Intelligence/
Dangerous spy game under Russian flag
The CIA officers slipped
in and out of the courtroom behind the cover of a retractable gray screen and
testified using only their first names and last initials. They described
clandestine meetings, suitcases full of cash and an obstinate Russian engineer
who they hoped would help them derail Iran’s nuclear ambitions.
In a federal courthouse in Alexandria,
Va., prosecutors are trying to prove that an ex-CIA officer with an ax to grind
gave sensitive national defense information to a reporter. But to make their
case — and discourage other would-be leakers — they have to parade his former
colleagues and secret sources into semi-open court, and talk about covert
methods and missions.
The trial of Jeffrey Sterling, whose fate jurors
are set to begin deliberating on Thursday, has offered a daily spectacle worthy
of fiction. It has also shown the challenge of prosecuting leakers: To win a
conviction, prosecutors have to reveal things the government never wanted out in
the open.
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