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Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/c...ts_csm/asnoop_1

Major work left to fix US intelligence
Snuffysmith
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/03/31/opinion/eddowd.html

I spy a screw-up
Snuffysmith
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=5423

'Dead Wrong' or Outright Deception?
Snuffysmith
C.I.A. Answers Criticism With Pledge to Do Better
By SCOTT SHANE
A day after a commission criticized its assessment of Iraqi
weapons, the C.I.A. said it was trying to give more candid
accounts of the reliability of intelligence it passed on.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/02/politics....html?th&emc=th
Snuffysmith
Panel Seeks Intelligence Culpability

By Walter Pincus

The co-chairmen of President Bush's commission on intelligence said yesterday that John D. Negroponte, the incoming director of national intelligence, should take action against agencies, and perhaps individuals, who were responsible for the worst of the glaring failures to accurately assess prewar Iraq's weapons programs.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
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'Curveball' Debacle Reignites CIA Feud
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The former agency chief and his top deputy deny reports that they were told a key source for Iraqi intelligence was deemed unreliable.

By Bob Drogin and Greg Miller
Times Staff Writers

April 2 2005

WASHINGTON; A bitter feud erupted Friday over claims by a presidential commission that top CIA officials apparently ignored warnings in late 2002 and early 2003 that an informant code-named "Curveball" — the chief source of prewar U.S. intelligence about Iraqi germ weapons — was unreliable.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...0,5679005.story
Snuffysmith
http://www.antiwar.com/mcgovern/?articleid=5429

Honest Intelligence Needed
Ray McGovern
Snuffysmith
http://www.salon.com/opinion/conason/2005/...olve/index.html

Its All the CIA's Fault
Snuffysmith
http://www.nti.org/d_newswire/issues/2005_4_1.html#C4D854F2

CIA Analysts Concerned About Faulty Iraq WMD Source Were "Forced to Leave," Report Says
Snuffysmith
http://www.nti.org/d_newswire/issues/2005_4_1.html#C4D854F2

CIA Resisted Doubts on Aluminum Tubes Thought to Be For Iraqi Nuke Program
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/n...curity_cia_dc_1

Abu Ghraib Probe Suggests CIA Role in Iraqi Deaths
Snuffysmith
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/04/06/int...tion=cnn_latest

CIA, senators trade barbs over 'Curveball'
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/a...t_pe/cia_leak_1

CIA Leak Probe Done, Minus Some Testimony
Snuffysmith
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/20...el_x.htm?csp=34

CIA questions why some information was missed on Iraq intelligence
Snuffysmith
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/20...ll_x.htm?csp=34

Officials ask why Iraq details are surfacing now
Snuffysmith
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?i...TC-RSSFeeds0312

Officials Ask Why Iraq Details Surface Now
Snuffysmith
http://www.dailypennsylvanian.com/vnews/di...T/4254d82fb3eaf

Veteran spy speaks against wars
Snuffysmith
A Failure of More Than Intelligence

By Richard Cohen

Shortly before the United States went to war in Iraq, I was in contact with a former member of the American intelligence community. This is what he told me: Saddam Hussein had no nuclear weapons program, no chemical or biological weapons program to speak of, and no link to al Qaeda. He said that if America invaded, it would cost us "perhaps 1,000 casualties" and would lead to prolonged "terrorism and harassment." I thanked him very much for his views -- and urged the United States to attack anyway. Along with Don Quixote, I sometimes feel that facts are the enemy of truth.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
See No Evil: Will we ever know if the White House pressured the CIA? Not if Senator Pat Roberts can help it.

http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050418&s=editorial041805
Snuffysmith
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/nation/11339623.htm

Prosecutor: 2 reporters stalling CIA leak probe
Snuffysmith
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/3123964

CIA chief orders full review of 'Curveball'
Goss wants to know why few questioned Iraqi defector's claims
Snuffysmith
http://www.showmenews.com/2005/Apr/20050407News014.asp

Panel's findings take lawmakers, CIA by surprise
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/k...ambassador_wa_1

Nominee for UN ambassador under investigation
Snuffysmith
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0515,vest,62865,6.html

Big LIes, Blind Spies, and Vanity Fair
Quick Lessons From the WMD Report
Jason Vest
Snuffysmith
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Senators Question CIA Cooperation in Inquiry
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Differences between last week's report on prewar failures and what was given lawmakers arise.

By Greg Miller
Times Staff Writer

April 9 2005

WASHINGTON; The Senate Intelligence Committee has asked the CIA to account for significant gaps in information that the agency provided to the panel as part of its investigation last year into prewar intelligence failures on Iraq, congressional officials said Friday.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...eadlines-nation
Snuffysmith
http://www.antiwar.com/orig/barry.php?articleid=5505

Negroponte and the CIA's Eclipse
Rest Assured - We Will Now Have 'Good Intelligence'
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/n..._curveball_dc_1

Goss Launches Review of CIA Doubts on Iraqi Source
Snuffysmith
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0515,webmondo3,62874,6.html

The Pope's CIA File
Snuffysmith
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0405/scra...face041105.php3

CBS to give CIA tips on infiltrating enemy groups
Snuffysmith
http://www.rutlandherald.com/apps/pbcs.dll...384/0/FRONTPAGE

Former CIA chief speaks at Godnick Adult Center
Snuffysmith
Negroponte Says Reform is Top Concern

By Katherine Shrader

John Negroponte, President Bush's choice as the first director of all U.S. intelligence activities, told senators Tuesday that reforming the various spy agencies will be a central focus of his new job.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Senators May Have Named CIA Operative

Senators may have blown the cover of a covert CIA officer yesterday.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle


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Snuffysmith
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/04/12/int...tion=cnn_latest

Intelligence nominee: Better results a priority
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/a...ner_abuse_cia_1

Ex CIA Worker Wants to Call Top Officials
Snuffysmith
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article....RTICLE_ID=43759

Senators didn't 'blow' CIA agent's cover
Contrary to AP story, name previously cited several times
Snuffysmith
Interrogator Says U.S. Approved Handling of Detainee Who Died

By R. Jeffrey Smith

The dispute over the Bush administration's treatment of military detainees is playing out in a North Carolina courtroom, where a CIA contractor has asserted that his rough interrogation in 2003 of an Afghan who subsequently died was indirectly authorized by deliberations in Washington at the highest ranks of the Bush administration.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/c...ts_csm/aponte_1

Task Ahead: How to Be a Spy Czar
theglobalchinese
Negroponte Approved as Intelligence Director by Senate Panel Bloomberg
Snuffysmith
US Intelligence Looks for Closer Cooperation

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=CDBFD1:2F72C9D

Efforts to improve the effectiveness of intelligence-gathering and
analysis appear to have fallen short In recent years there has been
sharp criticism, from many quarters, on the performance level of the
U.S. intelligence community. But efforts to improve the effectiveness
of intelligence-gathering and analysis appear to have fallen short. In
the first report of a two-part series, VOA Correspondent Gary Thomas
looks at the effort to foster closer cooperation among agencies.

Since 1994, there have been nine special commissions or panels
convened by the president or Congress to examine the work of the U.S.
intelligence community - three of them since the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001. All have been near unanimous in finding that from
operations to analysis, the U.S. intelligence community is a heavily
bureaucratic apparatus lacking in imagination and in need of urgent
reform.

Not only did the Central Intelligence Agency and the other
intelligence agencies stumble badly on their analysis of Saddam
Hussein's weapons capabilities or fail to warn of the September 11
attacks, the reports say, they also missed warning that India was
going to conduct a nuclear test in 1998.

Speaking at a recent student-sponsored conference on intelligence
issues at American University in Washington, former CIA analyst Randy
Pherson says there is a depressingly similar tone in the findings and
recommendations in all of the studies.

"My unfortunate conclusion is that there are some very fundamental
things that we just cannot figure out how to get right," he said. "And
almost every commission has come up with a series of primary
recommendations, and it is startling how consistent they are from
commission to commission."

The intelligence community is a loose confederation of about 15
agencies. The CIA is the best known, but the National Security Agency,
which engages in electronic intelligence and code breaking, is
believed to have more people and funds. The Department of Defense -
which controls the NSA - has control over most of the other
intelligence components. Within the U.S., there is the FBI and the
newly created Department of Homeland Security.

But the various commissions all found that the agencies tend to be
suspicious of each other and often fail to share potentially crucial
information. For years the FBI and CIA refused to even talk to each
other.

Randy Pherson says, "jointness," as it has come to be called, is the
way to foster fresh thinking.

"Where we have had most of our major intelligence failures is that we
have gotten into a mindset, and we have not had the tools or
techniques or the stimulus to force us to rethink the process, which
is why I encourage the idea that if you have more jointness in the
process, it forces by its very definition a challenge to what you are
saying and how you are thinking about these problems."

/// END ACT ///

Joint centers of specialists from the CIA, FBI, and NSA and other
agencies were set up on some areas, such as counter-terrorism, to
foster cooperation. But Kevin Scheid, team leader for intelligence on
the 9-11 Commission, says "jointness" has not worked very well.

"These centers were trying to transcend these institutional biases
across the community and help build a more comprehensive picture of
the particular problems they were working," he said. "Unfortunately,
these proved over the years to be a bit of a band-aid approach to
quite ossified bureaucracies that were not used to sharing a great
deal of information. There were pockets of good activity, good
sharing. But on the whole, the record was not very good."

Former CIA officer Mike Scheuer, who led the hunt for Osama bin Laden,
tells VOA "jointness" only works if the agencies adapt to new threats
and shake off the cobwebs of the Cold War to fight new threats.

"Collecting intelligence against closed societies is one thing," he
said. "Against these more diverse transnational threats is another.
And until policy makers become comfortable with acting on less than
perfect intelligence, the whole idea of 'jointness' is just another
obfuscation that will not result in better [intelligence] community
cooperation. It will result in more claims that there is better
community cooperation."

One key reform that has been enacted is the creation of the post of
Director of National Intelligence. The director is to act as
bureaucratic referee among squabbling agencies. But the extent of his
authority is murky and is expected to be worked out over time in what
intelligence insiders say are certain to be bruising bureaucratic
battles.
Snuffysmith
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/04/14/hom...tion=cnn_latest

Chertoff: Intelligence sharing vital
Snuffysmith
http://www.rutlandherald.com/apps/pbcs.dll.../504140303/1039

Calm Before the Storm?
Snuffysmith
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-04-13-voa62.cfm

Congress, White House Look to Shake Up US Intelligence
Snuffysmith
CIA's secret kidnappings :

The media took little notice of this bipartisan move to try and end the administration's outsourcing of torture - which President Bush continually says is not happening, despite mounting evidence from human rights organizations, freed tortured detainees, and journalists worldwide.
http://snipurl.com/e0mu
Snuffysmith
Court unseals Passaro papers:

Tenet, Gonzales on witness list: A former CIA contractor accused of beating an Afghan prisoner plans to call former agency Director George Tenet and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales as witnesses to aid his defense that he was acting under government authority.
http://www.newsobserver.com/news/story/230...p-8686608c.html

http://snipurl.com/e0mw
Snuffysmith
Guantanamo Detainee Suing US to Get Video of Alleged Torture :

A detainee at a U.S. military prison alleges that U.S. military guards jumped on his head until he had a stroke that paralyzed his face, nearly drowned him in a toilet and later broke several of his fingers, according to a lawsuit filed yesterday in federal court.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article8543.htm

http://snipurl.com/e0mx
Snuffysmith
Exposing Incompetent Incumbents

Ray McGovern April 13, 2005 Ray McGovern is a 27-year veteran of C.I.A.’s intelligence analysis directorate. He now serves on the steering group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity and works at Tell the Word, an activity of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in Washington, DC.

Many have asked how it could be that a comparatively small group of intelligence analysts in the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) was able to get it right on several key Iraq-related issues, while larger agencies like CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency—with, literally, a cast of thousands—got it so wrong. The answer is simple: INR had the guts to be the skunk at the picnic. That’s how. State Department analysts showed backbone in resisting White House pressure, as well as in-house prodding from the likes of Under Secretary of State John Bolton, to cook intelligence to the White House recipe.

INR stood firm, while former CIA director George Tenet, his deputy John McLaughlin and other malleable intelligence community managers caved in to administration pressure. (I note with some amusement that the euphemism now in vogue is “leaning forward,” as if that is not politicization.) In caving in, they became accomplices in the successful attempt to deceive Congress into voting for an unprovoked war. INR analysts dissented loudly from some of the most important key judgments of the infamous National Intelligence Estimate, “Iraq’s Continuing Programs for Weapons of Mass Destruction” of Oct. 1, 2002.

For example:

When the canard about Iraq seeking uranium from Niger insinuated its way into the estimate, INR inserted a strong footnote, dismissing the story as "highly dubious."INR analysts also debunked the fable about aluminum tubes for uranium enrichment for Iraq. Although then-national security adviser Condoleezza Rice portrayed the tubes as useful only in a nuclear application, State Department intelligence analysts joined the experts in the Department of Energy and U.N. engineers in pointing out, correctly, that the tubes were for conventional artillery.
Most obstreperous of all, on the highly neuralgic nuclear issue INR flat-out refused to predict when Iraq's "nuclear weapons program" was likely to yield a nuclear device. Why? Because it saw no compelling evidence that Vice President Dick Cheney was correct in claiming that the previous nuclear weapons program had been "reconstituted." In the best diplomatic language it could summon, INR said it was just too difficult to predict the culmination of any such program without having a start (or re-start) date. If that were not provocation enough, State Department intelligence analysts committed several other transgressions not directly connected to the NIE. INR's most experienced Middle East specialists prepared a study exposing as a chimera the notion that democracy could be brought to the area at the point of a gun. INR also provided invaluable support to the interagency team that worked hard to prepare sensibly for post-war Iraq. Its analysis and recommendations were trashed by Pentagon neophytes who knew the invasion would be a "cakewalk"—and by Vice President Dick Cheney, who knew that our troops would be seen as liberators. INR’s director at the time was the widely respected Assistant Secretary of State Carl Ford, a man not for sale. For 10 years, it had been de rigueur for the head of INR, the CIA director and FBI directors, and the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency to present together the annual worldwide threat assessment briefing to the Senate intelligence committee. But in February 2004, INR experienced the supreme penalty for having been right—ostracism. Sen. Roberts did not invite the INR director to participate in the threat assessment. Roberts apparently wanted to preclude the possibility that some over-curious senator might ask why INR was able to get it mostly right on Iraq when everyone else was almost all wrong.

Well, now we know. For who should show up at yesterday’s Senate hearing on John Bolton’s nomination for the post of U.N. representative but Carl Ford. He had not volunteered to testify and said he found it very awkward to do so—the more so, since he is a self-described conservative, a loyal Republican, an enthusiastic supporter of President Bush and his policies, and a “huge fan” of Vice President Dick Cheney. Nonetheless, Ford saw it as his duty to comment on the fitness of Bolton for the U.N. post, because of its importance and his profound misgivings regarding Bolton.

No Weasels Please

Ford emphasized that politicization is the main danger to intelligence analysis. He described politicization as a “team sport” since at least two are needed—the one exerting political pressure and the “weasel.” He described in some detail Bolton’s attempt to bully an INR analyst into changing his conclusions to fit Bolton’s extreme views on Cuba’s biological warfare capability. The analyst, who is several grade levels lower than Undersecretary Bolton but no weasel, stood firm and was treated to a torrent of verbal abuse. Later, when Bolton made it clear to Ford that the analyst should be removed, Ford said, in effect, over his dead body.

In the end, the analyst’s firmness prevented Bolton from representing his extreme opinions on Cuba as the views of the U.S. intelligence community. (Pity that this INR analyst apparently had no soul mate in courage among intelligence analysts of Iraq elsewhere in the community.) To his credit, Ford gave his analyst strong support. Nonetheless, this crass attempt at politicization threw such a fright into INR analysts that Ford decided to use the incident as an important teaching moment for staff and instituted defense-against-politicization training.

The former INR chief made it clear that he considered Bolton’s behavior beyond the pale and told his analysts that, were they to encounter such pressure they had just two requirements: (1) do not bend to it; and (2) report it to the director of INR immediately. Ford reported Bolton’s behavior to then-Secretary Powell, and later Powell went over to INR to address the staff and give a highly visible attaboy to the analyst who had stood his ground.

What’s Broken?

At director of national intelligence nominee John Negroponte’s confirmation hearing yesterday, Sen. Pat Roberts, chair of the Senate intelligence committee repeated the mantra, “We have a broken system.” But a “system” can be no better than its people. It is, rather, the professionalism and integrity of many of the system’s leaders that is broken. Gen. William Odom, a highly respected senior intelligence official now retired, wrote an op-ed during the unseemly rush to wholesale intelligence reform last summer, in which he stressed that “No organizational design will compensate for incompetent incumbents.” In my experience in intelligence analysis, lack of integrity goes hand in hand with incompetence. The people who float up to the top in such an environment do not tend to be the real professionals.

The wonder is not that INR got it right, but that there should be surprise that the larger intelligence agencies, marching in virtual lockstep to the drums of the White House, Pentagon and their own malleable leaders, got it wrong. Perhaps most depressing is the fact that not one of the analysts who knew what was going on could summon the courage to speak out to try to head off an unnecessary war. Apparently, fear runs very deep.

Many of us former intelligence professionals are astonished that, of the hundreds of analysts who knew in 2002 and early 2003 that Iraq posed no threat to the United States and were aware of Dick Cheney’s frequent visits to CIA Headquarters to argue otherwise, no one had the courage to blow the whistle on such pressure tactics and warn about the coming war. Even former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neil and former terrorism czar Richard Clarke, who are to be commended for eventually speaking out, put it off until it was too late to stop the war.

Silence is Betrayal

This is by no means a water-over-the-dam issue. If plans go forward for an attack on Iran, it may become necessary for those intelligence professionals with the requisite courage—if any are left—to mount their own pre-emptive strike against the kind of corrupted intelligence that greased the skids for war on Iraq. That they would be forced to go to the press, preferably with documentation, is a sad commentary. But no alternatives with any promise are available. (The only good news is that help is at hand: see the Truth-Telling Coalition Appeal .) The normal channel for such redress—the inspectors general of the various agencies—is a sad joke. And the prospect for successful appeal to the lapdog/watchdog intelligence committees of Congress is equally sad—and even more feckless www.tompaine.com
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/a...da_050416171848

Intelligence reports undercut US claims of Iraq-Qaeda link: top US Senator
Snuffysmith
Reject the Abuses, Retain the Tactic

By Daniel Byman

Perhaps the most misunderstood U.S. counterterrorism tool is the "rendition": the transfer of suspected terrorists from one country to another without formal legal proceedings. Human rights activists and international law experts have blasted the tactic as illegal and accused the U.S. government of "outsourcing torture" by shipping some suspects to countries that brutally interrogate prisoners. New York Times columnist Bob Herbert even declared that renditions stand "side by side with contract killings." Not surprisingly, calls to end or curtail the practice are growing.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
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New Office to Issue Terrorism Data
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State Department says move is for technical reasons, but one observer sees attempt to ditch political problem as numbers rise.

By Sonni Efron and Paul Richter
Times Staff Writers

April 19 2005

WASHINGTON; The State Department will stop releasing an annual report on terrorist incidents worldwide, saying Monday that a new federal office for counter-terrorism would take over the task of compiling the statistics.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/n.../bush_leak_dc_7

Appeals Court Refuses to Rehear CIA Leak Case
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