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The Recipe for America’s Next Espionage Scandal – Emma Isabella Sage

Most Americans think of double agents in Hollywood tropes: a furtive meeting in a distant hotel, a dead drop in a swanky casino, coded messages in dark web chatrooms. In reality, betrayal of one’s country often starts at home, with far more mundane scenes—a sudden financial crisis, a personal indiscretion, a rescinded job offer. History teaches us that insider threats are rarely the product of elaborate foreign machinations. More often, they germinate in the domestic lives of the desperate, disillusioned, and spurned, words that now describe far too many of America’s national security professionals.

In late May, Nathan Vilas Laatsch, a civilian employee of the Defense Intelligence Agency’s Insider Threat Division (which exists to stop leaks), was arrested for allegedly trying to pass information to a foreign government through a dead drop in a park. This would have been a major news story, and perhaps sparked a national debate, had these deeper and longer-term threats not been overshadowed by the Trump administration’s more sensational scandals, such as Signalgate. (This is not to downplay the seriousness of that intelligence breach, or its international repercussions). Worse still, journalism and intelligence work are natural enemies, in the sense that one profession requires uncovering things while the other survives on the basis of them remaining covered. This begs the question: If the intelligence community’s house were on fire, how would the public know?

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