More Imperial Intrigue as CIA Director Resigns
by
Jim Lobe
The
abrupt resignation of Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director
George Tenet adds new grist to Washington's rumor mills, already
churning at warp speed due to the ongoing prisoner-abuse scandal
in Iraq and reports that the Bush administration's favorite in Baghdad
turned over critical information to Iran.
Whether
Tenet, who also served for seven years as the director of central
intelligence (DCI) – a post that theoretically oversees all of Washington's
16 intelligence agencies – was pushed or decided to resign of his
own accord is the question of the day. And, if he was pushed, why
now, just five months before the presidential election?
In
a speech to CIA employees at the agency's headquarters outside Washington,
Tenet insisted Thursday his decision was based exclusively on the
"well-being of my wonderful family – nothing more, nothing
less."
That
was echoed by Bush himself, albeit in rather curious circumstances.
Just a few minutes after a routine photo opportunity on the White
House lawn with visiting Australian Prime Minister John Howard,
the president reappeared before reporters to say Tenet had informed
him of his decision to leave "for personal reasons" Wednesday
evening.
"I
told him I'm sorry he's leaving," Bush, who appears to have
had an unusually warm relationship with Tenet and had long resisted
right-wing pressure to fire him, said haltingly. "He's been
a strong leader in the war on terror, and I will miss him."
As has become customary, Bush took no questions and simply walked
away.
But,
as Tenet himself anticipated in his farewell, some observers suggested
his decision may not have been entirely voluntary and could, in
fact, mark the first of a series of high-level administration departures
over the coming weeks as Bush's re-election campaign struggles to
persuade voters to forget about setbacks in Iraq.
"I
think he's being pushed out," said former CIA Director Stansfield
Turner in an interview on CNN. "The president feels he has
to have someone to blame."
"They
want to use him as a scapegoat for everything that's gone wrong,"
one congressional aide told IPS. "But I don't think that's
going to work. While the CIA obviously fell down in major ways,
everyone knows by now that the Pentagon has been at the heart of
this whole mess."
Even
as Tenet was bidding good-bye, reports that the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) has begun interviewing – in some cases with
lie detectors – senior Pentagon civilians close to former Iraqi
exile Ahmad Chalabi to determine who told him that U.S. intelligence
had broken the codes Tehran uses to communicate with its spies dominated
newspaper headlines.
Those
reports came in the wake of a New York Times article Wednesday
that said Chalabi had informed Iran's top operative in Baghdad the
codes had been broken.
What
with the administration deeply concerned about Iran's nuclear program,
as well as its ability to disrupt Washington's efforts to stabilize
neighboring Iraq, the information is considered a major security
breach. Two weeks ago, Chalabi's own residence and headquarters
were raided by Iraqi police and U.S. agents and a $340,000 monthly
stipend that his group, the Iraqi National Congress (INC), had been
receiving from the Pentagon for intelligence-gathering was cut off.
Chalabi,
who has heatedly denied the allegations, has blamed the report on
the CIA which, after backing the INC with millions of dollars in
covert assistance in the early 1990s, broke with him after an aborted
coup d'etat launched by a rival exile group headed by Iyad Allawi,
who last weekend was selected as Iraq's new prime minister.
Allawi's
emergence at the top was seen as a decisive victory of the CIA and
State Department over their neoconservative rivals at the Pentagon
and Vice President Dick Cheney's office, who have championed Chalabi
since 1998.
In
recent days, Chalabi has lashed out against Tenet personally, accusing
him of concocting the charges against him.
Asked
about Tenet's sudden resignation, Chalabi repeated those accusations,
telling reporters that the CIA director's role in developing U.S.-Iraq
policy has "not been helpful to say the least." Tenet,
he added, had provided "erroneous information about weapons
of mass destruction (WMD) to President Bush, which caused the government
much embarrassment at the United Nations and his own country."
The
latter charge appeared particularly ironic in view of the growing
consensus, both in the administration and in Congress, that "defectors"
provided by Chalabi's INC were the most important source of faulty
– and, in some cases, apparently fabricated – reports of Baghdad's
pre-war WMD programs.
While
the CIA and other intelligence agencies were skeptical of many of
these reports, they were fed directly into the White House via Chalabi's
backers in the Pentagon and Cheney's office, according to numerous
published reports.
Nonetheless,
in at least one case, Chalabi's charge about Tenet's own role in
faulty WMD evidence appears to have been correct. According to journalist
Bob Woodward's new book, Plan
of Attack, a critical moment in the run-up to the war occurred
when Bush himself expressed doubt that the public would be persuaded
by the CIA's evidence of the threat posed by Iraq's WMD.
"From
the end of one of the couches in the Oval office, Tenet rose up,
threw his arms in the air. 'It's a slam-dunk case!' the DCI said,"
Woodward reported, adding that Tenet repeated the phrase a second
time when Bush asked whether he was confident about the evidence.
That
account, on which Tenet has not commented, has proved very damaging
to his position among war critics, particularly moderate Republican
and Democratic lawmakers, who until then had seen him as a restraining
influence on Bush during the run-up to the war.
Indeed,
Tenet's loss of support from the war skeptics, as well as ongoing
scandals around the performance of the CIA and even its use of interrogation
techniques that amounted to torture and resulted in at least one
death during the "war on terrorism," may have played a
decisive role in his decision to resign now.
Lawmakers
on both sides of the aisle are very angry at recent CIA delays in
clearing a pending report on the intelligence community's performance
before the war, which is itself expected to be strongly critical
of Tenet. The commission established to investigate the causes of
the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington is expected
to be similarly critical.
In
addition, Tenet, who has talked to friends about wanting to leave
the agency for at least two years, had become a lightning rod for
anger by Republican right-wingers in Congress and neoconservatives,
who have long agitated for his removal in part because of his status
as the highest-ranking holdover from the administration of former
President Bill Clinton.
"By
leaving now, Tenet will be depriving them of a highly visible target,"
said the Capitol Hill aide. "I'm sure people at the CIA appreciate
that, because they don't like being in the middle of a highly-charged
political debate."
Another
hint that it was Tenet himself who decided to leave now was suggested
by the fact that his resignation will not take effect until July
11, the seventh anniversary of his swearing in. The timing bolsters
the notion that he is leaving on his own terms, while Bush's failure
to announce a successor, in the eyes of some analysts, indicates
the White House was caught unawares by Tenet's departure.
For
now his successor will be John McLaughlin, the current deputy director
of the CIA and a career intelligence officer who is generally well
respected in Congress.
Whether
Bush will retain McLaughlin through the November elections or make
a political appointment will be a critical decision. It was widely
rumored six months ago, when Tenet last indicated he wanted to leave,
that Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz would be moved to CIA,
but Washington insiders now say that Wolfowitz, the administration's
highest-ranking neoconservative and Chalabi's most effective champion,
would not survive Senate confirmation hearings.
Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Armitage has also expressed interest
in the job in the past, but, as an unconditional ally and friend
of Secretary of State Colin Powell, he would be a major target of
right-wing Republican hawks and neoconservatives, to the extent
the latter retain much influence in the White House.
If
Bush were to decide not to stick with McLaughlin, the likeliest
candidate is the head of the Intelligence Committee in the House
of Representatives, Porter Goss of Florida. While a Republican loyalist,
Goss, a former CIA officer himself, has had generally good relations
with Democratic colleagues and is not considered particularly ideological.
June
4, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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