It's well known that Washington was originally
built on a pestilential swamp. Right now, the Bush administration is in the
process of draining
its own "swamp" of potential critics and doubters of any sort and installing
"family" members, many from George's (and Karl's) old Texas days, others "adoptees"
like Condoleezza Rice, ever more firmly in positions of ever greater power.
Though many
have written about this night of the loyalists recently, New York Times
White House correspondent Elisabeth Bumiller, who often seems little short of
an Oval Office staff member herself, produced a wonderful little mash note on
the subject Monday ("White
House Letter: In the New Bush Cabinet, Loyalty Trumps Celebrity"). She wrote
in part:
"President Bush appears to have picked his new cabinet with the view that he
has plenty of friends and doesn't need to make new ones
As anyone who watched
the job-hopping last week in Washington knows, the president promoted not just
men and women he knows and likes. He elevated the most loyal of loyalists, staff
members he has worked with for decades, most reaching far back to Texas."
In describing the appointment of his Texas camp followers to positions ranging
from Attorney General and Secretary of Education to White House Counsel, Bumiller
even manages to find a "critic" of the appointments who couldn't be sunnier:
"'The good news is that these appointments don't represent the kind of ideological
red flags that obviously could upset a lot of people,' said Leon E. Panetta,
a former chief of staff to President Bill Clinton."
Really, Leon? Evidently neither Panetta, nor Bumiller read Alan
Berlow in the Washington Post or Lou
Dubose in the LA Weekly on Alberto Gonzales, Bush family lawyer and
a sealed-lips insider who regularly raises the red flag of Bushism high above
the ramparts. During the president's first term, for instance, he made himself
useful by overseeing the development of a series of legal justifications for
torture meant to underpin an offshore global torture regime just for his guy.
In the process, he dismissed the Geneva Conventions (officially the law of the
land) as "obsolete" and in some provisions as "quaint." No red flags in rejecting
Ye Olde Geneva Conventions, I guess. As Dubose writes, "Gonzales was retained
to tell the boss how to do legally whatever he wanted done. It appears he never
gave Bush any advice he didn't want to hear
Gonzales is George Bush's yes man,
parsing the law to justify state executions and torture as easily as a corporate
lawyer would parse the law to justify the acquisition of a pipeline right of
way."
Jim Lobe of Inter Press
Service notes as well that "Gonzales' own legal team has been dominated
by members of the arch-conservative Federalist Society a group dedicated to
opposing the 'liberal ideology' its says dominates the U.S. legal profession
of which Ashcroft has been one of the leading figures. Virtually all of the
political appointees in the White House, the Justice Department, the Pentagon
and Cheney's office who were responsible for the most controversial memos on
torture, presidential power, and the Geneva Conventions are members of the society,
which is particularly notable for its strong aversion to international law and
its application within the United States."
Gonzales is, in fact, a far more dangerous figure than the bumbling, incompetent
"camera moth" who was our previous Attorney General. In the meanwhile, the various
Pentagon and vice presidential hardliners and neocons of term one are either
being kept in place like Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz or advanced like
Stephen
Hadley, Dick Cheney's man at the National Security Council, slated to replace
Rice as the next National Security Adviser. (Keep your eye, by the way, on what
happens to the neocon plant in the State Department John
Bolton, "the administration's designated treaty killer." Talking about raising
blazing flags, he's a man who could give the wild-eyed former CIA director and
general neocon freelancer-in-chief James ("World
War IV") Woolsey a run for his money. As Chris Nelson of the Washington
insider Nelson Report commented recently, Bolton "has been campaigning
all day to replace [Powell's second-in-command Richard] Armitage at State, but
[he] would certainly settle for Deputy National Security Advisor, sources agree.
Indeed, in recent weeks, John Bolton's name has frequently come up as a 'leading
indicator' of the policy direction of Bush 2, given his exuberantly hard-line
performance on Iran and North Korea, in particular."
So let's return to the official story, Bumiller-style: "In short, Mr. Bush
knows who his friends are, and they're now in his cabinet." Friends in the cabinet?
Well, think of it another way. Imagine our uncurious George and his vice president
as feudal lords who have called their retainers to their side. Their men are
now filling the moat and pulling up the drawbridge. (No more embarrassing kiss-and-tell
memoirs like those from term one!) In essence, what's now being created inside
the Beltway is the equivalent of what was created for the president on the campaign
trail those adoring rallies, that moving campaign bubble, lacking the slightest
challenge from reality. In a sense, what's now being put in place is a full-scale
fantasy regime, armed to the teeth. Inside the castle (or the bubble, if you
prefer) reality will be for a while at least what the president and vice
president decide it is.
In his second term, the president intends to preside over one big, blended
Family of Texas yes-folks, hawkish or neocon fundamentalists, Congressional
fundamentalists, and fundamentalist fundamentalists. (Note that in the elections
just past a number of seats in the Senate passed directly to members
of the American Taliban.) Paul
Woodward of the invaluable War in Context website offers the following comment
on this development: "Though in the short term this will boost their already
ballooning confidence, they are also insulating themselves from the possibility
that they will get advance notice of impending failures. A wise monarch knows
the value of the counsel of an irreverent 'fool,' but a vain monarch surrounds
himself with flatterers. An administration that only had one feeble eye now
has none." Whether, in the end, the impregnable castle, its raiding parties
ready to head out into the countryside, turns into a Nixonian-style "bunker"
remains to be seen.
In the meantime, the rest of Washington is being brought into line by various
other Bush "friends." In particular, former Congressional hack Porter Goss,
made head of the CIA in the run-up to the election, is directing a White House
purge of the Agency and ensuring that, in term two, fantasy will reign supreme
when it comes to the sort of intelligence the president and his cronies might
care to hear, as Chalmers Johnson, author of Blowback,
makes clear below. Tom
How to Create a WIA Worthless Intelligence Agency
by Chalmers Johnson
Two weeks after George Bush's reelection, Porter
J. Goss, the newly appointed Director of Central Intelligence, wrote an
internal memorandum to all employees of his agency telling them, "[Our job
is to] support the administration and its policies in our work. As agency employees,
we do not identify with, support, or champion opposition to the administration
or its policies."[1] Translated from bureaucrat-speak, this
directive says, "You now work for the Republican Party. The intelligence you
produce must first and foremost protect the president from being held accountable
for the delusions he has concerning Iraq, Osama bin Laden, preventive war, torturing
captives, democracy growing from the barrel of a gun, and the 'war on terror.'"
This approach is not new, even though former CIA
analyst Melvin A. Goodman declares that "the current situation is the worst
intelligence scandal in the nation's history."[2] Back in
1973, when James Schlesinger briefly succeeded Richard Helms as CIA director,
he proclaimed on
arrival at the agency's Virginia "campus": "I am here to see that you guys
don't screw Richard Nixon."[3] Schlesinger underscored his
point by saying that he would be reporting directly to White House political
adviser Bob Haldeman and not to National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger. In
the contemporary White House, Goss need not bother going directly to Karl Rove
since Bush's outgoing and incoming National Security Advisers, Condoleezza Rice
and Stephen J. Hadley, have both been working for months under Rove's direction
primarily to reelect the president.
In 1973, Schlesinger wanted to protect Nixon from revelations that the CIA
had broken into the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee and illegally
infiltrated the antiwar movement within the United States. His actual achievement
was to perpetuate Washington's idιe fixe that the United States could
still win the Vietnam War despite overwhelming intelligence to the contrary.
The same is likely to be true today and the outcome is likely to be similar.
Just as thirty years ago, an administration refused to pay attention to its
own internal intelligence assessments and lost the Vietnam War, so another administration
has again wrapped itself in a fantasy bubble of wishful thinking and so is losing
the war it started in Iraq.
Intelligence and the Truth-teller
Part of the background to the Goss memo is a widespread
misunderstanding of why the CIA was created and what it actually does. For example,
Bush
apostle David Brooks writes in the New York Times that the CIA is
engaged "in slow-motion brazen insubordination, which violate[s] all standards
of honorable public service. . . . It is time to reassert some harsh authority
so CIA employees know they must defer to the people who win elections. . . .
If they [people in the CIA] ever want their information to be trusted, they
can't break the law with self-serving leaks of classified data."[4]
Brooks seems to think that the CIA is the president's personal advertising agency
and that its employees owe their livelihoods to him. About Michael Scheuer,
the head of the "bin Laden Unit" in the agency's Counterterrorism Center from
1996 to 1999 and the anonymous author of Imperial Hubris: Why the West is
Losing the War on Terror, Brooks fumes, "Here was an official on the president's
payroll publicly campaigning against his boss."
Leave aside the fact that the president doesn't pay any government official's
salary, at least not legally, and that Scheuer was more interested in educating
the public about Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, on which he is an authority,
than in covering up the president's mistakes; the point is that the issue of
the CIA's intelligence on the Iraq war is bringing back into our political life
once again the figure most feared by presidents: the truth-teller. During a
previous period of falsified intelligence, National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger
said in the Oval Office in front of President Nixon and his Special Counsel
Charles Colson, "Daniel Ellsberg is the most dangerous man in America. He must
be stopped at all costs."[5] Kissinger and Nixon subsequently
ordered up felonies, such as a break-in at Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office,
in order to try to smear and discredit the man who had revealed to the public
the systematic lying of three presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson
about the war in Vietnam.
Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara had ordered a special staff to write a
top secret History of U.S. Decision-making in Vietnam, 1945-68, known
as "The Pentagon Papers," of which Ellsberg was responsible for the 1961 volume
on John F. Kennedy's presidency. Ellsberg's release of the highly classified
Pentagon Papers to the New York Times resulted in the public exposure
of virtually every National Intelligence Estimate on Vietnam written by the
CIA since the end of French colonial rule. Bush's attempt to squelch information
from the CIA then is hardly unprecedented in the annals of our government, but
it is egregious and ultimately self-defeating.
The term "intelligence" has always rested uneasily in the name of the Central
Intelligence Agency. There is no question that the agency was created in 1947
on the orders of President Truman for the sole purpose of collecting, evaluating,
and coordinating through espionage and from the public record information
related to the national security of the United States. Truman was concerned
to prevent another surprise attack on the U.S. like Pearl Harbor and to ensure
that all information available to the government was compiled and presented
to him in a timely and usable form. The National Security Act of 1947 placed
the CIA under the explicit direction of the National Security Council (NSC),
the president's chief staff unit for making decisions about war and peace, and
gave it five functions. Four of them concern the collection, coordination, and
dissemination of intelligence. It is the fifth which allows the CIA to "perform
such other functions and duties related to intelligence affecting the national
security as the National Security Council may from time to time direct" that
has turned the CIA into a personal, secret, unaccountable army any president
can order into battle without first having to ask Congress to declare war, as
the Constitution requires.
Clandestine operations, although nowhere mentioned in the CIA's enabling statutes,
quickly became the Agency's main activity and as one of its most impartial Congressional
analysts, Loch K. Johnson, has put the matter, "The covert action shop had become
a place for rapid promotion within the agency."[6] The Directorate
of Operations (DO) soon absorbed two-thirds of the CIA's budget and personnel,
while the Directorate of Intelligence limped along writing National Intelligence
Estimates (NIEs) summaries of intelligence produced by all the various intelligence
agencies, including those in the Department of Defense for the White House.
Meanwhile, CIA covert operations subverted domestic journalism, planted false
information in foreign newspapers, and covertly fed large amounts of money to
members of the Christian Democratic Party in Italy, to King Hussein of Jordan,
and to clients in Greece, West Germany, Egypt, Sudan, Surinam, Mauritius, the
Philippines, Iran, Ecuador, and Chile. Clandestine agents devoted themselves
to such tasks as depressing the global prices of agricultural products in order
to damage uncooperative Third World countries, and sponsoring guerrilla wars
or miscellaneous insurgencies in places as diverse as the Ukraine, Poland, Albania,
Hungary, Indonesia, China, Tibet, Oman, Malaysia, Iraq, the Dominican Republic,
Venezuela, North Korea, Bolivia, Thailand, Haiti, Guatemala, Cuba, Greece, Turkey,
Vietnam, Afghanistan, Angola, and Nicaragua, to name only a few of those on
the public record. All this was justified by the Cold War, and no one beyond
a very small group inside the government knew anything about it. The Central
Intelligence Act of 1949 modified the National Security Act of 1947 with a series
of amendments that, in the words of that pioneer scholar of the CIA Harry Howe
Ransom, "were introduced to permit [the CIA] a secrecy so absolute that accountability
might be impossible."[7]
How to Misuse Intelligence
Regardless of what it most enjoys doing, the CIA
is still tasked with providing the president with accurate information to enable
him to avoid a surprise attack and protect the national security. In the foyer
of the CIA's headquarters at Langley, Virginia, is inscribed a Biblical quotation:
"And ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free" (John 8:32).
Loch Johnson conjectures that former Director of the CIA (DCI) Allen Dulles
probably thought it meant, "And ye shall know the truth if ye be me, or the
president." Former DCI Richard Helms once maintained to Bob Woodward that the
early warning function of the CIA "is everything, and underline everything."[8]
Even if true, the CIA's power to provide such unrequested information to a president
constitutes a potential restraint on his freedom of action and may on occasion
totally derail his policies, particularly since such intelligence is very rarely
certain or unambiguous. Over the years the powers of the DCI to compel a president
to read an intelligence estimate have been systematically diluted, and when
information supplied to the president about a possible attack or any other matter
under the CIA's imprimatur has been leaked to the public, both the Agency and
the intelligence have become politically radioactive.
Such revelations have usually taken one of two forms. In the first instance,
the president, it is argued, has been shielded from or has refused to read accurate
intelligence. In the second instance, the president is accused of secretly ordering
the suppression of intelligence or of fabricating intelligence to support his
preferred policies. President Bush has engaged in both forms of dishonesty,
but he is certainly not the first president to do so. The examples are legion.
In 1961, at the time of the invasion of the Bay of Pigs, Richard Bissell, then
head of the Directorate of Operations, gained the ear of President Kennedy and
assured him that elated Cubans would welcome American-supported insurgents,
strew rose petals in their path, and help overthrow the Castro government. Bissell
simply did not show Kennedy the estimates that said Castro had extensive popular
support and the invasion would fail.
Similarly, in May 1970, as President Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger plotted
their "incursion" into Cambodia, the Board of National Estimates (BNE) concluded
that "an American invasion of Cambodia would fail to deter North Vietnamese
continuation of the war."[9] DCI Helms failed to deliver
this estimate to the White House, knowing what the BNE did not that the decision
to invade had already been made. Former DCI Robert M. Gates generalizes: "It
has been my experience over the years that the usual response of a policymaker
to intelligence with which he disagrees or which he finds unpalatable is to
ignore it."[10]
Examples of the distortion or fabrication of intelligence are rarer, but they
do occur. During the Vietnam War, Gen. William Westmoreland, U.S. military commander
from 1964 to 1968, omitted from his estimate of enemy forces all Communist guerrillas
and informal local defense forces perhaps as many as 120,000-150,000 fighters
that another estimate indicated had been responsible for up to 40% of American
losses. His apparent intent was to make victory in Vietnam look more plausible
to the American public. On March 14, 1967, DCI Helms included Westmoreland's
figures in an NIE going to the White House even though he "knew that the figures
on enemy troop strength in Vietnam provided by military intelligence were wrong
or, at any rate, quite different from CIA figures. Yet he signed the estimate
without dissent. The apparent reason, according to his biographer, was that
'he did not want a fight with the military, supported by [National Security
Adviser Walt] Rostow at the White House.'"[11]
Another example of the suppression or distortion of intelligence occurred in
1969-70 over the issue of whether or not the Soviet SS-9 ICBM could carry three
warheads and whether those warheads could be fired at separate and distinct
targets that is, whether or not the SS-9 carried MIRVs (multiple independently-targetable
re-entry vehicles). If true, this would perhaps have given the Soviet Union
a first-strike capability against the United States. The SS-9 came in four models,
the first of which had its flight test on September 23, 1963, and began to be
deployed in the summer of 1967. All Western intelligence agencies agreed that
models one through three carried a single warhead, some with huge yields (in
the range of 18 megatons). Disagreement arose over model four, which seemed
to carry three warheads. Whether these were independently targetable was in
dispute.
National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird
contended that the fourth version of the SS-9 was a MIRVed weapon; the CIA in
its NIE on the subject said that it was not. At first the CIA rejected the pressure
coming from the policymakers and, in fact, added more evidence against MIRVs
to its estimate. Ultimately, however, DCI Helms removed the paragraph arguing
against Soviet preparations for a first strike after "an assistant to [Laird]
informed Helms that the statement contradicted the public position of the Secretary."[12]
As it turned out, the CIA was right. The SS-9s were armed with MRVs, not MIRVs
that is, they could produce only a cluster of explosions in a single area.
The Soviet Union did not deploy MIRVs until 1976, six years after the United
States had done so. [13] So it was we, not they, who accelerated
the race toward mutual assured destruction and did so on the basis of fake
intelligence.
When it comes to ignoring accurate CIA intelligence, the preeminent example
in the Bush administration was National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice's
indifference to al-Qaeda and her failure to ensure that the president read and
understood the explicit warnings of an imminent surprise attack that the agency
delivered to her. As the Washington Post's Steve Coll has summarized
the matter in his book Ghost Wars, "BIN LADEN DETERMINED TO STRIKE IN
U.S. was the headline on the President's Daily Brief presented to Bush at his
Crawford, Texas, ranch on August 6 [2001]. The report included the possibility
that bin Laden operatives would seek to hijack airplanes. The hijacking threat,
mentioned twice, was one of several possibilities outlined. There was no specific
information about when or where such an attack might occur."[14]
Slaying the Messenger
After the extent of its failure became known,
and under extreme pressure from the public and families of the victims of 9/11,
the Bush administration reluctantly authorized the creation of a National Commission
on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States and permitted National Security
Adviser Rice to testify before it in public. But the fix was in: The Commission
was to concentrate on "intelligence failures," not on the failure of policymakers
to heed the intelligence, and on the need to "reform" the CIA but not to such
an extent as to damage the president's ability to blame it for his mistakes.
On November 20, 2004, right-wing members of the House of Representatives scuttled
the major recommendation of the 9/11 Commission namely, to provide the leader
of the American intelligence community with greater authority to direct and
coordinate the analyses of all 15 intelligence agencies. Reflecting the Pentagon's
interests in maintaining control over 80% of the $40 billion annual intelligence
budget, Duncan Hunter (R, Calif.), Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee
and an ally of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, withdrew his support. Other
Republican congressmen joined him, demanding that the bill go even further than
was already the case in harassing so-called illegal immigrants, primarily from
Mexico.
The president and the speaker of the House both said they favored enactment
of the proposed legislation, but many experienced observers thought it was all
Grand Kabuki by the Republican Party, intended to make it appear that the White
House favored reform while ensuring that reform did not actually occur. In killing
the reform bill, the Pentagon unambiguously displayed the raw political power
of the military-industrial-congressional complex. During October 2004, Gen.
Richard B. Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, without the public
approval of any civilian leader of the Defense Department, wrote to Congressman
Hunter expressing his support for sabotaging change.
After the 9/11 attacks and the Bush administration's decision to go to war
with Iraq, the focus shifted from ignoring unwanted intelligence to actively
creating false intelligence. The critical item was the NIE of October 1, 2002,
entitled "Iraq's Continuing Program for Weapons of Mass Destruction," which
became known inside the CIA as the
"whore of Babylon."[15] It explicitly endorsed vice president
Cheney's contention of August 26, 2002 "We know that Saddam has resumed his
efforts to acquire nuclear weapons" and was signed by DCI George Tenet with
"high confidence." "The intelligence process," writes CIA veteran Ray McGovern,
"was not the only thing undermined. So was the Constitution. Various drafts
of the NIE, reinforced with heavy doses of 'mushroom-cloud' rhetoric, were used
to deceive congressmen and senators into ceding to the executive their prerogative
to declare war the all-important prerogative that the framers of the Constitution
took great care to reserve exclusively to our elected representatives in Congress."
In succeeding months numerous review commissions revealed that the October
NIE was only one of numerous failures by the truth-tellers to do what the people
of the United States pay them to do. The Senate Intelligence Committee, the
9/11 Commission, and the CIA's Iraq Survey Group under Charles Duelfer all reported
that the CIA's so-called intelligence on Iraqi WMD was fictitious. Even more
dangerously for the White House, these reports suggested that its so-called
war on terrorism and its attack on Iraq rather than on the true perpetrators
of 9/11 were based on false intelligence, much of it manufactured in the Pentagon.
The number three civilian defense official in the Pentagon, Douglas Feith,
had set up the Office of Special Plans, an operation devoted to going through
all the raw intelligence available to the various spy agencies and finding items
that offered possible evidence of (or hints of evidence of) links between Saddam
Hussein and Osama bin Laden. It was this effort to get around both the CIA and
the Defense Intelligence Agency, neither of which had found links or ties between
Iraq and 9/11, that eventually led some officials to break ranks and charge
that the war against Iraq was in fact undercutting the "war on terrorism"
specifically, Richard A. Clarke, the White House's coordinator for counterterrorism
in both the Clinton and Bush administrations, in his book Against All Enemies:
Inside America's War on Terrorism; and the CIA's Michael Scheuer in Imperial
Hubris and in his letter to the House and Senate Intelligence Committees
entitled "How Not
to Catch a Terrorist."[16]
The new head of the CIA, Porter Goss, is now setting about knocking off all
such messengers and their supporters still inside the CIA because the agency,
despite its frequent co-option and misuse by presidents, still retains a vestigial
role as a truth-teller. Goss had been ordered to make it appear that the agency
misled the president (rather than the other way round, as actually happened).
He is then supposed to shake up what he calls a "dysfunctional" organization.
After George Tenet resigned as DCI in July 2004 and went on the lecture circuit
at $35,000 a pop he had earned well over a half-million dollars by November
Bush appointed Goss to control further truth-telling at Langley and to head
off efforts by Congress to create a powerful intelligence czar, as the 9/11
Commission has recommended.[17] The Senate confirmed Goss
by a vote of 77 to 17 (six senators did not vote), strongly suggesting the increasing
worthlessness of Senate oversight of the executive branch.
Goss represented the 14th district of Florida for some sixteen years in the
House of Representatives, but before that, between 1962 and 1971, he worked
in the CIA's Directorate of Operations (DO). He was stationed primarily in Latin
America, and rumors persist that he left the agency under a cloud. In 1995,
he was appointed to the House's Intelligence Oversight Committee and in 1997
became its chairman. There is no evidence that he did anything at all in this
position, including investigating the intelligence lapses that preceded 9/11
or the failure of the CIA to have placed a single spy anywhere within Saddam
Hussein's regime. Admiral Stansfield Turner, DCI under President Carter, has
said that Goss was the worst appointment ever made to the position of director
of the CIA.
How to Create a Worthless Intelligence Agency
Goss is a highly political bureaucrat, who raised
eyebrows when he gave speeches earlier this year attacking John Kerry for slashing
intelligence funding without mentioning that, in 1995, he himself had co-sponsored
a measure calling for firing 20% of all CIA personnel over five years. Goss
has also dismissed the efforts to find out who in the Bush administration identified,
and so outed, undercover CIA operative Valerie Plame wife of former ambassador
Joseph Wilson who had embarrassed the administration over its Iraqi nuclear
claims to the press as "wild and unsubstantiated allegations," a position
that will not reassure operatives at the Directorate who can be and have been
assassinated because of such leaks. Goss brought with him to Langley a group
of Republican Party activist staff members from the House Intelligence Committee
and set them up in prominent executive positions from which they unleashed a
witch-hunt against any and all intelligence officers who sought to put accuracy
and integrity ahead of service to George W. Bush.
It is interesting that Goss has begun his shake-up of the CIA by forcing out
the director and deputy director of operations, even though this is not where
the alleged failures of the CIA in recent years occurred. (This, in turn, has
lead to speculation that he is trying to ensure his own service record in the
DO will be kept under wraps.) Within the coming weeks, he will certainly fire
Jami A. Miscik, head of the Directorate of Intelligence (DI), who has worked
in the agency since 1983 and was a close associate of former DCI George J. Tenet.
She has led the DI since May 2002, a period in which much of the false reporting
on Iraq occurred. It may be logical and expectable that Miscik be held responsible
for the politicized intelligence produced on her watch; but under the present
circumstances it is clear that she is actually being punished for following
the orders of President Bush and Vice President Cheney, who ordered up the false
intelligence in the first place. As Spencer
Ackerman has written, "If Goss thought the CIA was dysfunctional before,
he has guaranteed that it is now."[18]
There is every reason to try to make the CIA at least slightly more effective
in its truth-telling mission, but even the hint that a Republican Party loyalty
test is now being applied will cause an exodus of experienced analysts and leave
the country even more vulnerable than it is now. With several wars underway
(in Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel-Palestine, Colombia, Kashmir, Sudan, and Chechnya,
to name only the most obvious), Iran and North Korea on the cusp of becoming
nuclear powers, a looming possibility of a global flight from the dollar, the
emergence of China as an economic powerhouse, and the polar ice caps melting,
this is not exactly a good time to be blinding ourselves. The only groups who
will profit from a crippling of what is left of the CIA's early warning and
analytic capabilities will be the Bush-Cheney White House and Rumsfeld's Pentagon.
The present sorry chapter in the rise and fall of the CIA reflects trends in
the U.S. that are bolstering an "imperial presidency" and its handmaiden, militarism.
Although the CIA was created to help inform presidents about threats to the
country, it is clear that the president and his top officials no longer want
or need its intelligence functions, which have, in any case, been increasingly
transferred to the military establishment, the professional armed forces, and
the military-industrial complex groups hardly best known for their reputations
as truth-tellers.
It is true that the CIA, once founded, quickly evolved into a Praetorian Guard,
totally under the president's secret control, and that every president since
Truman, upon discovering such an extraordinary source of power privately available,
has found its use irresistible. Over the decades, however, the CIA's ability
to intervene covertly and often violently in the affairs of others almost anywhere
on Earth has become somewhat less interesting to presidents as Congress passed
laws constraining presidential independence of action when it came to the Agency
and as alternatives came into being in the form of the military's various
Special Forces. The president now has an explicit and far more military Praetorian
Guard at his disposal that lacks any form of democratic oversight, although
he risks a future moment in which it might eventually take power into its own
hands, as the original Praetorians of the Roman Empire did two millennia ago.
Many presidents have abused their secret powers. When these violations of law
became public, as they did spectacularly during the Watergate scandal, they
led to Congressional efforts to impose oversight on the agency. From 1947 to
1974, Congress was completely uninformed about and exercised no control at all
over anything the CIA did. The agency's budget was buried in the "black" sections
of the Pentagon's budget. With the amending of the Foreign Assistance Act of
1974 (the "Hughes-Ryan Act") and the 1980 Intelligence Oversight Act, the president
was required formally to authorize all operations in writing and report them
to special committees of Congress or at least to their chairmen and ranking
minority members.
None of these measures has worked well, but they reflected a growing public
distrust of secret powers. Some members of Congress even collaborated with unscrupulous
CIA officials to subvert controls over expenditures and covert operations. When
Congressman Charlie Wilson (D, Texas) became chairman of the House's Intelligence
Oversight Committee, he wrote to his friends at the CIA, who were then secretly
enlarging the supply of weapons to the mujahedin in Afghanistan, "Well, gentlemen,
the fox is in the hen house. Do whatever you like."[19] Similarly,
in 1985, the oversight system virtually collapsed when it was revealed that
NSA director Vice Adm. John Poindexter and his aide Lt. Col. Oliver L. North
had secretly collaborated with DCI William Casey to sell arms to Iran and that
no one in Congress had been informed about it in any way. Somewhat more rigorous
Congressional scrutiny of the CIA ensued, which had the unintended effect of
making CIA officers more risk averse while enlarging the powers of the Pentagon
and our 14 other supersecret intelligence agencies, particularly the National
Security Agency, whose budget the Pentagon controls.
Nonetheless, the CIA still retains its statutory role of compiling and transmitting
to the president objective intelligence on matters it deems relevant to the
nation's security. The Agency may have become little more than a speed-bump
for an imperial president who also dominates the Congress and the courts, but
it is still part of the checks and balances of power within the executive branch
of our government that make the U.S. a democratic republic and protect us from
an imperial usurpation of power. With the reelection of President Bush and the
appointment of Porter Goss to bring the CIA under White House control, it becomes
increasingly hard to see how the republic will survive.
Footnotes
- Douglas Jehl, "Chief
of CIA Tells His Staff to Back Bush," the New York Times, November
17, 2004.
- Melvin A. Goodman, "Righting
the CIA," the Baltimore Sun, November 19, 2004.
- See, among several references, the remarks of a CIA officer who actually
heard Schlesinger: Ray McGovern, "Cheney's
Cat's Paw: Porter Goss as CIA Director," Counterpunch, July 6,
2004.
- David Brooks, "The
CIA Versus Bush," the New York Times, November 13, 2004.
- Daniel Ellsberg, Secrets
[New York: Viking, 2002], p. 434.
- Loch K. Johnson, America's
Secret Power: The CIA in a Democratic Society [New York: Oxford University
Press, 1989], p. 21.
- Loch K. Johnson, p. 36.
- Bob Woodward, Veil:
The CIA's Secret Wars, 1981-87 [New York: Simon & Schuster, 1987],
p. 49.
- Robert M. Gates, "The CIA and American Foreign Policy," Foreign Affairs
vol. 66, Winter 1987-88, p. 227.
- Loch K. Johnson, p. 62.
- L. K. Johnson, p. 62; see also Harold P. Ford, CIA
and Vietnam Policymakers: Three Episodes, 1962-1968 [Washington: Central
Intelligence Agency, 1998], pp. 86-104.
- 94th Congress, 2nd Session, Senate, Select Committee to Study Governmental
Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities [the Church committee],
Final Report [Washington: Government Printing Office, 1976], vol. 1,
p. 78.
- See Federation of American Scientists, Weapons
of Mass Destruction, R-36/SS-9 SCARP; and Fred Kaplan, The
Rumsfeld Intelligence Agency, Slate, October 28, 2002.
- Steven Coll, Ghost
Wars [New York: Penguin, 2004], p. 562.
- Ray McGovern, "Cheney's
Cat's Paw," Counterpunch, July 6, 2004.
- Richard A. Clark, Against
All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terrorism [New York: Free Press,
2004]; Michael Scheuer, "How
Not to Catch a Terrorist," Atlantic Monthly, December 2004,
pp. 50-52.
- Douglas Jehl, "Ex-CIA Chief Nets $500,000 on Talk Circuit," the New
York Times, November 11, 2004.
- Spencer Ackerman, "Killing
the Messenger," Salon, November 16, 2004.
- George Crile, Charlie
Wilson's War [New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2003], p. 494.
Chalmers Johnson's latest books Blowback:
The Costs and Consequences of American Empire (Metropolitan, 2000) and
The
Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic
(Metropolitan, 2004) are the first two volumes in a trilogy