Three veterans of American intelligence are horrified by the havoc
that they believe former secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton
caused through her epic abuse of state secrets in the E-Mailgate
scandal.
“If there really were SAP [special-access programs] material on her
server, consider the implications,” a former U.S. intelligence officer
tells me. He refers to the “several dozen” messages marked TOP
SECRET/SAP that I. Charles McCullough III, inspector general for the
intelligence community, reports were on the private server at Clinton’s
home in Chappaqua, N.Y., 267 miles north of the State Department.
Special-access programs are America’s most clandestine activities. Their
revelation could damage national security severely and possibly get
people killed.
In the anonymous words of this one-time American intelligence
professional, here is some of the devastation likely caused by Clinton’s
exposure of SAP secrets:
Intel officers responsible for those programs must be alerted.
Once alerted that SAP was mishandled and on a system that has
been attacked, it is only prudent to end those programs.
What does ending those programs mean? Depending on the SAP
involved, it could mean redoing war plans, terminating ongoing covert
actions, rethinking how the exposed covert actions must be done and
executing on that new plan, or, if it reveals a source, removing that
source from his environment.
That has a significant impact. Presume, if you will, that it was
a source. If that source were providing intel of such value that it
rose to the SecState, now we’ve lost that source.
Intel officers care about their sources, and for two reasons.
One, we’re human beings. We don’t want those assisting us and our
country to be hurt, even though we recognize the danger in which they
are placing themselves. Two, the business model doesn’t work very well
if sources think they’ll be outed. The US intel community already has so
much trouble in that regard due to Edward Snowden and Bradley [now
Chelsea] Manning. This just compounds it. Think about the next meeting
between a prospective source and a CIA case officer trying to recruit
that source to risk his/her life for the United States: “Are you sure a
high-level official won’t out me?”
So, since Clinton and her illegal, off-site server contained evidence of
these beyond-top-secret initiatives, the safest course for the CIA and
other agencies is to assume that these efforts were compromised and then
to wind them down. Once terminated, these activities stop yielding
information that keeps America secure and Americans alive.
Intelligence agencies also would relocate and possibly repatriate the
relevant U.S. operatives whose covers Clinton likely blew. This would
affect their careers. Those whom Clinton’s crimes have unmasked would
become unable to serve overseas, lest hostile nations or actors find,
exploit, or kill them.
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Also, if Clinton’s server contained the identities of American agents,
that could mean that, say, an undercover “diplomat” here and a
“businesswoman” there might be ordered back to the United States at
once. While these people might wind up stuck behind desks at CIA
headquarters in Langley, Va., at least they would be safe.
But how about their contacts in Somalia, Ukraine, or Venezuela? The
friends and associates of American agents exposed via Clinton’s at-best
gross negligence might awaken to loud knocks at their doors at 4:00
a.m., followed by one-way rides to Third World dungeons.
“To me, it’s offensive,” the former spook tells me. “If it were really
SAP, Clinton was undoing all the hard work that my friends were doing.
This is oftentimes intensive, painstaking, costly work, and her
carelessness has now undone it. That pisses me off.”
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This source uses an analogy from American industry to put Clinton’s
misdeeds into everyday language.
“Imagine that you work at Pepsi, your 401K is tied to the performance of
the company, and that performance is inextricably linked to the secret
ingredient for Pepsi,” this intelligence specialist explains. “How would
you feel if one of your superiors were just casual with that most
sensitive of information? I think it would upset you. Now, for intel,
multiply that by at least ten. We can have arguments over whether
confidential material is unnecessarily classified; we generally don’t in
mishandling cases, but I’d potentially be open to it. But with SAP, no
way. This is so grossly negligent that either it is false or Hillary
Clinton doesn’t care.”
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Meanwhile, a veteran who worked in military intelligence for more than
25 years thinks that this first source may be too optimistic.
“As for damage done, my suspicion is that it is much worse than it
looks,” he says, also anonymously.
“We need to consider that everything that was on that server has
been compromised.”
“We need to consider that everything that was on that server has been
compromised. There isn’t an intelligence service out there that isn’t
interested in the actions of our senior people,” he continues. “Outside
the president, the two most important targets for collection are SecDef
and SecState. And that means everyone. Russia and China, certainly.
Germany, France, South Korea, Japan, Iran, and Israel — I would guess —
would all be interested as well. Very interested.”
The former military-intelligence man outlines how foreign spy agencies
would handle the most sensitive information, after capturing it.
“The SecState is seeing a whole bunch of stuff. Virtually everything she
does is classified — honest. There are all sorts of stuff that would
fit under the generic heading of SAP. . . . Let’s assume this is a
program about some particularly well-placed individual somewhere who is
feeding us information. If I were a bad guy, and I got hold of this kind
of information, the last thing I would do would be to roll the guy up.”
He adds: “If it were one of my people, I might start feeding him, the
source, slightly skewed information so as to mislead the U.S. But that
is only the beginning. No matter what, the last thing I want to do is
let the U.S. know that I know of this source. . . . So, from the U.S.
side, everything that remotely touches that material, from the date of
the compromise, should now be considered tainted.”
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The former military spy echoes the first source: Breaches, such as what
likely befell Clinton’s private server, are not just technical glitches.
They hammer real people.
“More to the point, it affects other folks,” the
ex-military-intelligence operative tells me. “Everyone who was remotely
associated with the source is now on shaky ground. Compromises are
expensive. They mean everyone who was derived from one source is also
tainted. If the compromise happened a while ago, and we just found out,
it could mean years of not only being misled by some other organization,
but by now virtually all the people in a given network have been
compromised and either turned by the other side or are under close
observation, and they are waiting to roll them up when we start acting.
If this compromise, and it was a compromise, took place in 2012, then
more than three years have passed since the compromise. That’s really a
mess.”
This veteran thinks that Hillary Clinton cannot have it both ways: She’s
either too brilliant to be as innocent as she asserts or too innocent
to be as brilliant as she professes.
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“Secretary Clinton has been seeing this kind of thing for a long time,”
he says. “If she is competent to handle major decisions, if she is the
highly capable person she claims to be, she would know what all this
material was, without having some label stating it was secret.”
“If, on the other hand, someone could put reports in front of her
describing these various things, again and again, without the
appropriate labels, and she was not smart enough to recognize that this
material was from classified sources, then she isn’t competent to be the
president, or a departmental secretary. Or, of course, this is all
lies. There are no other options.”
One retired intelligence officer did comment on the record — and how.
‘The fact that she had a completely separate system for her chats
with Sid Blumenthal and others is outrageous.’
“I assume that the messages discussing SAP programs were known
instantaneously by the Russians and the Chinese and were likely shared
to some degree with other really bad actors — Iran?” Martha Sutherland
tells me. She spent 19 years as an operations officer in the Central
Intelligence Agency. “The only saving grace, in some weird way, is that
Bibi and the Mossad probably had their eyes all over them as well!”
Sutherland is appalled by what we already know about Hillary Clinton’s
behavior.
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“The fact that she had a completely separate system for her chats with
Sid Blumenthal and others is outrageous,” this former CIA agent
observes. “And then the tie-in to the Clinton Foundation and the quid
pro quo is another felony count. If I had cut and pasted classified
documents and put them in an e-mail on my unclassified server to avoid a
written record, I would have been frog-walked in handcuffs out of
Langley, no questions asked.”
People keep demanding a smoking gun in this scandal. Sutherland explains
that Hillary’s unencrypted, do-it-yourself server is, ipso facto, the
smoking gun. It never should have been purchased. Its mere presence is
the crime.
“It goes beyond having classified stuff without markings,” Sutherland
says. “It is the fact that she maintained a shadow communications
system, separate from the government-mandated, secure system. And she
was the BOSS! Its existence, the now damning news of SAP info on it, and
her continued denial that she did anything wrong are proof positive
that Hillary and the Clintons still think they are above the law! Enough
already — the BIG HOUSE for Hillary, not the White House, for goodness
sakes!”
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/430597/hillary-clinton-email-server-former-intelligence-officers-havoc
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/430597/hillary-clinton-email-server-former-intelligence-officers-havoc
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