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Joseph Finder

The Spies at State

Hillary Clinton Guang Niu, Pool / Getty Images The case surrounding Fidel’s alleged mole, says spy novelist Joseph Finder, is less important for the breach—Cuba?—than the huge security hole it exposes at the lie detector-averse State Department.

There’s nothing like a good old-fashioned spy story. Especially a real-life one: Last week, a retired State Department official, Walter Kendall Myers, and his wife, Gwendolyn Steingraber Myers, were arrested and charged with spying for Fidel Castro for almost three decades. The espionage they allegedly conducted was “incredibly serious,” said David Kris, assistant attorney general for national security, “and should serve as a warning to any others in the U.S. government who would betray America's trust by serving as illegal agents of a foreign government. We remain vigilant in protecting our nation's secrets and in bringing to justice those who compromise them.”

Well, the FBI’s recently enhanced counterespionage squad and its Washington field office deserve credit for an admirable job of entrapping the couple. But you’ve got to wonder: 30 years? What the hell took so long?

The FBI’s recently enhanced counterespionage squad deserves credit for an admirable job of entrapping the couple. But you’ve got to wonder: 30 years? What the hell took so long?

Myers was a senior Europe analyst for the State Department’s elite intelligence unit, the Bureau of Intelligence and Research. In 1999, he was granted a clearance above Top Secret: Top Secret/SCI, or Sensitive Compartmented Information, which pretty much unlocked the vault door to some of our government’s most closely held secrets. He viewed at least 75 Secret or Top Secret reports about Cuba that were demonstrably outside his area of responsibility. Yet he was uncovered as a spy only after his hard drive at work was audited—after his retirement, in October 2007. (We don’t yet know what caused State Department security to look at his hard drive; the tip, I’m told, came from a recent Cuban defector.)

Here’s the real scandal, which for some reason no one is talking about: In every other branch of intelligence, officials with access at this level are given periodic polygraphs and subjected to updated background investigations. But at State? Not so much. The State Department has been notoriously resistant to polygraphing their employees. They use the polygraph only for administrative investigations (such as internal affairs) and in certain pre-employment screenings. But when it comes to those in high-level, sensitive positions, the State Department has always preferred to protect their employees’ privacy. Their official policy: “An employee of the department may be asked, after high-level approval, if he or she is willing to take a polygraph examination on a voluntary basis in certain specified circumstances.”

Voluntary?

Of course, the polygraph is hardly foolproof, but it can be useful in pointing out “lifestyle” issues — sudden unaccounted wealth, for instance, like Aldrich Ames buying a new Jag with cash.The Myerses wouldn’t have been caught this way, because they were largely unpaid (just reimbursed for travel expenses) and allegedly spied out of fealty to Cuba. But the polygraph, along with regulary updated background checks, can call attention to other discrepancies. The couple’s travel pattern alone should have raised an eyebrow: They visited Ecuador, Jamaica, Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, Mexico, and Argentina, all to meet their Cuban handler. They met with a Cuban agent in South Dakota. They traveled to Cuba (via Mexico) where they spent the evening with Fidel. (As far as we know they weren’t freelancing work for the “Let’s Go” guides.)

Kendall Myers was well aware of this security loophole at State, which was why (according to the affidavit filed by an FBI Special Agent on the case) he and his wife rebuffed Cuban Intelligence’s request that one or both of them seek employment at the CIA. They both preferred the State Department because, Myers said, “you had to be a good liar to pass” [the CIA’s polygraph]—and he was “not a very good liar.”

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June 9, 2009 | 10:31pm
Comments ()
firasd

This article is completely devoid of useful arguments for polygraph tests instead of more reliable investigative tools. Let's mistrust our diplomats by default!

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11:56 pm, Jun 9, 2009
kent1944

wanna bet there are a few israelis spies in the congress,senate,state department and wherever else,mosaad is the best spy agency in the world,they are everywhere.wonder why we funnel so much money to israel ? surely not because it could be a strategic base in the ME.must be some other important reason.over the last 3 decades the money funnelled to israel could probably balance the budget.

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5:30 am, Jun 10, 2009
GPatton

Joe McCarthy was right. State is full of spies, comsymps, commies and fellow travelers -- Alger Hiss types. G Patton

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6:27 am, Jun 10, 2009
OnwardRocinante

I agree that updated background checks might be reasonable, but keep in mind these updates are very time consuming and expensive. As for polygraphs, they are unreliable to the point of being useless. Polygraphs falsely accuse the innocent and consistently let good liars pass through. Therefore, polygraphs are both a waste of time and money and worst of all provide a false sense of security. It would be nice, but it is not possible, to live in a world where the United States is the only country with successful spies. On occasion, other countries are going to have some success too. That is the reality of the game and it is an opportunity to be introspective, but it should not be a time to either radically change policy nor apply a useless Band-Aid.

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7:40 am, Jun 10, 2009
Ozone69

The Department of State has always had questionable employees and motives. Yet little is done. Richard Armitage outed Valerie Plame to Robert Novak and nothing was done to him.

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8:11 am, Jun 10, 2009
djmont

It wouldn't seem unreasonable at least to have more stringent security requirements for those handling the most sensitive of materials, as apparently these spies were.

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8:32 am, Jun 10, 2009
ritamary

Just curious why State is characterized as "Hillary's Spy Den" like she is somehow at fault?

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9:24 am, Jun 10, 2009
dahniuru

I once held a Top Secret clearance, and had access to fairly imortant information concerning our Missile Delivery System. IMO anyone in such a position of National trust should accept periodic checks, even with the lie detector approach, just to keep an eye on what's going on.

Why do some people prefer protecting the rights of those doing destructive deeds to protecting the rights of the rest of
us to be safe. Anyone that takes a job requiring a Top Secret Clearance should be subject ton ongoing, surprise, checkups. Period. If you don't want such checkups, take a different job.

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1:12 pm, Jun 10, 2009
Banjo1

What a joke the FBI's counter-intelligence division is. Spies spend decades giving our secrets away before they are more or less accidentally caught.

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2:04 pm, Jun 10, 2009
Mary50

First of all, this article is boring and useles. And the title smells like typical Hillary-Hating-To-Get-Attention stupidity on the part of talentless writers.

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2:23 pm, Jun 10, 2009
roseann

You must really be desperate for readers. Remove Hillary Clinton's photo from this article and admit this was a ploy to get attention.

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8:13 pm, Jun 10, 2009
JackJack

HIC.. you're done. go home and bake cookies.

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9:08 pm, Jun 10, 2009
veritas3

You can always tell the Hillary haters by the photos they use-

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10:55 pm, Jun 10, 2009
djmont

I like that picture of Hillary. She looks like she's about to kick someone's ass.

Hopefully Kim Jong Il's.

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2:43 pm, Jun 11, 2009
medtek

What could Fidel possibly do with the kind of stuff that Myers could liberate? This is less than Little League, it's T-Ball.
I think that "Stro" has his hands full what with teaching 98.75% of his folk to read and write (U.S. 67%), force-feeding 100% of his folk the latest in healthcare regimens, supplying the Doctors and Nurses required by most of Latin America, fielding a major force in worldwide Futbol, making it look like "escape" when major Cuban Beisbol players make it to the majors in the U.S., etc., etc. What do they need with anything U.S. ?

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5:41 pm, Jun 19, 2009
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The Spies at State

by Joseph Finder

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