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Obama’s Mishandling Of The Intelligence Community

failureintelMelvin A. Goodman, senior fellow at the Center for International Policy, is a former intelligence analyst at the CIA (1966-1990) and the author of Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA. Mr. Goodman is a longtime friend of Larry Johnson’s and gave his express consent to reprint this article. We strongly suggest that you read Mr. Goodman’s other op-eds published here at No Quarter.

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FROM Public Record (pubrecord.org): — On Jan. 7, the Washington Post published a front-page lead article and an oped on the nomination of Leon Panetta as CIA director; both articles exaggerated the extent of opposition to the Panetta appointment and demonstrated the weakness of mainstream media coverage of the intelligence community, particularly the Central Intelligence Agency.

The front-page article by Karen DeYoung, a seasoned reporter, and Joby Warrick, a newcomer to the intelligence beat, presented a one-sided and inaccurate account of the opposition to the naming of Panetta. The oped by David Ignatius, who has relied heavily on unnamed CIA clandestine operatives as sources for the past 25 years, argues that the CIA “has demonstrated an ability to sabotage bosses it doesn’t like.”  Such balderdash!  

It is particularly ironic that such senior writers as DeYoung and Ignatius would rely on the views of clandestine officers who are particularly adept at manipulating people and opinion.  Indeed, that is part of their job description. 

The reliance on anonymous CIA sources from the clandestine community does not make for good reporting or good journalism.

It must be understood that many CIA officials, particularly in the National Clandestine Service, have never welcomed the idea of reporting to a CIA director with a reputation for liberal or progressive policies.  When President Jimmy Carter was considering the nomination of Ted Sorensen as CIA director in 1977, CIA operatives were active on the Hill and in the press community making a case against Sorensen.  And when President Bill Clinton nominated Tony Lake as director in 1997, CIA officials successfully engaged in clandestine efforts to undermine Lake’s candidacy. It would not be surprising for clandestine operatives to lobby against Panetta, particularly in view of his opposition to torture and abuse and secret prisons. It should also be noted, however, that there are also many CIA officers  who share Panetta’s views and would welcome his leadership.

It  should be mentioned, moreover, that CIA clandestine officers typically rallied around CIA directors who broke the law as long as long as they were zealous supporters of covert action.  When CIA director Richard Helms falsely testified in 1973 that the CIA had not passed money to the opposition movement in Chile, he was fined $2,000 and given a two-year suspended prison sentence.  Helms went from the courthouse to the CIA where he was given a hero’s welcome by clandestine officers who presented Helms with a gift of $2,000 to cover the fine.  CIA director William Casey’s violations of the Boland Amendment to outlaw funding for the overthrow of the Sandinista government in Nicaragua were supported by the directorate of operations.  Conversely, CIA director William Colby’s cooperation with the Church Commission’s investigations of CIA violations of U.S. law during the Vietnam War were maligned by senior cadre of the clandestine service.

DeYoung and Warrick disingenuously repeated the assertion of one senior CIA officer that the “agency was neither consulted nor informed” about the Panetta nomination.  More balderdash! The CIA has never been consulted about the nomination of a CIA director nor should it.  It is unlikely that Foreign Service Officers were asked to vet the selection of Senator Hillary Clinton as secretary of state or that the Joint Chiefs of Staff were asked if they would support the nomination of Donald Rumsfeld as secretary of defense in 2001.  Civil servants have no role to play in the selection of senior officials of the government, and their professionalism requires support for their leadership, regardless of political beliefs.  We certainly expect U.S. military officers, who are overwhelmingly members of the Republican Party, to support the national security policies of Democratic administrations.  We should assume that CIA officers will do the same.

It is particularly interesting that DeYoung and Warrick reported that President-elect Obama’s first choice for CIA director, John Brennan, withdrew his name from consideration because of opposition to his association with CIA policies of interrogation and rendition.  Brennan, in fact, withdrew his name from consideration because he was involved in and supported those policies and because he has been part of the culture of cover-up at the CIA during the Bush years.  His confirmation process would have been confrontational and tendentious, and probably unsuccessful. Nevertheless, Ignatius’s candidate for CIA director is none other than the current deputy director of the CIA, Steve Kappes, the darling of the clandestine community and a supporter of and participant in the very policies of interrogation and rendition that reportedly sank the chances of Brennan.  

The Washington Post and the mainstream media for the most part have never understood that the CIA, like other large government entities, are complex organizations and rarely governed by one set of ideas on any issue, particularly the capabilities of their leaders.  There are numerous CIA officials who support the nomination of Panetta, just as there are opponents to his candidacy.  Reporters need to make sure they canvas the entire community before placing front-page articles in front of the American public. They must know that the overwhelming majority of CIA officers would not talk to the press; therefore, they should be skeptical of those who do.  And when they want to deny the fact that there is a serious morale problem at the CIA because of recent intelligence failures, reporters such as DeYoung and Warrick should not consult CIA spokesman such as Mark Mansfield, a well-known agency flack, to deny such facts.  You would never ask a barber if you need a haircut, and you certainly wouldn’t ask a CIA spokesman about internal problems at the CIA.<


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The following additional information comes from The Intelligence Daily‘s publication of the above article:

Visit Jason Leopold’s The Public Record!. Here is Mr. Leopold’s statement on the purpose of his blog:

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NQ EDITOR’s NOTE: We also strongly recommend that you read Mr. Goodman’s other insightful op-eds published here at No Quarter.

  • http://www.patriotroom.com Bill Dupray

    Seats Are Still For Sale in Chicago – Hurry, Sale Ends Soon

    http://patriotroom.com/article/seats-are-still-for-sale-in-chicago–hurry–sale-ends-soon

  • http://liberalrapture.com/ John (from Liberal Rapture)

    Obama is nonsense, wrapped in B.S., coated with lies.

  • the duke of marlboro

    I think, in part, despite his attempts to remake and control, Cheney (and by extension, Hayden, and the rest) was ultimately disregarded, perhaps the intelligence community, in part, outstripping him.

    Cheney’s (military) appointees simply weren’t talented men — four stars doesn’t guarantee skill, prescience, perspicacity or intellect. They were given tremendous power, simply squandering it in pursuit of unworkable ideology and concepts, never able to understand WHY their schemes failed, stillborn.

    Sadly, Obama is missing a golden opportunity, I wonder what he will do about Petraus?

  • Winston

    I’ll have you know that Barack Onada is the finest community organizer since Judas himself held that very same position. It is just that Barack needs more than a mere 40 pieces of gold to do his communizing; you know with inflation factored in and all.

  • rolling_thunder

    It’s all so stressful.
    Here’s a few things to make you all warm and happy.
    Crooks like nObama fail sooner or later and these creeps failed immediately…read on

    1. An 88-year-old Gresham woman sent a man fleeing in pain by punching him in the groin after he entered her home naked and shoved her face into a chair early Tuesday morning.

    2. A bank robber stole off with thousands but left behind a deposit slip with his name, address, and tel# on it, as he fled the bank with the cash.

    3. A car wash robber’s gun fell apart when the robber was pummeled by an employee with the high pressure water from the car wash hose. The robber fled the scene.
    These all happened this week.

    The mishandling of robbing others. Instant KARMA
    :razz:

  • cathnealon

    He(BO) is not ‘picking’ anyone. He couldn’t pick an apple. This administration will be a worse joke in that regard than the Bush fiasco. Everyhting of consequence is being done and will be done by others because BO is a little boy who’s posing as a President. How scary is that.

  • rolling_thunder

    Oh the naked robber’s name is Michael DICK.
    :lol:

  • jjran

    “This is just how Paris Hilton would act if she was the President of the United States of America.

    Welcome to the American Idol Presidency, Fellow Countrymen!

    So how do you like ‘change’ thusfar?”

  • http://www.anvp.wordpress.com soldier4hillary

    Hi everyone!
    For the sake of *thread unity* can you stay on topic? I think Susan will be posting a *open thread* but this is a REALLY really important article in which I am sure your viewpoints on it would be appreciated by those lurking.

  • TeakwoodKite

    Thank you NQ for posting this.

    It really does confirm for a novice like myself, that others with a lifetime of experience have a similar view point.

    I get that these cultures a very difficult to change once they become bueacraticlly entrenched. I can recall reading in Ms. Wilson’s book that they all “where watching fox news”.

    This has stuck with me because one would think, in an organization such as the CIA or the DI complex, the TV’s would have a variety of broadcasts on.

    I liken it to walking into Everett and Jones, in downtown Oakland, expecting to see the TV’s set to a 49er’s game. All the locals know that is never gonna happen.

  • Sonic Ninja Kitty

    Wow–totally fascinating article! My impression of Obama–he has no clue. We will be extremely lucky if we get the status quo.

  • TeakwoodKite

    While looking over the other articles on Public Record I came across this. It seems to be related. It begs the question, “Will BO reverse the effort by Bush to make classified anything and everything that is the public’s business?”
    The Department of Justice

    said Vice President Dick Cheney’s interview with the special prosecutor who investigated the leak of covert CIA operative Valerie Plame Wilson is top secret and the document’s classified status is the reason the agency has rebuffed demands to turn the document over to Congress.

    .

  • noproblama

    President Beefcake messing up already? How could that happen?

    We now have Princess Di in the Oval Office.

  • Strawberrybitch

    BEEFCAKE?!! Now that’s just nasty.

  • Texas Playwright

    The oligarchy pulling bho’s puppet strings is selling our Bill of Rights for power, money, fame. Too many government agencies holding on to their turf as we move into fascism. Crooks picking crooks to undermine America some more.

    Looks like the hard lessons of history are coming the way of the uninformed/misinformed electorate.

  • Northwest rain

    This is a very frightening article —

    I guess most of us can start saying “WE TOLD YOU SO”.

    My biggest issue with Obama was that he is a National Security risk on many levels. I doubt that he understands anything about the spy business — and it’s doubtful that he even understands the Pentagon issues and the State Department conflicts mentioned in this article.

    Obama does seem like a ceremonial type of President — I don’t expect that he is going to expend the effort to understand the functioning of the Government.

    This is very discouraging. For the active duty military — oh my god — what sort of hell are you all going through?

    My father was lucky — he served under mostly decent men who took their job as CiC very seriously

  • Queenie

    FOR NEWBIES..read this book..and learn about Porter Goss…

    Barry & ‘the Boys’: The CIA, the Mob and America’s Secret History by Daniel Hopsicker

    Then ask why Obama would keep anyone with close alliance to Porter Goss.

    Then realize why so many of us warned you ..and remember it when we say..we told you so!

    Thank you Mel..great article, thank you for enlightening so many!!

  • cynic

    We won’t really know the effectiveness of the Obama presidency until the guy takes office. What we do know is that he’ll be confronting some of the most serious challenges our country has faced in decades. Business as usual is what got us to that point.

    Obama isn’t president-elect because the people thought he was without risk. He’s president-elect because they thought he was a risk we couldn’t afford not to take.

    I’m not all that knowledgable about the workings of our national intelligence agencies or about their internal problems and politics. I assume, however, that the White House sets policy and tone and lays down the rules. Nobody is going to run roughshod over Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama, nor is anybody going to pull the wool over their eyes for long. Forget the far-right geopolitical agenda of the Project for the New American Century. There’s a new game in town.

  • kgirl1028

    sounds yummy.

  • Queenie

    Dear Cynic…it is obvious you never read the entire PNAC…or about what Leo Strauss taught…or what the blue prints stated…for the New world order or how it would be brought about.

    enough said.

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

    Wow the trolls are so damned stupid.

    For the billionth time — Obama is completely out of his depth. He has a smart ass kid, barely out of his teens writing speeches with pretty words. Obama can read the words from a teleprompter but he has zero comprehension of the meaning of the words.

    Obama lives in a fantasy land.

    Obama is unprepared and unqualified — and he is lazy. He has only moved from job to job — not really staying long enough to learn the job.

    His last job as US Senator was spent running for his next job — he never bothered to even understand the complexity of world politics.

    Obama does NOT understand the military culture — I have NEVER seen anyone so damned ignorant about the US military run for Prez of the US.

    We had the superior candidate — that was Hillary Clinton. McCain also is very knowledgeable about International politics and he knows the players.

    Ray-gun was a bumbling fool — Bush is a stupid fool — Obama is WORSE then Ray-gun on his worst day.

    You Obots are beyond hopeless.

    Obama is a danger to the world — he is causing death and destruction — and the SOB isn’t even Prez yet.

  • Magic Puzzle Box

    He is a security risk, but I wonder if his priorities are just not in that direction. After all, why say we need a national civilian force at home as well funded as our military abroad? From what I’ve read of people of the mindset he seems to fit into (the Leftist, Ayers-types, if that assumption is correct based on all of his strange associations) they really consider things like military, international issues and even space exploration financially wasteful, a distraction and a diversion from domestic issues. All that money spent on space and defense could be better spent, in their minds, on domestic poverty programs. All well and good, but in the meantime, the dictators they are busy admiring still have plans of their own.

    And by the way, the whole NASA thing, as I read about it in TIME, doesn’t seem to be a priority either, and so Obama’s people are fighting with NASA’s engineers. The problem is that very often space programs drive military technology, and we’ve got a tremendous space race right now with China, Japan, South Korea and India all slated to send space missions and beef up their space programs. It’s not a minor issue, and we shouldn’t consider it as unimportant to maintain on some level.

  • Astra14

    First: Mel, thank you for the great article!

    Second: cynic – I think we already know how effective he’s going to be given the number of times he goes on vacation and whenever there is an incident he refuses to comment on it. HE’S NOT GOING TO BE! And don’t give me that crap he’s not the President yet! This is the man who is going to be taking it over in a matter of days!!! He should be taking a stand NOW so the country and the world know where he stands and where he is going to lead this country after he’s immediately sworn in. Since I assume he’s not planning on nuking anyone and would go the diplomatic route – I’m assuming here – there is no reason why he can’t voice at least an opinion.

    Furthermore, after reading Mel Goodman’s article above, it’s clear Bush III has definitely arrived as well as the continued abuse of power – remember Obama voted FOR FISA! Follow the bouncing ball here, cynic, the “WE TOLD YOU SO” is loud and clear!

    “He’s president-elect because they thought he was a risk we couldn’t afford not to take.” Only the koolaid drinkers thought he was a risk we couldn’t afford to take – only because he had his hopey dopey changey speech with nothing to back it up. It takes more than words to prove a candidate can create change! It takes proof in his background – and Obama didn’t have it and still doesn’t – his books don’t count as proof. I’m in a heavily democratic college town – 55% of the votes went to McCain because the older democrats didn’t like or trust Obama so they took the unusual step of crossing party lines and it wasn’t based on racism. The only Obama/Bidens lawn signs were on properties with student housing and eventually those became fewer.

    No, Mel Goodman’s article just reinforces that Bush III has arrived and, on top of everything else Obama news related it, shows that we’ve four more years of a very rough ride and business as usual.

  • the duke of marlboro

    Yes, this is correct, they just don’t get it, but then, I suppose they’re not supposed to.

    And the speechwriter is a moron btw, the thinking not pretty, but canned, and trite, the culinary equivalent of a can of Campbell’s tomato soup.

    But they dont understand why this is a problem for them, a function of their narcissism.

  • I’m a Linda too

    Yes, thank you for you post.

  • Sophie

    That’s the way it is. Although it wasn’t that way as much with WJC and wouldn’t have been with Hillary. Those “others” like Presnits that play golf and work out and stay out of the way of the real work.

  • Sassy

    I certainly don’t wish to insult dedicated professionals, but some of the shenanigans that were exposed in these agencies looked like the “Keystone Cops” in action.
    Is it possible to head up a complex office and have your finger on every person and issue? I don’t know!
    Look across your own personal work-space, then ask yourself if you want your safety resting on that person. Scary!

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