http://www.commondreams.org/headlines01/0727-02.htm



Published on Friday, July 27, 2001 in the New York Times

M.I.T. Physicist Says Pentagon Is Trying to Silence Him

by James Dao


WASHINGTON - A leading critic of the military's missile defense testing
program has accused the Pentagon of trying to silence him and intimidate his
employer, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, by investigating him for
disseminating classified documents.

The case has raised questions about whether a document can be considered
secret if it is widely available to the public. And it has touched off a
dispute between the critic, Theodore A. Postol, and M.I.T. over how to
balance academic freedom with the university's obligations to cooperate with
Pentagon investigators.

At issue is correspondence between Dr. Postol, a physicist, and the General
Accounting Office, an investigative branch of Congress, in which he accused
the Pentagon of using doctored data to defend missile defense technology.

Dr. Postol said his conclusions had been based on an unclassified report,
which he disseminated over the Internet and can now be downloaded from Web
sites around the world, including one in Russia.

But after Dr. Postol began distributing the report last year, the Pentagon
determined that it contained secret information. This month, Defense
Department investigators asked M.I.T. officials to stop Dr. Postol from
disseminating that information and to confiscate the document from him.

The university has not done so. But in an e-mail message to Dr. Postol on
Monday, Charles M. Vest, the university president, said M.I.T. might be
required to ``move forward with at least the initial steps'' ordered by
Defense Security Service, a Pentagon agency. Dr. Postol provided a copy of
that message to The New York Times.

``They are basically threatening M.I.T. that it will lose its contract to run
this big laboratory if they don't abide by these demands,'' Dr. Postol said
in an interview.

The institute operates the Lincoln Laboratory at Hanscom Air Force Base in
Lexington, Mass., under contract with the Defense Department to do research
into missile defense, weather forecasting, military surveillance and other
sophisticated technologies. The lab's contract with the Pentagon was worth
$319 million last year.

M.I.T. officials declined to speculate today on whether Dr. Vest would
cooperate with the Pentagon's requests. But Dr. Vest issued a written
statement that raised questions about the investigation of Dr. Postol.

``While M.I.T. certainly abides by the laws that protect national security,
we also believe that the legitimate tools of classification of secrets should
not be misused to limit responsible debate,'' the statement said. ``Trying to
treat widely available public information as `secret' is a particular
concern.''

Pentagon officials declined to discuss details of their investigation. But
Lt. Col. Rick Lehner, a spokesman for the Ballistic Missile Defense
Organization, argued that the department was obligated to stop Dr. Postol
from disseminating potentially damaging information, even if it was readily
available.

``Just because it is made public doesn't mean it's declassified,'' Colonel
Lehner said.

Dr. Postol agreed that the information was potentially damaging, but only
because it showed that the Pentagon was far from developing effective
antimissile weapons.

For years, Dr. Postol has argued that the Pentagon's prototype antimissile
system could not distinguish between decoys and enemy warheads. He has joined
forces with an engineer, Nira Schwartz, who has accused her former employer,
TRW, a military contractor, of faking tests and evaluations of the technology
to make it appear more successful than it was.

The latest dispute arose when the Pentagon hired five scientists, including
two from M.I.T.'s Lincoln Laboratory, to review TRW's technology in the wake
of Dr. Schwartz's accusations. The resulting report disputed Dr. Schwartz's
assertions and has been used to defend the missile defense program on Capitol
Hill.

But Dr. Postol, who in the 1990's successfully challenged the effectiveness
of Patriot missiles in the Persian Gulf war, analyzed the report and
concluded it had distorted data to make it appear that available technology
could reliably distinguish warheads from decoys. In fact, Dr. Postol
contends, that technology does not yet exist.

The Pentagon and TRW have denied that assertion.

Dr. Postol first raised concerns about the Pentagon report in a letter to the
White House last year. Not long after, the Pentagon determined that officials
had inadvertently not removed classified information from the report before
releasing it, including the tables and diagrams Dr. Postol has used to attack
the testing program.

But Dr. Postol, who has done work for the Pentagon and stands to lose his
security clearance, contends that the Pentagon's actions smack of a cover-up.
He has recruited supporters in Congress. Representative Henry A. Waxman of
California, the ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Government Reform,
has asked the Pentagon to review Dr. Postol's accusations about the report.
Representative Edward J. Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, has asked the
General Accounting Office to study the Defense Department's classification
policy.

``The question that naturally arises is whether such a policy really protects
national security or whether it merely serves to stifle the ability of Dr.
Postol to communicate his views,'' Mr. Markey asks in a letter sent to the
accounting office today.


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