[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 88 (Tuesday, June 12, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3945-S3949]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
National Security Leaks
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, I rise today to discuss the issue of
national security leaks.
A few weeks ago, the world learned that U.S. intelligence agencies
and partners disrupted an al-Qaida plot to blow up a civilian aircraft.
We are all very familiar with the success of this effort, and we
applaud those involved in preventing a truly horrific terrorist attack.
However, my concern today, and has been since that time, is that the
public has become too familiar with this successful operation.
Specifically, due to an intelligence leak, the world learned of highly
sensitive information, sources, and methods that enabled the United
States and its allies to prevent al-Qaida from striking again.
This irresponsible leak jeopardizes future operations and future
cooperation with valuable sources and intelligence partners overseas.
The release of this information--intentional or not--puts American
lives at risk as well as the lives of those who helped us in this
operation.
Unfortunately, this is not the only recent leak to occur. As a member
of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, I am deeply concerned
about a troubling rash of leaks exposing classified intelligence
information that has come out in the last several weeks. This paints a
disturbing picture of this administration's judgment when it comes to
national security.
There is a questionable collaboration with Hollywood, whereby the
Obama
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administration decided to give unprecedented access to filmmakers
producing a movie on the bin Laden raid--including the confidential
identity of one of our Nation's most elite warriors. Discussions with
reporters in the aftermath of the raid also may have revealed the
involvement of a Pakistani doctor, who was sentenced to 33 years in
prison for treason after playing a critical role in the hunt for bin
Laden.
The pages of our newspapers have highly classified information
publicized pertaining to intelligence operations in Yemen and Iran--
currently, the two most concerning foreign policy challenges this
Nation faces. This is in addition to the frequency with which top
administration officials now openly discuss the once highly classified
execution of drone strikes. All too frequently we read in these
publications that ``highly placed administration officials'' are the
source of confirmation of previously classified information.
Sadly, these incidents are not the first time this Nation's secrets
have spilled onto the streets or in the book stores. The problem stems
in part from the media's insatiable desire for information that makes
intelligence operations look a lot like something out of a Hollywood
script. This media hunger is fed by inexcusable contributions from
current and former government officials.
Mr. President, I want to repeat that last statement. This media
hunger to publish classified information comes from the inexcusable
contributions of current and former government officials. We now know
that investigations by the FBI, CIA, and now two prosecutors are
underway, but more must be done to prevent intelligence disclosures
from occurring in the first place.
The question of whether the White House purposely leaked classified
information, as the President refutes, is not my main point. Whether it
was intentional has little bearing on the results. Highly classified
information still got out, and it appears to have been enabled by
interviews with senior administration officials.
At this time, I take the President at his word that the White House
did not purposely leak classified information. But what about his
administration leaking it accidentally or what about mistakenly or--and
this is perhaps the best adjective that might apply--what about
stupidly? There remain a lot of unanswered questions about the White
House's judgment and whether the actions by this administration,
intentional or not, enabled highly sensitive information to become
public.
The House and Senate Intelligence Committees are working together in
a nonpartisan fashion--let me emphasize that we are working together in
a nonpartisan fashion--to address this issue. As a member of the
committee, I am working with my colleagues to evaluate a range of
reforms to reduce or hopefully eliminate the opportunity for future
leaks. I wish to commend Chairman Feinstein and Vice Chairman Chambliss
for their efforts and genuine interest in moving forward with this, and
I thank them for their leadership on this matter. Our committee,
working across the Capitol with the House Intelligence Committee, will
bring forward recommendations, including legislation, to address this
growing problem.
As the Department of Justice conducts its investigations, we cannot
lose sight of important questions that must be answered, such as but
not limited to the following:
Question No. 1: Why did the White House hold a conference call on May
7 with a collection of former national security officials, some of whom
are talking heads on network television, to discuss the confidential
operation to disrupt the al-Qaida bomb plot?
Question No. 2: Why is the White House cooperating so candidly with
Hollywood filmmakers on a movie about the Osama bin Laden raid, one of
the most highly secretive operations in the history of this country?
While we don't know the date of the public release of this Hollywood
production, we can be sure that any release prior to the November
Presidential election will fuel a firestorm of accusations of political
motives.
Question No. 3: Why would the confidential identity of elite U.S.
military personnel be released to Hollywood filmmakers?
Question No. 4: Why would administration officials even talk to
reporters or authors writing books or articles about incredibly
sensitive operations?
Question No. 5: Did any administration officials--in the White House
or not--authorize the disclosure of classified information?
These are just some of the key questions that must be asked in this
investigation. There also remain several questions surrounding the
current investigations. The appointment of two prosecutors to lead
criminal investigations into the recent leaks is a step forward, but
the scope remains unclear, as well as the question of whether we should
insist on a special counsel given the current concerns about the
credibility of the Justice Department.
Will these investigations focus just on the Yemen and Iran issue or
will the leaks involving drone strikes and other leaks that have
occurred in the past months also be a target of the investigation?
Will White House officials be interviewed as part of this
investigation? Which officials will or will not be available to take
part in the investigation? Will those who are former or no longer a
part of the administration or the Federal Government or those outside
it, including those reporters in question, be a part of this
investigation?
Will e-mails or phone calls of administration officials be analyzed
to identify who spoke with the reporters and authors in question and
when?
Again, whether these officials are intentionally leaking classified
information is not the main point. If they put themselves in situations
where they are discussing or confirming classified information, they
must also be held accountable. Public pressure is required to shape
these investigations and to ensure all our questions about these events
are answered, which is why I am speaking here today.
Every day, we have men and women in uniform serving around the globe
to protect and defend this great country, and every day we have
intelligence professionals and national security officers working
behind the scenes with allies and potential informants to prevent
attacks on our country. These leaks undermine all that hard work and
all those countless sacrifices. Additionally, it risks lives and the
success of future operations. Not only must we plug these damaging and
irresponsible leaks, we also must work to do all we can to eliminate or
greatly reduce the opportunity for them to occur in the future.
Criminal prosecution and congressional action is not the only
solution. We also need public accountability. Administration officials
continue to speak off the record with reporters and authors about
classified information even after these recent disclosures. It is a
practice that contributes to unwise and harmful consequences.
Purposely or accidentally, loose lips can bring about disastrous
results. Perhaps the best advice is the saying: ``You don't have to
explain what you don't say'' or maybe it is even simpler than that.
Maybe the best advice for those who are privy to confidential
information is what former Defense Secretary Robert Gates said, and I
paraphrase: Just shut the heck up.
I yield the floor.
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, last night the Senate voted to end the
Republican filibuster of this outstanding nominee. For the 28th time
since President Obama was elected, the majority leader was forced to
file cloture to get an up-or-down vote on one of President Obama's
judicial nominations. Justice Hurwitz is not a nominee who should have
been filibustered. With the support of Senator Kyl, the partisan effort
to stall yet another judicial nomination was defeated. I thank Senator
Kyl and the Republican Senators who had the good sense to agree to
proceed to an up-or-down vote on this nomination.
By any traditional measure, Justice Hurwitz is the kind of judicial
nominee who should have been confirmed easily by an overwhelming,
bipartisan majority. Justice Hurwitz has served for 9 years on the
Arizona Supreme Court and had a distinguished legal career. He has the
support of his home state Senators, both conservative Republicans. He
was unanimously rated well qualified by the American Bar Association
Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary. And he was nominated to
fill a longstanding judicial emergency vacancy on the overburdened
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Ninth Circuit after extensive consultation between the White House and
the Arizona Senators.
The campaign that was mounted by the extreme right against this
outstanding nominee was wrong. I spoke against it yesterday, as did
Senator Kyl and Senator Feinstein. Some were attempting to disqualify a
nominee with impeccable credentials because a Federal judge for whom
that nominee clerked some 40 years ago decided a case with which they
disagree, a case that is still reflected as the law of the land. We
have seen a number of new and disappointing developments during the
last 2 years as Republicans have ratcheted up their partisan opposition
to President Obama's judicial nominees. On this nomination, for
example, I saw for what I think may be the first time a Senator reverse
his vote for a nomination and, instead, oppose cloture and support a
filibuster of that same nomination.
Justice Hurwitz's nomination is representative of the new standard
that has been imposed on President Obama's judicial nominees since this
President took office. After close consultation with home State
Senators, President Obama sent to the Senate a nominee with
unimpeachable credentials. Indeed, in the near decade that he has
served on the Arizona Supreme Court, not one of Justice Hurwitz's
decisions has been overturned. Despite the bipartisan support for
Justice Hurwitz, and his excellent credentials, partisan Republicans
have filibustered this nomination.
I heard some Senate Republicans attempt to mischaracterize Justice
Hurwitz's record on the death penalty. Over his 9-year tenure on the
Arizona Supreme Court, Justice Hurwitz has personally authored eight
opinions and joined numerous other opinions upholding the death
penalty. He also responded to both Senator Grassley and Senator
Sessions that ``the death penalty is a constitutionally appropriate
form of punishment'' and that he ``has voted in scores of cases to
uphold the death penalty.''
Justice Hurwitz's critics argue that he was the lone dissenter in two
rulings involving the death penalty, but in each case Justice Hurwitz
did not oppose the death penalty but sought to ensure that due process
was followed to guarantee fair justice and prevent reversal on appeal.
In State v. Beaty, the State of Arizona had decided overnight to apply
a new death penalty execution cocktail, and Justice Hurwitz felt that a
new execution warrant was necessary. Justice Hurwitz's dissent was not
opposing the death penalty; rather, he specifically requested the court
``immediately issue a new [execution] warrant effective as soon as
legally possible.''
In State v. Styers, Justice Hurwitz relied on Supreme Court precedent
and held that it prevented the Court from affirming the defendant's
death sentence when one aggregating factor had not been tried to a
jury. In his dissent, Justice Hurwitz reasoned that a limited
proceeding on that aggravating factor was ``constitutionally mandated
and will likely bring this case to conclusion more promptly than the
new round of federal habeas proceedings that will inevitably follow
today's decision.'' Thus, Justice Hurwitz did not ``quarrel with the
substance of the determination,'' but felt that the procedural error
should have been corrected.
The fact that he successfully argued the case of Ring v. Arizona,
where the U.S. Supreme Court found by a 7 2 vote that the Constitution
requires a jury trial to establish the aggravating circumstances that
make a defendant eligible to receive the death penalty, does not make
him an opponent of the death penalty any more than Justice Scalia and
Justice Thomas, who supported the decision, oppose the death penalty.
That case was principally about the defendant's Sixth Amendment right
to a jury trial and it was not a challenge to the death penalty.
Moreover, a ``study'' cited that purports to label Justice Hurwitz as
``pro defendant'' is based on a sample size of only 10 criminal cases--
and Justice Hurwitz was not on the bench for four of them. That is
hardly representative of Justice Hurwitz's career on the bench and the
many criminal appeals Justice Hurwitz has heard and the many
convictions he has upheld. Let us be honest about his record.
Justice Hurwitz is an outstanding nominee with impeccable credentials
and qualifications. He has a record of excellence as a jurist. Not a
single decision he has made from the bench in his nine years as justice
has been reversed, and he has the strong support of both Republican
Senators from Arizona as well as many, many others from both sides of
the political aisle.
A graduate of Princeton University and Yale Law School, Justice
Hurwitz served as the Note and Comment Editor of the Yale Law Journal.
Following graduation, he clerked on every level of the Federal
judiciary: First for Judge Jon O. Newman, who was then U.S. District
Judge on the District of Connecticut. Subsequently, he clerked for
Judge Joseph Smith of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
Then he clerked for Justice Potter Stewart of the U.S. Supreme Court.
He then distinguished himself in private practice, where he spent
over 25 years at a law firm in Phoenix, Arizona. While in private
practice, Justice Hurwitz tried more than 40 cases to verdict or final
decision. Justice Hurwitz has also taught classes at Arizona State
University's Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law for approximately 15
years on a variety of subjects including ethics, Supreme Court
litigation, legislative process, civil procedure, and Federal courts.
By any traditional measure, Justice Hurwitz is the kind of judicial
nominee who should be confirmed easily by an overwhelming, bipartisan
vote. And now that the Senate has been forced to invoke cloture with 60
votes to end a partisan filibuster, I hope the Senate will vote to
confirm him with bipartisan support.
I will conclude by emphasizing what I have been saying for months,
that the Ninth Circuit is in dire need of assistance. This nomination
should have been considered and confirmed months ago. The Chief Judge
of the Ninth Circuit along with the members of the Judicial Council of
the Ninth Circuit, wrote to the Senate months ago emphasizing the Ninth
Circuit's ``desperate need for judges,'' urging the Senate to ``act on
judicial nominees without delay,'' and concluding ``we fear that the
public will suffer unless our vacancies are filled very promptly.'' The
judicial emergency vacancies on the Ninth Circuit harm litigants by
creating unnecessary and costly delays. The Administrative Office of
U.S. Courts reports that it takes nearly 5 months longer for the Ninth
Circuit to issue an opinion after an appeal is filed, compared to all
other circuits. The Ninth Circuit's backlog of pending cases far
exceeds other Federal courts. As of September 2011, the Ninth Circuit
had 14,041 cases pending before it, far more than any other circuit.
When Senate Republicans filibustered the nomination of Caitlin
Halligan to the D.C. Circuit for positions she took while representing
the State of New York, they contended that their underlying concern was
that the caseload of the D.C. Circuit did not justify the appointment
of another judge to that Circuit. I disagreed with their treatment of
Caitlin Halligan, their shifting standards and their purported caseload
argument. But if caseloads were really a concern, Senate Republicans
would not have delayed action on the nominations to judicial emergency
vacancies on the overburdened Ninth Circuit for months and months.
So, let us move forward to confirm Justice Hurwitz without further
delay. The partisan filibuster against this nomination was wrong. Just
as we moved forward after defeating the filibuster of the nomination of
Judge Jack McConnell, let us move forward now to vote on the 17 other
judicial nominees ready for final Senate action and make real progress
in working with the President to fill judicial vacancies around the
country.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, shortly, we are going to move to confirm the
judge whose nomination we voted to move forward to last night. If
everyone will be at ease for just a moment.
Let me ask Senator Coburn how long he wishes to speak.
Mr. COBURN. Mr. President, I will speak in conjunction with the
majority whip for a short period of time. I don't have a long speech.
Mr. REID. If the Senator will be patient, we will get this done very
quickly.
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Mr. COBURN. You bet.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, the matter before the Senate is the
nomination of Judge Hurwitz; is that right?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
Mr. REID. I yield back all time on this nomination.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. If there is no further debate, all time is
yielded back.
The question is, Will the Senate advise and consent to the nomination
of Andrew David Hurwitz, of Arizona, to be United States Circuit Judge
for the Ninth Circuit.
The nomination was confirmed.
Mr. ALEXANDER. I wonder if the majority leader would permit me to
make a brief statement.
Mr. REID. I will in one second.
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