Frum’s confused defense of Jane Harman and AIPAC
posted at 9:26 am on April 23, 2009 by Ed Morrissey
David Frum wants to defend Rep. Jane Harman (D-CA) from allegations that she sold her influence to get charges reduced or dropped in an espionage case, but he ignores the corruption in favor of making a confused defense of leaks. In “The Real Jane Harman Scandal,” Frum instead accuses the accusers for attacking Harman and the AIPAC-connected ring while supposedly letting the New York Times off the hook for exposing national-security programs. Frum manages to prove that he can’t tell the difference between apples and oranges, and also to undermine the notion that bureaucrats don’t set policy:
Then, at last, in October 2005 the mole hunters found their man: a career Defense Department employee named Larry Franklin. Franklin’s offense? Brace yourself …
Franklin had learned of U.S. intelligence reports that Iranian sabotage teams were operating inside Iraqi Kurdistan. These reports were being disregarded for a reason very familiar in the Bush years: They contained uncomfortable news that higher-ups did not wish to know.
Franklin, however, thought the information important—maybe vitally important. He thought it needed to be pushed up the organization chart. Lacking the clout to move the information himself, he decided to do what frustrated officials often do: He leaked it.
Specifically, he leaked the information to two employees—American citizens both—of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, in hope that they could galvanize a response from their contacts in the White House. The two, Steve Rosen and Kenneth Weissman, shared Franklin’s information with journalists, colleagues, and the Israeli embassy.
For this action, all three were charged with criminal offenses.
Yes, they were, and for good reason — they all committed crimes. Government employees and contractors with clearances to access classified data get constant instruction on how that data is to be handled and protected. I know this, because for a few years a long time ago, I had such a clearance while working in the defense industry. There are no conscience exceptions to these laws, nor are there any codicils that say that a clearance allows the holder to conduct their own foreign policy or defense strategy. Leaking classified information is a serious crime, no matter who does it, nor to whom they leak it. The government has to maintain control over the handling of classified information, or else there’s no point in classifying it at all.
Frum then confuses the leakers with the recipients:
Two months after Franklin’s sentencing, another leak of classified information hit the newspapers. On Dec. 16, 2005, The New York Times reported the existence of a vast, unknown National Security Agency program to intercept foreign electronic communications.
Unlike the Franklin leak, which was intended to jolt an unwilling bureaucracy into action to defend the country, the Times leak was intended (by the leakers) to sabotage a program integral to that defense. The leak lethally compromised a vital intelligence-collection effort. In terms of its direct and immediate usefulness to America’s enemies, the Times story may count as the worst betrayal of vital national information in a generation.
Needless to say, nobody has ever been prosecuted for that or for any of the other leaks that did actual damage to American security since 9/11, such as The Washington Post leak that revealed the locations of prisons in which high-value al Qaida detainees were being held.
I don’t think you’re going to find many defenders of the NYT here, but let’s clarify what Frum muddies here. The Times did not “leak” the information. The Times did not have a clearance to access that information. They published information provided to them by a leaker. The Times in this analogy is not the equivalent of Franklin; that would be the people who gave the information to the Times. One can make a case for the Times being the moral equivalent of Rosen and Weissman, but not really a legal case. And to answer Frum’s silly Pulitzer outrage, the government doesn’t award those, either.
In any event, the lack of a prosecution of the Times for their entirely irresponsible publication does not negate the fact that Franklin, Weissman, and Rosen all broke the law. They took classified government information and gave it to a foreign embassy without approval from the legal authority over that data. They may or may not have had altruistic motives for it, but that’s an issue for sentencing, not a defense against the charges. And if the Department of Justice had ever discovered who leaked all that material to the Times or the Post, they’d have been next, especially when Bush was in office.
Nor does this touch at all the allegations which Harman faces. The article published by CQ Politics based on NSA wiretap transcripts make it appear that Harman agreed to wield her influence to block the prosecution of the three in exchange for support for her bid to chair the Intel Committee. She’s bargaining to obstruct justice in exchange for lobbyist support for her ambitions. If these transcripts check out, then Harman committed a corrupt act regardless of whether one likes the prosecution of the three or not. She’s selling influence to obstruct justice, which has only a tangential connection to the case itself.
It’s hard to see how Frum could be more wrong about this case than he is in this essay.










Blowback
Note from Hot Air management: This section is for comments from Hot Air's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that Hot Air management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment just because we let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with our terms of use may lose their posting privilege.
Trackbacks/Pings
Trackback URL
Comments
Frum seems to just generally be confused these days.
BadgerHawk on April 23, 2009 at 9:32 AM
There is no corruption in the demorat party, there are only unintentional mistakes and conscientious missteps.
Bishop on April 23, 2009 at 9:33 AM
I am so done with Frum.
RobCon on April 23, 2009 at 9:33 AM
If torturing logic was a crime, Frum would have been accused of waterboarding by now, for all the flawed essays he’s written since Obama’s election (though I suppose we should be thankful here he at least sticks to only blaming the Times to try and divert attention from Harman’s actions, instead of shoehorning Rush Limbaugh and Fox News into the argument).
jon1979 on April 23, 2009 at 9:34 AM
people like frum are why the GOP lost, and will continue to lose.
he’s wrong on everything else he writes, so why not this?
right4life on April 23, 2009 at 9:34 AM
So, cons give them a free pass on illegal spying on Americans but want to prosecute leaks.
Wow.
getalife on April 23, 2009 at 9:38 AM
Just for fun, can someone tell me the last time Frum got one right? Anyone?
Jaibones on April 23, 2009 at 9:40 AM
David, David, David. If reversed, and a Republican or conservative did this, they would be prosecuted immediately.
And you know something, rightfully so.
So how about a little “equal protection” so to say.
Mr. Joe on April 23, 2009 at 9:40 AM
Frum is that wrong about many things. With “conservatives” like him – and there are many like him – I’m not an optimist for America.
corona on April 23, 2009 at 9:40 AM
Well, Frum ought to be gratified that at least one person (that would be Ed) read his entire article. I don’t bother with Frum anymore; he’s off in his own world.
BigD on April 23, 2009 at 9:42 AM
Brick by brick we make our case. Every dirty act of an incumbent politico needs to be highlighted. Harmon, who appears to be part of the corrupt Washington Obama promised to change-needs to be investigated and, if found guilty…sent to prison. Brick by brick. Eventually, when Obama and the Dems continue to cover for the corruption in their ranks…they will lose the trust and respect of the populace which put them in power.
You know what I don’t want? I don’t want corruptible Republicans to get in to replace them. Is it possible to find honest public servants who will STAY honest?
Doug on April 23, 2009 at 9:43 AM
He also proves once again that he can’t tell the difference between his a$$#ole and a hole in the ground.
thomasaur on April 23, 2009 at 9:44 AM
Ed, thank you for doing a job that your fellow Americans won’t do – finish a David Frum article.
We love you, man!
kybowexar on April 23, 2009 at 9:50 AM
Could someone bring me up to speed on what this info was, who the higher-ups were and why didn’t they want to see no evil, hear no evil….?
Tom
marinetbryant on April 23, 2009 at 9:52 AM
Other than being contrarian and a general pain in the behind, what has Frum ever done that, you know, suggests that he’s actually good at his job.
His analysis is almost always wrong – and he’s the one we should be listening to for the road back to the WH?
Nat Hound on April 23, 2009 at 9:56 AM
Headline:
LAMEST GOVERNMENT EVAH
Dr Evil on April 23, 2009 at 9:57 AM
You’re off-base here, Ed. While Franklin was convicted of spying, Rosen and Weissman are about to have the charges against them dropped, and they have not been charged with spying.
The case against these two men is a witch hunt perpetrated by anti-Israel elements of the FBI. The law is being misused.
And the case is on the verge of being tossed.
Franklin was found guilty. But Rosen and Weissman—both of whom lost their jobs and were hung out to dry by AIPAC—did not break any laws. The proof is in the pudding, of course. But if the charges are dropped against them—and that is the likely scenario—then they are innocent.
Meryl Yourish on April 23, 2009 at 9:57 AM
The government had every right in the world to come down hard on Franklin. Franklin may have had the purest of intentions, but he broke the law. Moreover, Franklin was a bureaucrat – who gives a rat’s about what he thinks policy should be? If he had such a problem, the right thing to do would have been to stand for office and let the voters decide.
Watergate: Screwing up government since 1972
Nat Hound on April 23, 2009 at 10:02 AM
Let me see if I have this right: Bush administrators face legal action for an opinion, NYT and Jane Harman are innocent for…innocent because, uh…
OK, I’m officially confused!
Amendment X on April 23, 2009 at 10:06 AM
Frum & Frumpy.
jgapinoy on April 23, 2009 at 10:09 AM
Frum sticking up for Democrats is news? :P
It's Vintage, Duh on April 23, 2009 at 10:18 AM
Dear Jane:
The cookie jar is empty. You have crumbs all over your blouse. The chickens have come home to roost. Time to pay the piper. The clock has run out for for you, Jefferson, and Murtha. Adios pendeja; don’t forget to shut the lights off; don’t let the door hit you on the way out; leave the key under the mat.
byteshredder on April 23, 2009 at 10:20 AM
1 – She’s a democrat.
2 – You all need to SHUT UP!
3 – If you don’t you’re not just wrong, you are EVIL.
And probably a bigot.
That’s how it works these days,right?
Sefton on April 23, 2009 at 10:22 AM
Of course I’m not clicking the link, but it’s apparently something called “theweek.com”.
Seriously, when is that troll page going to get set up for “articles” like this one?
logis on April 23, 2009 at 10:26 AM
Fair enough, but that’s still no defense for leaking the info in the first place (Franklin, anyway) and for Harman’s actions.
Ed Morrissey on April 23, 2009 at 10:28 AM
Meryl already showed where you went wrong on Rosen and Weissman, but I had to point out that you’re somewhat off on Harman as well. From what little we know, it does not appear that Harman agreed to sell anything, and certainly not to obstruct justice.
First, the time line is a little screwy here. Why would Harman be making any deals about intelligence committee chairman in the Summer of ’05? That was almost a year and a half before the Democrats would win back the House such that Pelosi would even be in a position to tap Harman for the job. Was everyone so confident about a Dem win back then? And why would Harman, the senior ranking member, have thought she needed any help at that time?
Second, the DoJ already had already file the charges in the case. How is it possible that Harman’s asking for lenient treatment of the defendants “obstruction of justice”? If she agreed to use her official powers to somehow affect the outcomes, I think you’d have a point, but simply advocating for the interests of the defendants on behalf of American supporters (yes, AIPAC is American, not foreign) does not seem to rise to the level of criminality. There may be some ethical issues (the allegations appear improper at least), and I’m not trying to give Harman a pass, but accusing her of breaking the law does not seem to be well founded.
I don’t carry any water for Harman, and I couldn’t care less if she were to be ousted. But it should be for the right reasons and not for some slimy propagandizing by (apparently) the CIA.
Quick question: why did the CIA chief, Porter Goss, have to sign off on an investigation of Harman? The CIA has no jurisdiction within the USA.
MichaelW on April 23, 2009 at 10:28 AM
Because (assuming the transcripts are correct) Harman offered to wield political influence to affect a criminal prosecution in exchange for favors from a constituent. How is that NOT corrupt? Harman has no authority to dictate or even lobby for prosecution strategies to the DoJ. That’s outright politicization. The prosecutions at the DoJ are supposed to be independent of political influence, a point the Democrats have screeched about endlessly the past two years.
People want to leap to Franklin’s defense because they have sympathy for his motives, and to Harman’s defense because of sympathy for Franklin. He broke the law and her reported actions amount to influence peddling for personal gain.
Ed Morrissey on April 23, 2009 at 10:38 AM
I’ve always liked Harman. She seemed to have the interests of the nation ahead of politics. This case is a little confusing and I won’t convict her based on what has been said about her actions by the media. They could be wrong you know.
As for Franklin. It’s about time a leaker was punished. All of these know-it-all bureaucrats who leak classified info should be punished.
There wouldn’t be leaks if there weren’t people or entities that are willing to accept the leaks for personal gain. Most of this crap is to further careers and not for love of country.
Vince on April 23, 2009 at 10:39 AM
Doesn’t matter how many courts rule that it was legal. getaclue needs it to be illegal, so it is.
MarkTheGreat on April 23, 2009 at 10:40 AM
Well, I haven’t seen the transcripts, only hearsay as to what’s in them. But judging from what I’ve read, I think you nail the reason there wasn’t anything illegal: “Harman has no authority to dictate or even lobby for prosecution strategies to the DoJ.” If she has no authority, then what influence could she be peddling? If no one had asked her for help, would she be allowed to advocate for lesser charges? Is it just the fact that AIPAC asked for her help? Again, there may ethical violations, but I just don’t know what the criminal charges would be.
I have no sympathy for what Franklin did. I agree with you entirely that he violated the law and should have been prosecuted (as he was). And I have no problems with Harman facing an ethics probe. Just the same, the case for criminal sanctions (e.g. obstruction of justice) looks awfully weak.
MichaelW on April 23, 2009 at 10:50 AM
This is a distraction.
portlandon on April 23, 2009 at 10:50 AM
Do cons ever think things thru?
You might want to reconsider your freedom argument because spying on Americans is not freedom silly.
getalife on April 23, 2009 at 10:55 AM
getalife on April 23, 2009 at 10:55 AM
Scrambled eggs this morning?
dmann on April 23, 2009 at 11:12 AM
Frum, Brooks, McCain, et. al. seem much more interested in defending dems than their professed party affiliation. It would be better if we just ignored these people. Think of them as trolls. Treat them like trolls. Don’t feed ‘em.
PrincipledPilgrim on April 23, 2009 at 11:27 AM
Is Frum really that stupid?
blink on April 23, 2009 at 11:40 AM
Whether the indicted spies are guilty or not makes no difference to Harmans potential charges.
The accusation is she intervened in favor of a suspected spy who was on trial.
Obstruction. Abuse of power. Misuse of Office. Etc.
roninacreage on April 23, 2009 at 11:46 AM
Torture is good; leaking classified documents is good. The law be damned. Republicans fast becoming the party of anarchy.
Drum on April 23, 2009 at 11:56 AM
My question is, did Harman break the law? She was a party in the conversation concerning the deal… but did she ever follow through with her side?
Also, why in the world was a US Congresswoman being wiretapped? I mean, she was on the House Intel committee… ??? Was the govt hunting for someone?
At first, I thought this was JustAnotherCorruptDemocrat story, but the more that comes out, the more questions are raised.
Kai on April 23, 2009 at 12:07 PM
This is Nancy Pelosi settling scores.
Dr Evil on April 23, 2009 at 12:08 PM
Don’t you know accusing someone of breaking the law, even if they did, is anti semitic? You people are no better than Hitler.
No, just very poor lawyer-like sounding excuses. Dems are going down left and right so the Republicans have to do something to help them out until they figure who will hijack popular resentment with more of the same. When an eight year Republican President leaves office in 2024 we will be wondering what happened to all those limited government and fiscal responsibilty promises from 2012 to 2016. It will be no different than 2008.
LevStrauss on April 23, 2009 at 12:32 PM
(yes, AIPAC is American, not foreign)
Well really it is a hybrid. If you are a dual citizen, then it is not 100% American now is it?
LevStrauss on April 23, 2009 at 12:35 PM
Unless that American attended a TEA party, is anti-abortion or is a military vet, right? Then everything’s hunky-dorey….
dmh0667 on April 23, 2009 at 12:50 PM
Also, why in the world was a US Congresswoman being wiretapped? I mean, she was on the House Intel committee… ??? Was the govt hunting for someone?
At first, I thought this was JustAnotherCorruptDemocrat story, but the more that comes out, the more questions are raised.
Kai on April 23, 2009 at 12:07 PM
Harman wasn’t being wiretapped. The two under investigation from AIPAC were being wiretapped. It was because they contacted her, or she contacted them, that this conversation came to be.
Interesting though, how liberals can spin things. Last night I was channel surfing, and came to Keith Olbys show. I heard him say….we aren’t a network that takes sides by parties, we deal in what’s wrong, and what’s right. I about gagged at that. Good lord. Does he really believe the crap he says?
capejasmine on April 23, 2009 at 1:40 PM
Frum has turned into a special-pleading machine.
He has a few issues on which he will contort himself almost comically in trying to defend a point.
I’m sure any lefties who care what he has to say would love to apply his “it shouldn’t be illegal if the perp is trying to right what he perceives to be a wrong” philosophy to everyone from Earth First to the NY Times to Somali pirates.
JEM on April 23, 2009 at 1:42 PM
David Frum …. Just one more “conservative” educated beyond his intelligence.
el rey on April 23, 2009 at 1:52 PM
Ed,
While I’m not fan of Frum, you’re still wrong.
1. NYT got secret information, passed it on to other people. Steve Rosen and Kenneth Weissman got secret information, passed it on to other people. Why are they being prosecuted, and the NYT isn’t?
2: The law says Frankiln could be prosecuted. Unless you want to challenge Frum’s story, the reason why he was prosecuted was, at best, the ego of his superiors.
3: If we (the US) are going to survive the Obama years, we’re going to need a lot of Franklins telling us when Obama is selling out the country by ignoring facts that don’t agree with his political desires.
Greg Q on April 23, 2009 at 2:23 PM
I am not at all ready to condemn Harman for these allegations yet. Keep in mind that Lefty bloggers are demanding her resignation, that the Soros-funded CREW is pushing this investigation with the Justice Department, and that former A.G. Gonzales is also implicated. All of which makes me highly skeptical from the outset.
Buy Danish on April 23, 2009 at 3:26 PM
A crime requires motive and opportunity. Since Harman had no authority, she had no opportunity.
It’s interesting to see how supposed supporters of Israel like Ed are carrying water for interests hostile to Israel.
I’m no huge fan of Harman (or of the crappy audio gear sold by her husband, though their Hafler stuff is decent), but she’s one of the few national security hawks on the Dem side of the aisle. Conservatives helping in the attacks on Harman are shooting themselves in the foot and doing the country a disservice.
There is no evidence of any actual attempt by Harman to influence the prosecution. Like the Scooter Libby and Martha Stewart cases, Harman is being called a criminal when there is no underlying crime that has been committed.
rokemronnie on April 23, 2009 at 6:21 PM