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The scapegoating of Wen Ho Lee
How a Los Alamos scientist was caught in a web of political
intrigue and prosecutorial abuse
By Kate Randall
15 September 2000
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this version to print
A plea bargain in the case of Wen Ho Lee was finalized Wednesday
afternoon allowing the 60-year-old nuclear physicist from the
Los Alamos laboratory to be released from federal prison in Santa
Fe, New Mexico. He had been held in solitary confinement since
December 10, 1999.
In announcing Lee's release, US District Judge James Parker
said that the government's actions in the case embarrassed
our entire nation.... I sincerely apologize to you, Dr. Lee, for
the unfair manner in which you were held in custody by the executive
branch. Parker pointed to the ferocious campaign by the
government to incarcerate Lee under the most draconian conditions,
based on their allegations that to do otherwise would pose a risk
to national security. He denounced those efforts in light of the
prosecution's dropping now of all of the most serious charges
against the scientist.
Lee was indicted on 59 felony charges last December, alleging
that he transferred top-secret nuclear weapons data to unsecured
computers and portable tapes at Los Alamos. Although Lee was never
charged with espionage, government prosecutors alleged that he
acted with intent to harm the United States and to aid a foreign
power. If convicted of the original felony counts he could have
faced life in prison.
Wen Ho Lee's prosecution was framed against the backdrop of
an alleged spy scandal of huge proportions, supported by a semi-hysterical
campaign in the media which identified him by name and painted
him as a paramount threat to national security and US nuclear
secrets.
In the plea deal Lee admitted to only 1 of 59 felony counts
against himdownloading restricted material to an unsecured
computer. He will be sentenced to time already served278
daysand will agree to cooperate with federal investigators
in questioning over the fate of seven tapes the government claims
contain downloaded data from the Los Alamos lab. He will not be
additionally fined or penalized.
The collapse of the government's case against Lee marks the
end of a shameful episode of government witch-hunting and persecution
of the Taiwan-born nuclear scientist. An examination of the background
to the case provides a telling exposure of the American political
establishment in which no segment emerges unscathedfrom
the Republican right wing, to the Clinton administration and the
Democrats, to the liberal media led by the New York Times.
The vilification and scapegoating of Dr. Lee had their origins
in the politically motivated campaign by right-wing opponents
of the Clinton administration. It grew out of the many-faceted
Republican dirty tricks operation aimed at destabilizing Clinton,
which culminated in the investigation headed by Kenneth Starr
and the impeachment crisis. This political vendetta against Clinton
converged with Republican opposition to Clinton's policy on Chinese-US
relations, an issue that generated sharp divisions within US ruling
circles.
Secret congressional hearings chaired by Republican Congressman
Christopher Cox were convened in the autumn of 1998 into allegations
of Chinese espionage at US nuclear facilities. Leading up to this,
Republicans in Congress had been calling for the appointment of
an independent counsel to investigate allegations that the 1996
Clinton-Gore campaign accepted contributions from China. The Republicans
implied that a link existed between alleged Chinese donations
to the Democratic campaign and Clinton's moves to normalize relations
with China, as well as his administration's supposed reluctance
to investigate Chinese theft of US nuclear secrets.
The star witness at these hearings was Notra Trulock III, an
Energy Department intelligence officer. Trulock fingered Wen Ho
Lee, basing his suspicions of Lee on a document turned over to
the US by a suspected US-Chinese double-agent, who claimed that
China had stolen the secrets for the W-88, America's most sophisticated
nuclear warhead.
Trulock at the time contended that the espionage he attributed
to Wen Ho Lee threatened the lives of tens of millions of
people and was on a magnitude equal to the Rosenbergs-Fuchs
compromise of the Manhattan Project information, referring
to the case of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were tried on charges
of stealing atomic secrets and executed in 1953 as Soviet spies.
The Clinton administration conducted its own investigation,
headed by former Republican Senator Warren Rudman, into the Department
of Energy (DOE) Labs. This investigation concluded that Trulock
and the FBI had singled out Wen Ho Leefrom among 500 possible
suspectsbecause he was Asian-American and had traveled to
China in the 1980s, under the auspices of the DOE. Rudman recommended
that Trulock's office be disbanded and its responsibilities were
turned over to the CIA. Soon thereafter Trulock resigned his position
and went to work for the military contractor TRW.
In recent days the New York Times has expressed outrage
over the treatment of Wen Ho Lee. On September 12 it published
an editorial calling for an investigation into the prosecution
of the Los Alamos scientist. A serious investigation is indeed
called for, but one of its first items of business would have
to be an exposure of the role of the New York Times itself.
The Times played a critical part in launching the spy
scare and in witch-hunting Dr. Lee. This campaign began with a
front-page article on March 6, 1999 headlined Breach at
Los Alamos: A Special Report; China Stole Nuclear Secrets For
Bombs, U.S. Aides Say. Serving to line up public opinion
behind the Republicans' anti-Chinese and anti-Clinton propaganda,
the Times contended that the White House had stalled in
investigating the spying allegations even though senior
intelligence officials regarded it as one of the most damaging
spy cases in recent history.
The article claimed, China has made a leap in the development
of nuclear weapons: the miniaturization of its bombs, according
to Administration officials, and that in 1996 Government
investigators had identified a suspect, an American scientist
at Los Alamos laboratory, where the atomic bomb was developed.
Times articles over subsequent days identified Dr. Lee
as the chief suspect.
The Times' March 6 story served to legitimize the campaign
against Dr. Lee and lend credibility to Notra Trulock, an ultra-conservative
opponent of the Clinton administration who has written and participated
in chat room discussions on the extreme right-wing web site FreeRepublic.com.
Freepers, as they call themselves, were responsible
for organizing a number of rallies in Washington in 1998 calling
for the impeachment of Bill Clinton. It is worth noting that the
initial Times spy scare article was published within a
month of Clinton's acquittal by the Senate on charges laid the
previous December by the House of Representatives in its impeachment
vote.
This story was only the first in a series of pieces spanning
18 months wholesaling government charges against Wen Ho Lee and
allegations of massive Chinese espionage.
The initial Times article was co-authored by Jeff Gerth,
the reporter who during the 1992 election campaign wrote the first
story on the Clintons' involvement in the failed Whitewater real
estate development scheme. The 1992 piece marked the beginning
of the media frenzy which led ultimately to the Clinton impeachment
proceedings. Gerth's reporting on Whitewater was exposed as gossip
and rumor-mongering in a 1996 book by Little Rock journalist Gene
Lyons, Fools for Scandal: How the Media Invented Whitewater.
Lyons revealed that much of Gerth's information was obtained
from sources who had been paid by right-wing enemies of the Clintons
in Arkansas.
The Times March 6, 1999 article led to Lee's dismissal
from his Los Alamos job. He was fired three days after the article
appeared. A September 13, 2000 Los Angeles Times article
described how the FBI moved against the nuclear scientist in what
can only be described as a campaign of terror and intimidation.
According to this report, on March 7, 1999 two FBI agentswho
had been ordered to take a crash course in hostile interviewscame
to interview Wen Ho Lee at Los Alamos. Despite the fact that Lee
had denied in 19 previous sessions with the FBI that he ever gave
US nuclear secrets to the Chinese, the agents warned him
that, unless he cooperated, he might never see his children again
and could be electrocuted.' They demanded that he
sign a full confession of espionagea crime that carries
the death penaltywithout a lawyer present.
The government's brutal treatment of Dr. Lee continued over
the next 18 months. He was indicted and jailed on December 10
and held for nine months in solitary confinement, denied bail
because he would pose a clear and present danger to the
national security of the United States, according to government
prosecutors. He was confined to his cell for 23 hours a day. When
he was released once or twice a week for exercise, he was shackled
at the wrists, waist and ankles.
The FBI had initially investigated Lee as a potential Chinese
spy who might have given Beijing design details of the W-88 warhead,
but they never had any evidence to back up such a charge. The
W-88 is a miniaturized warhead that can only be utilized on missiles
equipped with so-called MIRV technology, where a single missile
releases multiple, independently targeted warheads. China has
no immediate use for the W-88 as it presently has no such missiles.
The first sign that the Justice Department's case was faltering
was the decision not to indict Lee for espionage. The case began
to unravel in earnest when several top scientists disputed the
government's claim that Lee had compromised the crown jewels
of the nuclear program.
Top officials at Los Alamos sprang to Lee's defense, saying
the downloading of data was common practice among the scientists
at the lab. They said that the vast majority of the information
Lee had downloaded was already in the public domain and that it
would be of little use to a foreign country. In fact, much of
the data was available to numerous government agencies as well
as to some military contractors.
Several months ago, in an attempt to salvage their case against
Lee, the government altered its original charges against him,
saying that he had downloaded the files to boost his prospects
for obtaining employment at scientific institutes in Australia,
Switzerland, France or another country. Government prosecutors
have now admitted they had no letters written by Lee to any such
institutions to back up their claims.
In what would prove to be a final blow to the prosecution's
case, the FBI's lead agent in the case, Robert Messemer, acknowledged
at a bail hearing in mid-August that he had falsely testified
last December that Lee lied to another scientist about the purpose
of his computer downloads.
Last week, Judge Parker ordered the government to turn over
thousands of pages of classified documents to the court, including
material that might have detailed the government's practice of
targeting individuals in cases of national security on the basis
of their national origin. With the plea bargain in place, the
government will avoid these disclosures.
Given the lack of evidence against Wen Ho Lee, the actions
of the government at all levelsfrom the Energy Department,
to the Justice Department to the Clinton White Houseto target
and persecute him are all the more despicable. True to form, as
in other instances when Clinton and the Democrats have come under
attack by the extreme right, they moved to conciliate these forces.
Wen Ho Lee became a sacrificial lamb in the efforts of the Clinton
administration to appease its right-wing critics.
See Also:
Jailed US nuclear scientist
granted bail as government case unravels
[26 August 2000]
Amnesty International protests
shackling of jailed US scientist
[19 August 2000]
Judge denies bail to jailed
US scientist Wen Ho Lee
[6 January 2000]
US indicts Taiwanese-American
target of nuclear espionage furor
[18 December 1999]
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