-Caveat Lector- <A HREF="">www.ctrl.org</A> DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at: http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html <A HREF="">Archives of [EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/ <A HREF="">ctrl</A> ======================================================================== To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

--- Begin Message ---
-Caveat Lector-

Hi, I found an interesting article in The American Prospect 
on the civil war in the current administration.  Apparently 
during the administration of Bush Sr., the President allowed 
the formation of a "Team B" neoconservative foreign policy team 
in the Pentagon who basically represented the views of Ronald 
Reagan and Bill Casey during the previous administration.
Bush Sr. let these guys vent, but was not much influenced by 
them.  However, this has blossomed into the Cheney cabal that 
has so captured the impoverished mind of Bush Jr.  Lots more 
interesting details and insights in this article.

Tim Howells

  =====================================================

http://www.prospect.org/print/V13/22/dreyfuss-r.html

The American Prospect: Vol 13, Issue 22.

The Pentagon Muzzles the CIA 
Devising bad intelligence to promote bad policy 
By Robert Dreyfuss
Issue Date: 12.16.02 

Even as it prepares for war against Iraq, the Pentagon is already 
engaged on a second front: its war against the Central Intelligence 
Agency. The Pentagon is bringing relentless pressure to bear on the 
agency to produce intelligence reports more supportive of war with 
Iraq, according to former CIA officials. Key officials of the 
Department of Defense are also producing their own unverified 
intelligence reports to justify war. Much of the questionable 
information comes from Iraqi exiles long regarded with suspicion by 
CIA professionals. A parallel, ad hoc intelligence operation, in the 
office of Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas J. Feith, 
collects the information from the exiles and scours other raw 
intelligence for useful tidbits to make the case for preemptive war. 
These morsels sometimes go directly to the president. 

The war over intelligence is a critical part of a broader offensive 
by the party of war within the Bush administration against virtually 
the entire expert Middle East establishment in the United States -- 
including State Department, Pentagon and CIA area specialists and 
leading military officers. Inside the foreign-policy, defense and 
intelligence agencies, nearly the whole rank and file, along with 
many senior officials, are opposed to invading Iraq. But because the 
less than two dozen neoconservatives leading the war party have the 
support of Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of Defense 
Donald Rumsfeld, they are able to marginalize that opposition. 
Morale inside the U.S. national-security apparatus is said to be 
low, with career staffers feeling intimidated and pressured to 
justify the push for war. At the State Department, where Secretary 
of State Colin Powell's efforts at diplomacy have thus far slowed 
the relentless pressure for war, a key bureau is chilled by the 
presence of Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near East 
Affairs Elizabeth L. Cheney, the vice president's daughter, who is 
in charge of Middle East economic policy, including oil. "When [Near 
East Affairs] meets, there is no debate," says Parker Borg, who 
served in the State Department for 30 years as an ambassador and 
deputy chief of counterterrorism. "How vocal would you be about 
commenting on Middle East policy with the vice president's daughter 
there?" Undersecretary of State John Bolton is also part of the 
small pro-war faction. 

And at the Pentagon, where a number of critical offices have been 
filled by hawkish neoconservatives whose commitment to war with Iraq 
goes back a decade, Middle East specialists and uniformed military 
officers alike are seeing their views ignored. "I've heard from 
people on the Middle East staff in the Pentagon," says Borg, 
referring to the staff under neocon Peter Rodman, the assistant 
secretary of defense for International Security Affairs. "The Middle 
East experts in those officers are as cut off from the policy side 
as people in the State Department are." 

But the sharpest battle is over the CIA. "There is tremendous 
pressure on [the CIA] to come up with information to support 
policies that have already been adopted," says Vincent Cannistraro, 
a former senior CIA official and counterterrorism expert. What's 
unfolding is a campaign by well-placed hawks to undermine the CIA's 
ability to provide objective, unbiased intelligence to the White 
House. 

Voice crackling over his cell phone, Jim Woolsey is trying hard to 
sound objective and analytical, but he is, well, gloating. The 
former CIA director has been one of the leaders of the get-Saddam 
Hussein faction for years, promoting a unilateral U.S. strike 
against Baghdad. Woolsey is not quite a private citizen, serving as 
an adviser to the CIA and as a member of the Defense Policy Board, 
which is chaired by the ringleader of the pro-war neocons, former 
Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard Perle. Woolsey has also, at 
least once, served as unofficial liaison to the Iraqi National 
Congress (INC) and other Iraqi opposition groups. 

What's got him excited is an Oct. 7 letter, recently declassified, 
from CIA Director George Tenet that put the CIA on record for the 
first time as saying that there have been "high-level contacts 
between Iraq and al-Qaeda going back a decade"; that Iraq and Osama 
bin Laden's gang have "discussed safe haven"; that members of 
al-Qaeda have been present in Baghdad; and that Iraq has "provided 
training to al-Qaeda members in the areas of poisons and gases." 
"The CIA has started saying things that the Defense Department has 
been saying all along, but up until that letter, I hadn't seen any 
evidence publicly that the CIA was acknowledging all these contacts 
between Iraq and al-Qaeda," says Woolsey. "What I read the Tenet 
letter as saying is that they are starting to. The CIA has started 
to come around to point out some of the things that the Pentagon has 
been talking about." 

Tenet's statement on Iraq and al-Qaeda was a significant departure 
from the consensus view among intelligence professionals. Since 
September 11, many of them, inside government and out, have 
pooh-poohed the notion that Iraq has provided support to al-Qaeda, 
and they continue to do so. Daniel Benjamin, co-author, with Steven 
Simon, of The Age of Sacred Terror, was director of counterterrorism 
at the National Security Council (NSC) in the late 1990s, and he 
oversaw a comprehensive review of Iraq and terrorism that came up 
empty. "In 1998, we went through every piece of intelligence we 
could find to see if there was a link [between] al-Qaeda and Iraq," 
says Benjamin. "We came to the conclusion that our intelligence 
agencies had it right: There was no noteworthy relationship between 
al-Qaeda and Iraq. I know that for a fact. No other issue has been 
as closely scrutinized as this one." The State Department's annual 
review of state-sponsored terrorism hasn't mentioned any link, 
either. 

A sign of how the Iraq-al-Qaeda issue is roiling the agency is how 
Tenet himself qualified the analysis. In his letter, addressed to 
Sen. Bob Graham (D-Fla.), chairman of the Senate Select Committee on 
Intelligence, Tenet wrote: "Our understanding of the relationship 
between Iraq and al-Qaeda is evolving and is based on sources of 
varying reliability." Benjamin, along with other analysts, points 
out that the CIA's letter seemed to strain to make the connection, 
noting that the phrase "sources of varying reliability" is "a way of 
saying that there isn't much evidence." 

But if after failing to find links between Iraq and al-Qaeda for 
years the CIA is suddenly discovering a connection between the two, 
some analysts believe that it is Tenet, the CIA director, playing 
politics and arranging to tell the Pentagon what it wants to hear. 
"[The CIA] is giving Bush what he wanted on Iraq and al-Qaeda," says 
Melvin Goodman of the Center for International Policy, who is also a 
former CIA Soviet expert and a fierce critic of politicized 
intelligence. "Tenet is playing the game, to a certain extent." 
Goodman, who has maintained contacts inside the agency, says that 
the CIA's key intelligence analysts are upset with Tenet and 
concerned that he will frame their conclusions in a way that kowtows 
to the Pentagon's preconceived view. "There's a lot of anger and 
questions about whether Tenet will hold off this pressure," Goodman 
says. "[The CIA analysts are] worried, and they don't have a lot of 
confidence in him. But the analytical core is holding fast to the 
evidence, and the evidence doesn't show that link." 

However, the intense pressure from the Pentagon seems to be having 
an effect. Tenet is, after all, a politician, not a CIA veteran. 
After serving as staff director for the Senate Select Committee on 
Intelligence, Tenet moved over to the CIA itself and was named to 
the director's job by President Clinton. But he took pains to 
ingratiate himself with the Bushes, p�re et fils. He quickly acted 
to name the CIA headquarters after former President Bush in 1998, 
organized a major intelligence conference at the George Bush School 
of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University -- itself 
headed by Robert Gates, a former CIA director -- and personally 
briefed then-Texas Gov. Bush during the 2000 election campaign. 
Tenet's quiet politicking was enough to persuade Bush to keep him on 
at the CIA, and the director's recent actions signal that he doesn't 
intend to buck the drive toward war. 

"It's demoralizing to a number of the analysts," says Cannistraro. 
"The analysts are human, and some of them are also ambitious. What 
you have to worry about is the 'chill factor.' If people are 
ignoring your intelligence, and the Pentagon and NSC keep telling 
you, 'What about this? What about this? Keep looking!' -- well, then 
you start focusing on one thing instead of the other thing, because 
you know that's what your political masters want to hear." 
Spy vs. Spy

For more than a year, one of the main sources of Defense Department 
pressure on the CIA has been a unnamed, rump intelligence unit set 
up in Undersecretary Feith's policy shop at the department. Begun as 
a two-person group, it has since expanded to four and now five 
people, and was set up to provide Rumsfeld, Deputy Secretary of 
Defense Paul Wolfowitz and Feith with data they can use to 
disparage, undermine and contradict the CIA's own analyses. 
Established just after September 11, the unit's main focus -- though 
not its only one -- has been on Iraq, especially Iraq's alleged 
links to al-Qaeda and Iraq's alleged intent to use its alleged 
nuclear, chemical and biological weapons. 

In a controversial Oct. 24 briefing at the Pentagon, Rumsfeld noted 
that a primary purpose of the unit was to provide him with 
ammunition that he could use to harass the CIA staffer who briefs 
him every morning. "In comes the briefer, and she walks through the 
daily brief and I ask questions," said Rumsfeld. "What I could do is 
say, 'Gee, what about this? Or what about that? Has somebody thought 
of this?'" Using powerful computers and having access to reams of 
intelligence factoids, Feith's team could create a steady stream of 
data bits that Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Feith himself could use to 
pick apart the CIA's conclusions, sending the CIA's collectors and 
analysts back to rewrite their reports. 

The fact that the unit is overseen by Feith, an ideologically 
committed partisan who is pushing for war with Iraq, raises 
questions about its impartiality and its willingness to reach 
conclusions that might contradict the Pentagon leadership's stated 
policy intentions. "It's one thing to create a unit to provide an 
independent look, and it's another thing to go on a fishing 
expedition," says Benjamin, the former NSC official. "The fact that 
this unit has been there for more than a year suggests that it is a 
fishing expedition." 

Informed sources say the person in charge of the unnamed unit is 
Abram Shulsky, another key member of the Perle-Wolfowitz war party. 
When Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) was elected to the Senate in 
1976, he "brought with him some of [Sen. Henry M.] Jackson's most 
militantly neoconservative former aides, among them Elliott Abrams, 
Chester Finn, Abram Shulsky and Gary Schmitt," according to a 1986 
account in The Washington Post. Perle was also a former Jackson 
aide, and Shulsky, Perle and many kindred thinkers got jobs in 
President Reagan's Department of Defense in the 1980s. Shulsky also 
spent years at the Consortium for the Study of Intelligence, a 
project of the National Strategy Information Center (NSIC), and at 
the RAND Corporation. At RAND, along with other fellow neocons, 
including I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby (now Cheney's chief of staff), 
Shulsky contributed a study called "From Containment to Global 
Leadership: America and the World after the Cold War." That study 
was a forerunner of the recent military strategy document released 
by the Pentagon suggesting that the United States act to preserve 
its global hegemony, even if it means preemptive war or preventive 
war making. 

Roy Godson, the head of the Consortium for the Study of Intelligence 
and a colleague of Shulsky's for many years, has high hopes for the 
success of the Pentagon's Iraq intelligence unit, despite its small 
size when arrayed against the CIA's might. "It might turn out to be 
a David against Goliath," says Godson. 


Dubious Intelligence

The Pentagon's war against the CIA relies heavily on intelligence 
from the Iraqi National Congress. But most Iraq hands with long 
experience in dealing with that country's tumultuous politics 
consider the INC's intelligence-gathering abilities to be nearly 
nil. Yet, Perle, Woolsey and the Pentagon's policy-makers 
increasingly use the INC as their primary source of information 
about Iraq's weapons programs, its relationship to terrorism and its 
internal political dynamics. "A lot of what is useful with respect 
to what's going on in Iraq is coming from defectors, and furthermore 
they are defectors who have often come through an organization, 
namely, the INC, that neither State nor the CIA likes very much," 
Woolsey told me. 

Earlier this year, the State Department abruptly stopped funding an 
INC scheme to collect intelligence inside Iraq. "The INC could only 
account for $2.5 million out of $4.5 million they received for the 
program," says a State Department official. "I can't say that there 
was evidence of corruption or embezzlement, but $2 million was 
unaccounted for." The more the INC began getting into intelligence 
work, the more the State Department grew uncomfortable funding the 
program. "The only reason they stopped paying for that program is 
that the State Department hates the INC," says a knowledgeable 
source. Shortly thereafter, the Pentagon picked up the tab. Now, 
whatever intelligence the INC collects goes straight to the Defense 
Department, according to spokesman Lt. Col. David Lapan. "The 
intelligence guys here get the information first and do the 
analysis," he says. Goodman, the former CIA analyst, concurs, 
saying, "The INC is in the Pentagon every day." 

But the Pentagon's critics are appalled that intelligence provided 
by the INC might shape U.S. decisions about going to war against 
Baghdad. At the CIA and at the State Department, Ahmed Chalabi, the 
INC's leader, is viewed as the ineffectual head of a self-inflated 
and corrupt organization skilled at lobbying and public relations, 
but not much else. [See "Tinker, Banker, Neocon, Spy," tap, Nov. 
18.] "The [INC's] intelligence isn't reliable at all," says 
Cannistraro. "Much of it is propaganda. Much of it is telling the 
Defense Department what they want to hear. And much of it is used to 
support Chalabi's own presidential ambitions. They make no 
distinction between intelligence and propaganda, using alleged 
informants and defectors who say what Chalabi wants them to say, 
[creating] cooked information that goes right into presidential and 
vice-presidential speeches." 

Adds Cannistraro, "They're willing to twist information in order to 
serve that interest. They've opened up a channel at the Pentagon to 
collect intelligence from Iraqi exiles, using people off the books, 
contractors. It's getting pretty close to an Iran-Contra type of 
situation." 

Manipulating the CIA is nothing new, of course. For decades, 
politicians annoyed that intelligence from the agency might work 
against policy goals have sought to bring pressure to bear on the 
CIA to alter its views or, failing that, to diminish the CIA's 
standing. During the Vietnam War, the Pentagon disparaged CIA 
analyses that cast into doubt the projected "light at the end of the 
tunnel." In the 1970s, then-CIA Director George H.W. Bush invited a 
so-called Team B group of neoconservative hawks to spin out a report 
accusing the CIA ("Team A") of consistently underestimating the 
Soviet threat. (Team B, it's worth noting, was created at the 
instigation of Albert Wohlstetter, the political godfather to Perle, 
Wolfowitz, et al.) That pressure continued, in other forms, during 
Ronald Reagan's military buildup in the 1980s. In the 1980s, too, 
then-CIA Director Bill Casey was notorious for constantly trying to 
politicize the CIA, repeatedly trying to influence the agency's 
reporting on Central America, Afghanistan and the Soviet Union. 


The Uses of Endless War

The hostility by the hard-liners against what they see as the CIA's 
myopia on Iraq at least matches any of those earlier fights. Perle, 
who said recently that the CIA's analysis of Iraq "isn't worth the 
paper it's written on," adds that the CIA is afraid of rocking the 
ark in the Middle East. "The CIA is status-quo oriented," he told 
me. "They don't want to take risks. They don't like the INC because 
they only like to work with people they can control." 

According to informed sources, Perle, who's currently based at the 
conservative American Enterprise Institute (AEI), has for the past 
several years sponsored the work of a former CIA clandestine 
operative, Reuel Marc Gerecht, helping him financially, lending him 
the use of his villa in France to write a book and getting him a 
fellowship at AEI. Gerecht, who spends much of his time living in 
Brussels, maintains close ties to the INC via its centers in London 
and Washington. According to a person familiar with the arrangement, 
Gerecht is privately working with the INC's intelligence people to 
help funnel information to Feith's office in the Pentagon. 

Asked whether he is working as an unofficial intelligence handler 
for the INC, Gerecht demurs but doesn't deny it. "It's pretty 
overstated," he says. "I talk to the Iraqi opposition now and then, 
but there are a lot more people in Washington who talk to the Iraqi 
opposition. So I don't think that Pentagon requires my assistance 
... in gathering information from Iraqi opposition." But Gerecht is 
quick to criticize the CIA over Iraq. "There is a great deal of 
hesitancy if not opposition to the war at the agency," he says. "I 
don't think [Rumsfeld] is terribly happy. The collective output that 
CIA puts out is usually pretty mushy. I think it's fair to say that 
the civilian leadership isn't terribly cracked up about the 
intelligence they receive from CIA." 

To call Gerecht a hard-liner on Iraq would be an understatement. For 
him and for many of his allies -- Perle, Wolfowitz, Feith and others 
-- an attack on Iraq is a strategic necessity, not because Saddam 
Hussein is a threat but because America needs to display an 
overwhelming show of force to keep unruly Arabs and Muslims all over 
the world in line. "If we really intend to extinguish the hope that 
has fueled the rise of al-Qaeda and violent anti-Americanism 
throughout the Middle East, we have no choice but to re-instill in 
our foes and friends the fear and respect that attaches to any great 
power," he wrote in The Wall Street Journal last December. "Only a 
war against Saddam Hussein will decisively restore the awe that 
protects American interests abroad and citizens at home. We've been 
running from this fight for 10 years." 

The Pentagon's campaign against the CIA is broader than just Iraq. 
Since the end of the Cold War, the CIA has been squeezed by the 
military again and again. Through its control over the National 
Security Agency, the National Imagery and Mapping Agency, the 
National Reconnaissance Office, the Defense Intelligence Agency and 
other entities, the Pentagon already controls the vast bulk of 
America's spy budget. To consolidate that control, Rumsfeld is 
currently pushing to create an intelligence czar at the Pentagon 
whose power and influence would rival that of the CIA director's. 
And more and more often, the CIA's covert-operations arm finds 
itself dominated by the Defense Department's Special Forces units, 
the gung-ho soldiers who've been on the front lines in the ongoing, 
and apparently endless, war on terrorism. 

What's at stake here is far greater than a bureaucratic turf battle. 
The CIA exists to provide pure and unbiased intelligence to its 
chief customer, the president. George W. Bush, whose knowledge of 
world affairs is limited at best, probably depends more heavily than 
most presidents on what his aides tell him about the outside world. 
And there is mounting evidence that the decision to go to war is 
based on intelligence of doubtful veracity, which has been cooked by 
Pentagon hawks. 

Robert Dreyfuss 

Copyright � 2002 by The American Prospect, Inc. Preferred
Citation: 
Robert Dreyfuss, "The Pentagon Muzzles the CIA," The American 
Prospect vol. 13 no. 22, December 16, 2002 . This article may not be 
resold, reprinted, or redistributed for compensation of any kind 
without prior written permission from the author. Direct questions 
about permissions to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 



Please let us stay on topic and be civil.
To unsubscribe please go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cia-drugs
-Home Page- www.cia-drugs.org 
OM 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 



<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om
--- End Message ---

Reply via email to