Crony-industrial complex thrives on security clearances
By: Rachel Marsden
"I have nothing bad to say about the president," reality-TV star Kim
Kardashian said this week on ABC 's " Jimmy Kimmel Live! " A woman known for
posting nude selfies apparently has more decorum than many leaders of America's
intelligence community.
White House press secretary Sarah Sanders announced last week that U.S.
President Donald Trump might strip some former national security officials of
their security clearances.
"They've politicized, and in some cases, monetized their public service,"
Sanders said.
The officials who could have their security clearances revoked are former CIA
Director John Brennan , former FBI Director James Comey , former Deputy FBI
Director Andrew McCabe, former National Security Agency Director Michael Hayden,
former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and former National
Security Adviser Susan Rice -- all of whom have publicly taken shots at the
legitimacy of Trump's presidency by wrapping their rhetoric in anti-Russia
hysteria.
Should a public servant with a security clearance be denied the First Amendment
right to self-expression? No. But if you're one of the faces of these agencies,
leveraging your CIA, FBI or NSA big boss badge to peddle activist rhetoric looks
like an attempt to manipulate the public.
Consider, for example, this gem of a tweet from Brennan earlier this year: "When
the full extent of your venality, moral turpitude and political corruption
becomes known, you will take your rightful place as a disgraced demagogue in the
dustbin of history."
Imagine that Brennan's tweet had been directed at a political target other than
Trump -- for instance, a non-American head of state. It sounds like textbook
regime-change rhetoric. Now consider that Brennan was downloading this kind of
rhetoric onto the American people about their own elected president.
Is it too much to ask for thoughtful, rational, balanced analysis from the
former leaders of institutions responsible for executing highly secret
operations? Hysterical paranoia is a bad look. Is that really what you want to
convey to the public?
The lack of diversity of viewpoints among these intelligence community bosses
raises the issue of a potential disconnect between the rank-and-file officers
and agency leaders, if only because it's hard to imagine entire agencies full of
people with the exact same political beliefs. Trump should investigate the
extent to which important intelligence-related decisions made by previous
presidents were based on the political will of intelligence community leaders
rather than objective data produced by their underlings.
How many legitimate intelligence analyses regarding critical issues have been
cast aside because they contradicted a political objective of an intel boss? And
how many detrimental courses of action were taken because of it?
The White House threat to rescind the security clearances of these former intel
leaders forces them to make a choice: Stop abusing your platform as former
executive-level public servants, or lose your business advantage.
If you are a former upper-level intelligence executive, top-secret security
clearances are highly attractive to clients who might think you're able to
provide access to information that could be valuable to them. Private-sector
companies seek such profiles for generously compensated board positions,
believing that having board members with active security clearances is good for
marketing.
By raising the issue of security clearances, Trump has opened Pandora's box on
another matter: letting former intelligence community members maintain a
monopoly on the lucrative defense and security sector.
Most defense contractor jobs require high-level security clearances from
previous government positions. It's a way to limit access to these well-paid
jobs to a relatively small club of former government employees. Those who have
the same or better skills, knowledge and experience despite a background in
government service are automatically excluded from consideration, with the
company citing the cost and time required to obtain a new clearance.
The end result is systemic discrimination in certain quarters of the private
sector against those who lack government experience, thereby creating two castes
of workers and quashing equality of opportunity. This system reflects the deeply
ingrained crony-industrial complex, whose top representatives can't seem to hold
their tongue about how much they despise President Trump.
In the interest of fairness and equality for all Americans, perhaps it's time
for Trump to revoke security clearances for anyone leaving the public sector --
not just those at the very top.
COPYRIGHT 2018 RACHEL MARSDEN