SEN. BIDEN SAYS U.S. LOST AN ENTIRE SPY NETWORK

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP81M00980R000600230131-6
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 21, 2004
Sequence Number: 
131
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 13, 1978
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP81M00980R000600230131-6.pdf96.87 KB
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By Bill Richards Washington Post staff writer The United States lost an entire spy network, apparently in Central Amer- ica, during the last 18 months after a young military sergeant attached to the National Security Agency sold top-secret intelligence data to foreign agents, Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.) said Wednesday night. Biden, who is a member of the Sen- ate Select Committee on Intelligence and head of its subcommittee on se- crecy and disclosure, told a student audience at Stanford University that "damage assessment reports" from in- telligence agencies showed the ser- geant was promoted and given an hon- orable discharge after selling "entire reels of this information . . . to the se- cret police [of a foreign government], blowing all our cover in a whole area of the world." The Delaware senator told his audi- ence that the incident was just one of of national security ranging from out- right murder to major espionage" in- volving U.S. security agencies, accord- agencies feared such prosecution intelligence information. Omar Torrijos. though military intelligence officials knew Torrijos paid the sergeant about $1,000 monthly through 1975 and 1976 the Army decided not to prosecute the man for fear the details of the op- eration would have to be revealed in open court. Instead, the sergeant was promoted and honorably discharged, Biden said Wednesday that it would have been necessary to establish that the bugging tapes were stolen. "We would have to bring into court the man or woman who establishes they moved from his possession to the pos- session of the foreign government," Biden said. "That person, in this case, happens to be an American spy in the other in- telligence agency:" said Biden. To produce the spy, he said, "you do one of two things: assure that person gets killed, practically speaking-and it isn't Alice in Wonderland, it's the real world out there-or we lose the abil- ity of that deep agent." The contents of Biden's remarks, which were part of an informal speech to Stanford students at the university in Palo Alto, Calif., were made available yesterday by the uni- versity. A Stanford spokesman said the speech was taped by a member of the university's news department. Spokesmen for both NSA and the Central Intelligence Agency declined to comment yesterday on Biden's re- marks. An official of the Senate sub- committee on Intelligence leaks, a unit of the Senate Ethics Committee which has been quietly investigating the Panama bugging and NSA leaks, also refused to make any comment on the speech. In addition to the NSA case, Biden said some of the other security breaches he had seen in the "damage assessment reports" by intelligence agencies ranked on the level of the case of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were executed for stealing nu- clear secrets and giving them to the Soviet Union. Biden said he had found a lesson in the damage assessments and the lack of prosecution for those involved in security leaks. "If you're going to en- gage in espionage against this coun- try," he said, "be sure that it really does jeopardize American society." The intelligence assessments were made available to Bid en because his subcommittee is scheduled to hold hearings next month on proposed leg- islation that would allow certain cases involving sensitive intelligence infor- mation to be conducted in secret. "The press will not like it, because I'm suggesting they be excluded," Bi- den said. "I may end up being the cause of some fairly repressive legisla- tion."