The secret
prison was set up on a secure U.S. Naval base outside the U.S.
and so beyond the slightest recourse to legal oversight. It was
there that the CIA clandestinely brought its "suspects" to be
interrogated, abused, and tortured.
That
description might indeed sound like Guantanamo 2002, but think
again. According to New York Times reporter Tim Weiner's
new history of the Central Intelligence Agency, Legacy
of Ashes a remarkable treasure trove of grim and
startling information you hadn't known before this actually
happened first in the Panama Canal Zone in the early 1950s. It
was there, as well as at two secret prisons located in Germany
and Japan, the defeated Axis powers (and not, in those days, in
Thailand or Rumania), that the CIA brought questionable double
agents for "secret experiments" in harsh interrogation, "using
techniques on the edge of torture, drug-induced mind control,
and brainwashing." This was but a small part of "Project Artichoke,"
a 15-year, multi-billion
dollar "search by the CIA for ways to control the human mind."
No book
in recent memory has done such a superb job of illuminating the
roiling, disastrous, thoroughly destructive path through history
of America's top covert-operations agency over the last six decades,
what Chalmers Johnson has often called "the president's private
army." Johnson himself was an outside consultant for the CIA from
1967 to 1973 until, as he writes in his latest book Nemesis:
The Last Days of the American Republic (the third volume
of his Blowback Trilogy), "this consulting function was
abolished by [National Security Advisor Henry] Kissinger and [CIA
Director James] Schlesinger during [President Richard] Nixon's
second term precisely because they did not want outsiders interfering
with their ability to tell the president what to think." On first
arrival at the Agency's "campus" in Langley, Virginia, Johnson
reminds us, Schlesinger, in the typically highhanded fashion of
CIA heads, immediately announced, "I am here to see that you guys
don't screw Richard Nixon." Think of CIA Directors George Tenet
or Porter Goss and George Bush and you're back in our present
age.
As books,
Nemesis and Legacy of Ashes complement each other
superbly, so I thought it worthwhile to set Johnson loose on Weiner's
new work in a rare book review for Tomdispatch. ~ Tom
Wall
Street Brokers, Ivy League Professors, Soldiers of Fortune, Ad
Men, Newsmen, Stunt Men, Second-Story Men, and Con Men on Active
Duty for the United States
By Chalmers
Johnson
This
essay is a review of Legacy
of Ashes: The History of the CIA by Tim Weiner (Doubleday,
702 pp., $27.95).
The American
people may not know it but they have some severe problems with
one of their official governmental entities, the Central Intelligence
Agency. Because of the almost total secrecy surrounding its activities
and the lack of cost accounting on how it spends the money covertly
appropriated for it within the defense budget, it is impossible
for citizens to know what the CIA's approximately 17,000 employees
do with, or for, their share of the yearly $44
billion$48
billion or more spent on "intelligence." This inability to
account for anything at the CIA is, however, only one problem
with the Agency and hardly the most serious one either.
There are
currently at least two criminal trials underway in Italy and Germany
against several dozen CIA officials for felonies committed in
those countries, including kidnapping people with a legal right
to be in Germany and Italy, illegally transporting them to countries
such as Egypt and Jordan for torture, and causing them to "disappear"
into secret foreign or CIA-run prisons outside the U.S. without
any form of due process of law.
The possibility
that CIA funds are simply being ripped off by insiders is also
acute. The CIA's former number-three official, its executive director
and chief procurement officer, Kyle "Dusty" Foggo, is now under
federal indictment in San Diego for corruptly funneling contracts
for water, air services, and armored vehicles to a lifelong friend
and defense contractor, Brent Wilkes, who was unqualified to perform
the services being sought. In return, Wilkes treated Foggo to
thousands of dollars' worth of vacation trips and dinners, and
promised him a top job at his company when he retired from the
CIA.
Thirty years
ago, in a futile attempt to provide some check on endemic misbehavior
by the CIA, the administration of Gerald Ford created the President's
Intelligence Oversight Board. It was to be a civilian watchdog
over the Agency. A 1981 executive order by President Ronald Reagan
made the board permanent and gave it the mission of identifying
CIA violations of the law (while keeping them secret in order
not to endanger national security). Through five previous administrations,
members of the board all civilians not employed by the
government actively reported on and investigated some of
the CIA's most secret operations that seemed to breach legal limits.
However,
on July 15, 2007, John Solomon of the Washington Post reported
that, for the first five-and-a-half years of the Bush administration,
the Intelligence Oversight Board did nothing no investigations,
no reports, no questioning of CIA officials. It evidently found
no reason to inquire into the interrogation methods Agency operatives
employed at secret prisons or the transfer of captives to countries
that use torture, or domestic wiretapping not warranted by a federal
court.
Who were
the members of this non-oversight board of see-no-evil, hear-no-evil,
speak-no-evil monkeys? The board now in place is led by former
Bush economic adviser Stephen Friedman. It includes Don Evans,
a former commerce secretary and friend of the President, former
Admiral David Jeremiah, and lawyer Arthur B. Culvahouse. The only
thing they accomplished was to express their contempt for a legal
order by a president of the United States.
Corrupt
and undemocratic practices by the CIA have prevailed since it
was created in 1947. However, as citizens we have now, for the
first time, been given a striking range of critical information
necessary to understand how this situation came about and why
it has been so impossible to remedy. We have a long, richly documented
history of the CIA from its post-World War II origins to its failure
to supply even the most elementary information about Iraq before
the 2003 invasion of that country.
Declassified
CIA Records
Tim Weiner's
book, Legacy
of Ashes, is important for many reasons, but certainly
one is that it brings back from the dead the possibility that
journalism can actually help citizens perform elementary oversight
on our government. Until Weiner's magnificent effort, I would
have agreed with Seymour
Hersh that, in the current crisis of American governance and
foreign policy, the failure of the press has been almost complete.
Our journalists have generally not even tried to penetrate the
layers of secrecy that the executive branch throws up to ward
off scrutiny of its often illegal and incompetent activities.
This is the first book I've read in a long time that documents
its very important assertions in a way that goes well beyond asking
readers merely to trust the reporter.
Weiner,
a New York Times correspondent, has been working on Legacy
of Ashes for 20 years. He has read over 50,000 government
documents, mostly from the CIA, the White House, and the State
Department. He was instrumental in causing the CIA Records Search
Technology (CREST) program of the National Archives to declassify
many of them, particularly in 2005 and 2006. He has read more
than 2,000 oral histories of American intelligence officers, soldiers,
and diplomats and has himself conducted more than 300 on-the-record
interviews with current and past CIA officers, including ten former
directors of central intelligence. Truly exceptional among authors
of books on the CIA, he makes the following claim: "This book
is on the record no anonymous sources, no blind quotations,
no hearsay."
Weiner's
history contains 154 pages of end-notes keyed to comments in the
text. (Numbered notes and standard scholarly citations would have
been preferable, as well as an annotated bibliography providing
information on where documents could be found; but what he has
done is still light-years ahead of competing works.) These notes
contain extensive verbatim quotations from documents, interviews,
and oral histories. Weiner also observes: "The CIA has reneged
on pledges made by three consecutive directors of central intelligence
– [Robert] Gates, [James] Woolsey, and [John] Deutch to
declassify records on nine major covert actions: France and Italy
in the 1940s and 1950s; North Korea in the 1950s; Iran in 1953;
Indonesia in 1958; Tibet in the 1950s and 1960s; and the Congo,
the Dominican Republic, and Laos in the 1960s." He is nonetheless
able to supply key details on each of these operations from unofficial,
but fully identified, sources.
In May 2003,
after a lengthy delay, the government finally released the documents
on President Dwight D. Eisenhower's engineered regime change in
Guatemala in 1954; most of the records from the 1961 Bay of Pigs
fiasco in which a CIA-created exile army of Cubans went to their
deaths or to prison in a hapless invasion of that island have
been released; and the reports
on the CIA's 1953 overthrow of Iranian prime minister Mohammad
Mossadeq were leaked. Weiner's efforts and his resulting book
are monuments to serious historical research in our allegedly
"open society." Still, he warns,
"While
I was gathering and obtaining declassification authorization for
some of the CIA records used in this book at the National Archives,
the agency [the CIA] was engaged in a secret effort to reclassify
many of those same records, dating back to the 1940s, flouting
the law and breaking its word. Nevertheless, the work of historians,
archivists, and journalists has created a foundation of documents
on which a book can be built."
Surprise
Attacks
As an idea,
if not an actual entity, the Central Intelligence Agency came
into being as a result of December 7, 1941, when the Japanese
attacked the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor. It functionally
came to an end, as Weiner makes clear, on September 11, 2001,
when operatives of al-Qaeda flew hijacked airliners into the World
Trade towers in Manhattan and the Pentagon in Washington, DC.
Both assaults were successful surprise attacks.
The Central
Intelligence Agency itself was created during the Truman administration
in order to prevent future surprise attacks like Pearl Harbor
by uncovering planning for them and so forewarning against them.
On September 11th, 2001, the CIA was revealed to be a failure
precisely because it had been unable to discover the al-Qaeda
plot and sound the alarm against a surprise attack that would
prove almost as devastating as Pearl Harbor. After 9/11, the Agency,
having largely discredited itself, went into a steep decline and
finished the job. Weiner concludes: "Under [CIA Director George
Tenet's] leadership, the agency produced the worst body of work
in its long history: a special national intelligence estimate
titled ‘Iraq's Continuing Programs for Weapons of Mass Destruction.'"
It is axiomatic that, as political leaders lose faith in an intelligence
agency and quit listening to it, its functional life is over,
even if the people working there continue to report to their offices.
In December
1941, there was sufficient intelligence on Japanese activities
for the U.S. to have been much better prepared for a surprise
attack. Naval Intelligence had cracked Japanese diplomatic and
military codes; radar stations and patrol flights had been authorized
(but not fully deployed); and strategic knowledge of Japanese
past behaviors and capabilities (if not of intentions) was adequate.
The FBI had even observed the Japanese consul-general in Honolulu
burning records in his backyard but reported this information
only to Director J. Edgar Hoover, who did not pass it on.
Lacking
was a central office to collate, analyze, and put in suitable
form for presentation to the president all U.S. government information
on an important issue. In 1941, there were plenty of signals about
what was coming, but the U.S. government lacked the organization
and expertise to distinguish true signals from the background
"noise" of day-to-day communications. In the 1950s, Roberta Wohlstetter,
a strategist for the Air Force's think tank, the RAND Corporation,
wrote a secret study that documented the coordination and communications
failings leading up to Pearl Harbor. (Entitled Pearl Harbor:
Warning and Decision, it was declassified and published by
Stanford University Press in 1962.)
The Legacy
of the OSS
The National
Security Act of 1947 created the CIA with emphasis on the word
"central" in its title. The Agency was supposed to become the
unifying organization that would distill and write up all available
intelligence, and offer it to political leaders in a manageable
form. The Act gave the CIA five functions, four of them dealing
with the collection, coordination, and dissemination of intelligence
from open sources as well as espionage. It was the fifth function
lodged in a vaguely worded passage that allowed 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 turned the CIA into
the personal, secret, unaccountable army of the president.
From the
very beginning, the Agency failed to do what President Truman
expected of it, turning at once to "cloak-and-dagger" projects
that were clearly beyond its mandate and only imperfectly integrated
into any grand strategy of the U.S. government. Weiner stresses
that the true author of the CIA's clandestine functions was George
Kennan, the senior State Department authority on the Soviet Union
and creator of the idea of "containing" the spread of communism
rather than going to war with ("rolling back") the USSR.
Kennan had
been alarmed by the ease with which the Soviets were setting up
satellites in Eastern Europe and he wanted to "fight fire with
fire." Others joined with him to promote this agenda, above all
the veterans of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), a unit
that, under General William J. "Wild Bill" Donovan during World
War II, had sent saboteurs behind enemy lines, disseminated disinformation
and propaganda to mislead Axis forces, and tried to recruit resistance
fighters in occupied countries.
On September
20, 1945, Truman had abolished the OSS a bureaucratic victory
for the Pentagon, the State Department, and the FBI, all of which
considered the OSS an upstart organization that impinged on their
respective jurisdictions. Many of the early leaders of the CIA
were OSS veterans and devoted themselves to consolidating and
entrenching their new vehicle for influence in Washington. They
also passionately believed that they were people with a self-appointed
mission of world-shaking importance and that, as a result, they
were beyond the normal legal restraints placed on government officials.
From its
inception the CIA has labored under two contradictory conceptions
of what it was supposed to be doing, and no president ever succeeded
in correcting or resolving this situation. Espionage and intelligence
analysis seek to know the world as it is; covert action seeks
to change the world, whether it understands it or not. The best
CIA exemplar of the intelligence-collecting function was Richard
Helms, director of central intelligence (DCI) from 1966 to 1973
(who died in 2002). The great protagonist of cloak-and-dagger
work was Frank Wisner, the CIA's director of operations from 1948
until the late 1950s when he went insane and, in 1965, committed
suicide. Wisner never had any patience for espionage.
Weiner quotes
William Colby, a future DCI (19731976), on this subject.
The separation of the scholars of the research and analysis division
from the spies of the clandestine service created two cultures
within the intelligence profession, he said, "separate, unequal,
and contemptuous of each other." That critique remained true throughout
the CIA's first 60 years.
By 1964,
the CIA's clandestine service was consuming close to two-thirds
of its budget and 90% of the director's time. The Agency gathered
under one roof Wall Street brokers, Ivy League professors, soldiers
of fortune, ad men, newsmen, stunt men, second-story men, and
con men. They never learned to work together the ultimate
result being a series of failures in both intelligence and covert
operations. In January 1961, on leaving office after two terms,
President Eisenhower had already grasped the situation fully.
"Nothing has changed since Pearl Harbor," he told his director
of central intelligence, Allen Dulles. "I leave a legacy of ashes
to my successor." Weiner, of course, draws his title from Eisenhower's
metaphor. It would only get worse in the years to come.
The historical
record is unequivocal. The United States is ham-handed and brutal
in conceiving and executing clandestine operations, and it is
simply no good at espionage; its operatives never have enough
linguistic and cultural knowledge of target countries to recruit
spies effectively. The CIA also appears to be one of the most
easily penetrated espionage organizations on the planet. From
the beginning, it repeatedly lost its assets to double agents.
Typically,
in the early 1950s, the Agency dropped millions of dollars worth
of gold bars, arms, two-way radios, and agents into Poland to
support what its top officials believed was a powerful Polish
underground movement against the Soviets. In fact, Soviet agents
had wiped out the movement years before, turned key people in
it into double agents, and played the CIA for suckers. As Weiner
comments, not only had five years of planning, various agents,
and millions of dollars "gone down the drain," but the "unkindest
cut might have been [the Agency's] discovery that the Poles had
sent a chunk of the CIA's money to the Communist Party of Italy."
[pp. 6768]
The story
would prove unending. On February 21, 1994, the Agency finally
discovered and arrested Aldrich Ames, the CIA's chief of counterintelligence
for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, who had been spying for
the USSR for seven years and had sent innumerable U.S. agents
before KGB firing squads. Weiner comments, "The Ames case revealed
an institutional carelessness that bordered on criminal negligence."
[p. 451]
The Search
for Technological Means
Over the
years, in order to compensate for these serious inadequacies,
the CIA turned increasingly to signals intelligence and other
technological means of spying like U-2 reconnaissance aircraft
and satellites. In 1952, the top leaders of the CIA created the
National Security Agency an eavesdropping and cryptological
unit to overcome the Agency's abject failure to place any
spies in North Korea during the Korean War. The Agency debacle
at the Bay of Pigs in Cuba led a frustrated Pentagon to create
its own Defense Intelligence Agency as a check on the military
amateurism of the CIA's clandestine service officers.
Still, technological
means, whether satellite spying or electronic eavesdropping, will
seldom reveal intentions and that is the raison d'être
of intelligence estimates. As Haviland Smith, who ran operations
against the USSR in the 1960s and 1970s, lamented, "The only thing
missing is we don't have anything on Soviet intentions.
And I don't know how you get that. And that's the charter of
the clandestine service [emphasis in original, pp. 36061])."
The actual
intelligence collected was just as problematic. On the most important
annual intelligence estimate throughout the Cold War that
of the Soviet order of battle the CIA invariably overstated
its size and menace. Then, to add insult to injury, under George
H. W. Bush's tenure as DCI (197677), the agency tore itself
apart over ill-informed right-wing claims that it was actually
underestimating Soviet military forces. The result was
the appointment of "Team B" during the Ford presidency, led by
Polish exiles and neoconservative fanatics. It was tasked to "correct"
the work of the Office of National Estimates.
"After the
Cold War was over," writes Weiner, "the agency put Team B's findings
to the test. Every one of them was wrong." [p. 352] But the problem
was not simply one of the CIA succumbing to political pressure.
It was also structural: "[F]or thirteen years, from Nixon's era
to the dying days of the Cold War, every estimate of Soviet strategic
nuclear forces overstated [emphasis in original] the rate
at which Moscow was modernizing its weaponry." [p. 297]
From 1967
to 1973, I served as an outside consultant to the Office of National
Estimates, one of about a dozen specialists brought in to try
to overcome the myopia and bureaucratism involved in the writing
of these national intelligence estimates. I recall agonized debates
over how the mechanical highlighting of worst-case analyses of
Soviet weapons was helping to promote the arms race. Some senior
intelligence analysts tried to resist the pressures of the Air
Force and the military-industrial complex. Nonetheless, the late
John Huizenga, an erudite intelligence analyst who headed the
Office of National Estimates from 1971 until the wholesale purge
of the Agency by DCI James Schlesinger in 1973, bluntly said to
the CIA's historians:
"In
retrospect.... I really do not believe that an intelligence organization
in this government is able to deliver an honest analytical product
without facing the risk of political contention. . . . I think
that intelligence has had relatively little impact on the policies
that we've made over the years. Relatively none. . . . Ideally,
what had been supposed was that . . . serious intelligence analysis
could.... assist the policy side to reexamine premises, render
policymaking more sophisticated, closer to the reality of the
world. Those were the large ambitions which I think were never
realized." [p. 353]
On the clandestine
side, the human costs were much higher. The CIA's incessant, almost
always misguided, attempts to determine how other people should
govern themselves; its secret support for fascists (e.g., Greece
under George Papadopoulos), militarists (e.g., Chile under Gen.
Augusto Pinochet), and murderers (e.g., the Congo under Joseph
Mobutu); its uncritical support of death squads (El Salvador)
and religious fanatics (Muslim fundamentalists in Afghanistan)
all these and more activities combined to pepper the world
with blowback movements against the United States.
Nothing
has done more to undercut the reputation of the United States
than the CIA's "clandestine" (only in terms of the American people)
murders of the presidents of South Vietnam and the Congo, its
ravishing of the governments of Iran, Indonesia (three times),
South Korea (twice), all of the Indochinese states, virtually
every government in Latin America, and Lebanon, Afghanistan, and
Iraq. The deaths from these armed assaults run into the millions.
After 9/11, President Bush asked "Why do they hate us?" From Iran
(1953) to Iraq (2003), the better question would be, "Who does
not?"
The Cash
Nexus
There is
a major exception to this portrait of long-term Agency incompetence.
"One weapon the CIA used with surpassing skill," Weiner writes,
"was cold cash. The agency excelled at buying the services of
foreign politicians." [p. 116] It started with the Italian elections
of April 1948. The CIA did not yet have a secure source of clandestine
money and had to raise it secretly from Wall Street operators,
rich Italian-Americans, and others.
"The
millions were delivered to Italian politicians and the priests
of Catholic Action, a political arm of the Vatican. Suitcases
filed with cash changed hands in the four-star Hassler Hotel.
. . . Italy's Christian Democrats won by a comfortable margin
and formed a government that excluded communists. A long romance
between the [Christian Democratic] party and the agency began.
The CIA's practice of purchasing elections and politicians with
bags of cash was repeated in Italy and in many other countries
for the next twenty-five years." [p. 27]
The CIA
ultimately spent at least $65 million on Italy's politicians
including "every Christian Democrat who ever won a national election
in Italy." [p. 298] As the Marshall Plan to reconstruct Europe
got up to speed in the late 1940s, the CIA secretly skimmed the
money it needed from Marshall Plan accounts. After the Plan ended,
secret funds buried in the annual Defense appropriation bill continued
to finance the CIA's operations.
After Italy,
the CIA moved on to Japan, paying to bring Nobusuke Kishi to power
as Japan's prime minister (in office 19571960), the country's
World War II minister of munitions. It ultimately used its financial
muscle to entrench the (conservative) Liberal Democratic Party
in power and to turn Japan into a single-party state, which it
remains to this day. The cynicism with which the CIA continued
to subsidize "democratic" elections in Western Europe, Latin America,
and East Asia, starting in the late 1950s, led to disillusionment
with the United States and a distinct blunting of the idealism
with which it had waged the early Cold War.
Another
major use for its money was a campaign to bankroll alternatives
in Western Europe to Soviet-influenced newspapers and books. Attempting
to influence the attitudes of students and intellectuals, the
CIA sponsored literary magazines in Germany (Der Monat)
and Britain (Encounter), promoted abstract expressionism
in art as a radical alternative to the Soviet Union's socialist
realism, and secretly funded the publication and distribution
of over two and a half million books and periodicals. Weiner treats
these activities rather cursorily. He should have consulted Frances
Stonor Saunders' indispensable The
Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters.
Hiding
Incompetence
Despite
all this, the CIA was protected from criticism by its impenetrable
secrecy and by the tireless propaganda efforts of such leaders
as Allen W. Dulles, director of the Agency under President Eisenhower,
and Richard Bissell, chief of the clandestine service after Wisner.
Even when the CIA seemed to fail at everything it undertook, writes
Weiner, "The ability to represent failure as success was becoming
a CIA tradition." [p. 58]
After the
Chinese intervention in the Korean War, the CIA dropped 212 foreign
agents into Manchuria. Within a matter of days, 101 had been killed
and the other 111 captured but this information was effectively
suppressed. The CIA's station chief in Seoul, Albert R. Haney,
an incompetent army colonel and intelligence fabricator, never
suspected that the hundreds of agents he claimed to have working
for him all reported to North Korean control officers.
Haney survived
his incredible performance in the Korean War because, at the end
of his tour in November 1952, he helped to arrange for the transportation
of a grievously wounded Marine lieutenant back to the United States.
That Marine turned out to be the son of Allen Dulles, who repaid
his debt of gratitude by putting Haney in charge of the covert
operation that despite a largely bungled, badly directed
secret campaign did succeed in overthrowing the Guatemalan
government of President Jacobo Arbenz in 1954. The CIA's handiwork
in Guatemala ultimately led to the deaths of 200,000 civilians
during the 40 years of bloodshed and civil war that followed the
sabotage of an elected government for the sake of the United Fruit
Company.
Weiner has
made innumerable contributions to many hidden issues of postwar
foreign policy, some of them still on-going. For example, during
the debate over America's invasion of Iraq after 2003, one of
the constant laments was that the CIA did not have access to a
single agent inside Saddam Hussein's inner circle. That was not
true. Ironically, the intelligence service of France a
country U.S. politicians publicly lambasted for its failure to
support us had cultivated Naji Sabri, Iraq's foreign minister.
Sabri told the French agency, and through it the American government,
that Saddam Hussein did not have an active nuclear or biological
weapons program, but the CIA ignored him. Weiner comments ruefully,
"The CIA had almost no ability to analyze accurately what little
intelligence it had." [pp. 66667, n. 487]
Perhaps
the most comical of all CIA clandestine activities unfortunately
all too typical of its covert operations over the last 60 years
was the spying it did in 1994 on the newly appointed American
ambassador to Guatemala, Marilyn McAfee, who sought to promote
policies of human rights and justice in that country. Loyal to
the murderous Guatemalan intelligence service, the CIA had bugged
her bedroom and picked up sounds that led their agents to conclude
that the ambassador was having a lesbian love affair with her
secretary, Carol Murphy. The CIA station chief "recorded her cooing
endearments to Murphy." The agency spread the word in Washington
that the liberal ambassador was a lesbian without realizing that
"Murphy" was also the name of her two-year-old black standard
poodle. The bug in her bedroom had recorded her petting her dog.
She was actually a married woman from a conservative family. [p.
459]
Back in
August 1945, General William Donovan, the head of the OSS, said
to President Truman, "Prior to the present war, the United States
had no foreign intelligence service. It never has had and does
not now have a coordinated intelligence system." Weiner adds,
"Tragically, it still does not have one." I agree with Weiner's
assessment, but based on his truly exemplary analysis of the Central
Intelligence Agency in Legacy of Ashes, I do not think
that this is a tragedy. Given his evidence, it is hard to believe
that the United States would not have been better off if it had
left intelligence collection and analysis to the State Department
and had assigned infrequent covert actions to the Pentagon.
I believe
that this is where we stand today: The CIA has failed badly, and
it would be an important step toward a restoration of the checks
and balances within our political system simply to abolish it.
Some observers argue that this would be an inadequate remedy because
what the government now ostentatiously calls the "intelligence
community" complete with its
own website is composed of 16 discrete and competitive
intelligence organizations ready to step into the CIA's shoes.
This, however, is a misunderstanding. Most of the members of the
so-called intelligence community are bureaucratic appendages of
well-established departments or belong to extremely technical
units whose functions have nothing at all to do with either espionage
or cloak-and-dagger adventures.
The sixteen
entities include the intelligence organizations of each military
service the Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Marine Corps,
Navy, and the Defense Intelligence Agency and reflect inter-service
rivalries more than national needs or interests; the departments
of Energy, Homeland Security, State, Treasury, and Drug Enforcement
Administration, as well as the FBI and the National Security Agency;
and the units devoted to satellites and reconnaissance (National
Geospatial Intelligence Agency, National Reconnaissance Office).
The only one of these units that could conceivably compete with
the CIA is the one that I recommend to replace it namely,
the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR).
Interestingly enough, it had by far the best record of any U.S.
intelligence entity in analyzing Iraq under Saddam Hussein and
estimating what was likely to happen if we pursued the Bush administration's
misconceived scheme of invading his country. Its work was, of
course, largely ignored by the Bush-Cheney White House.
Weiner
does not cover every single aspect of the record of the CIA, but
his book is one of the best possible places for a serious citizen
to begin to understand the depths to which our government has
sunk. It also brings home the lesson that an incompetent or unscrupulous
intelligence agency can be as great a threat to national security
as not having one at all.