kcstar | The CIA's director and its top lawyer told White House attorneys in
advance about their plans to file an official criminal complaint
accusing Senate Intelligence Committee aides of improperly obtaining
secret agency documents, the White House confirmed Wednesday.
Lawyers
in the White House counsel's office did not approve the CIA's move to
refer its complaint to the Justice Department or provide any advice to
the agency, presidential spokesman Jay Carney said.
"There was no
comment, there was no weighing in, there was no judgment," Carney said,
citing protocol not to interfere in the ongoing inquiries into the
matter by the FBI and the CIA's inspector general.
The public
controversy erupted on Wednesday when Sen. Dianne Feinstein, head of the
intelligence panel, accused the CIA of snooping in a computer network
it had set up for committee aides conducting an investigation, possibly
violating the Constitution as well as federal law.
She also
disclosed that a top CIA lawyer had filed papers with the Justice
Department saying committee personnel may have violated the law by
possessing certain agency documents.
Carney made his comments at
the White House as the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence
Committee avoided taking sides in the dispute between Feinstein,
D-Calif., and the spy agency.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss of Georgia said
in a brief speech on the Senate floor he does not know all the facts,
and a special investigator may be needed to find out what happened. He
said pointedly that GOP staff aides were not involved in the activities
at the heart of the dispute.
Carney did not say whether President
Barack Obama was directly aware of the decision. "The president has been
aware in general about the protocols and the discussions and occasional
disputes involved," he said.
Obama avoided commenting on his
involvement in the dispute at the end of a meeting Wednesday with female
Democratic lawmakers on women's economic issues. He added that "with
respect to the issues that are going back and forth between the Senate
committee and the CIA, (CIA Director) John Brennan has referred them to
the appropriate authorities. And they are looking into it. And that's
not something that is an appropriate role for me and the White House to
weigh into at this point."
Carney's confirmation of the White
House's awareness of the CIA's decision deepens the complicated
chronology that led the committee head to denounce the CIA and top
officials Tuesday for allegedly trying to intimidate and monitor
congressional overseers.
Feinstein's committee has been
investigating the CIA's now-shuttered "black site" overseas prison
system and harsh interrogation of prisoners. The committee's
long-overdue report has been stymied by its inability to fully review a
classified CIA report on the George W. Bush-era secret interrogations,
while CIA officials have questioned whether Senate investigators
breached a classified computer system in their efforts to press for the
material.
Carney said Brennan and the acting general counsel,
Robert Eatinger, informed White House officials about the decision to
make a referral to the Justice Department. Carney would not say when the
notification occurred.
A spokesman for James Clapper, the
director of national intelligence, said Wednesday that Clapper has been
"fully aware of the circumstances related to this matter and is in
regular contact with Director Brennan." The DNI spokesman, Shawn Turner,
did not say whether Clapper was told in advance of the CIA's plans to
file its complaint to Justice or whether he approved of the decision.
"Commenting
on this issue while it is under review by the Justice Department would
be inappropriate for someone in his position," Turner said.
Feinstein
castigated Eatinger, though not by name, and characterized the move as
"a potential effort to intimidate this staff, and I am not taking it
lightly."
She contends CIA officials monitored Senate aides as
they worked on their report, raising concerns of a clash between the
legislative and executive branch.
Brennan said the CIA was "not in any way, shape or form trying to thwart this report's progression."
Obama
said he was "absolutely committed" to declassifying the Senate
Intelligence Committee's report. "I would urge them to go ahead and
complete the report, send it to us," Obama said. "We will declassify
those findings so that the American people can understand what happened
in the past, and that can help guide us as we move forward."
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