Former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has
pleaded guilty to making false statements during an investigation into a leak
of classified information about a covert cyberattack on Iran's nuclear
facilities.
Retired Marine Gen. James Cartwright entered the plea at
a hearing Monday before U.S. District Judge Richard Leon. When Leon asked if
Cartwright understood the charge, he said, "I do, sir."
The offense carries a maximum of five years in prison,
but Cartwright's attorney told the judge that the government and defense
counsel had agreed on a recommended sentence of no more than six months. He is
scheduled to be sentenced in January, and it will be up to Leon to decide the
sentence.
Cartwright told investigators that he was not the source
of classified information contained in a book by New York Times journalist
David Sanger, according to charging documents unsealed by prosecutors.
Neither the book nor the classified subject is
identified in court papers. But Sanger has written in his book, "Confront
and Conceal," about a covert cyberattack on Iran's nuclear facilities and
the use of a computer virus called Stuxnet to temporarily disable centrifuges
that the Iranians were using to enrich uranium.
The charging documents also say Cartwright misled
prosecutors about classified information shared with another journalist, Daniel
Klaidman.
The U.S. attorney's office in Maryland announced the
case on Monday.
Officials say Cartwright will make an initial appearance
in federal court in Washington on Monday afternoon, when a plea hearing will also
take place. Prosecutors say Cartwright was charged via criminal information, a
document that is filed with a defendant's consent and that signals that a plea
agreement has been reached.
Gregory Craig, an attorney for Cartwright, had no
immediate comment. Craig's office said he would issue a statement later Monday.
Cartwright, 67, was vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff from 2007 until 2011, and was considered a key close adviser to Obama. A
former fighter pilot, the Marine general was known for his expertise in the
more highly technical areas of cyberwarfare and America's nuclear enterprise.
The New York Times reported in 2012 that Cartwright was
a crucial player in the cyber operation called Olympic Games, started under
President George W. Bush.
The Times had said that Obama ordered the cyberattacks
sped up, and in 2010 an attack using Stuxnet temporarily disabled 1,000
centrifuges that the Iranians were using to enrich uranium.
Congressional leaders had called for an criminal
investigation into who leaked the information, and some Republicans said senior
administrational officials had disclosed the details of the cyber operation to
bolster the president's national security credentials during the 2012 campaign.
Obama, for his part, said he had zero tolerance for such leaks.
The Justice Department's investigation into the
disclosure of classified information was one of several national security leak
probes conducted during the Obama administration, including ones involved The
Associated Press and Fox News.
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