Tag: leaker

  • GOP puts MTG ‘on an island’ over Pentagon leaker case

    GOP puts MTG ‘on an island’ over Pentagon leaker case

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    “It’s a separate conversation whether a lot of this stuff is over-classified — that’s probably true. And it’s a separate conversation about whether or not this administration has misled the public about what’s happening in Ukraine — that’s probably true,” Hawley said.

    The influential conservative added that claims Teixeira has “exposed stuff the public should know’” might be “fair enough, but is the way he did it the right way to do it? No.”

    As lawmakers received their first detailed classified briefing on the case Wednesday, the degree to which Greene stands alone marks a significant line in the sand for a Republican Party that’s increasingly split over commitment to defending Ukraine against Russia. Regardless of their stance on the Ukraine war, and on over-classification across the government, GOP lawmakers across the ideological spectrum agree that Teixeira should be held to account.

    “They’re on an island with regard to serious policy people,” Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) said in an interview regarding Greene and Carlson. “Unfortunately, they’re on an island of influence. But there’s not a lot you can do about that.”

    The FBI arrested Teixeira over his alleged involvement in the leak of the classified documents last week. The documents included sensitive intelligence on Ukraine’s spring plans in its war against Russia, as well as a trove of other information on global hotspots. Teixeira has since been charged with two federal crimes over his actions, which have attracted attention from the highest levels of the federal government.

    Senators left their briefing saying it revealed little new information. But many suggested the scope of the breach indicated Congress would have to step in to revamp how the federal government handles classified information. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters he thought “there have to be some improvements” without elaborating what those would be, and Intelligence Committee Chair Mark Warner (D-Va.) noted that “I think it’s time that Congress has got to step in.”

    “I didn’t learn much more than they’ve already leaked,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said after the briefing, echoing the comments of other Republicans.

    Senate Intelligence Committee Vice Chair Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said he still had a lengthy list of questions and he “wasn’t satisfied with any plans they have in place to prevent this from happening in the future.”

    “The core challenge we have on our hands right now is whether Congress is going to — on a bipartisan basis — assert not just our right, but our obligation, to come together to conduct oversight over these agencies, which we cannot do without full access,” he said. “It’s getting harder every day and cases like this make it even worse.”

    Top officials who briefed lawmakers on the leak included Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines and others in the intelligence and defense communities.

    Earlier Wednesday, Warner and Rubio sent a joint letter to Haines and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin demanding a host of information about the leak. Among their requests: copies of all documents obtained and disseminated by Teixeira; details on why it took so long for the government to identify the leak; and whether the airman should have had access to the classified information.

    Rubio said in an interview earlier in the week that time would reveal the leaker’s motives but added that his alleged actions were indefensible.

    “It was illegal. It was a crime,” Rubio said. “I can’t be supportive of someone committing a crime.”

    Greene, for her part, called Teixeira “white, male, christian, and antiwar” and asked who is “the real enemy” in an April 13 tweet. She moderated her defense slightly in a Monday appearance on Steve Bannon’s podcast, saying the leaker has “got to face some penalties for what he’s done — I’m not saying he shouldn’t,” but insisting that more of the U.S. actions in Ukraine should be exposed.

    Carlson, in response to the leak, said at the top of his April 13 show that “telling the truth is the only real sin” in Washington.

    Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) was the first to publicly bash Greene, accusing her of making “one of the most irresponsible statements you could make” in defense of the young guardsman.

    And a flurry of congressional Republicans also made clear that viewing Teixeira’s alleged actions in the context of his criticism of U.S. involvement in the Ukraine war is a mistake, given that the leak endangered lives in various conflicts.

    “In terms of defending him as a hero, he’s anything but that,” said Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “He’s compromised our sources and methods. He’s compromised American lives on the ground — our assets on the ground that report intelligence to us.”

    Even those Republicans skeptical of government actions in intelligence gathering wouldn’t back Greene’s position carte blanche. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said he wasn’t familiar with the specifics of Teixeira’s case, noting it did not appear to be an “organized thing,” but said he saw it differently from that of Edward Snowden, whom Paul described as a whistleblower routing material through the media.

    “There have to be rules about releasing information, but I think also there sometimes are hard questions,” he said in an interview, noting he was not making an analogy between the two cases.

    Democrats, across the board, bashed Greene and Carlson for offering any sort of political cover for the actions of the leaker.

    “I don’t know which nation-state they’re loyal to,” Warner said.

    Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are broadly interested in revisiting how much information is classified by the federal government, as well as how many people have access to it, in light of Teixeira’s alleged leaks. They predicted the episode would inject bipartisan momentum into legislation revisiting classification procedures.

    In addition, Congress has begun to investigate the leaks. House Armed Services Chair Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) and Intelligence Chair Mike Turner (R-Ohio) pressed the Defense Department for information about the disclosures in a Tuesday letter.

    While that oversight moves ahead, Republicans broke from Greene to argue that the leaker must be punished as harshly as possible, regardless of what any loud voices on their party’s right might suggest.

    “If you leak classified documents, you’re going to suffer consequences of the law,” Rep. Kevin Hern (R-Okla.), chair of the conservative Republican Study Committee, said in an interview. “Regardless of what the purpose is, we’ve made that statement for decades. We shouldn’t change that now.”

    “Someone who does that needs to be punished to the full extent of the law,” Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) echoed.

    Asked about Greene and Carlson’s defense of his actions, Sullivan replied: “I stand by my statement. As someone who served in the military for almost 30 years, I know a little bit about what I’m talking about.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • U.S. officials have examined whether alleged doc leaker had foreign links

    U.S. officials have examined whether alleged doc leaker had foreign links

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    “We still don’t know who this guy was talking to outside of the Discord server and if he had any other intention for leaking the documents beyond wanting to impress friends,” said a fourth person — a former U.S. intelligence official.

    It’s standard practice for investigators to examine a suspect’s potential ties to foreign governments and entities, especially in leak cases, said Mick Mulroy, a former top Pentagon official and retired CIA officer. Defense Department and CIA employees are required to disclose any “close and continuous” contact with foreigners, he noted.

    If they find any foreign links it would mean the leak is likely even more damaging than believed. It could signify that it was orchestrated by a foreign government, or that materials were available to foreign officials well before they became public knowledge.

    A foreign connection could also open Teixeira up to more charges.

    So far, Teixeira has been charged with “unauthorized retention and transmission of national defense information” and “unauthorized removal and retention of classified documents or material.” Each charge carries a sentence of up to 10 years in prison.

    According to court documents, Teixeira violated two sections of the Espionage Act. If the government were to establish probable cause, it could add another charge for Teixeira under a separate section of the act that deals with gathering or delivering defense information to aid a foreign government.

    The former U.S. intelligence official said that is unlikely to happen at this stage.

    The Justice Department is leading the investigation into Teixeira. The Pentagon and the intelligence agencies are also looking into the breach.

    The Defense Department closely monitors any employee’s activity on the Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communication System, the secure intranet system that houses top secret and sensitive information, including what information is accessed, downloaded and printed.

    The Pentagon is also reviewing Teixeira’s records, including his security clearance as part of the investigation, according to one of the people familiar with the probe. DoD hopes that the review will help it decide if changes to procedures regarding access to classified documents need to be made, the person said.

    Teixeira is an IT specialist assigned to the 102nd Intelligence Wing, giving him access to the computers of analysts tasked with packaging intelligence for senior military commanders, said a fifth person, a Defense Department official.

    The FBI and Justice Department declined to comment. The CIA and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence did not respond to a request for comment.

    Some press reporting in recent days has suggested that people from other countries were members of the original server where Teixeira allegedly posted the documents. Others, however, have rejected that assertion. In an interview with The Washington Post, one of Teixeira’s friends said any suggestion that the server’s members were Russian or Ukrainian was “pure fabrication.”

    According to another report by The Washington Post, users who interacted with Teixeira on Discord, the social media platform where the documents appeared, thought he posted the materials partly to educate them on how the U.S. government operates in the world and partly to show off his access.

    Understanding Teixeira’s motivation is also important for the government in determining how to prevent such leaks in the future.

    The leak allegedly carried out by Teixeira is different from past breaches of intelligence, including those perpetrated by Edward Snowden and WikiLeaks. Teixeira is accused of disseminating the documents on social media, instead of packaging and filtering them through the press, and did not appear to publish the intelligence as a result of a specific ideology.

    Teixeira allegedly posted the documents to a Discord server last year. In recent weeks, a member of that server posted them to a second Discord group before they began to circulate more widely on other social media sites, including Telegram and Twitter.

    The leaked documents include extraordinary detail on troop and battlefield movements by both Kyiv and Moscow in Ukraine as well as other global issues such as Iran’s development of its nuclear program, protests in Israel and China’s relationship with Russia. They also expose the extent to which the U.S. spies on its adversaries and allies.

    While POLITICO and many other media outlets have obtained and reviewed more than 50 of the classified documents, there appear to be perhaps dozens of other documents that have not been posted publicly on social media. The Washington Post and The New York Times have exposed several of those documents in recent days.

    At least one of the documents posted on Telegram appears to have been altered to include higher Ukrainian and lower Russian death tolls, according to a document reviewed by POLITICO. It’s unclear who altered the documents.

    A woman who recently ended her enlisted service in the U.S. Navy told The Wall Street Journal that she oversaw the Telegram channel where the altered documents were posted. That woman, 37-year-old Sarah Bils, has previously posted pro-Russian content on social media but denied having altered the classified document. She also told the Journal she deleted the documents from the channel as soon as she noticed they had been posted.

    In an email to POLITICO, Bils said: “I didn’t leak the documents and had no part in that. You’re asking the wrong entity. [The documents] were never in my possession at all.”

    While Bils’ link to the spread of the classified documents on other social media sites raises questions about her potential involvement in their alteration, there is no apparent connection between the former sailor and Teixeira.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Alleged Pentagon leaker hit with 2 federal charges

    Alleged Pentagon leaker hit with 2 federal charges

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    Teixeira was arrested by heavily armed tactical agents on Thursday following a weeklong criminal investigation into the disclosure of the government records, a breach that exposed to the world unvarnished secret assessments on the war in Ukraine, the capabilities and geopolitical interests of other nations and other national security issues.

    He appeared in court Friday in tan jail clothes for a brief proceeding at which U.S. Magistrate Judge David Hennessy ordered him held pending a hearing next Wednesday.

    Investigators believe Teixeira was the leader of a small group on the social media platform Discord where he wrote about classified information that was paraphrased from documents.

    He posted photographs of printouts of sensitive documents that were folded and then smoothed out. These documents were marked “Top Secret,” about the war in Ukraine and other geopolitical topics such as China, Iran and the Russian paramilitary group, Wagner.

    The Biden administration began looking into the leak last week. The Justice Department is leading the investigation.

    President Joe Biden on Friday commended “the rapid action taken by law enforcement to investigate and respond to the recent dissemination of classified U.S. government documents.”

    “While we are still determining the validity of those documents, I have directed our military and intelligence community to take steps to further secure and limit distribution of sensitive information, and our national security team is closely coordinating with our partners and allies,” Biden said in a statement.

    At an unrelated press conference Friday, Attorney General Merrick Garland said the leak of the classified documents is “not just about taking home documents” but rather about “both the unlawful retention and the transmission of the documents.”

    “People who sign agreements to be able to receive classified documents acknowledge the importance to the national security of not disclosing those documents,” Garland said, “and we intend to send that message, how important it is to our national security.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • FBI makes arrest in investigation of suspected leaker of classified intelligence

    FBI makes arrest in investigation of suspected leaker of classified intelligence

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    Teixeira was arrested “in connection with the unauthorized removal, retention and transmission of classified national defense information,” the attorney general said, using language that tracks violations of the Espionage Act.

    No specific charges were immediately announced, but Teixeira is expected to appear in federal court in Boston on Friday.

    During a hastily-assembled appearance before reporters at Justice Department headquarters, Garland spoke for less than a minute and provided no other details about the investigation beyond saying that it was “ongoing.”

    An FBI statement also confirmed Teixeira’s arrest and said it related to “his alleged involvement in leaking classified U.S. government and military documents.”

    “Since late last week the FBI has aggressively pursued investigative leads and today’s arrest exemplifies our continued commitment to identifying, pursuing, and holding accountable those who betray our country’s trust and put our national security at risk,” the FBI statement added.

    The 21-year-old appears to have been part of a small group on the Discord social media platform. He first wrote about the sensitive information in written paragraphs, paraphrased from the documents, months ago, as POLITICO previously reported. Starting in January, he began posting photographs of printouts of the documents, which had been folded and then smoothed out.

    The New York Times was the first to report that the likely leaker was Teixeira and said he was a member of the intelligence unit of the Massachusetts Air National Guard.

    The Washington Post first reported Thursday that the individual who leaked the documents on Discord worked on a military base. Teixeira was reportedly considered the leader of the small Discord channel, the Post reported, and espoused a love for guns and God.

    The documents Teixeira allegedly leaked contained highly classified information, including from papers marked “Top Secret,” about the war in Ukraine and other global topics such as China, Iran and the Russian paramilitary group, Wagner.

    President Joe Biden, speaking to journalists earlier in the day during a trip to Ireland, seemed to downplay the gravity of the breach which has roiled the intelligence community, the Pentagon and U.S. relationships with a variety of allies.

    “I’m concerned that it happened. But there’s nothing contemporaneous that I’m aware of that’s of great consequence,” Biden said while outside the residence of his Irish counterpart.

    But the public leak of classified intelligence is the largest since Wikileaks, which from 2006 to 2021 led to the publication of millions of emails, documents and other sensitive materials online.

    While the recent breach is much smaller in scale, the documents exposed in extraordinary detail the extent to which the U.S. spies on its allies and adversaries and included analyses that had been compiled just weeks before they were posted. The papers exposed battlefield planning by both the Ukrainians and the Russians, including detailed maps of troop movements, and that the U.S. had asked South Korea to provide Kyiv with ammunition.

    The Biden administration first began looking into the leak last week, including how the documents first ended up online and how they were able to circulate for months without detection. The Justice Department is leading the interagency investigation.

    DoD is reviewing its policies related to safeguarding classified material, including assessing how and where intelligence is shared, Pentagon spokesperson Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder said Thursday.

    “It’s important to understand that we do have stringent guidelines in place … this was a deliberate, criminal act, a violation of those guidelines,” Ryder said. “Anyone who violates those rules is doing so willfully.”

    Lara Seligman contributed reporting.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )