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US indicts Taiwanese-American target of nuclear espionage
furor
By Martin McLaughlin
18 December 1999
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The indictment and jailing of Los Alamos physicist Wen Ho Lee
marks an escalation of the politically motivated campaign over
alleged espionage by China against US nuclear weapons facilities.
Lee, a naturalized US citizen who was born and raised in Taiwan
and has never lived in mainland China, was indicted on 59 counts
of violating the Atomic Energy Act and the Foreign Espionage Act,
charges which would carry a penalty of life imprisonment if he
were convicted. He was arrested December 10 and ordered jailed
indefinitely at a hearing December 13 before US magistrate Don
Svet. Federal prosecutors demanded Lee's incarceration, calling
him a "flight risk," although he has lived in the United
States for more than two decades and has surrendered his passport.
The indictment was far more severe than had been suggested
in previous reports on the case, and is grossly disproportionate,
given that Lee is not accused of spying, but only of downloading
various computer files from a secure computer at Los Alamos for
use in his home computer, which is not secure. This practice is
reportedly commonplace among scientists at US government laboratories.
No evidence has been brought forward that links Lee to officials
of the Chinese government or China's Peoples Liberation Army,
despite a massive investigation. The FBI said more than 60 agents
and computer specialists conducted more than 1,000 interviews
and searched more than a million computer files. An additional
200 FBI agents have been involved in watching Lee 24 hours a day
since April, when he was fired by Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson.
The indictment does not claim that any of the data he is accused
of improperly handling actually found its way to Beijing or otherwise
assisted the Chinese nuclear development program. However, the
section of the Atomic Energy Act under which he is chargednever
before used in a criminal proceedingprovides that the offender
must have removed classified data "with the intent to injure
the United States and with the intent to secure an advantage for
a foreign power." There is no indication how the prosecution
plans to prove that Lee had such an intent.
Another example of contorted reasoning by the prosecutors is
their focus on 10 tapes of data made by Lee for the purpose of
moving files from the lab mainframe to his home computer. Seven
of these tapes are unaccounted for. After Lee was notified in
February 1999 that he was the target of an FBI investigation,
he apparently destroyed some or all of the tapes now labeled "missing,"
as well as erasing some of the files from his home computer. This
action, which in one interpretation would appear a perfectly natural
effort to correct a mistake, is depicted by the FBI and prosecutors
as an attempted cover-up.
Lee's attorneys, from the Los Angeles law firm of O'Melviney
and Myers (former Secretary of State Warren Christopher is a senior
partner), denounced the indictment as excessive and unwarranted,
and repeated a longstanding offer that Lee would submit to an
extensive polygraph interrogation on charges of espionage. Attorney
Holscher said such a test would "verify our repeated written
representations that at no time did he mishandle those tapes in
question and to confirm that he did not provide the tapes to any
third party."
After the initial media and political uproar over the case
last March, when charges of the theft of nuclear secrets were
made public by the New York Times, the case against Wen
Ho Lee slowly collapsed, as it became clear that the basis of
the charges was the unsupported suspicion of a single Department
of Energy official, deputy security chief Notra Trulock, whose
motives are suspect. An article in the Washington Post
revealed that Trulock has been a regular correspondent and participant
in chat room discussions on an extreme right-wing web site called
FreeRepublic.com.
By June, the Clinton administration's own investigation into
the Department of Energy (DOE) labs, headed by former Republican
Senator Warren Rudman, concluded that Trulock and the FBI had
selected Wen Ho Lee out of 500 possible suspects because he was
an Asian-American and had traveled in the 1980s to China (under
official DOE auspices). Rudman's report recommended that Trulock's
office be disbanded and its responsibilities be turned over to
the CIA, and shortly thereafter Trulock resigned his $125,000-a-year
position and took a management job with the military contractor
TRW.
Trulock's predecessor as acting head of counterintelligence
at DOE, Charles Washington, opposed Trulock's instigation of the
espionage investigation at Los Alamos in 1996, telling him that
singling out Lee and another Chinese-American scientist as suspects
was unfair. Washington, who is black, is now suing the Energy
Department for racial discrimination. He is also charging that
Trulock took retaliatory action against him.
Washington charged that Trulock was seeking to expand the budget
for his counterintelligence operation at DOE and saw the Los Alamos
spy scare as a golden opportunity. "Trulock used to say,
'We need one good espionage case to make this program grow,'"
Washington told the Washington Post.
Given the flimsy nature of the case and the dubious character
of Lee's principal accuser, Lee's indictment on such serious charges
can only be understood as a political decision taken at the highest
levels of the Clinton administration. Attorney General Janet Reno
reportedly made the decision to indict Lee after a briefing on
the case at the White House for senior administration officials.
Until that meeting, it had been widely expected that Lee would
either not be indicted at all, or face only relatively minor charges
for mishandling computer data.
As it has done consistently in the face of provocations by
extreme right-wing forceswhich have frequently been allied
with the FBIthe White House has once again decided to conciliate
its opponents on the right. In this case, Clinton and his aides
are seeking to mollify Congressional Republicans by making Wen
Ho Lee the scapegoat in a spy scare in which there is no certainty
that a breach of security actually took place.
The most widely publicized example of a supposed Chinese espionage
success, the leaking to China of plans for an advanced US warhead
called the W-88, demonstrates the dubiousness of the whole affair.
The W-88 is a miniaturized warhead used only on missiles equipped
with so-called MIRV technology, where a single missile releases
multiple, independently targeted warheads. China has no such missiles
and is not expected to be able to produce them for several decades,
and therefore would have no use for the W-88.
The timing of the indictment and arrest of Wen Ho Lee is also
suspiciously political. Fortuitously or not, it takes the spotlight
off of two other events in the China espionage investigation which
could discredit both the Clinton administration and the congressional
Republicans who have been seeking to whip up anti-Asian racism
and anticommunist hysteria over the issue.
On December 15, two days after Lee's hearing, a five-member
panel sponsored by Stanford University's Center for International
Security and Cooperation (CISC) issued a devastating, point-by-point
rebuttal of the report of a House subcommittee, chaired by Republican
Christopher Cox, which first launched the China spy investigation.
Supervised by Michael M. May, codirector of the CISC and former
director of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, one of
the main US nuclear weapons research facilities, the Stanford
report detailed crude errors of fact, interpretation and judgment
throughout the 750-page Cox report, which was widely hailed by
the US media when it was released last March.
Meanwhile a Senate special subcommittee headed by Arlen Specter,
a Republican from Pennsylvania, called off scheduled hearings
on the FBI's investigation into Chinese espionage, which would
have provided a public forum for Asian-American groups outraged
by the racial profiling employed by the agency in the course of
its three-year probe. Specter said the hearings were called off
at the request of FBI Director Louis Freeh, who claimed that testimony
could aid Wen Ho Lee's defense.
See Also:
China spying charges denounced
as racist frame-up
[19 August 1999]
No spy charges against Wen
Ho Lee
China espionage case collapses
[19 June 1999]
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