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Diminished intelligence
Ex-spies say the CIA isn't up to the task of out-smarting Osama bin Laden -- despite billions of new spending in the wake of his embassy bombings.

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By Jeff Stein

Sept. 12, 2001 | WASHINGTON -- What to hit?

When the shock wears off, the Bush administration will be casting about for ways to retaliate against those responsible for Tuesday's hideous terrorist attack. No doubt it already is.

It will have to wait. And think. Because Washington will find hurling jets and missiles over the Middle East a lot easier than hitting the right target.

The Central Intelligence Agency, meanwhile, may be the last to know where to go or who to hit, much less who done it here.


According to some of its own former spies in the region, America's premier information-gathering agency is virtually "blind" in the Middle East. And while some Republicans blame the problem on cutbacks in intelligence budgets, in fact Washington has thrown piles of money at counter-terrorism programs since 1998, when U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania were destroyed by Osama bin Laden's men.

Bin Laden, the Saudi millionaire who is Public Enemy No. 1 in the FBI's pantheon of thugs, is suspected of dispatching Arab kamikazes into the World Trade Center and Pentagon Tuesday morning. A fourth hijacked plane was headed to Washington when passengers reportedly wrestled control from the hijackers and brought it down in western Pennsylvania.

All of this seems bitterly ironic, since bin Laden was the CIA's own man in Afghanistan 15 years ago, during the U.S.-backed Islamic holy war to oust the Soviet Red Army. Now our spies can't seem to find him.

The shocking attack on American soil is leading some in Congress to begin to call for the head of CIA director George Tenet, Fox News reported Wednesday.

But the CIA's performance in the Middle East was coming in for scathing criticism -- from some of its own former agents -- before the Tuesday attacks. "I would argue that America's counter-terrorism program in the Middle East is a myth," says Reuel Marc Gerecht, a European-based CIA agent who quit the agency in disgust after nine years tracking terrorists through the region.

Gerecht's provocative statement in the July/August issue of the Atlantic Monthly went entirely unnoticed by a national news media obsessed with the affair of a congressman and an intern, even while credible terrorism forecasts filled the in boxes of anyone who was even half-watching. Arab newspaper editors in London were warning of a "big, big" action from bin Laden two weeks ago.

To intelligence insiders, however, Gerecht's public alarm was long overdue. Despite all the big talk of bin Laden and his men shaking in their boots "around the campfire," as officials have boasted, CIA managers have allowed the best and brightest to leave in droves. While the Bush administration chases a chimera of billion-dollar missile defenses, the ranks of well-seasoned Arabic-speaking Middle East operatives have gone unfilled.

"The [CIA] branch chiefs have never set foot in the Middle East," Bob Baer, who spent 17 years infiltrating Palestinian and other terrorist organizations until he quit in 1997, said in a telephone interview.

"They didn't speak Arabic, didn't speak Persian. The Beirut office has basically been closed since 1990-1991," Baer said. "They've got one guy out there who speaks a little French.

"So look at Lebanon," Baer continued, his voice rising Tuesday as black smoke billowed over the Pentagon. "You've got terrorists running all over there and we've got no real office there. We can't talk to them. We can't talk to the fundamentalists, we can't send people into the mosques."

"All the people in the counter-terrorism center and the FBI basically dismantled counter-terrorism over the 1990s," Baer said. "They didn't dismantle it by taking people out, they dismantled it by putting people in who knew nothing about it to run it -- people who have never been overseas."

Whoever is responsible for Tuesday's attack, there's a muted chorus of complaints about the CIA that will become louder as days go by and the perpetrators go unpunished.

Scott Ritter, who headed the United Nations team hunting Iraqi weapons after Desert Storm in 1991, said he was appalled by the terrorists' apparent ease in slipping through airport security, hijacking four airliners, and flying them into the Pentagon and World Trade Center.

"How such a large-scale, coordinated effort went undetected by law enforcement and intelligence services is incomprehensible, except that for the past decade we have allowed our capabilities to lapse in the one area we need the most: human intelligence."

Former Vice President Al Gore chaired a White House commission on aviation safety but "there is no mention in this report of the prospect of terrorists hijacking planes and crashing them into buildings," said John V. Parachini, executive director of the Center for Nonproliferation Studies at Monterey Institute of International Studies in Washington. "Today's tragic incidents raise profound questions about aviation security," Parachini added, saying experts will pore over previous incidents, such as the Egypt Air crash off the coast of Canada in 1999, in which the pilot is alleged to have purposefully crashed the plane, and the 1994 hijacking of an Air France plane by members of the Armed Islamic Group of Algeria, who threatened to crash the plane into Paris.

Parachini also called for "a better balance ... between concern about conventional weapons like explosives, car bombs, and aircraft and more esoteric weapons" like chemical and biological bombs.

http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2001/09/12/spies/index.html

 

. Next page | Westerners can't infiltrate bin Laden's world

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