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To: robnhood who wrote (9233)5/20/1999 10:13:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 17770
 
Book Discloses Clinton Secrets

Thursday, 20 May 1999
W A S H I N G T O N (AP)

HIGHLY CLASSIFIED U.S. documents in a new book divulge a wealth
of secrets, including that North Korea's leader crushed a 1996 coup
attempt and President Clinton assured Boris Yeltsin that U.S. policy
would have a "positive impact" on the Russian leader's re-election.

The documents also detail how Navy intelligence used the cover of a
Coast Guard ship inspection to search for laser weapons aboard a
Russian ship. None were found.

Though the government is prone to leaks, the unauthorized
publication of classified documents that in most cases are just a year
or two old is rare. It has touched off widespread concern in the
intelligence community.

"This is the kind of material that people file lawsuits to obtain after
it's 30 years old," said Steve Aftergood of the Federation of
American Scientists, a Washington group that follows intelligence
issues.

"These documents carry some of the highest classifications in the
U.S. government and it's absolutely astonishing that they would be
published in this way," Aftergood said.

"Betrayal" by Bill Gertz, a reporter for The Washington Times,
presents a critical account of Clinton administration security policy
that tracks closely to stories Gertz has written over the last several
years. The original articles, however, did not include reprints of the
classified documents.

U.S. officials interviewed Thursday confirmed the authenticity of the
documents and voiced concern.

One senior administration official, who spoke only on condition of
anonymity, said the White House didn't consider any of the published
information embarrassing but was concerned about risk to
intelligence sources and methods.

For several years, the FBI has been trying to identify Gertz's sources,
U.S. officials said.

CIA Director George Tenet has complained about a "hemorrhaging"
of classified information. Tenet has not blamed the news media,
focusing instead on "people who believe they derive some power
from leaking classified information."

Gertz, in a telephone interview, declined to discuss his sources.

But his book states the Clinton administration carried out a policy of
appeasement of real or potential U.S. enemies that "so angered
some intelligence, defense and foreign policy officials that they
responded in the only way they knew how: by disclosing to the press
some of the nation's most secret intelligence."

Gertz wrote that his sources were "unsung heroes" who "jeopardized
their careers to expose wrongdoing."

The book's appendix reprints all or part of 23 documents from the
Clinton administration - some as recent as last year - ranging in
classification from confidential to top secret. Several are marked
"umbra" or "gamma," code words for information derived from
electronic intercepts.

A 1996 U.S. intelligence report disclosed that the North Korean
government had detailed three cases of cannibalism stemming from
famine. It was classified at the "code word" level, among the highest
levels of classification.

A secret dispatch written last August by Larry Robinson, a State
Department official in Seoul, raised questions about leader Kim
Jong-Il's hold on power.

"There is extensive evidence of a major coup attempt by elements of
the VI Corps in 1995, which appears to have been crushed only with
some difficulty," the dispatch said.

A March 1996 State Department memorandum, marked
"confidential," summarized Clinton's meeting with Yeltsin at a
terrorism summit in Egypt.

Clinton told Yeltsin he "wanted to make sure that everything the
United States did would have a positive impact and nothing should
have a negative impact" on Yeltsin's upcoming re-election, the memo
said.

The memo added that the United States wanted an upcoming summit
with the Russian leader to be successful to "reinforce everything that
Yeltsin had done."

An April 1997 Pentagon report described how the Navy inserted an
intelligence team into a Coast Guard inspection crew that searched,
unsuccessfully, for evidence of the laser weapon aboard a Russian
merchant ship.

The memo alleged the ship was involved in spying on U.S.
submarines and appeared to direct a "laser emanation" at a
helicopter carrying a Navy officer. No weapon was found.

And a 1997 CIA report, based in part on electronic intercepts and
spy satellite imagery, indicated Russia was building a bunker and
subway line for use in evacuating leaders in a military emergency.

Not all of the documents' messages were serious. The March 1996
memo detailed an offer Yeltsin made in jest after Clinton handed him
a document translated only in English.

"Foreign Minister (Yevgeny) Primakov said that he could read it, and
Yeltsin joked that since Primakov knew English, Secretary (of State
Warren) Christopher should now learn Russian," the memo related.

"The Russians would be glad to provide the secretary with a young
attractive instructress who would work with the secretary night and
day." Clinton joked that would change Christopher's droll image, the
memo said.