State of silence The Espionage Act and the rise of America's secrecy regime

Sam Lebovic, 1981-

Book - 2023

"The Espionage Act was passed in 1917 to prosecute spies and critics during World War I. And yet, after a century of piecemeal revisions, the Espionage Act still forms the basis of our national security architecture today - a tool that lets the government keep an untold amount of information secret, without ever justifying the need for that secrecy. In State of Silence, political historian Sam Lebovic uncovers the troubling history of the Espionage Act and the shaky foundations on which our security state was built. The Espionage Act began as a series of vague statutes. Over time and aided by interventions from the executive branch and the courts, it became the basis of a patchwork system for protecting state secrets. Early drafts of t...he Act gave the president the authority to stop the presses. That provision was struck down after public outcry over freedom of speech, but the resulting legal ambiguities left room for decades of distortion as lawmakers leveraged Cold War paranoia into ever-tightening security. The resulting system for classifying information, Lebovic points out, is absurdly cautious: nearly 80 million documents are classified each year, and the system costs the government more than $18 billion annually to maintain. Aside from being costly, this system is shrouded in secrecy, hiding information from citizens in a way that Lebovic argues is fundamentally antithetical to our democracy. When individuals do try to make this information public, they're punished for it. As Lebovic shows, prosecuting whistleblowers (instead of journalists) has been built into our national security system from the beginning. Far before Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning, he shares with us the near-forgotten story of Colonel John Nickerson, the first whistleblower prosecuted under the Espionage Act in 1956 - and a proud Army man who had no idea that his sharing of information could be considered illegal. Finally, Lebovic calls for broad and sweeping reform, proposing a new approach to securing state secrets, one that places the interests of the people first from the very beginning. Shedding new light on the bloated governmental security apparatus that's weighing our democracy down, State of Silence offers the definitive history of America's turn toward secrecy--and its staggering human costs"--

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  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. The Fear of Spies
  • Chapter 2. The Speech Crimes of Eugene Debs
  • Chapter 3. 1919, Year of the Bombs
  • Chapter 4. The Creeping Scope of the Secrecy Laws
  • Chapter 5. The Nazi Spy Who Wasn't
  • Chapter 6. Red Herrings, or, the Cold War Spy Scare
  • Chapter 7. Missile Gaps
  • Chapter 8. Papers from the Pentagon
  • Chapter 9. Long Live the Secrecy State
  • Chapter 10. Whistleblowers in the War on Terror
  • Conclusion: Good-Bye to the Espionage Act?
  • Acknowledgments
  • Abbreviations
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

People are accustomed, nowadays, to living in a world where a government zealously protects its secrets and just as zealously punishes those who reveal those secrets. However, as Lebovic writes in State of Silence, as far as the United States was concerned, the modern fixation on secret keeping didn't spring up overnight. Considering the nation's early tendency towards isolationism, its policies on state secrets were relatively casual. That all changed in the years leading up to WWI, as the U.S. became more involved with world affairs, and intergovernmental espionage became an increasing concern. Lebovic follows the history of the founding and growth of the myriad agencies formed to protect states secrets and the increasingly broad laws enacted to empower those agencies, starting with the Espionage Act in the 1920s, through the paranoia of the Cold War era, to the Patriot Act in the 2000s. Lebovic is a conscientious historian who has clearly researched his subject in minute detail. Ardent students of the history of espionage will find much of interest in the detailed chronicle.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Historian Lebovic (A Righteous Smokescreen) charts in this probing study the evolving impact of the 1917 Espionage Act and its broad but vague proscription of communicating information related to national defense. Initially, the law was used to quash not just speech about military affairs but political dissent in military matters; it especially targeted left-wing opposition to American participation in WWI and advocacy of labor strikes that would affect wartime production. As free-speech rights were strengthened in later years, Lebovic notes, federal officials instead used the law to classify huge swaths of information and punish government employees who divulged it. The result was absurd overclassification--at one point the amount of peanut butter eaten by soldiers was deemed a vital national secret--and the coverup of such scandals as the CIA's torture of terrorism suspects after 9/11. Lebovic's skeptical, clear-eyed analysis of America's secrecy policies untangles murky legal issues while spotlighting the human drama surrounding them. There are gripping recaps of landmark espionage and free-speech cases, including the prosecution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, the publication of the Pentagon Papers, Edward Snowden's whistleblowing about ubiquitous NSA spying on telecommunications, and Donald Trump's spiriting of classified documents to Mar-a-Lago. The result is a riveting account of the rise of the national security state and its ongoing distortion of American politics. (Nov.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A history of the Espionage Act of 1917, which was designed to protect sensitive government information but has been used to perpetuate a "secrecy regime." "The laws and practices of secrecy emerged in a piecemeal, improvised fashion over many decades," writes Lebovic, author of A Righteous Smokescreen and Free Speech and Unfree News, in this illuminating chronicle. Beginning with World War I, the author proceeds through the various instances when the government tried to enforce the murky law, which had emerged from the earlier Defense Secrets Act (1911), created due to "a panic about Japanese spies." The first attempt at enforcement of the Espionage Act was the arrest of socialist leader Eugene Debs in 1918 for his "seditious speech." While Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. at first upheld the constitutionality of the act, he came around to a famous dissent in Abrams v. United States in favor of free speech ("the birth of the modern First Amendment"). Eventually, enforcement of the law turned from censorship to protecting the leak of "classified" information, a flawed tiered system put in place by Harry Truman in 1951. Lebovic delves into the little-known case of John Nickerson, who leaked documents from the Army Ballistic Missile Agency in Huntsville, Alabama, in 1957, leading to charges and embarrassment for the new "military industrial complex." In 1971, Daniel Ellsberg's publication of the Pentagon Papers led to the pivotal trial, but the Nixon administration failed to make the conviction, spurring the antiwar movement. Subsequent whistleblowers during the war on terror, including Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden, have forced a new reckoning with the Espionage Act and the surveillance state in general. Lebovic concludes his thorough, engaging history with a reflection on various reforms for the law in the modern era. A vital investigation of a "controversial, confusing law." Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.