Congress to press FBI, CIA on ‘suspicious’ emails that exposed Petraeus’ career ending affair with Paula Broadwell
Associated Press and Reuters | Nov 11, 2012 11:35 AM ET
Handout
This July 13, 2011 handout image
provide by International Security Assistance Force NATO, sho
ws them ISAF
Commander Ge, David Petraeus shaking hands with his biographer Paula
Broadwell in Afghanistan.
WASHINGTON — The FBI investigation
that led to the discovery of CIA Director David Petraeus’ affair with
author Paula Broadwell was sparked by “suspicious emails” from her to
another woman and Petraeus was not the target of the probe, U.S. law
enforcement and security officials told Reuters.
But the CIA director’s name unexpectedly turned up in the course of the investigation, two officials and two other sources briefed on the matter said.
The FBI was looking into “an issue with two women and they stumbled across the affair with Petraeus,” a U.S. government security source said.
The FBI probe was triggered when Broadwell sent threatening emails to an unidentified woman close to the CIA director, a security official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. It was unclear what the relationship of the woman who received the emails was to Petraeus.
The woman went to the FBI complaining of cyber harassment and the law enforcement agency traced the threats to Broadwell, the security official said. The FBI then uncovered explicit emails between Petraeus and Broadwell, The Washington Post reported.
Attempts by Reuters and other news media to reach Broadwell, an Army reserve officer and author of a biography of Petraeus, have not been successful.
Broadwell is married with two young sons. She’d planned to celebrate her 40th birthday in Washington this weekend, with many reporters invited. Her husband emailed guests to cancel the party.
CIA officers long had expressed concern about Broadwell’s unprecedented access to the director. She frequently visited the spy agency’s headquarters in Langley, Va., to meet Petraeus in his office, accompanied him on morning runs around the CIA grounds and often attended public functions as his guest, according to two former intelligence officials.
Petraeus’ staff when he was overseeing the war in Afghanistan
similarly had been concerned about the time she spent with their boss.
The FBI and CIA declined comment on Saturday.
Many questions in the case remain unanswered publicly, including the identity of the second woman; the precise nature of the emails that launched the FBI investigation; and whether U.S. security was compromised in any way.
Nor is it clear why the FBI waited until Election Day to tell Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, who oversees the CIA and other intelligence agencies, about its investigation involving Petraeus.
In attempting to explain the time between Petraeus’ FBI interview two weeks earlier and the DNI’s notification on Election Day, the security official said there had been no evidence any crime had been committed.
It now falls to the CIA’s deputy director, Michael Morell, to answer lawmakers’ questions about the attack on the U.S. Consulate and CIA base in Libya.
But Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who heads the Senate committee, said she hasn’t ruled out compelling Petraeus to testify about Benghazi at a later date. “We may well ask” him at some point, she told “Fox News Sunday.” “I think that’s up to the committee.”
SUDDEN RESIGNATION
The CIA director announced his resignation suddenly on Friday,
acknowledging an extramarital affair and saying he showed “extremely
poor judgment.
The developments likely ended the public career of one of the United States’ most highly regarded generals, who was credited with helping pull Iraq out of civil war and led U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.
New details emerged on Saturday about developments in the final days leading to Petraeus’ departure from atop the CIA.
Clapper was notified by the FBI on Tuesday evening about 5 p.m. – just as returns in the U.S. presidential election were about to come in – about “the situation involving Director Petraeus,” a senior intelligence official said. Clapper and Petraeus then spoke that evening and the following morning.
WHITE HOUSE NOTIFIED WEDNESDAY
“Director Clapper, as a friend and a colleague and a fellow general officer, advised Director Petraeus that he should do the right thing and he should step down,” the official said.
Clapper is a retired Air Force lieutenant general; Petraeus served nearly four decades in the U.S. Army and retired as a four-star general.
On Wednesday, Clapper notified the National Security Council at the White House that Petraeus was considering resigning and President Barack Obama should be informed, the official said.
U.S. law enforcement, security and intelligence officials agreed to
discuss the Petraeus matter only on condition of anonymity because of
the issue’s sensitivity and because it is the subject of a law
enforcement investigation.
Once Petraeus’ name turned up in the investigation, the importance of the FBI inquiry was immediately escalated, as investigators became concerned the CIA chief somehow might have been compromised, the law enforcement official said.
However, the official and two sources briefed on the matter said no evidence has turned up suggesting Petraeus had become vulnerable to espionage or blackmail. At this point, it appears unlikely that anyone will be charged with a crime as a result of the investigation, the official said.
The FBI investigation began fairly recently – months rather than years ago, when Petraeus would still have been in uniform as one of the U.S. Army’s top field commanders, the official said.
Representative Peter King, Republican chairman of the House of Representatives’ Homeland Security Committee, said in an interview on MSNBC: “It’s hard to believe this went on for four or five months at this level without the president or somebody in the White House being told about it by the FBI. I would have thought the FBI had an absolute obligation to tell the president when this type of investigation is going on.”
“And then we’re told the White House was told about it the very day after the election is (over). It raises a lot of questions. I’m not into conspiracy theories but this one just doesn’t add up,” said King, who is a frequent critic of the White House.
FBI Deputy Director Sean Joyce and acting CIA Director Michael Morell will separately brief the chairman and top Democrat of the House intelligence committee on Wednesday about Petraeus, a committee aide told Reuters.
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, a Republican, is “very concerned and has got a lot of questions,” the aide said.
Several officials briefed on the matter said senior officials at the Pentagon, CIA and Congress knew nothing of the FBI’s investigation of Petraeus until Thursday afternoon at the earliest, and some key officials were not briefed on the details until Friday.
There is no evidence at this time that anyone at the White House had knowledge of the situation involving Petraeus prior to the U.S. presidential election on Tuesday, which saw Obama elected to a second four-year term.
Another U.S. government security source said it was not until Friday afternoon that some members of the House and Senate intelligence oversight committees were notified about Petraeus’ resignation by Clapper’s office.
The congressional committees were told that it was a personal issue that Petraeus had to discuss with his wife. When pressed, a representative of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said it involved another woman.
But the CIA director’s name unexpectedly turned up in the course of the investigation, two officials and two other sources briefed on the matter said.
The FBI was looking into “an issue with two women and they stumbled across the affair with Petraeus,” a U.S. government security source said.
The FBI probe was triggered when Broadwell sent threatening emails to an unidentified woman close to the CIA director, a security official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. It was unclear what the relationship of the woman who received the emails was to Petraeus.
The woman went to the FBI complaining of cyber harassment and the law enforcement agency traced the threats to Broadwell, the security official said. The FBI then uncovered explicit emails between Petraeus and Broadwell, The Washington Post reported.
Attempts by Reuters and other news media to reach Broadwell, an Army reserve officer and author of a biography of Petraeus, have not been successful.
Broadwell is married with two young sons. She’d planned to celebrate her 40th birthday in Washington this weekend, with many reporters invited. Her husband emailed guests to cancel the party.
CIA officers long had expressed concern about Broadwell’s unprecedented access to the director. She frequently visited the spy agency’s headquarters in Langley, Va., to meet Petraeus in his office, accompanied him on morning runs around the CIA grounds and often attended public functions as his guest, according to two former intelligence officials.
REUTERS/Comedy Central/Handout Author
Paula Broadwell (L) is pictured discussing her biography of General
David Petraeus to Daily Show host Jon Stewart on the Daily Show in New
York January 25, 2012 in this screen capture from video obtained by
Reuters November 10, 2012.
The FBI and CIA declined comment on Saturday.
Many questions in the case remain unanswered publicly, including the identity of the second woman; the precise nature of the emails that launched the FBI investigation; and whether U.S. security was compromised in any way.
Nor is it clear why the FBI waited until Election Day to tell Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, who oversees the CIA and other intelligence agencies, about its investigation involving Petraeus.
In attempting to explain the time between Petraeus’ FBI interview two weeks earlier and the DNI’s notification on Election Day, the security official said there had been no evidence any crime had been committed.
It now falls to the CIA’s deputy director, Michael Morell, to answer lawmakers’ questions about the attack on the U.S. Consulate and CIA base in Libya.
But Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who heads the Senate committee, said she hasn’t ruled out compelling Petraeus to testify about Benghazi at a later date. “We may well ask” him at some point, she told “Fox News Sunday.” “I think that’s up to the committee.”
SUDDEN RESIGNATION
Jeff Haynes / Reuters files David Petraeus and his wife Holly at Super Bowl XLIII in 2009.
The developments likely ended the public career of one of the United States’ most highly regarded generals, who was credited with helping pull Iraq out of civil war and led U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.
New details emerged on Saturday about developments in the final days leading to Petraeus’ departure from atop the CIA.
Clapper was notified by the FBI on Tuesday evening about 5 p.m. – just as returns in the U.S. presidential election were about to come in – about “the situation involving Director Petraeus,” a senior intelligence official said. Clapper and Petraeus then spoke that evening and the following morning.
WHITE HOUSE NOTIFIED WEDNESDAY
“Director Clapper, as a friend and a colleague and a fellow general officer, advised Director Petraeus that he should do the right thing and he should step down,” the official said.
Clapper is a retired Air Force lieutenant general; Petraeus served nearly four decades in the U.S. Army and retired as a four-star general.
On Wednesday, Clapper notified the National Security Council at the White House that Petraeus was considering resigning and President Barack Obama should be informed, the official said.
paulabroadwell.com Paula Broadwell
Once Petraeus’ name turned up in the investigation, the importance of the FBI inquiry was immediately escalated, as investigators became concerned the CIA chief somehow might have been compromised, the law enforcement official said.
However, the official and two sources briefed on the matter said no evidence has turned up suggesting Petraeus had become vulnerable to espionage or blackmail. At this point, it appears unlikely that anyone will be charged with a crime as a result of the investigation, the official said.
The FBI investigation began fairly recently – months rather than years ago, when Petraeus would still have been in uniform as one of the U.S. Army’s top field commanders, the official said.
Representative Peter King, Republican chairman of the House of Representatives’ Homeland Security Committee, said in an interview on MSNBC: “It’s hard to believe this went on for four or five months at this level without the president or somebody in the White House being told about it by the FBI. I would have thought the FBI had an absolute obligation to tell the president when this type of investigation is going on.”
“And then we’re told the White House was told about it the very day after the election is (over). It raises a lot of questions. I’m not into conspiracy theories but this one just doesn’t add up,” said King, who is a frequent critic of the White House.
FBI Deputy Director Sean Joyce and acting CIA Director Michael Morell will separately brief the chairman and top Democrat of the House intelligence committee on Wednesday about Petraeus, a committee aide told Reuters.
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, a Republican, is “very concerned and has got a lot of questions,” the aide said.
Several officials briefed on the matter said senior officials at the Pentagon, CIA and Congress knew nothing of the FBI’s investigation of Petraeus until Thursday afternoon at the earliest, and some key officials were not briefed on the details until Friday.
There is no evidence at this time that anyone at the White House had knowledge of the situation involving Petraeus prior to the U.S. presidential election on Tuesday, which saw Obama elected to a second four-year term.
Another U.S. government security source said it was not until Friday afternoon that some members of the House and Senate intelligence oversight committees were notified about Petraeus’ resignation by Clapper’s office.
The congressional committees were told that it was a personal issue that Petraeus had to discuss with his wife. When pressed, a representative of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said it involved another woman.
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