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George Tenet’s Saudi Pool Party

Looking for something to stick in your holiday sock? Patrick Tyler’s book, A World of Trouble, argues that the Middle East is the “beginning and end of U.S. foreign policy.” I don’t know about that, but it may be the end of George Tenet. Tyler’s prologue includes an account of a well-lubricated George Tenet (Scotch is his poison of choice apparently) splashing in the pool and railing about the Bush Administration officials for blaming him for the botched intelligence on Iraqi WMDs.

A servant appeared with a bottle. Tenet knocked back some of the scotch. Then some more. They watched with concern. He drained half the bottle in a few minutes.
“They’re setting me up. The bastards are setting me up,” Tenet said, but “I am not going to take the hit.”

But wait, there is more. An eyewitness to the incident told Tyler that Tenet:

“mocked the neoconservatives in the Bush administration and their alignment with the rlght wing of Israel’s political establishment, referring to them with exaxperation as, “the Jews.”

According to Patrick Tyler, George Tenet initially denied he was at Prince Bandar’s party palace, but subsequently conceded he was in the pool but did not say such dastardly things. Personally I do not think Tenet deserves the benefit of the doubt. I am certain that Patrick Tyler has this solidly sourced. Tyler risks too much legally to make it up.

I wonder about a couple of other possibilities. Does a Saudi prince pool party include “party favors?” You know, the two legged female kind in attire normally not allowed outside of the Saudi palace? And if such “party favors” were present did anyone have an I-Phone or other similarly equipped camera ready phone? There could be some interesting candid photos.

I hope this is true. It is fitting justice in my mind for the havoc George Tenet helped create in Iraq and the Middle East. I suspect many of you have not read the piece I wrote when George Tenet’s book came out last year. I am reprinting in full for your background. Once you read this you’ll understand why I have no sympathy for George Tenet and his adventure at the Saudi pool party.

A Bloody Lie of George Tenet

How many lies is George Tenet allowed to tell on TV before he immolates the last shred of credibility? Judging by his latest sad performance on Meet the Press I would say his time is up. Tenet insisted to Tim Russert today that he was crystal clear in debunking the assumption that Al Qaeda and Iraq were in cahoots:

Well, Tim, Tim, I will tell you that I had many conversations, particularly on Iraq and al-Qaeda, particularly on the terrorism question, where we drew the line as sharply as we knew how. We were very, very clear about our judgments. We worked very, very hard to make sure that people comported and stayed within the bounds of what the intelligence showed.

But George Tenet can’t keep his stories straight.  For example, as has been widely reported, he starts his book off with an inaccurate account of a conversation with neocon and Iraq war advocate Richard Perle. It is the day after 9-11, Perle is stuck in France, yet Tenet writes that he saw Perle exiting the White House and talking about attacking Iraq. Leave it to George Tenet to make Richard Perle sound sane.

George Tenet wants gullible book buyers to believe that he always disputed the notion that Saddam and the 9-11 attackers were working in concert. But the words and actions of George Tenet tell a radically different story. A damning one at that.   

In March of 2002 George Tenet said:

"There is no doubt that there have been contacts and linkages of al-Qaeda organization. As to where we are in September 11, the jury is out. . . . . Their ties may be limited by divergent ideologies, but the two sides’ mutual antipathy toward the United States and the Saudi royal family suggest that tactical cooperation between them is possible."

Why did George Tenet leave open the window of doubt on this critical issue when he now insists that there was no there there? But wait, there is more.

CIA Deputy Director, John McLaughlin, sent a letter responding to a query from Senator Evan Bayh on October 7, 2002 that said:

Regarding Senator Bayh’s questions of Iraqi links to al-Qaeda, senators could draw from the following points for unclassified discussions.
One, We have solid reporting of senior level contact between Iraq and al-Qaeda going back a decade.”;
Two, Credible information indicates that Iraq and al-Qaeda have discussed safe haven and reciprocal aggression.
Three, Since Operation Enduring Freedom, we have solid evidence of the presence in Iraq of al-Qaeda members, including some that have been in Baghdad.
And lastly, We have credible reporting that al-Qaeda leaders sought contacts in Iraq who could help them acquire WMD capabilities. The reporting also stated that Iraq has provided training to al-Qaeda members in the areas of poisons and gases and making conventional bombs.

p>Did anyone hear George Tenet at the time remind anybody that there was no “operational tie” between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda? No. He chose to say nothing. Did he challenge those–like Dick Cheney–who suggested there was a substantive ongoing relationship? Nope. George Tenet said nothing to dispel that false conclusion.

That same day (October 7, 2002) President Bush gave a speech in Cincinnati, Ohio (this is the famous speech in which Tenet excised the reference to Niger, Iraq, and uranium) and said the following:

And that is the source of our urgent concern about Saddam Hussein’s links to international terrorist groups. Over the years, Iraq has provided safe haven to terrorists such as Abu Nidal, whose terror organization carried out more than 90 terrorist attacks in 20 countries that killed or injured nearly 900 people, including
12 Americans. . . .

We know that Iraq and the al Qaeda terrorist network share a common enemy — the United States of America. We know that Iraq and al Qaeda have had high-level contacts that go back a decade. Some al Qaeda leaders who fled Afghanistan went to Iraq. These include one very senior al Qaeda leader who received medical treatment in Baghdad this year, and who has been associated with planning for chemical and biological attacks. We’ve learned that Iraq has trained al Qaeda members in bomb-making and poisons and deadly gases. And we know that after September the 11th, Saddam Hussein’s regime gleefully celebrated the terrorist attacks on America.

George Tenet’s CIA approved this language and Tenet was familiar with the speech because he had called the White House to protest another portion of the speech.  This provides circumstantial evidence for Richard Dearlove’s (George Tenet’s British counterpart) now famous memo (the Downing Street Memo) that the facts and the intelligence were being fixed around the policy of going to war with Iraq.  In my day we called it cooking the books and George Tenet was one of the chefs.

Tenet’s participation in the hoodwinking of the American public continued when, on February 4, 2003, he sat stoically behind Colin Powell at the UN Security Council and, by virtue of his presence, provided the CIA’s imprimatur for the following claim:

Al Qaeda continues to have a deep interest in acquiring weapons of mass destruction. As with the story of Zarqawi and his network, I can trace the story of a senior terrorist operative telling how Iraq provided training in these weapons to al Qaeda. Fortunately, this operative is now detained, and he has told his story.
I will relate it to you now as he, himself, described it. This senior al Qaeda terrorist was responsible for one of al Qaeda’s training camps in Afghanistan.

His information comes firsthand from his personal involvement at senior levels of al Qaeda. He says bin Laden and his top deputy in Afghanistan, deceased al Qaeda leader Mohammed Atef, did not believe that al Qaeda labs in Afghanistan were capable enough to manufacture these chemical or biological agents. They needed to go somewhere else. They had to look outside of Afghanistan for help. Where did they go? Where did they look? They went to Iraq.
The support that (al Libi) describes included Iraq offering chemical or biological weapons training for two al Qaeda associates beginning in December 2000. He says that a militant known as Abu Abdula Al-Iraqi (ph) had been sent to Iraq several times between 1997and 2000 for help in acquiring poisons and gases. Abdula Al-Iraqi (ph) characterized the relationship he forged with Iraqi officials as successful.

This intelligence came from Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, an al-Qaeda commander who was tortured by the Egyptians. Even though George Tenet was briefed in January 2003 that his analysts doubted al-Libi’s account (see Hubris pp. 187-88) he signed off on Powell’s briefing.

But he did more. On February 11, 2003 Tenet he went before Congress and said:

Iraq is harboring senior members of a terrorist network led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a close associate of al Qaeda. …Iraq has in the past provided training in document forgery and bomb-making to al Qaeda. It has also provided training in poisons and gases to two al Qaeda associates. One of these associates characterized the relationship he forged with Iraqi officials as successful. … I know that part of this – and part of this Zarqawi network in Baghdad are two dozen Egyptian Islamic jihad which is indistinguishable from al Qaeda – operatives who are aiding the Zarqawi network, and two senior planners who have been in Baghdad since last May.
Now, whether there is a base or whether there is not a base, they are operating freely, supporting the Zarqawi network that is supporting the poisons network in Europe and around the world. So these people have been operating there. And, as you know – I don’t want to recount everything that Secretary Powell said, but as you know a foreign service went to the Iraqis twice to talk to them about Zarqawi and were rebuffed. So there is a presence in Baghdad that is beyond Zarqawi.

The public record is quite clear about the role George Tenet played in helping condition the American people to fear Iraq and support a preemptive war against Iraq.  He helped build the myth that Al Qaeda enjoyed safehaven in Iraq and was biding its time to strike us again. George Tenet was not an honest broker trying to get the best intelligence to the President and the Congress. He willingly and knowingly agreed to make public statements and authorized statements that were at odds with the actual intelligence.

What do you think would have happened if George Tenet had gone to members of Congress and warned them that there was no relationship between Al Qaeda and Saddam’s Iraq? Would overwhelming majorities have voted to give the President authority to start a war with Iraq? I do not think so.

Would Americans still raw from the wounds inflicted by Al Qaeda on 9-11 support the President’s campaign to attack a country which had nothing to do with those attacks and, despite claims to the contrary, was not protecting or enabling Al Qaeda operatives who wanted to launch new attacks against the United States? The answer. No, and hell no!

Lie is the only word that comes to mind and seems appropriate to describe what George Tenet has done. This is the chief reason I say he has the blood of American soldiers on his hands. And I, along with several former members of the CIA, the U.S. Department of State, and the U.S. Army, believe that George Tenet owes the soldiers and the families of soldiers who have died or been wounded in Iraq part of the proceeds from his $4 million dollar advance for his book. It would be the decent thing to do, but George Tenet’s decency quotient appears to be running on empty.

  • jeremy

    what about the 500 tons of yellow cake uranium that was found in iraq? arent this considered wmd’s?

  • http://NoQuarterUSA.net Larry Johnson

    No, because the Iraqis had no means to process the yellow cake. Just because you have an egg does not mean you have the means to make a bundt cake.

  • jeremy

    so would it be ok to have a missle launcher as long as we didnt have the actual missle?

  • Rah-Rah

    Larry:

    Thank you. Excellent.

    Every time I hear someone trying to tie Saddam to 9-11, I want to scream. The majority of the citizens of this country have lost all ability to think critically…to look at facts…to admit that things are not as they appear simply because someone in *power* says they are.

    Tenet should be tried for war crimes.

  • Rah-Rah

    it was all a ruse, jeremy. face it: we were hood-winked by our own military and political leaders. you should be outraged – not making excuses…

  • http://NoQuarterUSA.net Larry Johnson

    Jeremy,
    What are you talking about? Hussein did have missile launchers that were destroyed. Ever hear of SCUDs. But a launcher without a missile is not useful. Like having a gun but no bullets. An empty gun is more lethal than a missile launcher without a missile. At least you can throw the gun or use it as a club.

  • http://www.jable.com/jable/WildChild.jpg WIldChild

    It might be if you snorted about half a ton of it. Some of your brain mass is bound to be destructed.

  • http://www.jable.com/jable/WildChild.jpg WIldChild

    It would be the ideal place to fire off your bottle rockets.

  • Rob

    I’m surprised there’s no mention of Tenet assuring Bush that it was a “slam dunk” that Saddam had WMD. That should be a staple in any Tenet biopic.

    The president, unimpressed by the presentation of satellite photographs and intercepts, pressed Tenet and McLaughlin, saying their information would not “convince Joe Public” and asking Tenet, “This is the best we’ve got?” Woodward reports.

    According to Woodward, Tenet reassured the president that “it’s a slam dunk case” that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction.

    In his CBS interview, Woodward said he “asked the president about this, and he said it was very important to have the CIA director, ‘slam-dunk’ is as I interpreted it, a sure thing, guaranteed.”

    http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/04/18/woodward.book/

  • beebop

    God bless you sir and your patience. Jeremy requires far more tutelage than most people would provide. He is either obtuse or just plain stupid. God bless you for not judging. Thank you for leaving that to us. :)

  • Pennsylvania Red

    Larry please forgive the threadjack:

    ABC news is reporting that Blagoevich was once a bookie who paid street tax to the mob:

    He told ABC7 that Mr. Blagojevich regularly paid a so-called street tax to Robert “Bobby the Boxer” Abbinanti, a convicted outfit gambling collector. In the early 1980′s, Abbinanti was working for convicted West Side mob boss Marco D’amico. Bookies pay street taxes to the crime syndicate in exchange for being allowed to operate such a racket.
    “I predicted five years ago when he ran the first time that he was a hands on person who would be selling every position in the state of Illinois and that it exactly what happened,” said Cooley.
    Cooley, who secretly recorded conversations in a Counselor’s Row restaurant near City Hall which brought down the first ward leadership, contends Illinois corruption is unstoppable.
    “The biggest problem you have now and reason for what is happening is that the people in power have money and ability to silence the media so it will never be reported and as long as you have that going on, you will never stop it,” Cooley.

  • Pennsylvania Red

    Here’s the link

  • Bazooka

    I think I remember reading that it was not the kind that is considered weapons grade.

  • Baba Rum Raisin

    The appropriate term for a missile launcher sans missile is SCRAP. Or, at best, STEEL SAWHORSE.

  • Indy G-Dog

    I understand life as a director of the CIA must be so demanding, but WTH was he doing hanging out, getting DRUNK, with the Saudis, even post invasion?

    A very sloppy, stupid war put together by amateurs,
    the greater implications for those running the US government, astounding.

    No wonder the thing failed, bound to happen when the legal structure is willfully, and deliberately, ignored.

  • jeremy

    actually i could care less that he had wmd. what i cared about are the millions of women and children he slaughtered with chemical weapons. i think that alone was enuff to go in there and take him out. the war was managed bad. have u guys seen the pics of the women holding there infants laying in the street from mustard gas?

  • Ferd Berfle

    You exaggerate. Thousands is much more precise. Stop hyperventilating, bot.

  • Indy G-Dog

    At what cost to the US?

    You don’t know, do you?

    It was a horrific strategic move, horrific, perhaps costing us our economy, and ultimately, our ability to protect ourselves.

    Why do you think Cheney had to go through so many generals?

  • Ferd Berfle

    The cost can be measured in lives, money, prestige, and trust. I’m sure ther are others.

  • http://ezinearticles.com/?Three-Basic-Parenting-Styles&id=744499 Northwest rain

    Let me see if I remember the Nationalities of the men we have been told were the Sept 11 hijackers — Iraqi — NO — They were mostly Saudi Nationals.

    So why was Tenet at a Saudi pool party?

    His judgment sucked then and never did improve much with time.

  • Ferd Berfle

    Attacking Iraq over 9/11 would be analagous to FDR ordering an attack on China for Pearl Harbor.

    Bots to the right; bots to the left, but not a brain among them collectively.

  • Linda C.

    Lots goes on in Saudi pools..just saying…

  • HARP

    lol

  • TeakWoodKite

    Thanks for reposting the post Mr. Johnson.

  • Indy G-Dog

    Our economy is broken, there is simply no way to gloss it over, and as Eisenhower said, our true might is derived from our economy, not our military.

    When the Saudis are turning up their nose at you, or dealing with Russia as the superior power, we, as a country are dead within 20 years.

    Fortunately, we’re a democracy, the corrupt democrats and republicans simply a small part of the greater power structure.

  • Doc99

    Instead of the Medal of Freedom, Bush should have canned Tenet after taking the Oath in Jan of 2001.

  • I’m a Linda too

    I’d love to see some of those photos too Larry.

  • kgirl1028

    roflmao

  • TeakWoodKite

    Tenet’s book is an interesting exercise in revisionism. It hurt to think that his book was not redacted near as much as Mrs Wilsons was… in her book they redacted the word “and”…and his ? Not.

    I am wondering what your views are regarding the US Policies towards Saudi Arabia will be in the coming administration… and how that relates to Iran.

  • commie77

    Isn’t this just all complete BS? See statement from Abe Foxman:
    http://jeffreygoldberg.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/12/foxman_to_tenets_rescue.php

    And the people who were in the room also say it is BS:
    http://jeffreygoldberg.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/12/tenets_denial.php

    Ah well, never let the facts get in the way of a good story…

  • commie77

    This is just all complete BS? See statement from Abe Foxman:
    http://jeffreygoldberg.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/12/foxman_to_tenets_rescue.php

    And the people who were in the room also say it is BS:
    http://jeffreygoldberg.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/12/tenets_denial.php

    Ah well, never let the facts get in the way of a good story…

  • Ed Reed

    Mr. Johnson:

    What did you think of the Vice President’s admission in an ABC interview that he authorized/facilitated the waterboarding of detainees.

    Thank you.

  • Ed Reed

    Mr. Johnson:

    What did you think of the Vice President’s admission in an ABC interview that he authorized/facilitated the waterboarding of detainees?

    Thank you.

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