Jonathan Pollard Comments on Time Article
The following item appeared in Time Magazine, December 6, 1993. Jonathan Pollard's comments follow:
Time Magazine - Chronicles - Inside Washington
The Damage of Pollard's Espionage
As Israel presses the Clinton Administration to free Jonathan Pollard, the former U.S. Navy intelligence analyst sentenced in 1986 to life in prison for spying for the Israelis, Time has learned that one document Pollard is believed to have slipped to the Israelis - thought to have landed in Soviet hands, albeit unintentionally - was a huge National Security Agency compendium of frequencies used by foreign military and intelligence services.
Gathering this information cost the U.S. billions of dollars, but Pollard rendered it useless. Officials assume countries that knew their frequencies had been discovered used them for disinformation. Additionally, officials fear the data in the book were so specific that is discovery may have cost informants their lives.
Jonathan Pollard comments:
This Time magazine article was part of a very carefully orchestrated disinformation campaign that was designed to sabotage Prime Minister Rabin's initial efforts to secure my release. It also reflected the then ongoing effort to blame me - and by extension, Israel - for all the damage later attributed to Aldrich Ames. Of course, if the government had actually possessed any evidence which could have substantiated the claims made in this piece, the prosecutors should have, at the very least, indicted me for having intended to harm the U.S. But that never happened.
The fact is, the government did not formally charge me with having compromised either the identities of agents or sensitive communications intelligence, which it could have easily done - assuming, that is, I had actually committed those crimes. So what, exactly was the real story behind this NSA compendium?
Firstly, I should make it very clear that the document in question was not a "code book." Although the distinction may seem academic, it's critical to understand that I never had access to any cryptographic material. I'm stressing this point because both the "leakers" and the prosecutors have, from time to time, tried to leave the false impression that the compendium was some sort of super secret code-breaking manual which the U.S. never shared with any foreign intelligence service. And that, simply put,
was not the case
.Secondly, court records clearly show that, when challenged, the government grudgingly admitted that approximately 1/3 of the compendium had been
officially given to Israel
. What was even more amazing, though, was the fact that the intelligence community absolutely refused to provide the court with any explanation as to why the remaining 2/3 had been unofficiallydenied to Israel
.Citing "national security" considerations, the government also declined to provide the court with a list of those foreign intelligence agencies which had received the entire document. This shows how the government used the compendium as a means of manipulating the criminal justice system.