Thursday, March 16, 2017

Ex-CIA Officer's Case Shows How to Get Things Done in D.C.



Steven Emerson, Executive Director
March 16, 2017

Ex-CIA Officer's Case Shows How to Get Things Done in D.C.

IPT News
March 16, 2017
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Getting things accomplished in Washington often requires being at the right place at the right time with the right relationships and the right issue. Much ink gets spilled about the gridlock that keeps things from getting things done.
The case of former CIA agent Sabrina DeSousa serves as a perfect case study. In early January, DeSousa faced imminent deportation from Portugal where she lives to Italy where she faced a four-year prison sentence. Italy convicted her in absentia in 2009 for her alleged involvement in the February 2003 rendition of al-Qaida cleric Abu Omar – an event she says she had nothing to do with.
DeSousa spent more than eight years and countless dollars and Euros in legal fees trying to clear her name. Her country had left her behind. The CIA and State Department did not assist her when she was charged or during her trial. On her own, she was left to fend for herself against charges brought against her for things the U.S. government asked her to do. She was in the wrong place, at the wrong time. Nothing got done because the Obama administration did not consider it a priority.
Her back was up against the wall. She seriously believed she was headed to prison. DeSousa thought she was out of options. She decided to use the power of Twitter to contact Investigative Project on Terrorism Senior Analyst John Rossomando unsolicited. He sensed her desperation and the wrong that was being committed. Rossomando and the IPT understand terrorism and the risks our case officers face to keep America safe. You don't leave them behind.
Rossomando connected her with IPT Shillman Senior Fellow and former House Intelligence Committee Chairman Pete Hoekstra.
Hoekstra and Rossomando acted quickly to keep her from being extradited before President Trump took office on Jan. 20.
Coincidentally, Hoekstra had a meeting planned with former Trump National Security Adviser Michael Flynn the afternoon DeSousa first contacted Rossomando. Hoekstra addressed the issue with Flynn at their meeting. Flynn expressed concern, and understood the urgency.
This got the ball rolling. Rossomando wrote an article about DeSousa's case for the IPT's website. Hoekstra worked his connections to get positive press coverage, culminating in DeSousa's Jan. 16 appearance on Tucker Carlson's Fox News show.
She went from being trolled on Twitter by people who accuse her of being a human-rights violator due to her alleged involvement in the Abu Omar affair to being hailed as a patriot by Fox News viewers.
Appearing on Carlson's show also gave her breathing room. She had been scheduled for deportation from Portugal to Italy on Jan. 17. But to her relief, Portuguese police didn't knock on her door that day as she had feared.
Trump's inauguration dramatically changed the dynamic. Former Republican Congressman Mike Pompeo's accession as CIA director, replacing John Brennan whom DeSousa believes was a "vindictive" antagonist in her case, marked a tipping point in her favor.
DeSousa believes Brennan excluded her from a 2014 pardon agreement that let other Americans involved in the Abu Omar affair. Portuguese sources indicated that Brennan had twice visited Portugal in 2016 and never brought up her case. Brennan also did nothing to push back against the European arrest warrant against her. This impeded her ability to see her family; DeSousa said the CIA knew this. It also didn't hurt that Hoekstra had a previous relationship with Pompeo and had worked with him on Libya and Benghazi.
Hoekstra reached out to CIA Director Pompeo, the National Security Council, the State Department and U.S. Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif. – his successor as chairman of the House Intelligence Committee –to prod the Portuguese and Italians to keep DeSousa out of jail. Hoekstra served with Nunes in Congress for eight years. Hoekstra also had a relationship with Pompeo. His experience in Libya helped provide Pompeo some perspective on his work on the Benghazi investigation. These established relationships made a difference.
On Feb. 20, the knock on the door that DeSousa feared came. Police took her to a prison in northern Portugal where she thought she awaited imminent deportation to serve her four-year sentence in an Italian prison. The U.S. Embassy and DeSousa's husband kept her updated throughout her nine days in the Portuguese prison.
Team Trump worked with their Portuguese and Italian counterparts to secure DeSousa's freedom – a stark contrast with the Obama administration. Italian President Sergio Mattarella granted her a partial pardon on Feb. 28. Portuguese authorities released DeSousa from prison on March 1.
This partial pardon resulted in DeSousa getting released from the Portuguese prison where she spent nine days awaiting extradition. It reduced DeSousa's sentence from four years to three years, without the need for her to serve prison time.
However, work still remains. DeSousa's conviction in absentia likely will remain on her record. She may still need to serve some sentence – either by house arrest or through community service in Portugal. DeSousa might accept the latter, but her reasonable demand is that her conviction be annulled and that she be reimbursed for her financial expenditures during the last 11 years.
"I should not have had to spend even a day in prison for ill-conceived decisions by senior agency CIA officers for which I had no input to stop the rendition," DeSousa said.
But one thing is certain; a weight has been lifted in DeSousa's life now that the threat of extradition and prison has been removed.
The Trump administration appears to have not forgotten about DeSousa, and neither will the IPT. While there may be differences on how to most effectively fight terrorism, hopefully all of those involved in the fight will agree with the IPT, that those who fight on the front lines shouldn't be the pawns in geopolitical arguments.
Rank and file CIA case officers now know that the Trump administration and the IPT have their backs, according to DeSousa.
Her case shows that having the right issue at the right time with the right relationships gets things done in Washington.
We share this story with you because so often the IPT cannot share its successes with you publicly. This is one story we can share publicly how the IPT helped someone who thought she had no options left. Our work is not yet completed. DeSousa faces additional challenges and IPT will be there with her.
The IPT accepts no funding from outside the United States, or from any governmental agency or political or religious institutions. Your support of The Investigative Project on Terrorism is critical in winning a battle we cannot afford to lose. All donations are tax-deductible. Click here to donate online. The Investigative Project on Terrorism Foundation is a recognized 501(c)3 organization.  

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