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The Sloppiness of George Tenet and Bill Harlow

by
Larry C Johnson

Anyone who follows politics probably knows who George Tenet is (former CIA Director).  Few may recognize the name of Bill Harlow.  Harlow is the co-author of George Tenet’s book and was his press flack at the CIA.  Let’s first recall what George Tenet said about his failure to tell Congress that Bin Laden and Saddam were not working together to attack America.  On Wolf Biltzer’s show, The Situation Room, Tenet made this stunning admission:

TENET: We — we would regret not having that clause that was — that I talked about that was in all of our testimonies and every paper that we wrote. We were — we were sloppy in that letter.

No shit.  But that’s not your only sin sloppiness, George Tenet.

Most already know that Tenet opens his book with an alleged conversation with Richard Perle, neocon and Prince of Darkness.  Tenet claims he talked to Perle at the White House on September 12, 2001.  Tenet claims Perle told him:

‘Iraq has to pay a price for what happened yesterday, they bear responsibility.’ It’s September the 12th. I’ve got the manifest with me that tell me al Qaeda did this. Nothing in my head that says there is any Iraqi involvement in this in any way shape or form and I remember thinking to myself, as I’m about to go brief the president, ‘What the hell is he talking about?’" Tenet remembers.

One small problem.  Perle was in France.  Tenet claims he was mistaken about the date but that the conversation took place.  Sorry folks, if you’re the Director of the CIA you are supposed to get your facts right.  Sloppiness was the hallmark of Tenet’s tenure. 

Tenet, for example, claims in his book that the first of the World Trade Center towers hit on September 11, 2001 was the "South Tower".  Hello?  The North Tower was the first one hit.

I had an indirect run in with Bill Harlow a few years back (I think it was in June of 2003 after I started speaking out about friends inside the CIA who told me the books had been cooked).  Bill Harlow called several journalists and told them, "You should not use Larry Johnson as a source because he is misrepresenting his experience at the CIA.  He only worked there for one year."

How do I know this?  I was called on that same day by Knut Royce (who writes for Newsday) and David Kaplan (who writes for U.S. News and World Reports).  Both men relayed Harlow’s claim.  I responded:

This explains in part why the CIA is having trouble locating weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.  I worked at the CIA for four years-September 1985 until September 30 1989.

Let’s ignore for a moment that I received two Exceptional Performance Awards my last year at CIA.  Let’s ignore that I was ranked in the top 10% of analysts for current intelligence production (which means the aritcles I wrote for the National Intelligence Daily and the Presidential Daily Brief).  And let’s ignore the fact that I also produced a "hard cover" (a long term research paper).  These clowns didn’t even have the competence to check the facts before trying to trash me.

George Tenet did some good things in trying to rebuild the CIA’s collection capabilities.  He did some good things in trying to make terrorism a priority.  Yet, as others have noted, Tenet’s sloppiness was another hallmark of his tenure.  As John Weisman so adroitly records:

On George Tenet’s watch, CIA mistakenly bombed the embassy of the People’s Republic of China in Belgrade because Langley lacked the assets to provide the correct information.

While Deputy Director George Tenet was busy overseeing a new fishpond outside The Bubble at CIA headquarters, al-Qa’ida bombed the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia, killing nineteen American service personnel and wounding 500 more.

On George Tenet’s watch, CIA missed any advance warning of India’s May, 1998 nuclear tests because it had not recruited enough spies from within the Indian government and its nuclear program.

On George Tenet’s watch, Pakistani nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan’s network smuggled nuclear materials and expertise to Iran and North Korea.  But for years CIA was deaf, dumb and blind to the Pakistani’s villainy because it had no agents close to Khan and no agents privy to the North Korean or Iranian nuclear weapons programs.

On George Tenet’s watch, CIA shut down many of its sub-Saharan stations and bases.  The resulting intelligence vacuum left America vulnerable to al-Qa’ida’s August, 1998 attacks on our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed and wounded hundreds.

On George Tenet’s watch, unilateral agent penetrations of al-Qa’ida cells in the Gulf States and the Arabian peninsula were virtually nonexistent because CIA suffered from a dearth of language-capable officers and a culture of risk aversion and political correctness.  CIA was therefore unable to provide any prior warning about the October, 2000, attack on the USS Cole that killed 17 of our Sailors.

On George Tenet’s watch, America suffered 9/11, its most ignominious intelligence failure since Pearl Harbor.  9/11 resulted in the worst-ever loss of life from a hostile attack on American soil.

Tenet says he was so worried about an impending terrorist strike in 2001 that he brief National Security Advisor Condi Rice in July 2001.  Yet, during August, he declined to say anything to President Bush beyond the August 6th PDB that warned of an impending attack.

Let’s give Tenet his due for consistency.  He was sloppy as the DCI and he is sloppy about "facts" in his book.  If you think sloppiness deserves reward then buy his book.  But, if you believe that the head of the CIA is responsible for getting facts right, don’t.  He was sloppy and U.S. soldiers are now paying a fearsome price for his cavalier attitude.

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Comment by Clark | 2007-05-10 23:39:09

Thank you Larry!
Speaking truth to power.
I would like to see the “Sloppiness Defense” put to the test.
In the Hague!

 

Comment by PrchrLady | 2007-05-11 01:24:26

Excellent Larry. You shared some new insight on the slime bag tenet is, and has been. I think that is one of the prime reasons bushco kept him on, when putting in place the cronies they needed to hatch the plot…

I agree with you Clark, to the Hague, yesterday, please

 

Comment by Leslie | 2007-05-11 01:52:59

Larry,
The article you link to by Weisman says that Michael Spann’s family only received one year’s annuity following his death in Afghanistan. Is that correct–one year? That’s Tenet’s new policy for CIA officers killed in the field? That’s outrageous.

Regarding Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program: Didn’t Reagan and Bush Sr. enable, or at least look the other way, while Pakistan developed its nukes? Then Secretary of Defense Cheney and then Deputy Under-Secretary of Defense Scooter Libby were involved too. Why do those names sound so familiar? Just read this chilling account in rawstory.com a few days ago, “They Sold Out the World for an F-16 Sale”: http://rawstory.com/news/2007/They_sold_out_world_for_F16_0426.html

 

Comment by Larry Johnson | 2007-05-11 08:59:31

Weisman’s source on the Spann annuity seems sound. Typical Tenet.

 

Comment by Leslie | 2007-05-11 09:31:06

Geez, Richard Perle has a WaPo oped today slamming Tenet. Talk about calling the kettle black. Two gems at the end:

“When Defense Department officials pressed the CIA to reassess whether Hussein’s intelligence service supported terrorists, and had links to al-Qaeda, Tenet first resisted, then treated with derision the evidence of such links that CIA analysts had ignored….

“But the greatest intelligence failure of the past two decades was the CIA’s failure to understand and sound an alarm at the rise of jihadist fundamentalism. It is Wahhabi extremism and the call to holy war against infidels that gave us the perpetrators of Sept. 11 and much of the terrorism that has followed. In his attempts to blame others for CIA shortcomings, Tenet cannot say, “I told the president that our Saudi allies were financing thousands of mosques and schools around the world where a hateful doctrine of holy war and violence was being inculcated in young potential terrorists.” Fatefully, the CIA failed to make our leaders aware of the rise of Islamist extremism and the immense danger it posed to the United States.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/10/AR2007051001808.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

Saddam had no ties to al Qaeda. Don’t these guys follow the news? Then Perle says the greatest threat to US security has been the rise of Wahhabism. Hello, the Wahhabis are in Saudi Arabia. Wasn’t Bush just holding hands with Crown Prince Abdullah at the White House?

 

Comment by oldtree | 2007-05-11 09:35:01

one things springs to mind; Tenet seems to remember what he sees on paper, but no interaction with others. Perhaps the plan was to hit the other tower first? and he has seen something relating to that?

I do not believe that our country would allow an attack to promote their agenda, but there is enough conflicting evidence that something is very wrong with this “government” since the day they got in.
this boob was the one in charge. he seems to have looked the other way while a lot of things happened. so many times that his role in a conspiracy of silence indicates to many that it was not strictly silence.

 

Comment by Retired | 2007-05-11 10:34:41

A good contrast between the approaches and concerns of a professional intelligence officer and a professional political staffer. Somehow, it was the latter who ended up as DCI under two Presidents, one Democrat, one Republican.

 

Comment by susanUnPC | 2007-05-11 11:45:27

[QUOTE FROM PERLE] Tenet cannot say, “I told the president that our Saudi allies were financing thousands of mosques and schools around the world where a hateful doctrine of holy war and violence was being inculcated in young potential terrorists.” Fatefully, the CIA failed to make our leaders aware of the rise of Islamist extremism and the immense danger it posed to the United States.” [/QUOTE]

Leslie, thanks for posting this. This assertion by Perle is laughable! Good god, anyone who reads a newspaper or magazine would know this! (Oh right, Bush doesn’t read. But his henchmen do. They knew.)

Perle’s contention is idiotic — well, moreso, it’s pathetic and criminal in its accidental admission that he and the rest of Bush’s handlers weren’t paying attention to world events, or even discussing hot spots.

 

Comment by ybnormal | 2007-05-11 12:27:26

Add to Tenet’s sloppiness, the illusion of truth founded on sloppiness.

Ongoing, future writings will refer back to Tenet’s book as “The Official Word” about whatever it is they’re citing, then add their own two cents worth, which will then in turn become accepted as fact by the next; and so on.

Another example of how lies become accepted as fact.

 

Comment by PseudoCyAnts | 2007-05-12 15:06:01

Just a few germane links.

Attention Leslie:

Henry S. Rowen, GHW Bush Admin member and more recently, member of the Silberman/Robb Committee, admits to knowledge of Pak Nuke aspirations during the Admin of Poppa Bush. Although the USA Today link given doesn’t provide attribution, I know from previously scraped URLs, now dead, that Kelley is the author.

Matt Kelley - AP, “Pakistan threatened to give nukes to Iran, ex-officials say”, USA Today, April 27, 2004
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2004-02-27-us-pakistan_x.htm

In Re Perle:

Jim Lobe documents Perle’s distortions at the AntiWar.com blog:

Tenet v Perle, May 3, 2007
http://www.antiwar.com/blog/2007/05/03/tenet-v-perle/

Tenet v Perle II, May 11, 2007
http://www.antiwar.com/blog/2007/05/11/tenet-v-perle-ii/

 

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