It’s a problem when the director of National Intelligence can’t seem to get his story straight.
Speaking Thursday at the Intelligence and National Security Summit in Washington, D.C., James Clapper said that the intelligence community has not willfully violated the law, an assertion which documents and information from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden contradict. And when CIA Director John Brennan took the stage for a panel on Thursday afternoon, he blamed media “mischaracterizations” for catching him in a lie over spying on Congress.
When Clapper laid out seven principles of professional ethics for the intelligence community, he said integrity became particularly important to him, “when I got accused of lying to congress because of a mistake … I had to answer on the spot about a specific classified program in a general, unsecure setting.”
But last year, in an interview with NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell, Clapper took a different approach to his tense March 2013 exchange with Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden. When Wyden, a Democrat, asked if the NSA gathers “any type of data at all on millions of Americans,” Clapper responded “No,” and “not wittingly.” After a Guardian report contradicted that statement, Clapper said he gave the “least untruthful” response to a complicated question.
Wyden’s office confirmed that not only had Clapper received Wyden’s questions in advance, but that he had been offered the chance to amend his answer after the public hearing, but did not do so. Wyden has been a leader in legislative efforts to reign in NSA spying.
The seven ethical principles listed by Clapper, which were originally published two years ago, are: 1) mission; 2) truth; 3) lawfulness; 4) integrity; 5) stewardship; 6) excellence; and 7) diversity.









