James Bamford
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James Bamford (born September 15, 1946) is an American author, journalist and documentary producer noted for his writing about United States intelligence agencies, especially the National Security Agency (NSA). The New York Times has called him "the nation's premier journalist on the subject of the National Security Agency" and The New Yorker named him "the NSA's chief chronicler."
In 2006, he won the National Magazine Award for Reporting for his writing on the war in Iraq published in Rolling Stone.
In 2015 he became the national security columnist for Foreign Policy magazine and he also writes for The New Republic. His book, The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA From 9/11 to the Eavesdropping on America, became a New York Times bestseller and was named by The Washington Post as one of "The Best Books of the Year."
Early life
Bamford was born on September 15, 1946, in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and raised in Natick, Massachusetts. During the Vietnam War, he spent three years in the United States Navy as an intelligence analyst assigned to a National Security Agency unit in Hawaii. Following the Navy, he earned a Juris Doctor Degree in International Law from Suffolk University Law School in Boston, Massachusetts; a post graduate diploma from the Institute on International and Comparative Law, University of Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne; and was awarded a fellowship at Yale Law School.
While in law school as a Navy reservist, Bamford blew the whistle on the NSA when he learned about a program that involved illegally eavesdropping on US citizens. He testified about the program in a closed hearing before the Church Committee, the congressional investigation that led to sweeping reforms of US intelligence abuses in the 1970s.
The Puzzle Palace and threat of prosecution
In 1982, following graduation, he wrote The Puzzle Palace: A Report on NSA, America's Most Secret Intelligence Agency (Houghton Mifflin) which became a national bestseller and won the top book award from Investigative Reporters and Editors, the professional association of investigative journalists. Washingtonian magazine called it "a monument to investigative journalism" and The New York Times Book Review said, "Mr. Bamford has uncovered everything except the combination to the director's safe."
During the course of writing the book, Bamford discovered that the Justice Department in 1976 began a secret criminal investigation into widespread illegal domestic eavesdropping by the NSA. As a result, he filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) for documents dealing with the investigation and several hundred pages were eventually released to him by the Carter administration. However, when President Ronald Reagan took office, the Justice Department sought to stop publication of the book and demanded return of the documents, claiming they had been "reclassified" as top secret. When Bamford refused, he was threatened with prosecution under the Espionage Act. In response, Bamford cited the presidential executive order on secrecy, which stated that once a document had been declassified it cannot be reclassified. As a result, President Reagan changed the executive order to indicate that once a document has been declassified it can be reclassified. However, due to ex post facto restrictions in the US Constitution, the new executive order could not be applied to Bamford and the information was subsequently published in The Puzzle Palace.
NSA raid on the Marshall Library
Following publication, however, the NSA continued its efforts against Bamford. While writing The Puzzle Palace, the author made extensive use of documents from the in Virginia. These included the private correspondence of William F. Friedman, one of the founders of the NSA. Although none of the documents was classified, following the book's release the NSA sent agents to the library to order their removal. The action led to a lawsuit (631 F.Supp. 416 (1986)) by the American Library Association (ALA) against the NSA, charging that the agency had no right to enter a private library and classify and remove Friedman's private papers. Although the court criticized NSA, saying it "does not condone by any means NSA's cavalier attitude toward its classification determination," it nevertheless found in the agency's favor and dismissed the suit. The ALA appealed the dismissal to the U.S. Court of Appeals but Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who was at that time a judge on that court, ruled that the ALA lacked standing in the case. At the library, Bamford also had access to the private papers of Marshall S. Carter, a former director of the NSA whom he had interviewed. But after the book was published, agency officials met with Carter at a secure location in Colorado, where he was in retirement, and threatened him with prosecution if he did not immediately close his collection and refrain from further interviews. Carter reluctantly agreed to the demands.
Body of Secrets and A Pretext for War
In 2001, Bamford released Body of Secrets: Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret NSA, From the Cold War to the Dawn of a New Century (Doubleday). The second in his trilogy, it also became a national bestseller. A cover review[clarification needed] in The New York Times Book Review called it "an extraordinary work of investigative journalism" and it won the Investigative Reporters and Editors Gold Medal, the highest award given by the association.
In 2002, during the lead up to the war in Iraq, Bamford argued that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and therefore the country should not go to war. He made his arguments on the editorial pages of USA Today where he was a member of the newspaper's Board of Contributors. And in 2004 he released A Pretext for War: 9/11, Iraq. and the Abuse of America's Intelligence Agencies (Doubleday), which became a bestseller. Time, in a two-page review, said, "A Pretext for War is probably the best one-volume companion to the harrowing events in the war on terrorism since 1996." The Washington Post listed the book as one of "The Best of 2004" and in a cover review said, "Bamford does a superb job of laying out and tying together threads of the Sept. 11 intelligence failures and their ongoing aftermath." Bamford also wrote on the war in Iraq for Rolling Stone magazine and his 2005 article, "The Man Who Sold the War," won the National Magazine Award for reporting, the highest award in magazine writing, and was included in Columbia University's The Best American Magazine Writing.
The Shadow Factory and ACLU v. NSA
In 2006, following revelations in The New York Times that the NSA had been conducting illegal domestic eavesdropping for decades, Bamford joined writer Christopher Hitchens and several others as plaintiffs in a lawsuit (ACLU v. NSA, 493 F.3d 644) brought by the American Civil Liberties Union that challenged the constitutionality of the agency's surveillance. On August 17, 2006, District Court Judge Anna Diggs Taylor granted summary judgment for Bamford and the other plaintiffs, ruling that the surveillance was unconstitutional and illegal, and ordered that it be halted immediately. However, she stayed her order pending appeal. Later the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the District Court ruling on the grounds that the plaintiffs could not show that they had been or would be subjected to surveillance personally, and therefore they lacked standing before the Court.
In 2008, Bamford released the third book in his trilogy, The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA From 9/11 to The Eavesdropping on America, which became a New York Times bestseller and was named by The Washington Post as one of "The Best Books of the Year."
PBS and ABC News
Bamford also writes and produces documentaries for PBS and in 2010 was nominated for an Emmy Award for his program, "The Spy Factory," which was based on his book, The Shadow Factory. Earlier he spent a decade as the Washington investigative producer for ABC's World News Tonight, covering the White House as well as reporting from much of the world, including the Middle East during the Gulf War. Among his awards was the Overseas Press Club Award for Excellence and the Society of Professional Journalists Deadline Award for the Best Investigative Reporting in Television.
Legal cases
Bamford has served as a defense consultant in a number of espionage cases, including U.S. v. Thomas Andrews Drake. A former senior NSA official, in 2011 Drake was charged under the Espionage Act for allegedly leaking classified documents to the Baltimore Sun. However, Bamford was able to show that all the materials the government claimed to be classified were actually freely available in the public domain, and placed there by the government itself. As a result, the government was forced to throw out the charges against Drake in exchange for a misdemeanor plea for abusing his computer, with no jail time or even a fine. It was one of the very few times the government had been forced to dismiss charges in an espionage case.
Additionally, Bamford has testified as an expert witness on intelligence issues before committees of the Senate and House of Representatives as well as the European Parliament in Brussels and the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. He has also been a guest lecturer at the Central Intelligence Agency's Senior Intelligence Fellows Program, the National Security Agency's National Cryptologic School, the Defense Intelligence Agency's Joint Military Intelligence College, the Pentagon's National Defense University and the Director of National Intelligence's National Counterintelligence Executive. And he has been an invited speaker at colleges and universities in the U.S., Europe, and the Middle East, including Oxford, Harvard, Yale, the American University of Beirut and many others.
During the 2010s, Bamford wrote a number of cover stories for Wired magazine as a contributing editor, including "The Most Wanted Man in the World," the result of three days in Moscow with NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, the longest any journalist has spent with him there.
U.S.S. Liberty Advocacy
Bamford is a strong supporter of the "USS Liberty Veterans Association" and has written many articles in support of survivors of the 1967 Israeli attack on the USS Liberty. He spoke at a 2004 U.S. State Department symposium that was convened in about the Six-Day War in response to the findings of the 2003 Moorer Commission and the 2004 release of Captain Ward Boston's affidavit pertaining to the USS Liberty incident.
One of the chapters in Body of Secrets is titled "Blood" and is about the Liberty. He dedicates part of this chapter to discussing how U.S. Navy Chief Petty Officer Marvin E. Nowicki, a linguist aboard a Navy EC-121 that was flying overhead during the attack, intercepted Israeli communications that seemed to indicate they knew or suspected the ship they were attacking was American. He goes on to posit that the motivation for the Israeli attack on the Liberty was to cover-up the Ras Sedr massacre, which occurred the same day. He postulates that the Israel Defense Forces attacked the signals intelligence collection ship to destroy any evidence of the massacre that it may have collected.
Criticisms
Jefferson Adams in the International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence praised Spyfail (2023) but noted that Bamford did not address Cuba and was troubled by Bamford's attention to criticism of Israel, with 4 of the 9 chapters addressing Israel. Tim Weiner, writing in The New Republic, criticized Bamford's omission of what he described as successful US counterintelligence in the CIA's prediction that Russia was about to attack Ukraine. According to the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, a publication regarded as critical of Israel and US policy, Bamford's book "ruffles all the right feathers" in reference to a negative assessment of the book by the Central Intelligence Agency and praises it for its critical view of Israel's intervention in United States politics.
Publications
Books
- Bamford, James (1982). The Puzzle Palace: Inside the National Security Agency, America's Most Secret Intelligence Organization. Viking Penguin. ISBN 0-14-006748-5.
- Bamford, James (2001). Body of Secrets: Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret National Security Agency. Doubleday. ISBN 0385499078.
- Bamford, James (2004). A Pretext for War: 9/11, Iraq, and the Abuse of America's Intelligence Agencies. Doubleday. ISBN 0385506724.
- Bamford, James (2008). The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA from 9/11 to the Eavesdropping on America. Doubleday. ISBN 9780385521321.
- Bamford, James (2023). Spyfail: Foreign Spies, Moles, Saboteurs, and the Collapse of America's Counterintelligence. Twelve. ISBN 978-1538741153.
Articles
| Date | Publication | Title |
|---|---|---|
| August 9, 1982 | Newsday (Viewpoints Section) | "The UN: A Gold Mine for U.S. Intelligence" |
| November 6, 1982 | The Nation | "How I Got the NSA Files . . . How Reagan Tried to Get Them Back" |
| September 9, 1983 | The Boston Globe (Op-Ed Section) | "Victim of the Long Electronic War" |
| October 1983 | Boston Observer | "How We Know What We Know About KAL 007" |
| December 4, 1983 | The Washington Post Magazine | "Big Brother is Listening" |
| January 8, 1984 | The Washington Post Magazine | "The Last Flight of KAL 007: How the U.S. Watches The Soviets in the Far East" |
| January 22, 1984 | The New York Times Book Review | |
| January 13, 1985 | The New York Times Magazine | |
| April 21, 1985 | Los Angeles Times Book Review | "Black Box: KAL 007 and the Superpowers; KAL Flight 007: The Hidden Story" |
| June 9, 1985 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| April 6, 1986 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| May 1986 (Naval Review Issue) | Proceedings (U.S. Naval Institute) | "The Walker Spy Case." |
| May 24, 1986 | The Boston Globe (Op-Ed Section) | "U.S. Satellite Photos of Plant Should Have Been Released" |
| July 6, 1986 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| July 13, 1986 | The New York Times Book Review | |
| August 3, 1986 | The New York Times Book Review | |
| September 28, 1986 | Los Angeles Times Book Review | "Shootdown, The Target is Destroyed" |
| October 5, 1986 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| November 9, 1986 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| January 4, 1987 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| January 18, 1987 | The New York Times Magazine | |
| February 8, 1987 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| February 8, 1987 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| June 14, 1987 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| October 11, 1987 | Los Angeles Times Magazine | |
| October 18, 1987 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| October 29, 1987 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| February 21, 1988 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| March 6, 1988 | Los Angeles Times Magazine | |
| May 29, 1988 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| Vol. 3, No. 5, May 1988, pp. 38–47 | City Magazine | "Taking on the Mob" |
| June 1988, Vol. 114, No. 6 | Proceedings (U.S. Naval Institute) | Review of Merchants of Treason by Thomas B. Allen & Norman Polmar |
| June 26, 1988 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| July 3, 1988 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| August 7, 1988 | The New York Times Book Review | |
| September 9, 1988 | The New York Times (Op-Ed Section) | "" |
| February 9, 1992 | The New York Times Book Review | |
| January 29, 1995 | The New York Times Book Review | |
| March 3, 1996 | Los Angeles Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| August 20, 1998 | The New York Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| August 26, 1999 | The New York Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| November 14, 1999 | The Washington Post (Sunday Outlook Section) | |
| March 18, 2001 | The New York Times Magazine | |
| April 5, 2001 | The New York Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| April 12, 2001 | USA Today (Op-Ed Section) | "Rethink Spy Missions" |
| August 7, 2001 | The Guardian (London) | |
| August 28, 2001 | The New York Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| September 18, 2001 | The New York Times | |
| December 2001 | Nieman Reports (Harvard) | |
| January 20, 2002 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| February 7, 2002 | The New York Times | |
| June 2, 2002 | The Washington Post (Sunday Outlook Section) | |
| July 19, 2002 | USA Today (Op-Ed Section) | "Linguist Reserve Corp Answers Terror Need" |
| August 27, 2002 | The New York Times (Week in Review Section) | |
| August 29, 2002 | USA Today (Op-Ed Section) | "" |
| September 8, 2002 | The New York Times (Week in Review Section) | |
| September 8, 2002 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| September 14, 2002 | The Guardian (London) | |
| September 16, 2001 | USA Today (Op-Ed Section) | "Untested Administration Hawks Clamor for War" |
| October 24, 2002 | USA Today (Op-Ed Section) | "Maintain CIA's Independence" |
| November 24, 2002 | The New York Times (Week in Review Section) | |
| December 15, 2002 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| March 23, 2003 | Los Angeles Times Book Review | |
| April 27, 2003 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| July 4, 2003 | The New York Times | |
| February 29, 2004 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| May 9, 2004 | Los Angeles Times Book Review | |
| June 13, 2004 | The New York Times (Op-Ed Section) | |
| February 20, 2005 | The Washington Post Book World | |
| March 28, 2005 | The American Conservative | "Breeding Terror: The Intelligence Community Analyzes a Counterproductive War" |
| December 1, 2005 | Rolling Stone | |
| December 25, 2005 | The New York Times (Week in Review Section) | |
| January 9, 2006 | The New York Times | |
| April 1, 2006 | The Atlantic | |
| August 10, 2006 | Rolling Stone | |
| August 20, 2006 | The New York Times Book Review | |
| December 12, 2006 | The Washington Post | "" |
| January 31, 2007 | The New York Times | "" |
| March 15, 2012 | Wired | " |
| April 3, 2012 | Wired | |
| November 7, 2013 | GQ | |
| June 12, 2013 | Wired | |
| August 2014 | Wired | |
| August 2014 | Wired | Video |
| October 2, 2014 | The Intercept | |
| January 29, 2015 | Foreign Policy | |
| March 25, 2015 | Foreign Policy | |
| May 11, 2015 | Foreign Policy | |
| July 21, 2015 | Foreign Policy | |
| September 28, 2015 | The Intercept | |
| September 29, 2015 | Foreign Policy | |
| November 10, 2015 | Foreign Policy | |
| December 8, 2015 | Foreign Policy | |
| January 22, 2016 | Foreign Policy | |
| March 11, 2016 | Foreign Policy | |
| April 28, 2016 | Foreign Policy | |
| July 7, 2016 | Foreign Policy | |
| August 4, 2016 | Reuters | |
| August 21, 2016 | Reuters | |
| September 7, 2016 | Foreign Policy | |
| September 20, 2016 | Reuters | |
| December 14, 2016 | Foreign Policy | |
| January 6, 2017 | Foreign Policy | |
| March 20, 2017 | Foreign Policy | |
| May 31, 2017 | Foreign Policy | |
| March 19, 2018 | The New Republic | |
| February 11, 2019 | The New Republic |
External links
- on C-SPAN
- , PBS and WGBH-TV, Nova program series. February 3, 2009.
- at IMDb
- on National Public Radio in 2001
- on National Public Radio in 2005
- on National Public Radio in 2008
- James Bamford. , Rolling Stone, November 17, 2005.
- , Profile by Michael Scherer, Salon.com, December 2005
- , profile by Alexander Nazaryan, The New Yorker, June 10, 2013
- , interview with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now!, November 21, 2005 (video, audio, and print transcript).
- with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now, October 14, 2008 (video, audio, and print transcript).
- Scott Horton. , The Weekend Interview Show (December 3, 2005)
- Jenny Asarnow. KUOW-FM Speaker's Forum (April 19, 2007)
- (February 9, 2008)
- Kevin Zeese. , Democracy Rising (May 23, 2005)
- Steve Clemons. , The Washington Note, (November 21, 2005)* William Sweet. , IEEE Spectrum Radio interview (February 20, 2006)
- , Center for Cooperative Research.
- , Lew Rockwell.com, (February 11, 2002)
- James Bamford. , The New York Times, (August 27, 2002)
- Christopher Dickey (January 9, 2009). . The New York Times.