
When House
Republicans called a hearing in the middle of their long recess, you knew it
would be something big, and indeed it was: They accidentally blew the CIA's
cover.
The purpose of
Wednesday's hearing of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee was to
examine security lapses that led to the killing in Benghazi last month of the
U.S. ambassador to Libya and three others. But in doing so, the lawmakers
reminded us why "congressional intelligence" is an
oxymoron.
Through their
outbursts, cryptic language and boneheaded questioning of State Department
officials, the committee members left little doubt that one of the two compounds
at which the Americans were killed, described by the administration as a
"consulate" and a nearby "annex," was a CIA base. They did this, helpfully, in a
televised public hearing.
Rep. Jason
Chaffetz (R-Utah) was the first to unmask the spooks. "Point of order! Point of
order!" he called out as a State Department security official, seated in front
of an aerial photo of the U.S. facilities in Benghazi, described the chaotic
night of the attack. "We're getting into classified issues that deal with
sources and methods that would be totally inappropriate in an open forum such as
this."
A State
Department official assured him that the material was "entirely unclassified"
and that the photo was from a commercial satellite. "I totally object to the use
of that photo," Chaffetz continued. He went on to say that "I was told
specifically while I was in Libya I could not and should not ever talk about
what you're showing here today."
Now that Chaffetz
had alerted potential bad guys that something valuable was in the photo, the
chairman, Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), attempted to lock the barn door through which
the horse had just bolted. "I would direct that that chart be taken down," he
said, although it already had been on C-SPAN. "In this hearing room, we're not
going to point out details of what may still in fact be a facility of the United
States government or more facilities."
May still be a
facility? The plot thickened - and Chaffetz gave more hints. "I believe that the
markings on that map were terribly inappropriate," he said, adding that "the
activities there could cost lives."
In their
questioning and in the public testimony they invited, the lawmakers managed to
disclose, without ever mentioning Langley directly, that there was a
seven-member "rapid response force" in the compound the State Department was
calling an annex. One of the State Department security officials was forced to
acknowledge that "not necessarily all of the security people" at the Benghazi
compounds "fell under my direct operational control."
And whose control
might they have fallen under? Well, presumably it's the "other government
agency" or "other government entity" the lawmakers and witnesses referred to;
Issa informed the public that this agency was not the FBI.
"Other government
agency," or "OGA," is a common euphemism in Washington for the CIA. This "other
government agency," the lawmakers' questioning further revealed, was in
possession of a video of the attack but wasn't releasing it because it was
undergoing "an investigative process."
Or maybe they
were referring to the Department of Agriculture.
That the Benghazi
compound had included a large CIA presence had been reported but not confirmed.
The New York Times, for example, had reported that among those evacuated were
"about a dozen CIA operatives and contractors." The paper, like The Washington
Post, withheld locations and details of the facilities at the administration's
request.
But on Wednesday,
the withholding was on hold.
The Republican
lawmakers, in their outbursts, alternated between scolding the State Department
officials for hiding behind classified material and blaming them for disclosing
information that should have been classified. But the lawmakers created the
situation by ordering a public hearing on a matter that belonged behind closed
doors.
Republicans were
aiming to embarrass the Obama administration over State Department security
lapses. But they inadvertently caused a different picture to emerge than the one
that has been publicly known: that the victims may have been let down not by the
State Department but by the CIA. If the CIA was playing such a major role in
these events, which was the unmistakable impression left by Wednesday's hearing,
having a televised probe of the matter was absurd.
The chairman,
attempting to close his can of worms, finally suggested that "the entire
committee have a classified briefing as to any and all other assets that were
not drawn upon but could have been drawn upon" in
Benghazi.
Good idea. Too
bad he didn't think of that before putting the CIA on
C-SPAN.
AN/SM