Big Three Ignore Proof Clinton Lied on
China Spying
Review
Sex Lies Draw More News Than Policy Lies
When
he was forced to respond to press conference inquiries about newspaper
scoops on Chinese espionage, Bill Clinton denied any knowledge that
espionage occurred on his watch. On March 19, Clinton insisted: "Can I
tell you there has been no espionage at the labs since I’ve been
President? I can tell you that no one has reported to me that they
suspect such a thing has occurred." He repeated later in the same event:
"To the best of my knowledge, no one has said anything to me about any
espionage which occurred by the Chinese against the labs, during my
presidency."
On April 8, Clinton met the
press with Chinese premier Zhu Rongji and denied knowledge again: "You
know, China is a big country with a big government and I can only say
that America is a big country with a big government and occasionally
things happen in this government that I don’t know about. And so I think
it’s important that we continue the investigation and do our best to
find out what happened and I asked for his cooperation." That night, ABC
and NBC ran clips of Clinton’s March 19 denial. But with the routine
exception of FNC, the network evening and morning shows often failed to
follow up when evidence emerged proving his denials were hollow:
April 28: The New
York Times reported: "A scientist suspected of spying for China
improperly transferred huge amounts of secret data from a computer
system at a government laboratory, compromising virtually every nuclear
weapon in the United States arsenal, government and lab officials say.
The data – millions of lines of computer code that approximate how this
country’s atomic warheads work – were downloaded from a computer system
at the Los Alamos, N.M., weapons lab that is open only to those with
top-level security clearances, according to the officials. The
scientist, Wen Ho Lee, then transferred the files to a widely accessible
computer network at the lab, where they were stored under other file
names, the officials said. The Taiwan-born scientist transferred most of
the secret data in 1994 and 1995, officials said."
Coverage of this evidence of
espionage during Clinton’s first term? ABC’s World News Tonight
aired a full story, the CBS Evening News mentioned it before its
own exclusive report on nuclear lab security and CNN’s The World
Today aired two reports. NBC aired nothing. None pointed out how the
disclosure countered Clinton’s claim.
April 30: The
Washington Post front page reported that Congress "erupted" with
criticism against the FBI and the Justice Department. "After grilling
FBI Director Louis J. Freeh for nearly three hours in a closed-door
hearing, members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence from
both parties appeared equally outraged at what they depicted as lax
handling of past and present investigations into suspected leaks of
classified data." Coverage? Only CNN aired a story.
May 2: The New York
Times added new details about when the Clinton team learned about
espionage: "A secret report to top Clinton administration officials last
November warned that China posed an ‘acute intelligence threat’ to the
government’s nuclear weapons laboratories and that computer systems at
the labs were being constantly penetrated by outsiders.Yet investigators
waited until March to search the computer of a scientist at Los Alamos
National Laboratory who had been under investigation for nearly three
years, suspected of spying for China. And it was not until April that
the Energy Department shut down its classified computer systems to
impose tighter security over their data....The classified report
contains numerous warnings and specific examples showing that outsiders
had gained access to the computer systems at [U.S.] weapons labs as
recently as June 1998."
Network coverage? Only ABC
reported it, for 40 seconds, but did not note it contradicted Clinton’s
claims of ignorance.
May 5: The Senate Energy
and Natural Resources Committee heard from nuclear lab directors and
probed delays in warrants for Wen Ho Lee. The next day’s New York
Times story began: "Scientists at the government’s weapons
laboratories can still download nuclear secrets onto computer disks and
walk out without being checked, the directors of three of the labs told
Congress on Wednesday." Network coverage? CBS and NBC aired nothing.
ABC’s World News Tonight provided a full story on the China
hearing, but Bob Woodruff honed in on FBI bungling on the Lee case and
bought the Justice Department’s claim that it twice turned down warrant
requests simply "because the evidence against Lee was insufficient."
May 7: Washington
Times reporter Bill Gertz summarized a bipartisan congressional
finding of damage that was released later that day: "U.S. satellite
technology transferred to China in 1995 and 1996 has improved Beijing’s
rockets and missiles, according to a report to be released May 7 by the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. The bipartisan committee report
sets out that the Chinese government is engaged in a covert operation
aimed at influencing U.S. policies." Network coverage? Only CNN.
May 9: On NBC’s Meet
the Press, host Tim Russert forced Energy Secretary Bill Richardson
to admit that espionage had occurred "during past administrations and
present administrations." Russert exclaimed: "Finally, someone has
acknowledged it." Network coverage? Zero, even though the admission made
the front page of The Washington Times and The Boston Globe.
May 10: New York
Times reporters Jeff Gerth and James Risen expanded on espionage: "A
scientist working on a classified Pentagon project in 1997 provided
China with secrets about advanced radar technology being developed to
track submarines, according to court records and government documents.
Submarine detection technology is jealously guarded by the Pentagon
because the Navy’s ability to conceal submarines is a crucial military
advantage."
The reporters added context:
"The information about the radar technology, which is considered
promising and has been in development for two decades, was divulged to
Chinese nuclear-weapons experts during a two-hour lecture in Beijing in
May 1997 by Peter Lee, an American scientist, court records show....The
Peter Lee case is also significant because it clearly demonstrates that
the American government believed that China was successfully engaged in
espionage – obtaining American defense secrets – during President
Clinton’s second term." Network coverage? Zero. CNN did a story on
espionage, but not this story.
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