Turnerâs press release notably went further than HPSCIâs letter, pressing US president Joe Biden to personally âdeclassify all informationâ concerning the threat. The next day, Turner issued a second statement declaring heâd worked closely âwith the Biden administrationâ before notifying Congress. Naft, the HPSCI spokesperson, clarified by email that Turner had worked with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on the language describing the threat contained in the Dear Colleague letter. (Naft stressed Turner had âNEVERâ stated heâd cooperated with the White House.)
Turnerâs second statement added that HPSCI had voted 23â1 to make the disclosure. According to the committeeâs own rules, a vote is not a procedural requirement, suggesting the vote was cast preemptively to demonstrate solidarity with the decision.
It is unclear which HPSCI member voted against the disclosure, as no roll call was taken.
A senior congressional source tells WIRED the Dear Colleague letter was always destined to cause panic. It is widely understood that the letters are not a secure form of communication and are often disclosed to reporters and others working off the Hill.
Only four times in the past decade and a half, according to WIREDâs review of the system, has HPSCI used a Dear Colleague letter to draw attention to classified materialâoutside of routine budgetary concerns.
The first such message is dated March 2009 and pertains to two classified Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) reports. The subject of the reports is undeclared. A second letter was issued by HPSCI and signed by former congressperson Devin Nunes on January 10, 2017, informing members of a classified report on âRussian activities and intentions in the recent US election.â
Neither letter is marked urgent.
A third letter informing members about the option to review classified material is dated February 24, 2010; however, it makes clear the material was made available at the request of the intelligence community (IC). It is one of numerous letters in which HPSCI is seen lobbying on the spy agenciesâ behalfâin this case, to support a renewal of the 9/11-era USA PATRIOT Act, today defunct due to a lack of support in Congress.
A plurality of HPSCIâs Dear Colleague letters are aimed at whipping support for bills that reauthorize or advance US spy powers. Others urge lawmakers to vote against legislation that would enhance Americansâ privacy protections. One such letter reads simply: âDonât Handcuff the FBI and Intelligence Community.â
Six other letters are invitations to classified briefings held by intelligence agencies. HPSCI routinely acts as a mediator between the agencies and members of Congress, arranging briefings and other events on the intelligence communityâs behalf.
HPSCI sent an additional three Dear Colleagues letters the morning after its âurgentâ warning about Russia went out: Each asked members to support various amendments to a FISA bill during an upcoming vote that HPSCIâs chair was, simultaneously, working to get called off.
Sources told WIRED that Johnsonâs decision to delay the vote on FISA came amid a sudden threat by Turner to kill the bill the moment it got to the floor. Turner was motivated to stop the billâs progress at any cost, they said, due to the growing odds of a rival committee passing amendments of their ownâto dramatically curtail the FBIâs domestic surveillance abilities.
+ There are no comments
Add yours