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http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-cia20feb20,1,4570519.story?c
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THE WORLD

CIA Struggles to Spy in Iraq, Afghanistan
Security problems and short-term assignments hamstring the agency, sources say.
Its Baghdad chief is again replaced and outposts are closed.

By Greg Miller and Bob Drogin
Times Staff Writers

February 20, 2004

WASHINGTON - Confronting problems on critical fronts, the CIA recently removed
its top officer in Baghdad because of questions about his ability to lead the
massive station there, and has closed a number of satellite bases in Afghanistan
amid concerns about that country's deteriorating security situation, according
to U.S. intelligence sources.

The previously undisclosed moves underscore the problems affecting the agency's
clandestine service at a time when it is confronting insurgencies and the
U.S.-declared war on terrorism, current and former CIA officers say. They said a
series of stumbles and operational constraints have hampered the agency's
ability to penetrate the insurgency in Iraq, find Osama bin Laden and gain
traction against terrorism in the Middle East.

The CIA's Baghdad station has become the largest in agency history, eclipsing
the size of its post in Saigon at the height of the Vietnam War, a U.S. official
said. But sources said the agency has struggled to fill a number of key overseas
posts.

Many of those who do take sensitive overseas assignments are willing to serve
only 30- to 90-day rotations, a revolving-door approach that has undercut the
agency's ability to cultivate ties to warlords in Afghanistan or collect
intelligence on the Iraqi insurgency, sources said.

There is such a shortage of Arabic speakers and qualified case officers willing
to take dangerous assignments that the agency has been forced to hire dozens -
if not hundreds - of CIA retirees, and to lean heavily on translators, sources
said. The agency has also had to use soldiers for tasks that CIA officers
normally perform, sources said.

Even without the personnel challenges, Iraq and Afghanistan are seen as so
dangerous that it is difficult for agency officers to venture outside guarded
districts and compounds without security details, making covert meetings with
informants extremely difficult, sources said.

CIA officials said Thursday that the agency had no shortage of eager volunteers
for tough assignments, or any lack of resolve in the war on terrorism.

But current and former officers, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the
agency was confronting one of the most difficult challenges in its history.

One former officer who maintains close ties to the agency said it was stretched
to the limit. "With Afghanistan, the war on terrorism, with Iraq, I think
they're just sucking wind," he said.

But the officers also said the latest problems point to a deeper problem with
the CIA leadership and culture. Some lamented that an agency once vaunted for
its daring and reach now finds itself overstretched and hunkered down in secure
zones.

"They claim that they've rebuilt the [clandestine service] and it's firing on
all cylinders," said a former station chief in the Middle East. "Is it? I would
say not. Not if you don't have trained manpower."

The CIA dismisses such criticism, and President Bush has recently voiced support
for six-year CIA Director George J. Tenet. The president said he believed the
agency was serving the country well. The CIA has also won praise for its role in
dismantling the upper ranks of Bin Laden's Al Qaeda network and helping round up
the top figures in Saddam Hussein's regime.

But in many respects, the CIA is an agency under siege, with several inquiries
underway into its prewar assessments on Iraq, and an independent commission
still investigating intelligence failures related to the Sept. 11 attacks.

Swift Rotation

The U.S. official acknowledged that the CIA station chief in Baghdad was removed
in December after weeks of increasingly deadly and sophisticated attacks against
U.S.-led coalition forces and civilian targets.

"There was just a belief that it was a huge operation and we needed a very
senior, very experienced person to run it," the official said.

The official declined to disclose the number of CIA personnel in Iraq, but other
sources said it exceeded 500 people.

The replacement of the station chief means that the high-profile post has been
held by three senior officers since Bush declared an end to major combat in Iraq
in May, sources said. The job of Baghdad station chief is a demanding one that
includes briefing top U.S. officials in Iraq, providing frequent updates to
Washington on the stability of the country, and overseeing all of the operations
and analysis done in the nation.

The first of the three recent station chiefs had served at the Baghdad station
before the Persian Gulf War in 1991. He went to "run operations [from] across
the border" before the invasion last year, was fluent in Arabic and was
"extraordinarily experienced" in setting up and running large intelligence
operations, according to a former senior intelligence official who spoke on
condition of anonymity.

But that officer had always planned to leave the job in June 2003, and has since
moved on to another station in the Middle East, sources said.

His replacement had served as station chief in a neighboring country and was to
stay in Baghdad for at least a year. But he was pushed out in December amid a
combination of personnel problems and growing concern in Washington that the
agency was failing to get an adequate grip on the Iraq insurgency.

Speculation Over Report

Some speculated that the officer might have angered officials in the Bush
administration with a pessimistic report he produced in November saying that a
growing number of Iraqis believed the U.S. coalition could be defeated. But the
U.S. official denied that the report, which was quickly leaked to the media,
played any role in the ouster.

The current station chief is a highly regarded officer who "rose rather
meteorically" during operations in Kosovo, which was the agency's last major
buildup of assets, a former CIA officer said.

Many of the CIA's employees have been based at secure compounds at the airport
in Baghdad, with others working in the so-called Green Zone, the heavily
fortified area in central Baghdad around the headquarters for the Coalition
Provisional Authority. There are smaller offices, known as bases, in Basra,
Mosul and other parts of the country.

Several sources said there had been squabbling over the agency's mission and
priorities, with some saying that the CIA had been drawn too much into
troop-protection work ordinarily done by the military. As a result, some are
concerned that the agency has not been able to concentrate on recruiting the
spies that will be needed as crucial sources of information for years to come
after sovereignty is transferred from U.S. hands this year.

The CIA is also in charge of setting up a new Iraqi intelligence service,
drawing at least in part on former members of Hussein's Mukhabarat. But although
candidates are identified and vetted in Iraq, much of the training is said to be
taking place outside the country, in Jordan or Egypt.

A number of sources said the main problem confronting the Baghdad station has
been security constraints that inhibit the ability of operatives to move about
the country.

The U.S. official acknowledged that instability and violence made "it harder for
people to do their job. They're not locked down, but it adds to the degree of
difficulty everyone faces."

Several sources said that when agency officers venture beyond their secure
compounds, they are accompanied by security details or must travel in convoys.
The U.S. official said all of the agency's employees being sent to Iraq are
given weapons training, and that clandestine officers are given more specialized
paramilitary training.

The agency is in the midst of a multiyear effort to rebuild its clandestine
service, and officials say recent recruiting classes have been among the largest
in history. But the service was badly depleted in the 1990s, amid post-Cold War
cuts and a crackdown on perceived abuses in the service. Many of the agency's
most experienced hands were demoralized by the changes and left.

Since Sept. 11, 2001, the agency has brought back hundreds of retirees, dubbed
"green-badgers" for the color of the identification cards issued to those who
return to the fold under contract. The agency has also turned to young officers
without any overseas experience.

New agency recruits with military backgrounds are being sent to Iraq as soon as
they emerge from the CIA training academy in Virginia, said one former agency
official.

"They don't speak the language, don't know how to recruit," the official said.
"It's on-the-job training."

The U.S. official said that all of the agency's personnel in Iraq were
volunteers and that the CIA has not had to make any "directed" assignments,
meaning ordering someone to go. "We've got plenty of people who are anxious to
take assignments," generally of one year, the official said.

But others said many of the agency's personnel were there for just one to three
months. "That was true for the station as well as the [weapons search team],"
said David Kay, who resigned last month as special advisor in Iraq to Director
Tenet. "None of us were happy about that."

So-called domain experts on Hussein and his associates were "the clearest case,"
Kay said. "They were over for 30 or 60 days and then get rotated back," he said.
"It was a real issue."

Former case officers said such turnover made recruiting spies almost impossible.
"To get the lay of the land takes a month," one former station chief said. And
if you manage to cultivate a source in that time, "you have to turn him over to
someone he doesn't know the next month."

The problems also extend to Afghanistan, sources said. One CIA veteran said he
recently spoke with an officer who had served as a base chief in Kandahar for 60
days, an unusually brief tenure for such an important assignment.

The base in Kandahar is one of five or six the CIA established in Afghanistan
after the U.S. invaded the country in 2001, all reporting to the agency's
primary station in Kabul, the capital. But a number of those remote bases have
been closed in recent months, according to current and former CIA officials.

The closures have alarmed some in the intelligence community because they come
at a time when remnants of the deposed Taliban regime appear to be regrouping
and preparing fresh attacks designed to disrupt elections planned for the
summer. The U.S. military is also planning a spring offensive, aimed at catching
or killing Bin Laden.

'It's Very Frustrating'

One former senior CIA official said the bases were closed because of security
concerns. "It's very frustrating" for CIA officers in the country, the official
said. "They are locked down very tightly. There's very little unilateral
[intelligence collection] going on, and they closed most of their bases out in
the countryside because they feared for the safety of their people."

The U.S. official acknowledged that the bases had been closed. But the official
said the agency had done so for several reasons, and had not reduced the number
of personnel in Afghanistan.

"It's not just because it's a dangerous place - it's been dangerous all along,"
the official said. "The bases that have been closed have been closed for reasons
of efficiency, because the job can be done better somewhere else."

The CIA has struggled to fill high-ranking posts in other countries, sources
said. Four former CIA officers with close ties to headquarters said in separate
interviews that the agency struggled to fill its top post in Pakistan last year,
that at least five candidates turned down the job of station chief in Islamabad
before the agency found an officer willing to take it.

A former senior officer in the agency's Near East Division said he was "badly
jolted" by that news, and that most who turned it down did so for family
reasons, such as a working spouse or children in school. "They were all the sort
of things you'd expect in the corporate world," he said. "But this isn't the
corporate world."

The CIA disputes those claims. "There were a number of people who wanted that
job and were vying heavily for it," said the U.S. official. "I'm not aware of
anybody turning it down."


Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times

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