or obsolete, but when I was an Army officer it was understood that an officer did not lie - and especially not to Congress. Gen. Alexander seems to have missed that block of instruction.
And the same can be said for so many other very senior Army officers. It becomes easier to understand why Army Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba compared some of his colleagues during the Bush administration to the Mafia.
No Additional Stars for Taguba
Maj. Gen. Taguba conducted the first (and only real) investigation of the abuses at Abu Ghraib. His brutally honest report was leaked to the press - and thus became largely responsible for preventing the scandal from being swept entirely under the rug. Rather than thank Taguba for upholding the honor of the U.S. Army, the Bush administration and more senior generals singled him out for ridicule, retribution and forced retirement. They made him an example of what happens if you don't toe the party line.
Taguba told investigative journalist Seymour Hersh of a chilling conversation he had with Gen. John Abizaid, then CENTCOM commander, a few weeks after Taguba's report became public in 2004. Sitting in the back of Abizaid's Mercedes sedan in Kuwait, Abizaid quietly told Taguba, "You and your report will be investigated."
"I'd been in the Army 32 years by then," Taguba told Hersh, "and it was the first time that I thought I was in the Mafia."
Getting back to Gen. Alexander's nomination, if our senators continue to feed on thin gruel like that served up by the Washington Post, Alexander is a shoo-in to become the first head of the Cyber Command, newly established to enhance the kind of capabilities for waging network warfare that the Pentagon believes it needs.
Technically speaking, Alexander's training and experience would qualify him for the job. But, as I will show in what follows, if Congress wants to be able to get honest answers from someone in such a sensitive post, it should send the general packing.
Premium on Trustworthiness
As Alexander testified Thursday before the Senate Armed Services Committee that is weighing his nomination, it became frighteningly clear that his new scope of responsibility would be virtually (no pun intended) unbounded - the more so inasmuch as he would keep his job as NSA director.
Alexander himself conceded the point that much about cyber-warfare is "unchartered (sic) territory." He got that right! It's also uncharted.
"Civil liberties, privacy all come into that equation," Alexander said, "while you try to, on the same network, potentially take care of bad actors."
This gave little comfort to committee members with concerns that civil liberties could take a back seat to the Cyber Command's broadly-but-vaguely defined tasks, like "executing full-spectrum military, cyberspace operations." Nathan Hodge, writing in Wired, observed that apparently Alexander would be cyber guru over "everything but the kitchen sink."
No sighs of relief or reassurance were heard as committee members read Alexander's written answers to earlier questions from senators. For example, in an attempt to mollify some of the senators' concerns, Alexander had written this:
"It is difficult for me to conceive of an instance where it would be appropriate to attack a bank or a financial institution, unless perhaps it was being used solely to support enemy military operations."
What about the Internet? Could Alexander order his cyber-warriors to shut it down?
Alexander promised to be sensitive to the vagaries of cyber-warfare and said he would honor the laws of war and the impact on civilians. It seems he was protesting a tad too much as he promised repeatedly to "operate within applicable laws, policies, and authorities."
That should be a given, no? Not for Gen. Alexander. There was an elephant in the room - Alexander's open record of deception - but no one noticed it.
Lying Is Okay
Would that the Washington Post's Ellen Nakashima had done due diligence before talking to Alexander's buddies and then writing a bland scene-setter before Thursday's hearing. Nakashima had a follow-up on Friday, in which she noted that the Senate committee members expressed confidence that he would be confirmed.
A few minutes of Googling would have turned up an incident that, by any objective standard, should be an automatic disqualifier for Alexander. (I realize that after 9/11 "everything changed." Does that mean that lying to Congress is now okay?)
Here's the story on Alexander; it requires a bit of background.
In December 2005, top New York Times officials decided to let the rest of us in on the fact that the Bush administration had been eavesdropping on American citizens without the court warrants required by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).
Get this: The fearless Times had learned of this law violation well before the 2004 election and acquiesced to White House entreaties to suppress this explosive information, which easily could have proved a game-changer.
Over a year later, in late fall 2005, the Times' investigative reporter James Risen reminded management that his explosive book, State of War: the Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration, was about to be published and would expose the warrantless eavesdropping and much else.
Times' publisher, Arthur Sulzberger, Jr., bit through his lip when he realized he could defer to the White House no longer. It would simply be too embarrassing to have Risen's book out on the street before Sulzberger let Risen and his colleagues tell the story in the newspaper.
The Times was already reeling from the well earned ridicule directed its way for its shameless reporting on the threat from Iraq with its (non-existent) "weapons of mass destruction," and the Times' cheerleading for war. How could Sulzberger and his managers pretend that the eavesdropping story did not fit Adolph Ochs's trademark criterion: All The News That's Fit To Print. (The Times' then ombudsman, Public Editor Byron Calame, later branded the newspaper's explanation for the long delay in publishing Risen's story "woefully inadequate.")
When Sulzberger told his friends in the White House that he could no longer delay reporting on Risen's findings, the publisher was immediately summoned to the Oval Office for a counseling session with President Bush on Dec. 5, 2005. Bush tried in vain to talk him out of putting the story in the Times.
But, alas, there is always someone who does not get the word. This time it was the pitiable Lt. Gen. Keith Alexander. No one in the White House thought to call NSA and tell Alexander, in effect, that the cat was out of the bag.
Alexander The Not So Great
And so the following day, Dec. 6, Alexander spoke from the old faux talking points when House intelligence oversight committee member Rush Holt, D-New Jersey, made a parish call at NSA. No, never ever would NSA eavesdrop on Americans without a court order, Alexander told Holt.
Holt is still possessed of the quaint notion that generals and other senior officials are not supposed to lie to congressional oversight committees. Accordingly, on Dec. 16 when the Times published a front-page story by James Risen and Eric Lichtblau, "Bush Lets U.S. Spy on Callers Without Courts," Holt was surprised, to say the least.
He drafted a blistering letter to Gen. Alexander, but the Intelligence Committee chair, Pete Hoekstra, R-Michigan, blocked any attempt to hold Alexander accountable for his lie.
Holt, mind you, was not simply another committee member, but rather the panel's most experienced and diligent worker in this area. Holt also had served in the intelligence community as an intelligence analyst at the State Department.
Here's what happened next. The day after the Dec. 16 Times feature, President Bush publicly admitted to - actually bragged about - committing a demonstrably impeachable offense.
Authorizing illegal electronic surveillance was a key provision of the second article of impeachment against President Richard Nixon. On July 27, 1974, this and two other articles of impeachment were approved by bipartisan votes in the House Judiciary Committee, prompting Nixon's resignation two weeks later.
Toughing It Out
For his part, Bush chose a frontal approach. Far from expressing regret, the President proudly bragged about having authorized the warrantless surveillance "more than 30 times since the September the 11th attacks."
Declaring that he would continue to do so, Bush added: "Leaders in Congress have been briefed more than a dozen times on this authorization and the activities conducted under it."
On Dec. 19, 2005, then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and then-Deputy Director of National Intelligence Michael Hayden held a press conference to answer questions about the surveillance program. (Hayden had been Alexander's predecessor as NSA director and would become head of the CIA in May 2006.)
At the press conference, Gonzales was asked why the White House decided to flout the FISA rather than attempt to amend it, choosing instead a "backdoor approach." He answered:
"We have had discussions with Congress...as to whether or not FISA could be amended to allow us to adequately deal with this kind of threat, and we were advised that that would be difficult, if not impossible."
Hmm. Impossible? It strains credulity that a program of the limited scope described would be unable to win ready approval from a Congress that had passed the sweeping "Patriot Act" in record time.
James Risen has made the following quip about the prevailing mood: "In October 2001, you could have set up guillotines on the public streets of America." (And, further disproving Gonzales' transparent excuse, FISA was amended before Bush left office essentially to make his illegal actions "legal.")
Based on all the deceptions and circumlocutions, it was not difficult to infer that the surveillance program must have been of such scope and intrusiveness that, even amid highly stoked fear, it didn't have a prayer of winning congressional approval.
So, the administration resorted to the tried and true "brief/co-opt/and gag" approach that works so well with the invertebrate leaders of the Intelligence Committees who fear nothing so much as being painted "soft on terrorism."
Naming the Bugging
Despite Bush's hubris, going with the name, "Illegal Surveillance Program (and Whaddya-Gonna-Do-About-It?)," didn't quite fit the White House's public-relations purposes. It took six weeks to settle on "Terrorist Surveillance Program," with Fox News leading the way followed by the President himself. This branding would dovetail nicely with Bush's earlier rhetoric on Dec. 17, 2005:
"In the weeks following the terrorist attacks on our nation, I authorized the National Security Agency, consistent with U.S. law and the Constitution, to intercept the international communications of people with known links to al-Qaeda and related terrorist organizations. ... The authorization I gave the National Security Agency after September 11 helped address that problem..."
"Consistent with U.S. law and the Constitution?" No way. Congress had made FISA the exclusive means for conducting national security wiretaps on Americans, and the Constitution's Fourth Amendment requires a warrant based on "probable cause."
But, of course, Gonzales and Gen. Michael Hayden, who headed NSA from 1999 until Alexander took over in August 2005, were on the same page as the President, and brazened through as strongly as Bush.
Yet, in a moment of almost poignant candor during his May 2006 confirmation hearings to become CIA director, Hayden told of his deep soul-searching when, as director of NSA, he was asked to eavesdrop on Americans without a court warrant.
"I had to make this personal decision in early October 2001," said Hayden. "It was a personal decision. ... I could not not do this."
Small wonder it was a hard decision. It was not only in direct violation of FISA (and thus a felony), but also of NSA's own time-honored "First Commandment" - Thou Shalt Not Eavesdrop on Americans Without a Warrant.
Call me old school, but I believe it was Hayden's duty to refuse an illegal order. I take some satisfaction in the fact that two of Hayden's most admired predecessors concurred in that judgment.
Accountability? What's That?
After President Bush nominated Hayden to be CIA director, Admiral Bobby Ray Inman, who led NSA from 1977 to 1981 and was actually a key co-author of the 1978 FISA, minced few words about Hayden. At a public discussion at the New York Public Library on May 8, 2006, Inman took strong issue with Hayden's flouting of FISA:
"There clearly was a line in the FISA statutes which says you couldn't do this," said Inman. He went on to call specific attention to an "extra sentence put in the bill that said, 'You can't do anything that is not authorized by this bill.'"
Inman spoke proudly of the earlier ethos at NSA, where "it was deeply ingrained that you operate within the law and you get the law changed if you need to."
The New York Times and the rest of the Fawning Corporate Media missed the story.
The late Gen. Bill Odom, another former NSA director, was even blunter, declaring that Hayden "should have been court-martialed" for assenting to an order that violated federal law and the Constitution.
Odom's comment on Jan. 4, 2006 came while preparing to be interviewed by George Kenney, a former Foreign Service officer and now producer of "Electronic Politics." Odom added with equal fury that President Bush "should be impeached."
But accountability for unconstitutional lawbreaking was not in the cards, then or since. Hayden was easily confirmed as CIA Director on May 26, 2006, after already acquiring a fourth star for his loyalty (to the White House, not the Constitution - you don't get stars from the Constitution).
Gen. Alexander seems to have learned well from his NSA predecessor. And he is likely to get a fourth star from President Barack Obama upon taking over the new Cyber Command, after getting confirmed by senators who either don't care that Alexander lied to Congress or don't know enough to care. (I'm not sure which is worse.)
It all reminds me of the college student whom I asked to explain the widespread apathy on campus. His answer: "I don't know, and I don't care."
O Tempora, O Mores!
NSA will be in the news over the next days because of the ex-NSA official who has been accused of giving information to a reporter about cost overruns and other bureaucratic screw-ups at NSA. Would that the NSA cared as much about honoring the law and protecting the privacy of the American people, as it does about insiders who commit the unforgivable sin of exposing the spy agency's own dirty laundry.
The media circus that is sure to follow will make it still easier to divert attention from Gen. Alexander's proven willingness to deceive.
This article first appeared on Consortiumnews.com.




20 Comments so far
Show AllWe have so many lies floating around now and so many criminals that have not paid any penalty for their actions that things are getting clouded up. People may be getting used to lies and unethical behavior so that truth is not valued properly now.
Being politicians, I dont think the senators particularly valued the truth, and would not have wanted the truth in their face. It may be that they were much happier acting on the "face value" information that did not threaten their comfortable existance. This is known as "willful ignorance".
Willful ignorance is common where politicians are capable of putting a metaphorical glass wall between themselves and the truth in order to prevent themselves from learning or comprehending something would force them to lie or else damage their career.
Willful ignorance was demonstrated to me by an Australian politician, Ian McFairlane, in early 2003. A group of concerned citizens came to his office to discuss the coming Iraq war. Initially, Ian parroted the media's lines about Iraq being a threat to the world, but Ian's media talking points regarding the war were demolished relatively easily. So Ian became angry and he loudly declared:- "Prime Minister John Howard is my leader and I will follow wherever he leads".
He basically knew he had to cling to something in order to prevent from admitting the truth to himself (or possibly to his audience). The citizens knew at that point that facts were not going to get them anywhere. I imagine that most politicians at the time clung to some set of precious lies which prevented them from facing the truth. That is called "willful ignorance".
I know no way of breaking willful ignorance. Perhaps if you were to have the power to interrogate such a person, and direct the questions to repeatedly reveal a contradiction, forcing them to say one thing, and then contradict themselves, you might be able to open a crack large enough to wedge the truth in. But politicians in an interview situation, for example, simply give answers unrelated to the question, as Barack Obama did when asked about Israel's nukes by that veteran female reporter Helen Thomas.
There was another incident shortly before the above which also demonstrated willful ignorance. Prime Minister John Howard ordered an ASIO (Australia's CIA) report on Iraq's WMD. The report which was tabled in parliament had a summary that had something to the effect that "There is little or no evidence that Iraq has anything that would constitute a threat to the world."
The Prime Minister condemned the report, saying that it was "totally unacceptable". Had he experienced a very uncharacteristic bout of honesty he might have said "The truth? Hell no!! We dont want a bar of that. We have been ordered by the USA to participate in Iraq, and we need some official lies to cover our asses.".
So ASIO was ordered to prepare another intelligence report, this time one that confirmed that Saddam posed a threat that could not be ignored. A senior ASIO intelligence officer publicly resigned over being forced to lie, but the Prime Minister got his report the way he wanted it.
Sioux Rose
BRAITHWA: Authoritarians still believe they own impunity from "only following orders" of a higher-up. I believe there's a whole different authority they will have to answer to and for... call it the Lords of Karma review board on higher planes. By the way, great post.
Sioux Rose
KERNEL: Fitting denouement for the final phase of the Piscean Age, its symbol, fish opposing fish. Pisces can (via one fish) bring about exquisite states of "at-onement" OR (the road MORE traveled by), deception, double-dealing, and subterfuge... which appear to be the traits our government trafficks in most. The net effect, apart from the society of addicts, escape-artists, and those incapable of noting the truth, is the collective version of a "shoot one's self in the foot" epidemic. Fortunately, next up on the cosmic dial of time is Aquarius, where the Truth (that would, if they could recognize it in a climate of delusion) set them free. Ages occur over spans of 2200 years, so the demarcation "point" doesn't exist in any exact way. I believe we are IN the transition phase from Pisces to Aquarius NOW.
The USAF's Cyber warfare department doesn't inspire much confidence either, as their top civilian adviser could well be an Israeli spy:
http://original.antiwar.com/giraldi/2010/04/14/dr-strangelove-made-in-israel/
I am reminded of what Sioux Rose brought up for discussion when she explained what was meant by Mars rules in the past. I understand that some people don't understand but when we are facing the fact that a warmonger who lies and gets rewarded in sharp contrast to an honorable gentleman serving in the military but not wanting to abuse his power, be honest, and help avert more conflicts who gets punished, it becomes harder to write off the notion that Mars rules. Given what has happened, there will be tougher road ahead for people like Maj. Gen. Taguba who want to explore the truth and bring it up even when it isn't pretty while the General Alexanders will feel extra confident that they can not only get away with but also rewarded for lying under oath at least where they know it suits the politicians. What we have here is yet another example of a faith based system where nothing good is guaranteed but all the ills are.
General Taguba, along with any General and Colonel, who did not agree with the policies of Geoorge W Bush were let go.....If you have noticed, Barack Obama has not brought back one General who was against the Invasion of Iraq.
If you notice, Barack Obama has upped the anti on criminality within office, he has an authorized "Assassination List" and that list includes a U.S. Citizen.....There has been no investigation, no evidence brought to a grand jury, and no trial by jury.....Just a "Hit List" approved by the President of the United States.
Ray, you did a great job to show Alexander's lies. But, as we have seen liars get rewarded, "Whistleblowers" and honest men get punished.
"The Supreme Leader" of "The New World Order" is "The Rule of Law" and he has authorized the murder of the people of Afghanistan,Iraq, and Pakistan. "Collateral Damage" is "Collateral Murder" when you have no evidence other than people paid $3,000 to turn in whoever they do not like! Of course he is merely following the policies of Henry Kissinger and Zbigniew Brzezinski and their organizations, The Council on Foreign Relations,Tri-Lateral Commission, and with a touch of Bilderberg Club!
"If you have noticed, Barack Obama has not brought back one General who was against the Invasion of Iraq."
I thought that there was one general, forgot his name, who was brought back to be in charge of the VA. He must have been marginalized by now.
And it has precisely *nothing* to do with Mars.
Not the planet - the mythical character Mars-Aries. It's a metaphor.
Joseph Campbell wrote that our times are ruled by Mars, the warrior, Hermes, the merchant and trickster, and Apollo the scientist. Those are the guiding metaphors just now, and they're linked in the most destructive way by the MIC.
Got it now?
Read some Campbell - The Masks of God.
Thanks redballoon for explaining to Dionski. I will have to remember to include this distinction note the next time I mention Mars.
Sioux Rose
REDBALLOON: Archetypes are diffusive by nature. I don't see the same reference to Apollo that Campbell does, but that's fine. The important point is that the archetypal energies are to human character what DNA is to our biology. We all have "some Mars," but when a society champions the qualities of that particular prototype above all others, we end up with Naziism or another form of uber: miliarism as seen in the current US model.
Thank you for the reference; and thank you, Stanley, for taking a concept I have included in the forum and managing NOT to adulterate its intended message, as a few others have repeatedly done for their own dubious purposes. What the US spends on its military year after year when so many other domestic needs go unaddressed, is in and of itself, ample proof of the influence of "Mars" over the nation's psyche and pocketbook.
Actually, Redbaloon (and Stanley), I had it from the beginning. I've read much Campbell. And I've read enough SR to know that when she's talking planets, she's talking (at least partly) planets. And if you don't think that she believes that the actual planet Mars plays a role in influencing the timbre of our times (by influencing individual psyches), JUST ASK HER.
Great reporting by Ray McGovern!
At least he came back from retirement, for however long.
O Tempora, O Mores!
Oh the times! Oh the customs!--an exclamation at the evil of them.
Proving himself not only an unabashed prevaricator, but also an audacious hypocrite, it was criminal-in-chief Bush who, after exposure by the NYT of his illegal wiretap program--the same one he denied existed for more than a year-- ordered the Justice Department to open a criminal investigation of the whistle-blowers who exposed him as both liar and criminal.
This ugly episode also served, once again, to expose The New York Times as not only an unprincipled vehicle for disseminating establishment propaganda and disinformation, but worse, its willing and craven complicity in abetting Bush/Cheney crimes.
It was also the despicable Michael Hayden who, when being questioned by a reporter in 2006 at the National Press Club, publicly insisted--arrogantly argued, actually--that there was NO probable cause standard in the 4th Amendment. At the time, I remember thinking, "How was it possible that the individual tasked with heading the NSA could be this incompetent? " Of course, I now realize that incompetence, arrogance, hypocrisy and sycophancy to power were the main prerequisites for any high-level position in the Bush syndicate.
Sioux Rose
GIOVANNA: Most excellent analysis and post! Thank you.
We are turning into passive spectators watching the waterboarding of the truth.
The lights are going dim and soon we will hear just the screams in the dark.
What do you expect? This is the US of A, after all, where criminals rule.
Bring America Back !!!!.....!!!...Well, Sir Ray McGovern, do you suppose this is why the Forefathers put the military under the control and direction of the Civilian President, also known fondly as the Commander in Chief ????
**Were they not insightful, or what, of an out of control
Military Industrial Complex....as wary as former Pres Dwight Eisenhower.
**But our Founders never comprehended that the MIC could subvert and control the Chief Executive himself, or herself.
Barak Obama was elected specifically on his promise to end the "Culture of Corruption" in DC, Instead, He has become part and parcel of it, and shows nothing but more proliferation of the MIC, and its rolling powers!
**Reality is that when Feds lie for the King or his programs, they do get rewarded. Much like the Emperor who really was naked ! Sure Emperor Obama, your Drone program
truly is working, and winning the Crusade to Tora Bora.
Yes Prez Barak the Zion Genocide at GAZA, where 400 innocent children were slaughtered, was in the US National Interest.
Nice suit there, Mr President !!!!! Where do you get your clothes, McGovern ?