Bush's CIA Pick 'Business as Usual'
by
Jim Lobe
After
endorsing an appeal from the bipartisan 9/11 Commission to drastically
overhaul the U.S. intelligence community, President George W. Bush
on Tuesday nominated as his next director of the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) the longtime chair of a congressional panel that the
commission called complacent in the run-up to the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks.
The choice
of Rep. Porter Goss, who has chaired the Intelligence Committee
of the House of Representatives since 1996, drew skepticism from
a number of sources, who said Goss' tenure had been marked primarily
by his coziness with former CIA Director George Tenet, at least
until the administration decided it would try to blame all its pre-war
claims about Iraq on the agency.
"When George
Tenet announced his retirement I made it clear that I thought his
replacement should be someone of unquestioned capability and independence
who could restore the credibility of America's intelligence community,"
said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, the ranking opposition Democrat on the
Senate Intelligence Committee, which must now hold confirmation
hearings on the Goss nomination.
"I said then
and I still believe that the selection of a politician – any politician,
from any party – is a mistake," Rockefeller added, noting that the
nominee "will need to answer tough questions about his record and
his position on reform, including questions on the independence
of the leader of the intelligence community."
Others were
more blunt. Stansfield Turner, the CIA director under former President
Jimmy Carter (1977-1981) described the nomination as the "worst
in the history of the post," while Mel Goodman, a former top CIA
analyst, currently at the Center for International Policy (CIP),
said the Florida congressman "has all the wrong credentials," including
a nine-year stint in the 1960s as a covert CIA operative in Latin
America and Europe.
Still others
described Goss as a "cat's paw" for Vice President Dick Cheney,
whose office, according to a number of retired intelligence officials,
played a key role in corrupting the intelligence process in the
run-up to Washington's attack on Iraq in March 2003.
The nomination,
which is also for the position of director of central intelligence
(DCI), comes amid an increasingly intense debate sparked by the
recommendations of the 9/11 Commission to urgently reorganize the
intelligence community in light of its total failure, despite numerous
opportunities, to detect and prevent the 9/11 attacks.
The most far-reaching
of the proposals include the creation of a White House-based national
intelligence director (NID) who would allocate the $40-billion-a-year
budget among the 15 different agencies that make up the intelligence
community, and hire and fire the directors of each one. While the
DCI is supposed to oversee all 15 agencies, only the CIA falls under
his direct control, and about 90 percent of the intelligence budget
goes to agencies that are controlled by the Pentagon.
After considerable
pressure from the 9/11 Commission itself, Bush accepted the notion
of creating a NID but rejected giving the post such far-reaching
powers. His reaction drew scorn from reform proponents in Congress,
which last month created a special committee to draft legislation
that would put most of the commission's proposals into practice.
The fact that
the intelligence community's future is so uncertain made Goss' nomination
for a position whose job description may be substantially altered
in the coming months particularly remarkable, especially because
the administration recently retreated from signs that it was in
a hurry to replace Tenet with a political appointee.
But White House
concern that Bush would be blamed for not providing new leadership
to the flagship spy agency in the event that a new terrorist attack
takes place on U.S. territory before the November elections apparently
forced the decision. Having nominated Goss, the administration would
be able to shift blame onto the Democrats if a terrorist attack
does in fact occur and its nominee has not yet been confirmed.
Goss, who has
long been mentioned as a leading candidate for the job and has actively
campaigned for it, has spent 16 years in the House, where he acquired
a reputation as a relatively moderate Republican and Bush family
loyalist who was primarily interested in intelligence and the environment.
Like Bush himself, Goss, who is 65, was born into wealth in Connecticut
and graduated from Yale University before joining the CIA.
First as a
member and then chairman of the Intelligence Committee, Goss made
himself a champion of the CIA and Tenet on Capitol Hill, until the
moment in June when Tenet announced his resignation – and then Goss
transformed himself virtually overnight into one of the agency's
fiercest and most partisan critics.
That "abrupt
shift," as the Wall Street Journal described it, was particularly
dramatic on the release of a staff report by the committee that
accused the CIA of "ignoring its core mission ... for too long.
There is a dysfunctional denial of any need for corrective action,"
the report declared, adding that the CIA was heading "over a proverbial
cliff" after years of mismanagement and neglect.
Goss' sudden
about-face was particularly galling for Tenet, who fired back, calling
the staff report "frankly absurd." The Los Angeles Times
called Goss' behavior "particularly brazen," noting that if things
were so bad, "where was Mr. Intelligence Committee Chairman all
those years?"
That criticism
was less directly expressed in the 9/11 Commission's final report,
which scored both congressional intelligence committees for failing
to take seriously al-Qaeda and other terrorist threats in advance
of 9/11, but noted that the House committee had the worst record
of the six major national-security panels, having held only two
hearings devoted to counter-terrorism in the three and a half years
before the attacks on New York and the Pentagon.
Goss has also
been criticized for excessive loyalty to the Bush administration.
At Cheney's
behest two years ago, he fought for denying the 9/11 Commission
the power to subpoena witnesses and key White House documents in
negotiations in Congress, according to a Newsweek account.
More recently he has battled his Democratic vice chair, California
Rep. Jane Harman, over resisting hearings on the role of Bush political
appointees – particularly in the Pentagon and Cheney's office –
in pressuring the intelligence community, especially the CIA, to
tailor its analyses to the administration's political goals.
Goss' role
as the Bush-Cheney campaign's choice to criticize Democratic presidential
candidate John Kerry's speech on national-security issues in early
June also did little to endear him to Democrats; indeed, it prompted
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi to rule out the possibility of
supporting him for CIA director.
Several retired
CIA officials agreed that Goss has been both too close to the CIA
and to the administration to be a credible director. Ray McGovern,
a retired career officer, scorned him for being a "Republican party
loyalist first and foremost," who "has long shown himself to be
under [Cheney's] spell and would likely report primarily to him
and to White House political adviser Karl Rove."
"Goss
was a very strong supporter of the agency and not one who was ever
associated with any proposal for change, or, for lack of a better
word, reform," said David McMichael, a former CIA analyst. "To find
him being the nominee can be interpreted as saying, 'This is business
as usual.'"
August
12, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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