By Greg Guma
June 07, 2013
Political rights are so easily taken for granted ~ until they’re threatened or curtailed by repressive laws. In the United States, they are usually most vulnerable when people are anxious about some outside threat.
After World War II, for instance, dissent became risky as relations
with Russia hardened into Cold War I. Hysteria about domestic Communist
subversion led quickly to state and congressional investigations of
“un-American activities.” And in 1951, a Supreme Court decision led to the
imprisonment of eleven Communist leaders, not for any overt acts threatening
national security, but rather for trying to organize a political party and
teach Marxism.
Today the threats to political liberty are no less
imminent.
The groundwork was actually laid when a proposal for
a massive rewrite of the US criminal code became the Nixon administration’s
blueprint for crushing dissent and savaging the Bill of Rights. After Watergate
and FBI-CIA revelations, proposed charters for the intelligence community were
exploited as springboards to legalize intrusive techniques. Meanwhile, the
Supreme Court moved toward prior restraint of free speech.
Prior restraint of the press became government
policy in March 1979 when The Progressive magazine was prevented from
publishing an article on the H-bomb. The ban succeeded for six months, on
grounds that the 1954 Atomic Energy Act gave the government the right to
suppress nuclear knowledge. Although the case was eventually dropped, the law
may very well be used again.
Original Vanguard Press cover, 1980
Support from
other publications was slow in coming, possibly because the case involved a
small Wisconsin monthly rather than a daily giant like The New York Times’
publication of the Pentagon Papers. The press gag ended only when other
researchers found and printed the same “secrets.”
Even though
the government dropped its case, it asserted that the section on violating
national security secrets in the Atomic Energy Act would continue to be
enforced, one of several “loaded pistols aimed at the First Amendment,” as
writer Nat Hentoff put it.
In February
1980, the Supreme Court ruled, in the case of ex-CIA agent Frank Snepp, that
government agencies have the right to restrict publication of national security
information ~ even if the material is unclassified ~ when the book or article
has been produced by a government worker with access to “confidential sources.”
The Court
had effectively usurped the lawmaking powers of Congress and gone a long way
toward enacting an American version of the British Official Secrets Act. In a
letter to The New York Times, Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz, who was
working with Ted Kennedy at the time, said that an Official Secrets Act might
not be needed since “we have one now.”
The decision
went further than penalizing one CIA employee for breaking his contract. Any
government worker in a relationship of trust with his agency, whether or not a
written agreement exists, could have rights to speech diminished. The high
court, with four Nixon appointees in the majority, buttressed lower court
decisions involving CIA censorship of ex-agent Victor Marchetti. That case
dealt with classified material, and the Court set up a powerful precedent for
prior restraint that violated the public’s right to know.
In the 1950s
and afterward, the intelligence community saw itself in a war with those who
supposedly threatened the existing social order. Programs conducted in the heat
of the Cold War ranged from, multi-million dollar covert actions worldwide ~
secret support for pro-American political parties, destabilization of
“unfriendly” regimes, arms transfers, training and propaganda ~ to a wide range
of domestic “counter-intelligence” efforts.
Americans
were shocked to learn that the FBI, CIA, National Security Agency (NSA) and
others had conducted massive campaigns of spying and subversion directed at
American citizens, most of whom had never committed any crimes.
After the
revelations of the mid-1970s Congress moved toward defining a set of standards,
to be codified in several laws. But by the time the first of these, the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) was passed in 1978, the mood had already
changed. There was little objection when CIA Director Stansfield Turner
nullified regulations banning the use of journalists, academics and the clergy
in intelligence work.
Under a 1978
Presidential order on intelligence work, an investigation or covert project
could be initiated if a person was “reasonably believed” to be involved in
activities which may or may not involve legal violations, or was aiding or
conspiring in these possible activities. Reasonable belief as a standard does
not require concrete evidence that a law is being broken. The “potential” for a
threat can be enough.
As pressures
for action in the Middle East mounted, President Carter asked for a freer rein
in initiating programs (the CIA was already supplying arms to rebels in
Afghanistan, according to several sources). Carter also wanted less public
access to CIA information. One proposal was to bar US citizens from obtaining
information about any program that didn’t directly involve the individual.
Critics of
this exemption to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) said it would damage
historical and journalistic research and informed public debate. Yet, in a
hasty reaction to international tensions, congressional oversight and an
independent check of intelligence operations became another casualty of the
obsession with “national security.”
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