House Panel Subpoenas State Department Over Afghanistan Exit Cable

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Representative Michael McCaul (R-TX) preside as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken testifies on the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, September 13, 2021. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo)

WASHINGTON (The Washington Post) —- A senior U.S. lawmaker sent the State Department a subpoena for a classified diplomatic cable on Tuesday, escalating a standoff over the Biden administration’s exit from Afghanistan.

The move by Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, intensifies the dispute over a July 2021 cable that employees at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul sent to Washington before the collapse of the U.S.-backed government there, setting in motion a tumultuous evacuation period that included a takeover by Taliban militants and an attack killing 13 U.S. service members.

McLaurine Pinover, a spokeswoman for McCaul, said the subpoena for the cable, which was sent via a “dissent channel” that allows employees to convey information to senior agency leaders that differs from those of other department officials, was transmitted Tuesday morning.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken, speaking to lawmakers last week, indicated his unwillingness to provide Congress the cable because, he said, it could discourage workers from using the channel in the future. He noted that the department had sent lawmakers thousands of pages of documents related to the withdrawal, which was widely seen as a chaotic and embarrassing end to the United States’ two decades in Afghanistan.

The State Department has proposed instead speaking with lawmakers about the document’s contents.

“The department followed up with the committee to reiterate its willingness to provide a briefing about the concerns raised and the challenges identified by Embassy Kabul, including in the dissent channel,” State Department spokesperson Vedant Patel said in a statement. “The committee chose instead to issue a subpoena.”

It was not immediately clear what steps McCaul, who last year released a report on the administration’s management of the withdrawal, may take to enforce the subpoena.

“We have made multiple good faith attempts to find common ground so we could see this critical piece of information,” McCaul said in a statement ahead of the subpoena’s delivery. ” . . . The American people deserve answers as to how this tragedy unfolded, and why 13 U.S. servicemembers lost their lives.”

“The State Department, for better or worse, as a practical matter has the upper hand,” said Brian Finucane, a former State Department attorney who is now a senior adviser at the International Crisis Group.

Experts say the incident highlights a contested area of executive and legislative branch authorities, one that has never been settled in U.S. courts. It echoes some of the challenges that Democrats faced during the Trump administration in obtaining information from executive agencies including the State Department.

“I will say that it’s difficult to square what might be the legitimate policy-based rationale of the department to preserve the dissent channel with Congress’s oversight responsibilities and its need for information from the department,” Finucane said of the standoff.

The senior Democrat on the committee, Rep. Gregory W. Meeks (D-N.Y.), told Blinken last week that he had also requested the cable last year.

In a March 22 letter to McCaul, a senior State Department official said the agency, as far as the Biden administration was able to determine, had never provided a dissent channel cable to Congress in the half-century since the channel’s establishment.

“Following that 50-year precedent, the department must continue to protect the integrity of the dissent channel and protect the confidentiality and freedom of conscience of the officers of the State Department who utilize it,” Naz Durakoglu, assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs, wrote in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Post.

During Blinken’s testimony last week, Republican lawmakers complained that some of the documentation provided by the State Department was so heavily redacted that it had been rendered useless.

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