Gossing Over the Record

"Have they all drunk the Kool-Aid?" asked a former CIA colleague, referring to the stampede to appoint a new director and radically restructure the intelligence community. The Kool-Aid allusion was to the "groupthink" that led disciples of self-anointed "messiah" Jim Jones to mass suicide via poisoned Kool-Aid in 1978.

Attorney General John Ashcroft warned on May 26 that the government has "credible intelligence from multiple sources that Al Qaeda plans an attack on the United States" before the November election. Yet the president and Congress have picked this very time – as our intelligence and security forces are ordered to battle stations – to create mammoth distraction and uncertainty among those on whom we rely for our safety.

As my colleague put it: "It just doesn’t parse. Besides, if nominee Porter Goss (R, Fla.) becomes CIA director and the president does not win reelection, Goss has but six weeks before becoming a lame duck. And then still further disruption and uncertainty would be in store for an intelligence community that yearns in vain for stability."

I reminded my friend that this is not about stability, efficiency or preparedness. The current hyperactivity is driven by politics, and experience has shown that politics and intelligence reform are a noxious mix.

In the light of 9/11 and the debacle in Iraq, no politician wishes to risk being seen as putting the brakes on intelligence reform.

  • In this highly charged atmosphere, the Republican-led Senate would confirm Peter Sellers’ Inspector Clouseau, were the president to nominate him.

  • As one wag put it referring to Goss, a bird in the hand is worth it for Bush. Even if the president is reelected, he cannot be sure he will have so docile a Senate next year.

  • Rep. Curt Weldon (R, Pa.) recently commented: "Porter is a team player . . . and will probably defer to what the president wants." Which, of course, is a very large part of the problem – as so dramatically illustrated by the sycophancy of former CIA Director George Tenet.

“The Record Is The Record”

With those words, Mr. Goss tried to deflect questioning at his nomination hearing on Sept. 14. Okay, we’ll bite. Let’s look at that record.

On June 19, 1997, The Washington Post reported:

"The House Intelligence Committee criticized U.S. intelligence agencies for having ‘limited analytical capabilities . . . an uncertain commitment and capability to collect human intelligence . . . a lack of analytic depth and expertise . . . and a lack of foreign language skills and limited in-country familiarity.’ The panel’s sharply written report on the fiscal 1998 intelligence authorization bill carried more weight than usual because for the first time it was chaired by a former C.I.A. operations officer, Rep. Porter J. Goss (R, Fla.)."

Goss chaired that committee for the next seven years, overseeing (overlooking?) a steady decline in all of those key areas. The fact that during that period he did not use the committee’s power of the purse and its watchdog prerogative to ensure that those deficiencies were corrected gives a hollow ring to his current assertion, "I can make that happen." Instead of doing so as head of the intelligence committee, Goss spent seven years cheering for the CIA – which he still affectionately calls his "alma mater" – until last June when the signals from the White House changed and he stunned everyone by abruptly becoming its harshest critic.

To their credit, Senators Levin, Durbin and DeWine asked tough questions of Goss during Monday’s hearing but found him entirely unresponsive.

Politics And Reform Don’t Mix

Mr. Goss also lacks what is demonstrably a sine qua non qualification for a Director of Central Intelligence – experience managing a large, highly complex organization.

Moreover, the job for which he has been nominated requires the kind of nonpartisan approach that is alien to anyone who has functioned for very long in the highly politicized ether of the U.S. Congress – again, as the tenure of George Tenet, who made his mark serving senators, so amply demonstrated.

Goss co-authored an opinion piece in The Tampa Tribune on March 8, claiming that in the 1990s Sen. John Kerry "was leading efforts in Congress to dismantle the nation’s intelligence capabilities." And in June, Goss interrupted debate on the House floor by displaying a sign with a 1977 quote from Kerry that called for cuts in the intelligence budget. These antics raise legitimate concerns with respect to Goss’s ability to be nonpartisan.

Even more troubling to veteran intelligence analysts is the way Goss’ prepared statement parroted the president’s rhetoric to the effect that terrorists "are committed to the destruction of our economy and our way of life" – boilerplate that merits as much credence as the now thoroughly discredited pre-war claims about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

The situation is much more complex than that. If Mr. Goss believes what he said, he has not read the definitive work on "why they hate us," CIA analyst Michael Scheuer’s recent book Imperial Hubris. And if he doesn’t grasp this complexity, how could he possibly convey it to leaders relying on his counsel?

Ray McGovern – a CIA analyst for 27 years from the administration of John F. Kennedy to that of George H. W. Bush – has written "A Compromised C.I.A.: What Can Be Done?" in Patriotism, Democracy and Common Sense published this month by the Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation. McGovern’s chapter includes a detailed discussion of the qualities needed in a CIA director.

This article first appeared at TomPaine.com

Author: Ray McGovern

Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. In the Sixties he served as an infantry/intelligence officer and then became a CIA analyst for the next 27 years. He is on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).