Ex CIA and NSA spy chief Michael Hayden has called Edward Snowden “morally arrogant,” for selectively leaking classified information, and Hayden repeatedly complained about people who spill secrets to the press.
But on Thursday, Hayden got caught providing anonymous information to reporters himself. A passenger seated near Hayden on the Acela train from Washington to New York live-tweeted several conversations Hayden had in which he disparaged President Obama and boasted of tactics long repudiated by the administration, including secret prisons operated by the CIA.
Hayden has a long history of defending the government’s right to selectively determine what the public needs to know. Hayden led the NSA’s illegal surveillance program. Defending it at the time, former President Bush told Americans they didn’t need to be concerned with the program as long as they had nothing to hide.
It turns out that even Hayden has secrets he’d prefer to keep. He was overheard talking about classified programs while telling reporters to quote him only as “a former senior administration official.” (In fact, Hayden only served six weeks in Obama’s administration, as a placeholder during the government transition. He had tried to stay on at the CIA, but Obama asked him to leave.)
In December 2007, while running the CIA, Hayden sent reminder notes around Langley headquarters telling subordinates not to disclose classified information. The notes came after former CIA officer John Kiriakou admitted that Abu Zubaida, a suspected terrorist, had been waterboarded. Hayden admitted to Congress that month that he had overseen the destruction of two videotapes of interrogations. Kiriakou was convicted of leaking information to the press.
Tom Mattzie, the passenger who overheard Hayden, tweeted that the former CIA director could be heard in his calls with reporters “bragging about rendition and black sites.” But during Bush’s presidency Hayden fought to prevent The Washington Post from revealing information about the secret programs. Hayden twice submitted statements in federal court arguing that any discussion of the sites would cause “grave harm” to CIA intelligence efforts.
During his confirmation hearing to head the CIA, Hayden swore he would take the same hard line approach against unauthorized leaks that his predecessor Porter Goss had. “Obviously I know how we all abhor leaks,” Hayden said. Goss fired a veteran intelligence officer just days before she was scheduled to retire when she admitted she had spoken to reporters without approval. “I admire Director Goss for the action he took with regard to this last round of unauthorized disclosures,” he told Sen. Saxby Chambliss.
Although he demanded anonymity from reporters Thursday, Hayden doesn’t like others to use it. In a September speech he said, “The problem I have with the internet is that it’s anonymous.” He admitted in the same speech that he is no fan of Google, calling Gmail “the preferred internet service provider of terrorists worldwide.” Maybe he still uses Hotmail?









