CIA Chief Clueless on Neocon Intelligence Channel
by
Jim Lobe
Was
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director George Tenet really the
last person in Washington to find out that both the president and
vice president were being fed phony or "sexed up" intelligence
about prewar Iraq by a Pentagon office staffed by ideologically
driven neoconservatives?
It
is highly doubtful, but in his desperate attempt to walk a tightrope
between his increasingly irreconcilable loyalties to the administration
of President George W. Bush and to his own intelligence professionals,
Tenet is suggesting that he really was in the dark about what was
going on just a few miles down the Potomac River from CIA headquarters.
Just
a month ago, in a rousing defense of the intelligence community's
professionalism, Tenet boasted to students at Georgetown University
that he and only he was the sole purveyor of intelligence information
to the president.
But
on Tuesday he admitted to members of the Senate Armed Services Committee
that he was unaware until just last week that officials based in
the Pentagon's policy office had given intelligence briefings directly
to the White House.
"Is
that a normal thing to happen, that there (is) a formal analysis
relative to intelligence that would be presented to the NSC (National
Security Council) that way, without you even knowing about it"?
an incredulous Democratic senator, Carl Levin, asked Tenet during
contentious hearings.
"I
don't know. I've never been in the situation," Tenet replied,
insisting, "I have to tell you senator, I'm the president's
chief intelligence officer; I have the definitive view about these
subjects."
"I
know you feel that way," Levin said, betraying a hint of sarcasm.
The
exchange reflected the latest development in what is building into
one of the biggest intelligence crises in modern U.S. history, one
the administration is trying desperately, but with increasing difficulty,
to quash.
The
scandal, which is based on Washington's abject failure one year
after invading Iraq to find any evidence to back up the administration's
prewar claims that former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein possessed
massive stockpiles of biological and chemical weapons; reconstituted
his nuclear-weapons program (to the extent that, according to Vice
President Dick Cheney, he had obtained weapons); and had operational
ties with Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, has been building
since last summer.
But
it gained momentum in January when the CIA's chief weapons inspector,
David, Kay admitted that US intelligence, including himself, had
been "almost all wrong" on its prewar assessments of Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) capabilities.
Both
Kay and the administration, as well as members of Congress from
Bush's Republican Party, immediately blamed the official intelligence
community, which Tenet heads as CIA director, for the failure.
But
opposition Democrats, backed up by former intelligence officials
and some media reporting, charged the administration had systematically
exaggerated and manipulated the intelligence by both intimidating
the professional analysts who disagreed with them and by producing
its own intelligence, much of which now appears to have been fabricated,
through unofficial channels.
As
a result, the intelligence committees in both houses have expanded
their investigations in recent weeks.
While
it is now clear that professional intelligence analysts made some
serious errors assessing Iraq's WMD programs largely through
a combination of assuming "worst-case scenarios" in the
absence of hard evidence and lacking reliable agents or assets in
Iraq either as informants or investigators the "Feith
factor" has now emerged as the key focus of the committees'
work.
Shortly
after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on New York and the Pentagon, Undersecretary
of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith set up two groups, the Office
of Special Plans (OSP) and the Counter-Terrorism Evaluation Group
(CTEG).
They
were tasked to review raw intelligence to determine if official
intelligence agencies had overlooked connections between Shiite
and Sunni terrorist groups and between al-Qaeda and secular Arab
governments, especially Hussein's.
The
effort, which reportedly included interviewing "defectors,"
several of them supplied by the Iraqi National Congress (INC), an
exile group close to neoconservatives who support Israel's Likud
Party, closely tracked the agenda of the Defense Policy Group (DPG),
chaired by Feith's mentor, Richard Perle.
The
DPG also convened after Sept. 11 with INC leader Ahmed Chalabi to
discuss ways in which the terrorist attacks could be tied to Hussein.
Neither the State Department nor the CIA was informed about the
meeting.
The
OSP, which was overseen by Abram Shulsky, brought on Michael Malouf,
who had worked for Perle in the Pentagon 20 years before and specialized
in obtaining authorizations giving the office access to analyses
produced by official intelligence agencies, according to knowledgeable
sources.
Malouf's
operation, called the "bat cave," permitted hawks in the
Pentagon and Cheney's office to anticipate the intelligence community's
more skeptical arguments about the alleged threats posed by Hussein,
and then to devise questions or develop their own evidence that
would be used to challenge the more benign views of the professional
analysts, according to these sources.
At
the same time, OSP, which consisted of only two permanent staff
members, but which employed dozens of like-minded consultants, developed
its own "talking points" and briefing papers, one of which
on the subject of Hussein's alleged ties to al-Qaeda
was leaked last November to the neoconservative Weekly Standard.
It
consisted of 50 excerpts taken from raw, mostly uncorroborated intelligence
reports from sources of varying reliability from 1990 to 2002, which
purported to show an operational relationship between the captured
leader and the group.
But
when it was published, former intelligence officials dismissed the
work as amateurish, unsubstantiated and indicative, even if most
of the allegations were true, of the absence of any operative relationship.
"This
is meant to dazzle the eyes of the not terribly educated,"
former State Department intelligence officer Greg Thielmann told
IPS at the time.
As
recently as last month, Cheney referred to the paper as "the
best source of information" for intelligence on Iraq.
It
was this paper that reportedly formed the basis of a briefing by
Feith given to the NSC and Cheney's office in August 2002. Tenet
said Tuesday he "vaguely" remember having received a similar
briefing by Feith, but was never informed that it was also presented
to the White House.
The
presentation to the CIA reportedly omitted certain remarks made
to the White House to the effect that the CIA was deliberately ignoring
evidence of Hussein-al-Qaeda links.
"Did
you ever discuss with the secretary of defense or other administration
officials whether the Department of Defense policy office run by
Mr. Feith might be bypassing normal intelligence channels?"
Levin asked Tenet on Tuesday.
"I
did not. I did not," he replied.
Why
he did not remains a major question, particularly in light of the
fact that several publications, including The New Yorker,
Knight-Ridder news agency and IPS, were reporting already last July
that Feith's office was constantly "stovepiping" intelligence
directly to Cheney and the White House in order to circumvent official
channels.
These
accounts have now been accepted by Democrats and some Republicans
on the intelligence committees. Last Friday, the ranking Democrat
on the House of Representatives committee, Rep Jane Harmon, raised
the issue directly in a speech at Perle's AEI.
"The
president should direct a review of the activities of various (Pentagon)
offices, particularly an early analytic unit that reported to Undersecretary
of Defense Doug Feith, as well as the Office of Special Plans,"
she said.
"Disclaimers
notwithstanding, many in Congress and intelligence operatives in
the field now believe these entities fed unreliable and 'unvetted'
intelligence to (Pentagon) policymakers and the Office of the Vice
President."
March
12, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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