takimag.com |
The evidence that Gen. David Petraeus, formerly the commander of
U.S. troops in Afghanistan, the author of the current Army field
manual, Princeton Ph.D. and, until last week, the director of the
Central Intelligence Agency, was forced to resign from the CIA to
silence him is far stronger than is the version of events that the
Obama administration has given us.
The government would have us believe that because the FBI
confronted Petraeus with his emails showing a pattern of
inappropriate personal private behavior, he voluntarily departed
his job as the country's chief spy to avoid embarrassment. The
government would also have us believe that the existence of the
general's relationship with Paula Broadwell, an unknown military
scholar who wrote a book about him last year, was recently and
inadvertently discovered by the FBI while it was conducting an
investigation into an alleged threat made by Broadwell to another
woman. And the government would as well have us believe that the
president learned of all this at 5 p.m. on Election Day.
We now know that the existence of a personal relationship
between Broadwell and Petraeus had been suspected and whispered
about by his senior-level colleagues and by his personal staff in
the military, who worried that it might become publicly known,
since before the time that he came to run the CIA.
We also know that when he was nominated to run the CIA, that
nomination was preceded by a two-month FBI-conducted background
check that likely would have revealed the existence of his
relationship with Broadwell. The FBI agents conducting that
background check surely would have seen his visitor logs while he
commanded our troops and would have interviewed his military
colleagues and regular visitors and those colleagues who knew him
well and worked with him every day, and thus learned about his
personal life. That's their job.
And that information would have been reported immediately to
President Obama and to the Senate Intelligence Committee, prior to
Petraeus' formal nomination and prior to his Senate confirmation
hearing.
In the modern era, office-holders with forgiving spouses simply
do not resign from powerful jobs because of a temporary,
non-criminal, consensual adult sexual liaison, as the history of
the FDR, Eisenhower, JFK, LBJ, and Clinton presidencies attest. So,
why is Petraeus different? Someone wants to silence him.
Petraeus told the Senate and House Intelligence Committees on
September 14, 2012, that the mob attack on the U.S. consulate in
Benghazi, Libya, three days earlier, was a spontaneous reaction of
Libyans angered over a YouTube clip some believed insulted the
prophet Muhammad. He even referred to that assault—which resulted
in the murders of four Americans, now all thought to have been CIA
agents—as a "flash mob." His scheduled secret testimony this week
before the same congressional committees will produce a chastened,
diminished Petraeus who will be confronted with a mountain of
evidence contradicting his September testimony, perhaps exposing
him to charges of perjury or lying to Congress and causing
substantial embarrassment to the president.
It's obvious that someone was out to silence Petraeus. Who could
believe the government version of all this? The same government
that wants us to believe that FBI agents innocently and
accidentally discovered the Petraeus/Broadwell affair a few months
ago and confronted Petraeus with his emails a few weeks ago is a
cauldron of petty jealousies. From the time of its creation in
1947, the CIA has been a bitter rival of the FBI. The two agencies
are both equipped with lethal force, they both often operate
outside the law, and they are each seriously potent entities. Their
rivalry was tempered by federal laws that until 2001 kept the CIA
from operating in the U.S. and the FBI from operating outside the
U.S.
In one of his many overreactions to the events of 9/11, however,
President George W. Bush changed all that with an ill-conceived
executive order that unlawfully unleashed the CIA inside the U.S.
and the FBI into foreign countries. Rather than facilitating a
cooperative spirit in defense of individual freedom and national
security, this reignited their rivalry. FBI agents, for example,
publicly exposed CIA agents whom they caught torturing detainees at
Gitmo, and Bush was forced to restrain the CIA.
Isn't it odd that FBI agents would be reading the emails of the
CIA director to his mistress and that the director of the FBI, who
briefs the president weekly, did not make the president aware of
this? The FBI could only lawfully spy on Petraeus by the use of a
search warrant, and it could only get a search warrant if its
agents persuaded a federal judge that Petraeus himself—not his
mistress—was involved in criminal behavior under federal law.
The agents also could have bypassed the federal courts and
written their own search warrant under the Patriot Act, but only if
they could satisfy themselves (a curious and unconstitutional
standard) that the general was involved in terror-related activity.
Both preconditions for a search warrant are irrelevant and would be
absurd in this case.
All this—the FBI spying on the CIA—constitutes the government
attacking itself. Anyone who did this when neither federal criminal
law nor national security has been implicated and kept the
president in the dark has violated about four federal statutes and
should be fired and indicted. The general may be a cad and a bad
husband, but he has the same constitutional rights as the rest of
us.
No keen observer could believe the government's Pollyanna
version of these events. When did the CIA become a paragon of
honesty? When did the FBI become a paragon of transparency? When
did the government become a paragon of telling the truth?
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario