“In April, secret documents allegedly
photographed by a member of the Massachusetts Air National Guard began making
their way into the mainstream media. Many were briefings prepared by military
intelligence services, and much of it dealt with the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
They offered Americans a rare window into the government’s most valuable
intelligence on one of Europe’s deadliest conflicts since World War II.
We’ve been here before. In 2010,
WikiLeaks began churning out hundreds of thousands of secret documents about
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that had been leaked by an Army private,
prompting Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to declare that
such disclosures “tear at the fabric of the proper function of responsible
government.” Three years later, Edward Snowden, a National Security Agency
contractor, leaked another batch of highly classified documents. President
Barack Obama warned then that if anybody who disagreed with the government
could choose to reveal its secrets, “we will not be able to keep our people
safe, or conduct foreign policy.”
This time the reaction has been
quite different. The Pentagon did say that the latest disclosures — widely
known as the “Discord Leaks” — present a “very serious risk to national
security.” But there has been curiously little public interest in the spilled
secrets. News coverage has focused mostly on the banality of the person charged
in connection with the leak and his motives: Jack Teixeira, a low-ranking
21-year-old in the Massachusetts Air National Guard with a penchant for
far-right racist gibberish and guns, who allegedly printed out secret documents
from his work to impress his online chat group on the social platform Discord.
Reaction to the indictment of Donald
Trump has followed a similar pattern, though the case revolves around a former
president’s handling of classified files, not leaked secrets. So far, attention
has mostly focused on the political repercussions of the indictment, even
though the charges include alleged violations of the Espionage Act suggest the
government regards the documents as secrets whose disclosure could harm the
United States or aid a foreign adversary.
On the Discord front, investigations
underway by the government and military will presumably address the obvious
questions: How much damage did the leaks do? Why did a low-ranking tech once
again have access to so much secret stuff, and how did he get the clearance for
it? For that matter, why does the Massachusetts Air National Guard have that
kind of access? How did Mr. Teixeira so easily print this stuff out, when there
should be all sorts of safeguards against that?
There’s nothing especially
surprising in the public fascination with Mr. Teixeira, nor with earlier lead
actors in major security leaks such as Mr. Snowden, Chelsea Manning or Julian
Assange. But why so little interest in the secrets themselves? Given the huge
American investment in defending Ukraine, the “Discord Leaks” seemed like they
would be a natural sensation. A small sampling of the purported intelligence,
as reported by various news organizations:
● U.S. intelligence assessments have
expressed serious doubts that the Ukrainian spring counteroffensive would
achieve more than “modest territorial gains,” especially given the problems
with training and ammunition.
● Earlier in the conflict, the
United States tried to dissuade Ukraine from defending Bakhmut, which Russia
eventually took.
● Russia’s special forces have been
decimated by the conflict, according to American assessments, and could take
years to rebuild.
● What appeared to be American
electronic intercepts captured the Russian spy agency accusing the Russian
defense ministry of concealing the true toll of the conflict, in part by
excluding the dead and wounded in national guard and mercenary forces.
● An unnamed source said that
President Vladimir Putin of Russia was scheduled to undergo chemotherapy, and
that the Russian chief of general staff, Valery Gerasimov, and security council
secretary, Nikolai Patrushev, were suspected to have “devised” a plan to
“sabotage” the president while he was under treatment.
Some of the documents deal with
other countries, too, including discussions within the South Korean leadership
on whether or not the artillery shells the country agreed to sell to the United
States would end up in Ukraine; efforts by Wagner, a Russian mercenary group,
to buy arms from Turkey through Mali; purported plans by Egypt to supply
rockets to Russia; and suggestions that Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency
backed protests against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s attempt to
downgrade the powers of the country’s judiciary.
Why has this trove of information
generated less excitement than previous leaks?
One reason cited by intelligence
experts is that the Ukraine events are already being reported in minute detail,
and the batch of raw intelligence does not substantially change the overall
perception of the state of affairs. While the leaked documents testify to the
extraordinary intelligence-gathering abilities of the United States and provide
some granular details of the fight, this might no longer impress an American
public that’s saturated with information and immured to the notion of
ubiquitous data mining. It’s hard to get excited by information purportedly
intercepted from Russian military leaders when selfies by their troops
circulate openly.
The White House, moreover, has
wisely shared considerable intelligence about the conflict. Its
intelligence-gathering prowess was on early public display when it accurately
predicted the events at a time when many experts dismissed the possibility.
Another factor in the lackluster
public reception may be that the leaks aren’t politically scandalous. Though
their disclosure is worrisome to intelligence agencies, embarrassing to
American diplomats and irritating to foreign leaders, there are no revelations
of gross dereliction or covert iniquities, as have dropped in past leaks.
“So far there are no bombshells about bad government
behavior,” said Tom Blanton, director of the National Security Archive at
George Washington University. “Nothing akin to the revelation of massive spying
on Americans in Mr. Snowden’s cache, or even the camera footage of the death of
the Reuters cameraman revealed by Chelsea Manning.”
Nor do the documents reveal much, if
any operational information that could compromise secret missions. Much of the
material made public is raw reporting, neither confirmed nor yet analyzed.
There is no indication, for example, that the information
about Mr. Putin’s chemotherapy is anything but a long-circulating rumor, and no
proof that top officials are scheming against him. It’s presented simply as
something that’s out there.
And for all the dire warnings from
Mrs. Clinton, Mr. Obama and others a decade ago, the far more voluminous and
potentially harmful information leaked by Ms. Manning and Mr. Snowden did not
wreck America’s ability to function in the world. Most foreign governments
probably assume the United States and its major allies are keeping an
electronic eye on them, and in any case America’s clout leaves them little
choice but to carry on. The Discord files do not change that.
On balance, the public’s reaction may
have it right. It’s worrisome that a low-level racist gun-lover can so easily
copy information that needs to be secret. But it’s good to learn that American
spy services are doing such a good job of having eyes and ears on a conflict
that’s costing Americans a small fortune."
Or maybe DeSantis is right, we inject a bunch of money into corrupt Ukraine, which distributes that money, laying it out on sofas, and only participates in an insignificant dispute about the borders, thus teasing us?
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