SPIEGEL ONLINE - January 29, 2007, 12:50 PM
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,462782,00.html
SPIEGEL INTERVIEW WITH CIA'S FORMER EUROPE DIRECTOR
"We Probably Gave Powell the Wrong Speech"

The former chief of the CIA's Europe division, Tyler Drumheller, 
discusses the United States foreign intelligence service's cooperation 
with Germany, the covert kidnapping of suspected terrorists and a Bush 
adminstration that ignored CIA advice and used whatever informaiton it 
could find to justify an invasion of Iraq.

SPIEGEL: Mr. Drumheller, do you still dare to travel to Europe?

Drumheller: Yes, absolutely. I was a great friend of the Europeans. I 
grew up in Wiesbaden. I love Germany very much.

SPIEGEL: Arrest warrants have been issued in Europe for a number of your 
former colleagues. They are suspected of involvement in the illegal 
kidnappings of suspected terrorists as part of the so-called 
"renditions" program. Doesn't this worry you?

Drumheller: No. I'm not worried, but I am not allowed to discuss the issue.

SPIEGEL: One of the cases is the now famous kidnapping of Khalid 
el-Masri, a German-Lebanese who was taken into custody at the end of 
2003 in Macedonia and later flown to Afghanistan. How could the CIA 
allow an innocent person to be arrested?

Drumheller: I'm not allowed by the agency to comment on any of those 
cases or the so-called "secret prisons." I would love to, but I can't. 
We have a life-long secrecy agreement and they are very, very strict 
about what you can say.

SPIEGEL: The renditions program saw the kidnapping of suspected Islamist 
extremists to third countries. Were you involved in the program?

Drumheller: I would be lying if I said no. I have very complicated 
feelings about the whole issue. I do see the purpose of renditions, if 
they are carried out properly. Guys sitting around talking about 
carrying out attacks as they smoke their pipes in the comfort of a 
European capital tend to get put off the idea if they learn that a 
like-minded individual has been plucked out of safety and sent elsewhere 
to pay for his crimes.

SPIEGEL: We disagree. At the very least, you need to be certain that the 
targets of those renditions aren't innocent people.

Drumheller: It was Vice President Dick Cheney who talked about the "dark 
side" we have to turn on. When he spoke those words, he was articulating 
a policy that amounted to "go out and get them." His remarks were 
evidence of the underlying approach of the administration, which was 
basically to turn the military and the agency loose and let them pay for 
the consequences of any unfortunate -- or illegal -- occurences.

SPIEGEL: So there was no clear guidance of what is allowed in the so 
called "war on terrorism"?

Drumheller: Every responsible chief in the CIA knows that the more 
covert the action, the greater the need for a clear policy and a defined 
target. I once had to brief Condoleezza Rice on a rendition operation, 
and her chief concern was not whether it was the right thing to do, but 
what the president would think about it. I would have expected a big 
meeting, a debate about whether to proceed with the plan, a couple of 
hours of consideration of the pros and cons. We should have been talking 
about the value of the target, whether the threat he presented warranted 
such a potentially controversial intervention. This is no way to run a 
covert policy. If the White House wants to take extraordinary measures 
to win, it can't just let things go through without any discussion about 
their value and morality.

SPIEGEL: Perhaps the White House wanted to gloss over its own 
responsibility.

Drumheller: Let me give you a general thought: From the perspective of 
the White House, it was smart to blur the lines about what was 
acceptable and what was not in the war on terrorism. It meant that 
whenever someone was overzealous in some dark interrogation cell, 
President (George W.) Bush and his entourage could blame someone else. 
The rendition teams are drawn from paramilitary officers who are brave 
and colorful. They are the men who went into Baghdad before the bombs 
and into Afghanistan before the army. If they didn't do paramilitary 
actions for a living, they would probably be robbing banks. Perhaps the 
Bush Administration deliberately created a gray area on renditions.

SPIEGEL: Investigations in the European Parliament and the German 
parliament, the Bundestag, are trying to ascertain the extent to which 
European governments cooperated with the CIA after the Sept. 11 terror 
attacks. How close is the relationship?

Drumheller: On terrorist issues very closely -- we did some very good 
things with the Europeans. Two weeks after Sept. 11, August Hanning (the 
head of the German foreign intelligence service, the BND) came with a 
delegation to discuss how we can make cooperation better. Elements of 
the Bush administration developed the view that European personal 
privacy laws were somehow to blame, that the Europeans are too slow. We 
can be very frustrating to work with. I always said, 'Stop preaching to 
them.' The Europeans have been dealing with terrorism for years, we can 
learn from their successes and failures. Its not a good spy story, but 
it's actually how you do this.

SPIEGEL: How important is Europe to the CIA?

Drumheller: The only way we will ever be able to protect ourselves 
properly is if we can get a handle on the threat in Europe, since that 
is the continent where fanatics can best learn their most crucial 
lesson: How to disappear in a Western crowd. Europe has become the first 
line of defense for the United States. It has become a training ground 
for terrorists, especially since the war in Iraq has heralded an 
underground railroad for militants to go and fight there. It is being 
used for young fanatics in Europe to be smuggled into Iraq to fight 
Americans and, assuming they survive, to return home, where they present 
a more potent threat than they did before they left. Since the odds 
against penetrating the top of al-Qaida are phenomenally high, we must 
pursue the foot soldiers.

SPIEGEL: But given the uproar in Germany and all over Europe, it looks 
highly unlikely that they will cooperate fully with the CIA.

Drumheller: The guys who attacked the World Trade Center didn't fly from 
Kabul to New York. They came from Hamburg. So the value in befriending 
the local intelligence services in Europe instead of alienating them is 
clear: We need to ensure that they are telling us everything they know.

SPIEGEL: But it was your agency that was coming up with all the wrong 
information concerning Saddam Hussein's alleged weapons of mass 
destruction. To what degree is the intelligence community responsible 
for the disaster?

Drumheller: The agency is not blameless and no president on my watch has 
had a spotless record when it comes to the CIA. But never before have I 
seen the manipulation of intelligence that has played out since Bush 
took office. As chief of Europe I had a front-row seat from which to 
observe the unprecedented drive for intelligence justifying the Iraq war.

SPIEGEL: One of the crucial bits of information the Bush administration 
used to justify the invasion was the supposed existence of mobile 
biological weapons laboratories. That came from a German BND source who 
was given the code- name "Curveball." An offical investigation in the 
United States concluded that of all of the false statements that were 
made, this was the most damaging of all.

Drumheller: I think it is, it was a centerpiece. Curveball was an Iraqi 
who claimed to be an engineer working on the biological weapons program. 
When he became an asylum-seeker in Germany, the BND questioned him and 
produced a large number of reports that were passed here through the 
Defense Intelligence Agency. Curveball was a sort of clever fellow who 
carried on about his story and kept everybody pretty well convinced for 
a long time.

SPIEGEL: There are more than a few critics in Washington who claim that 
the Germans, because of Curveball, bear a large part of the 
repsonsibility for the intelligence mess.

Drumheller: There was no effort by the Germans to influence anybody from 
the beginning. Very senior officials in the BND expressed their doubts, 
that there may be problems with this guy. They were very professional. I 
know that there are people at the CIA who think the Germans could have 
set stronger caveats. But nobody says: "Here's a great intel report, but 
we don't believe it." There were also questions inside the CIA's 
analytical section, but as it went forward, this information was seized 
without caveats. The administration wanted to make the case for war with 
Iraq. They needed a tangible thing, they needed the German stuff. They 
couldn't go to war based just on the fact that they wanted to change the 
Middle East. They needed to have something threatening to which they 
were reacting.

SPIEGEL: The German government was convinced that "Curveball" would not 
be used in the now famous presentation that then US Secretary of State 
Colin Powell gave in 2003 before the United Nations Security Council.

Drumheller: I had assured my German friends that it wouldn't be in the 
speech. I really thought that I had put it to bed. I had warned the CIA 
deputy John McLaughlin that this case could be fabricated. The night 
before the speech, then CIA director George Tenet called me at home. I 
said: "Hey Boss, be careful with that German report. It's supposed to be 
taken out. There are a lot of problems with that." He said: "Yeah, yeah. 
Right. Dont worry about that."

SPIEGEL: But it turned out to be the centerpiece in Powell's 
presentation -- and nobody had told him about the doubts.

Drumheller: I turned on the TV in my office, and there it was. So the 
first thing I thought, having worked in the government all my life, was 
that we probably gave Powell the wrong speech. We checked our files and 
found out that they had just ignored it.

SPIEGEL: So the White House just ignored the fact that the whole story 
might have been untrue?

Drumheller: The policy was set. The war in Iraq was coming and they were 
looking for intelligence to fit into the policy. Right before the war, I 
said to a very senior CIA officer: "You guys must have something else," 
because you always think it's the CIA. "There is some secret thing I 
don`t know." He said: "No. But when we get to Baghdad, we are going to 
find warehouses full of stuff. Nobody is going to remember all of this."

SPIEGEL: After the war, the CIA was finally able to talk to "Curveball" 
-- something the BND had never allowed before. What was the result?

Drumheller: In March 2004, a fluent German-speaking officer, one of my 
best guys, who had a scientific background went to Germany and worked 
for about two weeks. Finally, at the end of it, Curveball just sort of 
sat back and said: "I don't have anything more to say." But he never 
admitted. People here always ask, was he polygraphed? Well, lie detector 
tests aren't used very much in Germany.

SPIEGEL: Do you think it would have make a difference if the Germans had 
allowed you to question Curveball earlier?

Drumheller: If they had allowed us to question him the way we did in 
March of 2004, it would have. Maybe the whole story would have turned 
out in a different way.

SPIEGEL: In your book, you mention a very high-ranking source who told 
the CIA before the war that Iraq had no large active WMD program. It has 
been reported that the source was Saddam Hussein's foreign minister, 
Naji Sabri.

Drumheller: I'm not allowed to say who that was. In the beginning, the 
administration was very excited that we had a high-level penetration, 
and the president was informed. I don't think anybody else had a source 
in Saddam's cabinet. He told us that Iraq had no biological weapons, 
just the research. Everything else had been destroyed after the first 
Gulf War. But after a while we didn't get any questions back. Finally 
the administration came and said that they were really not interested in 
what he had to say. They were interested in getting him to defect. In 
the end we did get permission to get back to the source, and that came 
from Tenet. I think without checking with the White House, he just said: 
"Okay. Go ahead and see what you can do."

SPIEGEL: So what happened?

Drumheller: There were a lot of ironies throughout this whole story. We 
went on a sort of worldwide chase after this fellow, and in the end, he 
was in one place, and our officer was in another country asking for 
permission to travel. I called up people who were controlling 
operations, and they said: "Don't worry about it. It's too late now. The 
war is on. The next time you see this guy, it will be at a war crimes 
tribunal."

SPIEGEL: Should you have pressed harder?

Drumheller: We made mistakes. And it may suit the White House to have 
people believe in a black and white version of reality -- that it could 
have avoided the Iraq war if the CIA had only given it a true picture of 
Saddam's armaments. But the truth is that the White House believed what 
it wanted to believe. I have done very little in my life except go to 
school and work for the CIA. Intellectually I think I did everything I 
could. Emotionally you always think you should have something more.

Interview conducted by Georg Mascolo and Holger Stark.


© SPIEGEL ONLINE 2007
All Rights Reserved
Reproduction only allowed with the permission of SPIEGELnet GmbH

+++

Tyler Drumheller, 54, had a 25- year career working for the CIA. In 
2001, he was promoted to become the American intelligence agency's chief 
of European operations. The spectacular kidnappings of suspected al- 
Qaida terrorists -- including the German- Syrian Mohammed Haydar Zammar 
and the German- Syrian Khaled el- Masri -- by CIA commandos happened 
under his watch. Drumheller, who retired in 2005, recently published his 
memoir, "On the Brink," in the United States.

+++



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