My Name's Blind. James Blind.
by
Fred Reed
by Fred Reed
Recently
by Fred Reed: Cairo
The
following is a somewhat amplified letter to a friend. I know I've
said some of this before.
Jim,
Permit me respectfully
to disagree about the potency of American intelligence agencies.
It seems to me that they are clowns, incompetent at their assigned
work but adept at causing grave problems for the United States.
Their almost comic ineptitude lies hidden behind a veil of romantic
secrecy à la James Bond. But look at their known record.
Your belief
that a few jets and Marines would have changed the outcome in the
Bay of Pigs rests on the characteristic inability of US intel to
grasp how other people look at things. Cubans hated Batista, did
not yet hate Castro to whatever extent they ever would, and the
exiles used to invade the island were agents of the people Cubans
hated most that is, the rich property owners who fled Castro.
The Americans, remember, had always supported Batista, as they had
supported every ugly dictator in Latin America. America itself is
detested throughout South America. No warm welcome was in the cards.
Americans still
have no understanding of how other people work, and therefore of
what they are likely to do. I remember that in Afghanistan the Pentagon
was going to conquer Marjah and give it a government in a
box. That is, the Afghans were going to fall in love with
brutal invaders who destroyed most of their city. Fat fucking chance.
Iraq would be a cakewalk? A friend of min Jack McGeorge on Blixs
team briefed Langley on WMD before the invasions of Iraq. I asked
him whether the CIA really believed the cakewalk theory or were
lying for political reasons. They really believed it, he said.
American intel
has never been much good. Reflect. In 1941 tensions were high with
Japan, which was known to have a large, modern fleet and better
pilots with better airplanes than ours. On December 7, naval intelligence
hadnt bothered to know where that fleet was with disastrous
results.
In 1950 in
Korea, signs of an upcoming attack were thick on the ground, but
US intelligence didnt notice with disastrous results.
Nor did it notice when the PLA was about to enter the war
with disastrous results.
As noted above,
in 1959 the CIA made a complete botch of the attack on Cuba. Again:
the Childrens Agency thought that the Cubans would rise against
Castro. The results were politically disastrous.
In 1961, the
U2 got shot down over Russia. It was not up to the CIAs standards
of catastrophe, being merely embarrassing. I suppose it is too much
to expect perfect consistency.
In 1975 came
the adventure of the Glomar Explorer, in which the CIA wasted a
half a billion green ones, which was money in those days, in secret
communion with a totally lunatic Howard Hughes, to fail to retrieve
most of an ancient Soviet submarine that the Navy didnt want.
In 1967 the
Israelis attacked the spy ship Liberty and killed 142 sailors, because
the intelligence community was too stupid to protect its ships.
In 1968 the North Koreans grabbed the spy ship Pueblo, whose highly
trained crew didnt manage to destroy their secret thingamawhatsses,
because the intel community was too stupid to protect its ships.
In 2007 the Chinese forced down an NSA spy plane, which, as usual,
didnt destroy its secrets.
Vietnam. Here
we have another example of the intelligence geeks consistent
inability to do what should be a primary duty: to tell the government
the likely consequences of a given policy with disastrous
consequences. Washington blundered into that war with no idea that
the Viets might fight, that the war might cost a decade, 60,000
dead soldiers, and eventually be lost. Had Langley and Meade not
read Bernard Fall, or heard of Dien Bien Phu?
During Vietnam,
there was the Son Tay raid. Son Tay was a suburb of Hanoi where
a large number of American prisoners were held. The military made
a brilliant raid that would have gotten them out, except that intel
hadnt noticed that the prisoners had been moved to another
location. For the prisoners the results were disastrous, since they
would not get another chance.
But the supreme
contribution of the spookoweeners to that war was to be taken utterly
by surprise by Tet, the queen-sacrifice move that lost the war for
the US. Disastrouser and disastrouser.
In the Yugoslavian
mess, the US managed to bomb the Chinese embassy in Belgrade because
it didnt know where it was. Gilbert and Sullivan. Check the
telephone book, maybe?
The spooks
were astonished when the Berlin Wall went up, and again when it
came down. They did not predict the collapse of the Soviet Union,
their principal object of study. What do these guys do all day?
They did not
detect the pack of Saudis who dropped those towers in New York
with disastrous results. Nor had they detected the earlier attempt
on the towers with a truck bomb.
Iraq? Again,
they had no idea how Arabs might react. I guess they had never heard
of Israel and the Palestinians. They figured it would be a walk
in the park, with disastrous results.
They seem to
have been equally clueless, or maybe just unable to overcome the
Pentagons excessive estimation of itself, in the case of Afghanistan,
again with disastrous results. Washington did not remotely suspect
that it would get bogged down in a decade of a war, which it would
probably lose. Maybe they hadnt gotten around to reading about
the Russians experience of Afghanistan.
They have been
utterly ineffective in finding Bin Laden, who I figure is living
in some luxurious marble basement in Riyadh. Now we have Egypt,
which as best I can tell took the spooks by surprise with
serious and potentially disastrous results. It looks like the usual
thing, astonishing technotoys, too few feet on the ground, and no
faint idea of how people work.
Why the cluelessness?
My take: Unending emphasis on technology, technology, technology
instead of languages, back streets, and really understanding the
culture, something that Americans seem almost genetically incapable
of doing. Second, a peculiarly impenetrable frame of mind convinced
of its own rightness, of being of a wisdom superior to that of those
outside the agencies by virtue of being secret, and therefore impervious
to criticism from without. Third, a willingness to be polygraphed,
spied upon, to have dossiers compiled on their friends and lovers
and in general to accept a degree of rigid control that repels the
kind of people who understand the world. Add, with many, an us-agin-them,
almost Cold War mentality and, in the CIA at least, a tendency to
attract cowboys more interested in secret missions than knowing
what is going on abroad. They also usually have a profound distaste
for the press, although the people who know most about, say, the
Mideast are reporters who have covered the region for thirty years
Robert Fisk, Patrick Cockburn, Eric Margolis without
being crippled by having to have cover jobs at the embassy.
Pricey, full
of themselves, murderous in effect if only sometimes in intention,
without adult supervision. I need a drink.
Best,
Fred
February
15, 2011
Fred Reed
is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be. His latest
book is Curmudgeing
Through Paradise: Reports from a Fractal Dung Beetle. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2011 Fred Reed
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