The Weekly Standard
"Anonymous" Names Names
Former CIA counterterrorism expert Michael Scheuer reveals who it was at the
agency who gave him "carte blanche" to criticize President Bush.
by Matthew Continetti
11/19/2004 2:20:00 PM

ON NOVEMBER 9, ex-CIA counterterrorism officer Michael Scheuer gave an
interview to the Washington Post's Dana Priest. Scheuer, who ran the CIA's
bin Laden unit from 1996-99, and whose latest book, Imperial Hubris
(published under the pseudonym "Anonymous"), criticizes the Bush
administration's counterterrorism policies in general and the Iraq war in
particular, wanted to talk about his former employer. Scheuer told Priest
that his bosses at the CIA (he gave the interview prior to leaving the
agency) had "diluted the pool that supports our people overseas," which
meant that "in the long term, we're less safe than we should be." What's
more, Scheuer added, CIA management can't take criticism. Just look at what
happened with his latest book. "As long as the book was being used to bash
the president, they gave me carte blanche to talk to the media," Scheuer
said. When Scheuer started attacking the CIA in interviews along with the
president, agency brass fo! rbade him from talking to the media.

Scheuer's stunning admission--that CIA officials actively promoted a book
criticizing the administration they work for--has garnered some attention,
mostly from conservative columnists like Robert Novak and David Brooks. But
one question remained unanswered throughout the coverage--who, exactly, were
"they"? Who gave Scheuer carte blanche to attack Bush? At a breakfast with
reporters on Friday, Scheuer gave his answer: former CIA spokesman Bill
Harlow.

Scheuer told reporters on Friday that, traditionally, he would have to
arrange interviews through the CIA public affairs office. Each interview
would have to be cleared before Scheuer was allowed to talk. With Imperial
Hubris, however, that wasn't the case. The book's advance publicity had
hyped the fact that a CIA officer was anonymously breaking with the
administration's anti-terror strategy. Interview requests flooded in. But
Scheuer said that Harlow told him, "We're giving you carte blanche."
Harlow's condition? Scheuer was supposed to let the public affairs office
know who he talked to--after the interview(s) had taken place.

"The book was misunderstood," Scheuer said on Friday. "It's a book about the
failure of senior intelligence officers," not an ad hominem attack on the
president. During his first round of publicity interviews, he tried to set
the record straight. "Once I turned it around," however, "and talked about
leadership in the intelligence community," Scheuer said, "well, that was the
end of the day." Since Bush was no longer his target, Scheuer had been
gagged.

Of course, one reporter asked, Harlow couldn't have made the decision to
promote Scheuer's book alone. Scheuer nodded. He said that Harlow would've
needed authorization from his superiors for such a move. Harlow's superior
at the time? Former CIA director George Tenet.

Matthew Continetti is a reporter at The Weekly Standard.

Reply via email to