Attorney General Jeff Sessions and other
top Trump administration officials on Friday lashed out against illegal
leaks and issued a stern warning to would-be offenders saying they would
be “held accountable” for their actions.
“No government can be effective when its members cannot speak in
confidence” with other government and foreign leaders, Sessions said,
adding that referrals of classified leaks from U.S. intelligence
agencies have “exploded” this year.
“We are taking a stand,” the attorney general said. “This culture of
leaks must stop.”
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Session said criminals who have leaked classified information are “being
investigated and will be prosecuted.” He added that four people have
already been charged with leaking classified material and related
counts, and investigations have tripled.
Last month, a report written by Republicans on the Senate’s homeland
security panel warned that the Trump administration faced an “alarming”
amount of media leaks that posed a potential threat to national
security. The 24-page report titled “State Secrets: How and Avalanche of
Media Leaks is Harming National Security,” estimated the Trump
administration has had about one leak per day.
The authors of the report urged the Justice Department to step up its
investigations into the leaks.
On Thursday, a new leak hit the White House hard.
The Washington Post released complete transcripts from Trump’s telephone
conversations with Peña Nieto, the president of Mexico, and Australian
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
The documents provided an unfiltered glimpse into Trump’s diplomacy
during his first few days on the job. It also unveiled some not-so-nice
comments he made in which he called New Hampshire a “drug infested den”
and pleaded with Nieto to stay quiet about the controversial border wall
Trump repeatedly promised he’d build.
“Leaking the phone calls between our president and other heads of state
is nothing short of a national disgrace,” Kellyanne Conway, White House
counselor, told “Fox & Friends” on Friday. “I want there to be
bipartisan outrage.”
She noted the West Wing is a “small place” and finding the leakers might
be “easier” than some realize.”
Former federal prosecutors told Fox News that the leak likely
constitutes a federal crime. And lawmakers have voiced concern about how
that material got out and the security implications.
Republican Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Bob Corker of
Tennessee lashed out at the person behind the leak with Graham calling
it a “disservice to the president” and Corker saying he hopes Trump’s
new chief of staff will “fire every single person” who is behind leaking
sensitive information from within the White House.
Though Friday’s announcement has been in the works for some time, it
comes during a rocky period between Trump and Sessions. Trump has taken
the former Alabama senator to task over the past few weeks and has
stated his “disappointment” with the country’s top law enforcement
official via tweets, interviews and press conferences.
Trump slammed Sessions for not being tougher on leaks from the
intelligence community.
"I want the attorney general to be much tougher," Trump said last week.
"I want the leaks from intelligence agencies, which are leaking like
rarely have they ever leaked before, at a very important level. These
are intelligence agencies we cannot have that happen.”
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