THE LEAK MANIA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00561R000100010023-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 6, 2012
Sequence Number: 
23
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 7, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP91-00561R000100010023-5.pdf91.59 KB
Body: 
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/06: CIA-RDP91-00561 R000100010023-5 'aE THE NATION ON PAGE 7 June 1986 EDITORIALS. ReaW has di ovei the years by a number of Po T7lhl ~Y damaging leaks for which he has criticized his disloyal associates and the irresponsible media. His prob- e Ieak Mania lems with budget director David Stockman Interior Sec- ow that the rehabilitation of Richard Nixon is Mary James Watt, Environmental Protection Agency ad- under way, according to a recent Newsweek ministrator Anne Burford and Secretary of State Alexander Haig were laid to the press. Lately, the leaks have had a na- cover story, it makes sense that a White House security cast, which annoys Casey. He accused NBC Ncommittee would seek to revive the plumbers of aiding the enemy by interviewing Abu Abbas recently unit, the leak-stopping operation that figured so prominent- for broadcasting an item on U.S. submarine surveillance f ly in the former President's political obituary. Seventies Soviet ports that figured in the spy trial of Ronald Pelton. revival and Watergate retro are coming into fashion. High- The Washington Post, The New York Times, Newsweek level officials regularly attack the press, Administration in- and other publications were threatened because they re- siders are under investigation and covert action is no longer ported on intercepted Libyan messages after the bombing of a dirty word. Washington corruption has overtaken Miami the Berlin disco. vice as a model for criminal chic: at last count, 111 senior The media have responded that the leaks were of no par- Administration officials have been accused of illegal or ticular value to the Russians or the Libyans, that the mate- unethical conduct since January 1981, and many have been rial was public knowledge in an Rea- convicted and sentenced or are awaiting trial. How long can g y case and that President gan was the biggest leaker when he it be before President Reagan comes on television to of the Libyan messages when he talked about them on nationwide television. But national se- reassure a worried nation, "I am not a crook"? curity is obviously not the Nixon's fixation on news leakage was his undoing. The Primarily concerned with point a Casey s campaign. He is exposure of E. Howard Hunt's White House shop, as a policy in itself and as a plumbing p, method of governance. Leaks loom large when policy fails. after its third-rate burglary attempt at the Watergate apart- The U.S. intelligence establishment has been stung by ments fourteen years ago this week, began the investigative series of crimes and blunders that cry out for a sca a process that unraveled the web of chicanery and cover-ups The foreign affairs establishment is st ymted the pe Middle and led to the famous final days. Things are nowhere near East, in Central America, in the great East-West encounter. that point chez Reagan, but the White House is again The raid on Libya, far from a foreign policy victory, repre- involved in a furious campaign against the leakers and sents an open admission of failure; Sn kdiplomats oen publishers of embarrassing information. Director of Central doors good open Intelligence William Casey has threatened five major pub- d rather than close them. lictions and NBC News under a 1950 espionage law (never Reagan and Casey want to stonewall in their towers of before used power and rule by handout, which is a tempting form of against the press) for divulging items told to news management and political control in a troubled time. them by government officials, gleaned from public doc- But the Watergate revival works against them. We are still uments and statements, or whispered by Casey's own col- too close to the leagues in one or another security agency. Secretary days of Woodward and Bernstein, etary of State Sam Ervin and John Sirica to forget that an Administration George Shultz, White House chief of staff Donald Re an l g oses everything when it destroys its credibility. and the President have all railed against the news passers and their wide receivers in order to blame the failure or un- popularity of their policies on those who spread the word. And late last month a working group of Administration security advisers delivered a secret memorandum to the White House detailing a plan for stanching leaks which would include lie-detector tests and other surveillance methods eschewed by former chief of staff James Baker, on Shultz's insistence, when the idea was broached three years ago. As so often happens with secret memos, this one was promptly leaked to the press. STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/06: CIA-RDP91-00561 R000100010023-5