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May 16, 2006
Gabriel Schoenfeld answered the question he posed in his excellent March 2006 Commentary article in the affirmative: "Has the 'New York Times' violated the Espionage Act." Commentary has now posted correspondence responding to Schoenfeld's article and his comments on it here as a preview of the June issue. Among Schoenfeld's correspondents are Steven Aftergood (of the Federation of American Scientists), Morton Halperin (of the Open Society Institute), and Paul McMasters (of the First Amendment Center). All the correspondets take issue with Schoenfeld's article, but they fail to make much of an argument concerning his analysis of the legal issues. When it comes to compliance with section 798 of the espionage laws, they're like Bartleby the Scrivener: They'd prefer not to. They refer to the vagueness of section 793. They refer to the age of section 793. They assert the illegality of the NSA eavesdropping program exposed by the Times without reference to a single case on the issue of the president's constitutional authority. All in all, they put on a remarkable performance. They also refuse to take a look at the requirements of a prosecution under section 798 (or even section 793). As I pointed out in "Exposure," an element of the offense defined by section 798 is prejudice to the safety or interest of the United States, or detriment to the United States. If the government chose to prosecute Messrs. Risen, Lichtblau et al., it would have to prove -- and a jury would have to find beyond a reasonable doubt -- that the disclosure of the program harmed the safety or interest of the United States. Not a single one of Schoenfeld's correspondents even takes note of this requirement and how it acts to limit prosecutions of the offense. Were they to do so, moreover, it would suggest why the statute should be enforced under circumstances such as those involved in the case of the Times exposure of the NSA program. In his autobiography Radical Son, former Ramparts editor David Horowitz recounts a similar incident involving the magazine's 1972 receipt of a draft article by a pseudonymous National Security Agency employee. Horowitz characterizes his involvement in the publication of the article in Ramparts as "the most shameful or humiliating thing I ever did." In the article, the NSA employee revealed that the agency had cracked the Soviet intelligence code and could read Soviet electronic communications at will. Deliberating over whether publication of the article might subject the magazine editors to prosecution under the espionage laws, Horowitz consulted prominent Harvard law professor Charles Nesson. (Nesson denies recollection of the conversation recounted by Horowitz.) Nesson was then working as a member of Daniel Ellsberg's defense team in connection with the government's prosecution of Ellsberg for removing copies of the Pentagon Papers and turning them over to the Times -- the incident underlying the Pentagon Papers case itself. Horowitz relates that Nesson advised him that publication of the article would violate the law. In addition to providing certain technical guidance, according to Horowitz, Nesson advised: To make its case in a court of law, the government would have to establish that we had indeed damaged national security. To do so, it would be necessary to reveal more than the government might want the other side to know. In fact, the legal process would force more information to light than the government would want anybody to know. On balance, there was a good chance that we would not be prosecuted. I had just been given advice by a famous constitutional law professor on how to commit treason and get away with it.And Nesson was of course exactly right. The same considerations apply to any possible prosecution of the Times. Schoenfeld himself does not explain this in his response, but he does powerfully address the issue of harm: Along with a number of other correspondents, Mr. Aftergood suggests that only minimal damage was done by disclosure of the NSA program. Even before the Times story appeared, so the argument goes, al-Qaeda operatives had cause to believe that their telephone and email messages were not secure, and they refrained from communicating through such channels. All the New York Times did, therefore, was to confirm a fact already widely known, without interfering with actual counterterrorism operations. |