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Wednesday, May 25, 2005
Joel Mowbray :: Townhall.com Columnist
Not espionage after all
by Joel Mowbray
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When Pentagon analyst Larry Franklin was finally charged with passing classified information on May 3, the headlines, at least in part, should have read, ?Franklin not charged with espionage.?

Such was the media build-up last fall; almost every story on Mr. Franklin had a headline or subhead that contained the words ?espionage? or ?spying.?  But in spilling the beans on an espionage investigation, the FBI (or possibly another entity) was itself leaking highly classified information.  What the media never did was stop to ask: why?

Charges that have been formally leveled against Mr. Franklin are not inconsequential.  He is charged with unauthorized disclosure of classified material for allegedly disclosing classified information to two U.S. lobbyists who work for the American Israel Political Action Committee (AIPAC).

But what the charge wasn?t was espionage.  It was far, far less sexy.  Unauthorized disclosure?as any reader of the New York Times or the Washington Post knows?is also far, far more common.  Which doesn?t excuse Mr. Franklin?s allegedly illegal behavior, but it does put it in a far different context.

Gone would have been the sexy headlines that someone in the ?pro-Israel? division at the Pentagon was about to be arrested for ?espionage? on behalf of the Jewish state.  Gone would have been the stories?particularly by the Post?that tarred named individuals, all Jews and all Bush supporters, with unsubstantiated allegations that they, too, might be involved in spying for Israel.

If everything alleged by the government is true, then Mr. Franklin has committed a serious crime, one which is punishable by up to 10 years in prison.  But it is a vastly different charge than what unnamed investigators seemed certain of last fall.  Mr. Franklin, ironically, is now charged with the same behavior that most likely was committed by someone in the FBI: unauthorized disclosure of classified information.

The details of an espionage investigation are highly classified, for obvious reasons.  As maligned as CBS News is, it is unlikely that it would have broken the story last August without solid, well-placed sourcing.

From an August 27 article on CBSNews.com: ?the FBI believes it has ?solid? evidence that the suspected mole supplied Israel with classified materials.?  The evidence was described as coming from ?wiretaps, undercover surveillance and photography? that further showed the information being passed from two AIPAC officials ?on to the Israelis.?

A front-page story in the Washington Post the next day added urgency by reporting, ?arrests in the case could come as early as next week.?   Notice ?arrests.?  Had the Post been tipped off to one arrest, the word used would not have been plural.  And though that first article left open the possibility that Franklin might not be charged with espionage, subsequent Post stories later in the same week implied that the FBI might be on the verge of unraveling an entire network of dual loyalty spies for the Jewish state.  To date, it appears that not even an investigation into those named individuals has been launched.

As leaked, it certainly sounded like espionage: classified information going through an intermediary from Mr. Franklin to Israel.  Reports in the New York Times and elsewhere further indicate that neither AIPAC nor its two former officials are targets of the investigation anymore.  If indeed they did pass classified information to a foreign government, though, then why not? Continued...

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About The Author

Joel Mowbray, who got his start with Townhall.com, is an award-winning investigative journalist, nationally-syndicated columnist and author of Dangerous Diplomacy: How the State Department Threatens America's Security.

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