WASHINGTON — The Central Intelligence Agency has warned former employees not to have unapproved contacts with reporters, as part of a mounting campaign by the administration to crack down on officials who leak information on national security issues. A former official said the CIA recently warned several retired employees who have consulting contracts with the agency that they could lose their pensions by talking to reporters without permission. He added that while the threats might be legally ‘hollow,’ they were having a chilling effect on former employees. The CIA called the allegations ‘rubbish’. Jennifer Millerwise Dyke, spokeswoman for CIA director Porter Goss, said former employees with consulting deals could lose their contracts for violating the CIA secrecy agreement by having unauthorised conversations with reporters. But she stressed that under current law, ‘termination of a contract does not affect pensions’. The clampdown represents the latest move in what observers describe as the most aggressive government campaign against leaks in years. The Justice Department is investigating the disclosure to the media of secret overseas CIA prisons and a highly classified National Security Agency domestic spying programme authorised by President George W. Bush. Last week, the CIA fired Mary McCarthy, […]
Thursday, April 27th, 2006
CIA Warns Ex-agents Over Talking to Media
Author: DEMETRI SEVASTOPULO
Source: Financial Times (U.K.)
Publication Date: 9:42 p.m. ET April 26, 2006
Link: CIA Warns Ex-agents Over Talking to Media
Source: Financial Times (U.K.)
Publication Date: 9:42 p.m. ET April 26, 2006
Link: CIA Warns Ex-agents Over Talking to Media
Stephan: I recently had a well-known Russian writer tell me that he has begun to see the same obsessive governmental attempt to control the media, and the self-censureship by the media itself that he saw in the old Soviet Union.