A House committee has begun hearings on unauthorized disclosures of classified information, which may lead to legislation providing more effective ways to prosecute leakers.
House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence chairman Peter Hoekstra (R-MI).
told the ]em]Washington Post ]/em]that he wants to find ways "to protect the public's right to know and at the same time protect the intelligence community that needs to be more secure."
It seems Hoekstra's intentions are good -- he has spoken on this subject at length -- but given a chance to back up those intentions with an appropriate action regarding the ongoing investigation into the leak of CIA Operative Valerie Plame's identity, Hoekstra and his fellow committee Republicans
failed to deliver.
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The House committee's first leak hearing took place behind closed doors on Sept. 14 with testimony from an unnamed "representative of the intelligence community," who discussed "repercussions and consequences" of unauthorized disclosures, a committee statement said. Hoekstra said the panel moved from hearing about the damaging impact of leaks to
"why we are not prosecuting and why we are not finding the leakers."
But just one day later, Hoekstra and fellow committee Republicans
voted down a resolution by Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ), calling on President Bush to turn over to the House documents relating to a federal investigation into the public disclosure of Plame's identity.
Why the flip-flop? Hoekstra cited a letter from Assistant Attorney General William E. Moschella that said special counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald had advised that production of documents on the Plame case "would interfere with his investigation."
Democrats challenged this spin, pointing out that Republicans, during the Clinton administration, carried out several investigations of alleged espionage at nuclear weapons laboratories
at the same time that a criminal investigation was under way. ***
Rep. Jane Harman (D-CA), the ranking Democrat on the panel, said the panel's hearings will look into whether the government is overzealous in classifying information, leading government employees to disregard secrecy rules.
Hoekstra told the
Post that "too much information is classified and more should be declassified." Asked why he, along with other members, refused to identify the panel's first witness, Hoekstra said, "We probably have some overclassification situations of our own."
***
This item first appeared at
Journalists Against Bush's B.S.