The Director of National Intelligence lied to Congress about NSA surveillance. What else will he lie about?
By Fred Kaplan
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper
Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images
Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images
If President Obama really does welcome a debate
about the scope of the U.S. surveillance program, a good first step
would be to fire Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.
Back at an open congressional hearing on March 12, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) asked Clapper,
“Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds
of millions of Americans?” Clapper replied, “No sir … not wittingly.” As
we all now know, he was lying.
We also now know that Clapper knew he was lying. In an interview with NBC’s Andrea Mitchell that aired this past Sunday, Clapper was asked why he answered Wyden the way he did. He replied:
“I thought, though in retrospect, I was
asked [a] ‘when are you going to … stop beating your wife’ kind of
question, which is … not answerable necessarily by a simple yes or no.
So I responded in what I thought was the most truthful, or least
untruthful, manner by saying, ‘No.’ ”
Let’s parse this passage. As a member of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, Wyden had been briefed on the top-secret-plus programs that
we now all know about. That is, he knew that he was putting Clapper in a
box; He knew that the true answer to his question was “Yes,” but he
also knew that Clapper would have a hard time saying so without making
headlines.
But the question was straightforward. It could be
answered “yes” or “no,” and Clapper had to know this when he sat there
in the witness chair. (Notice that, in his response to Mitchell, Clapper
said he came up with the wife-beating analogy only “in retrospect.”)
There are many ways that he could have finessed the question, as
administration witnesses have done in such settings for decades, but
Clapper chose simply to lie. “Truthful” and “untruthful” are not
relative terms; a statement either is or isn’t; there’s no such thing as
speaking in a “most truthful” or “least untruthful” manner.
Nor was this a spontaneous lie or a lie he regretted making. Wyden revealed in a statement today
that he’d given Clapper advance notice that he would ask the question
and that, after the hearing, he offered Clapper a chance to revise his
answer. Clapper didn’t take the offer.
Clapper’s deceptions don’t stop there. Rambling on in his
rationalization to Mitchell, he focused on Wyden’s use of the word
“collect,” as in “Did the NSA collect any type of data ... on
millions of Americans?” Clapper told Mitchell that he envisioned a vast
library of books containing vast amounts of data on every American. “To
me,” he said, “collection of U.S. persons’ data would mean taking the book off the shelf and opening it up and reading it.”
If this were true, it would suggest that Clapper wasn’t quite lying
when he told Wyden that the NSA doesn’t wittingly “collect” data on
Americans. But of course, this is nonsense. Neither in everyday speech
nor in tech-intelligence jargon does “collect” mean anything other than
what it obviously means: to gather, to sweep up, to bring together. No
one says, “I’m going to collect The Great Gatsby from my
bookshelf and read it.” Nor does anyone say, “I’m going to collect this
phone conversation from my archive and listen to it.”
It is irrelevant whether Clapper really believes his definition of
“collect” or made it up on the spot. Either way, this is a man who
cannot be trusted to hold an honest discussion about these issues. If he
lied about what he thinks “collect” means, he will lie about lots of
things. If he really thinks the English language is this flexible, it is
unwise to assume that any statement he makes means what it appears to
mean.
This is crucial. We as a nation are being asked to let the National
Security Agency continue doing the intrusive things it’s been doing on
the premise that congressional oversight will rein in abuses. But it’s
hard to have meaningful oversight when an official in charge of the
program lies so blatantly in one of the rare open hearings on the
subject. (Wyden, who had been briefed on the program, knew that Clapper
was lying, but he couldn’t say so without violating the terms of his own
security clearance.)
And so, again, if President Obama really welcomes an open debate on
this subject, James Clapper has disqualified himself from participation
in it. He has to go.