Chatgate: Senator Mark Warner's Shifting Stance on LeaksThe Jeffrey Goldberg affair has inspired a change of heart in high places.Senator Mark Warner, talking to MSNBC about the “military plans” leak to Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg:
This is the same Mark Warner who was Vice-Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee whose head of security, James A. Wolfe, was criminally convicted in 2018 of lying to the FBI about leaking the Carter Page FISA material to a pair of journalists. Warner didn’t invoke shock, crap or steroids in response to that leak, which led to stories calling a former Trump aide an “agent of a foreign power.” In fact, Warner wrote a letter to the judge in Wolfe’s case, Ketanji Brown Jackson, recommending leniency:
Wolfe ended up getting two months. As a bonus, the Justice Department subpoenaed the Google phones of a huge list of unrelated congressional aides wrongly dragged into the leak probe. That latter group only found out that their private information had been accessed six years later, when Google was finally allowed to tell their customers they’d answered a subpoena. With the Atlantic tale, the New York Times concluded immediately that the Trump administration didn’t just screw up, but displayed a “vast disregard for the inconveniences that true security requires.” Columnist David French was one of many to call for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s resignation after a “stunning breach of security” that is “one of the most extraordinary stories I’ve ever read.” An Axios headline read, “‘Heads Should Roll’: Congress erupts over stunning intel leak.,” while USA Today, the Guardian, the BBC, Politico, the Independent and many others also went with “stunning.” When I checked this morning’s DNC talking points mailer, it was there: Walter and I will talk about the case in the next America This Week, but something about this story doesn’t smell right. More to come. Thanks for subscribing to Racket News. This post is public, so feel free to share it. |
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten