GIVING THE ESPIONAGE LAWS A NEW LOOK

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000201830063-2
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 28, 2012
Sequence Number: 
63
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 25, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000201830063-2.pdf81.45 KB
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~ IR AIT 11:'I 1 1[ uu1 f u a of il~ Flu f ff i,i i IL_L L I 1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/02/29: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201830063-2 .u. i1CLE ON pAGE~ NEW YORK TIMES 25 May 1986 Giving the Espionage Laws a New Look j c=Bq STEPHEN ENGELBERG WASHINGTON THE issue of the hour was spies and their relentless as- sault on the national defense. Every day, it seemed, came fresh revelations about the hemor- rhage of this country's most sensi- tive secrets. America was in a panic about threats from abroad. That was in 1950, the year Con- gress rewrote the nation's espionage laws. Three-and-a-half decades later, with the country once again ob- sessed with spies, one of those stat- utes has emerged as a central ele- ment in a confrontation between the press and Government. The law sets a maximum sentence of 10 years in jail and a $10,000 fine for anyone who publishes classified information ob- tained through intercepted com- munications. It also covers similar secret information on American codes or techniques for intercepting communications. William J. Casey, the Director of Central Intelligence, last week asked the Justice Department to consider bringing the first prosecution ever under the law against NBC News for a story it aired on the damage caused by Ronald W. Peiton, a for-, mer employee of the National Se- curity Agency who is on trial for es- pionage. The network broadcast a one-sentence description of an eaves- dropping project involving subma- rines that he Is alleged to have dis- closed to the Soviet Union. After several weeks of negotia- tions with the White House, The Washington Post last week published a story about Mr. Pelton, but without many details officials had claimed would be potentially damaging to na- tional security. A spokesman for the C.I.A. said a recommendation that the newspaper be prosecuted was under consideration. Speaking to the American Jewish Committee, Mr. Casey asserted there had been "widespread viola- tion" of the 1950 statute in recent months and said this was hampering American efforts to ward off terror- ism. But thus far, the Justice De- partment has been cool to Mr, Casey's suggestions for prosecuting the press. "Don't forget, we pride ourselves on being an independent ? branch of the Government over here," stressed one Department offi- cial. Meanwhile, the National Se- curity Council is said to have begun a broad study to determine if new measures to prevent disclosures of sensitive information are needed. The 1950 restrictions on communi- cations intelligence were enacted id the wake of a growing awareness of the Government's abilities to inter- cept transmissions and break codes - and the need to keep those abilities secret. A 1918 Congressional assess- ment of the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, which- detailed American cabilitles for reading Japanese codes before and during the war, was fre- quently cited-in the debate over. how best to protect communications in- telligence. Further proof of the im- portance of eavesdropping on an enemy emerged years later, when it was revealed the allies had cracked the mysteries of Nazi Germany's Enigma encoding machine. The report on Pearl Harbor con- cluded with a recommendation that the unauthorized publication of any. classified material should be re- garded as a crime. But Congress eventually decided instead to limit its law to what the House Judiciary Committee termed "a small degree of classified matter, a category which is both vital and vulnerable to almost a unique degree." Since then, the press has come to pay an increasing amount of atten- tion to American foreign and defense policies. And until recently, Govern- ment officials had by and large been willing to live with a certain amount of disclosure of classified informa- tion as the price paid for discussion of such issues in a democracy. Mr. Casey believes that, among other factors, international terror- ism has fundamentally changed the equation. "If we are to protect our security as a nation and the safety of our citizens," he told the American Jewish Committee, "the law now on the books to protect a very narrow segment of information, that dealing with communications intelligence, must now be enforced." Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/02/29: CIA-RDP90-009658000201830063-2 7