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The Rise of Another CIA Yes Man
As Gen. David Petraeus prepares to take the helm at CIA in September, he can expect unswerving loyalty from his likely deputy, Michael Morell, who has been acting director since July when Leon Panetta left to become Secretary of Defense.
Like many senior CIA officials in recent years, Morell’s record is checkered, at best. He held key jobs in intelligence analysis over the past decade as the CIA often served as a handmaiden to the war propagandists.
As for Michael Morell, as with many other successful CIA careerists, his strongest suit seemed to be pleasing his boss and not antagonizing the White House. If past is precedent, his loyalty will be to Petraeus, not necessarily to the truth.
Forgive me if my thinking about loyalty to the facts seems “obsolete” or “quaint” – or if it seems unfair to expect CIA analysts to put their careers on the line when politicians and ideologues are misleading the nation to war – but those were the principles that analysts of my generation tried to uphold.
The recent tendency at CIA to give politicians what they want to hear rather than the hard truth is not healthy for the Republic that we were all sworn to serve.
And, if Petraeus’s own past is precedent, loyalty to the four-star general will not always be synonymous with loyalty to the truth.
Burnishing an Image
However, you will get no indication of this troubling reality from the flattering, but thin, feature about Michael Morell, “Mr. Insider Will Guide Petraeus at the CIA,” by Siobhan Gorman in the Wall Street Journal on Aug. 26.
Gorman is normally a solid reporter; but either she did not perform due diligence and let herself be snookered, or her editors stepped in to ensure her story was consonant with the image Petraeus and the Establishment wish to create for Morell.
Before her “rare” interview with Morell, Gorman should have taken a close look at former CIA Director George Tenet’s memoir, At the Center of the Storm, to learn what Tenet says about Morell’s record during the last decade’s dark days of misleading and dishonest intelligence.
In Tenet’s personal account of the CIA’s failures around 9/11 and the Iraq War, Morell – Tenet’s former executive assistant – is generally treated kindly, but Tenet puts Morell at the center of two key fiascoes: he “coordinated the CIA review” of Secretary of State Colin Powell’s infamous Feb. 5, 2003 address to the United Nations and he served as the regular CIA briefer to President George W. Bush.
Putting Access Before Honesty
So, Morell was there as Bush blew off early CIA warnings about the possibility of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden being “determined to strike in the US” – and while Bush and his neoconservative inner circle were concocting intelligence to justify invading Iraq.
Tenet credits Morell with suggesting to analysts that they prepare a report on the terrorist threat, which became the President’s Daily Brief that was handed to Bush on Aug. 6, 2001, at his ranch in Crawford, Texas. Bush brushed aside the warning with a reported comment to the CIA briefer, “all right, you’ve covered your ass,” and went off fishing.
Though Tenet said Morell got along well with Bush, it appears the President didn’t pay much heed to any CIA information coming from Morell, at least not anything that went against what Bush wanted to hear – nor did Morell seem to risk offending the President by pushing these contrary points.
After the Aug. 6 PDB was delivered, Tenet wrote that he needed to follow it up, and did so with a trip to Crawford 11 days later, when Tenet remembers Bush driving him around in a pickup truck as Tenet made “small talk about the flora and fauna.”
Morell also was the CIA briefer with Bush in Florida on the morning of 9/11 when news arrived about the attacks on New York City’s Twin Towers. Later, Bush told Morell “that if we [the CIA] learned anything definitive about the attack, he wanted to be the first to know,” Tenet wrote, adding:
“Wiry, youthful looking, and extremely bright, Mike speaks in staccato-like bursts that get to the bottom line very quickly. He and George Bush had hit it off almost immediately. In a crisis like this, Mike was the perfect guy for us to have by the commander-in-chief’s side.”
However, it appears Morell was not willing to risk his rapport with Bush by challenging the President’s desire to pivot from retaliatory strikes against Afghanistan to a full-scale invasion of Iraq based on false and misleading intelligence.
Tenet also described Morell’s role in organizing the review of the “intelligence” that went into Powell’s speech, which let slip the dogs of war by presenting a thoroughly deceptive account of the Iraqi threat, what Powell later called a “blot” on his record.
Though the CIA embraced many of Powell’s misleading assertions, Tenet recounted one exchange in which Morell stood up to John Hannah, an aide to Vice President Dick Cheney, regarding Iraq’s alleged efforts to obtain yellowcake uranium from Niger.
“Hannah asked Mike Morell, who was coordinating the review of the speech for CIA, why the Niger uranium story wasn’t in the latest draft,” Tenet wrote. “‘Because we don’t believe it,’ Mike told him. ‘I thought you did,’ Hannah said. After much wrangling and precious time lost in explaining our doubts, Hannah understood why we believed it was inappropriate for Colin to use the Niger material in his speech.”
Despite that one pushback, the CIA analysts mostly bent to pressures coming from the White House for an alarmist treatment of allegations about the “weapons of mass destruction,” which turned out not to be in Iraq.
Of the CIA’s finished intelligence product, it was reportedly the PDB – delivered by Morell – that most exaggerated the danger.
Not Mistaken, Dishonest
It is sad to have to recall that this was not “erroneous,” but rather fraudulent intelligence. Announcing on June 5, 2008, the bipartisan conclusions from a five-year study by the Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen. Jay Rockefeller described the intelligence conjured up to “justify” war on Iraq as “uncorroborated, contradicted, or even non-existent.”
Rockefeller’s comments call to mind what Tenet told his British counterpart, Sir Richard Dearlove, on July 20, 2002, after former Prime Minister Tony Blair sent Dearlove to the CIA to get the latest scoop on how the U.S. planned to “justify” the attack on Iraq.
According to the official British minutes of a cabinet-level planning session chaired by Blair on July 23, 2002, at 10 Downing Street, Tenet made clear to Dearlove that “the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy” to bring “regime change” to Iraq.
Could it be that Tenet would let the British in on this dirty little secret and keep George W. Bush’s personal briefer, Michael Morell, in the dark? Seems unlikely.
But even if Morell were not fully informed about the high-level scheme for war, would he have been – with his prized relationship with the President – the most appropriate senior official to “coordinate the CIA review” of Powell’s speech?
The ‘Sinister Nexus’
In the Wall Street Journal feature, reporter Gorman was assured of something else about Morell’s role in preparing the intelligence on Iraq. According to Gorman, “His [Morell’s] team didn’t handle the analysis that erroneously concluded the Iraqi government had weapons of mass destruction.” I guess that depends on your definition of “team.”
But what about alleged ties between Iraq and al-Qaeda, the second bogus issue used to “justify” attacking Iraq? There Morell seemed to be on better ground, telling Gorman that his “team” had concluded that there had been earlier contacts between Iraqi intelligence and al-Qaeda, but there were no links to al-Qaeda operations at the time.
Still, Morell didn’t seem to have pressed this point very hard while coordinating the CIA’s review of Powell’s UN speech. If Morell had, one has to wonder why Powell was fed, and swallowed, the line about a “sinister nexus between Iraq and the al Qaeda terrorist network?”
ABC’s Brian Ross shot down that canard just hours after Powell spoke. Citing a BBC report from London, Ross noted that British intelligence had concluded there was no evidence to support the theory that al-Qaeda and Iraq were working together.
Virtually all intelligence analysts with no axes to grind, after sifting through thousands of reports, had long since come to that same conclusion.
Did Secretary Powell have to learn about the Iraq/al-Qaeda disconnect from the BBC? Later, Powell was livid at having been led down the garden path by the likes of Tenet, Tenet’s pandering deputy John McLaughlin, and Morell, a Tenet protégé.
Tenet and McLaughlin were also co-liars-in-chief regarding those mobile biological weapons factories — a yarn spun by the infamous source called “Curveball.” In his memoir, Tenet doesn’t describe Morell’s role in promoting — or at least acquiescing in depicting — the charlatan “Curveball” as a reliable intelligence source for a key portion of Powell’s speech.
And, if you think it’s unfair to expect CIA bureaucrats to risk their careers by challenging the political desires of the White House, it’s worth noting the one major exception to the CIA’s sorry record during George W. Bush’s presidency – and how honest CIA analysts helped prevent another unnecessary war.
After former chief of State Department intelligence Tom Fingar was put in charge of National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs), a thoroughly professional NIE in late 2007 concluded unanimously and “with high confidence” that Iran had stopped working on a nuclear weapon in mid-2003.
President Bush’s own memoir leaves no doubt that this Estimate played a huge role in spiking White House plans for war on Iran. It’s a pity that the Estimate on Iran should be an exception to the rule.
Much to Be Humble About
Yet, in the Wall Street Journal feature, Michael Morell lectures Gorman on the basics – and the limits – of intelligence analysis.
“We end up having bits of information that have a multitude of possible explanations,” said Morell. “You’ve got to be really humble about the business we’re in.”
Well, yes indeed. The WSJ also ran a sidebar with a list of the following CIA failures and Morell’s facile potions for cures:
–2001, Sept. 11 attacks: A failure of both intelligence collection and analysis. Lesson: A need to better penetrate U.S. adversaries.
–2003, Iraq weapons of mass destruction: Analysts erroneously concluded Iraq had WMDs. Lesson: Analysts must describe confidence levels in conclusions, consider alternate explanations.
–2009, Bombing of CIA base in Khost, Afghanistan: Doubts about the asset-turned-suicide-bomber didn’t get to the right people. Lesson: Share information with the people who most need it.
Is this Morell fellow on the ball, or what?
Let’s address these one by one:
–9/11 need not have happened if Tenet and his protégés simply shared the information needed by the FBI and others. See, for instance, Consortiumnews.com’s “Did Tenet Hide Key 9/11 Info?” Or, Tenet and Morell might have risked their cozy relationship with Bush by challenging his casual dismissal of the existing multiple warnings.
–The WMD not in Iraq? How about promoting and rewarding honest analysts; no “fixing” allowed. Face down White House pressure. We used to do it all the time. We used to have career protection for doing it.
–On the tragedy at Khost? Well, how about some basic training in tradecraft — including rudimentary security precautions.
And speaking of rudimentary security precautions: Morell bragged to Gorman that he had recently flown to Kabul to brief Petraeus, carrying a blue briefing book emblazoned with the CIA seal and detailing the CIA’s every critical program, organization and operation.
“It was the most highly classified guide that I’ve ever seen in my life” was Petraeus’s wow-response.
The appropriate reaction, in my professional view, would have been to fire Morell on the spot for recklessness. He should know better. They down aircraft, blow up motorcades and shoot people in Afghanistan, you know. Is it really such a great idea to carry a briefing book with the CIA’s most sensitive secrets into that environment?
Moreover, bragging about this cavalier approach to protecting sensitive documents sends shivers down the backs of foreign intelligence officers, adding to their reluctance to share delicate information with us.
Loosening Leashes on Dogs of War
There is ironic serendipity in the fact that the WSJ feature on Morell appeared on Aug. 26, exactly nine years after the fraudulent speech given by Vice President Dick Cheney before the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Nashville.
And just four days before the nation’s bookstores host In My Time — Cheney’s apologia pro vita sua. (The advance promotion includes his personal warning that the book will have “heads exploding” all over Washington.)
There are huge lessons in what happened and what did not happen immediately after Cheney’s Aug. 26, 2002, thinly disguised call for an attack on Iraq — and how those who recognized the lies could not summon enough courage to try to stop the juggernaut toward war.
The Fawning Corporate Media and the cowering careerists at CIA were among the main culprits. But there were others who, if they have a conscience and are honest with themselves, may still be finding it difficult to look in the mirror nine years later.
In his August 2002 speech, Cheney launched the virulent propaganda campaign for an aggressive war against Iraq, telling the audience in Nashville:
“Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction. There is no doubt he is amassing them to use against our friends, against our allies, and against us.”
This was no innocent mistake by the Vice President; it was a bald-faced lie, a falsehood that opened the gates to a hellish conflict that has ripped apart Iraq, bringing untold death and destruction.
Nine years later it is well worth recalling this lie – on behalf of the 4,500 U.S. troops killed in Iraq, the many more wounded, the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis killed, and the five million displaced from their homes.
Let it be widely understood that on Aug. 26, 2002, Dick Cheney set the meretricious terms of reference for war.
Hear No Evil — Speak No Truth
Sitting on the same stage that evening was former CENTCOM commander Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, who was being honored at the VFW convention. Zinni later said he was shocked to hear Cheney’s depiction of intelligence (Iraq has WMD and is amassing them to use against us) that did not square with what he knew.
Although Zinni had retired two years before, his role as consultant had enabled him to stay up to date on key intelligence findings.
“There was no solid proof that Saddam had WMD. … I heard a case being made to go to war,” Zinni told Meet the Press three and a half years later.
Zinni is normally a straight shooter with a good bit of courage. And so, the question lingers: why did he not go public when he first heard Cheney’s lie?
What seems operative here, I fear, is an all-too-familiar conundrum at senior levels where people have been conditioned not to rock the boat, not to risk their standing within the Washington Establishment.
Almost always, the results are bad. I would bet a tidy sum that Zinni regrets having let his reaction be shaped, as it apparently was, by a misguided kind of professional courtesy and/or slavish adherence to classification restrictions.
After all, he was one of the very few credible senior officials who might have prevented a war of aggression, which the Nuremberg Tribunals – after World War II – branded the “supreme international crime.”
Zinni was not the only one taken aback by Cheney’s words. Then-CIA Director George Tenet said Cheney’s speech took him completely by surprise.
In his memoir, Tenet wrote, “I had the impression that the president wasn’t any more aware than we were of what his number-two was going to say to the VFW until he said it.” But like Br’er Fox, Tenet didn’t say nothing.
Tenet claims he didn’t even check it all out with either Cheney or Bush after Cheney’s speech. Yet, could Cheney’s twisting of the data not have been anticipated? Indeed, weren’t Tenet and his CIA in on the determination to make a case for war?
In a way, that conclusion is a no-brainer. As mentioned above, just five weeks before Cheney’s speech, Tenet himself had explained to his British counterpart that the President had decided to make war on Iraq for regime change and “the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.”
Cheney simply was unveiling the war rationale to the public. Several weeks later, when Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Bob Graham insisted on a National Intelligence Estimate before any vote in Congress, Tenet told his folks to prepare one that dovetailed with Cheney’s unsupported rhetoric.
Sadly, my former colleagues did. And where was Michael Morell in this process? Clearly, he did nothing to destroy his career or put himself too much on the outs at the White House.
The Sales Job
When Bush’s senior advisers came back to town after Labor Day 2002, the next five weeks were devoted to selling the war, a major “new product” that, as then-White House chief of staff Andy Card explained, one shouldn’t introduce in the month of August.
Card, too, apparently had no idea that Cheney would jump the gun as “fixer-in-chief.” At that point, the Tenets, McLaughlins and Morells of this world fell right into line.
After assuring themselves that Tenet was a reliable salesman, Cheney and then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld allowed him to play a supporting role in advertising bogus claims about aluminum tubes for uranium enrichment and mobile trailers for manufacturing biological warfare agents.
The hyped and bogus intelligence succeeded in scaring Congress into voting for war on Oct. 10 and 11, 2002.
In my view, it strains credulity to think that Michael Morell was unaware of the fraudulent nature of this campaign. Yet, like all too many others, he mostly kept quiet — and he got promoted. That’s how it works in Washington these days.
This kind of malleability regarding twisting facts to support war has worked well for Petraeus, too.
Today, there is little chance Petraeus can be unaware of Morell’s pedigree. Given Petraeus’s own experience in climbing the career ladder, the general may even harbor an admiration for Morell’s extraordinary willingness to please.
The two will make a fine pair for Official Washington, though not for those “quaint” folks who put a high premium on integrity.
As for Dick Cheney who was once given the well-deserved sobriquet “Vice President for Torture” in a Washington Post editorial, I just wish he would disappear so he would stop bringing out the worst in everyone.
I found my own feelings mirrored in a plaintive comment from a good friend who prays a lot. She said, “I keep praying for Dick Cheney, especially when he goes into the hospital. But he always comes out again.”
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. He was a PDB briefer of Vice President George H.W. Bush and the Secretaries of State and Defense during President Ronald Reagan’s first term, and earlier in his career chaired National Intelligence Estimates. He serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).
Note: I (Ray) sent a draft of the above article to former colleagues, intelligence officers who served in CIA more recently than I and left after clocking many years at very senior levels. The comments I received from them turned out to be so germane and incisive that I include them below for those wanting a better feel for what really goes on.
The first is from a recently retired Senior Intelligence Service officer.
Ray:
You make a good case that Morell isn’t going to be the objective, unpoliticized deputy that Petraeus is going to need. He may be what Petraeus wants, but not what he needs to do a good job.
You make the case that, like McLaughlin, he’s going to give the veneer of an analyst’s integrity to decision making without any of the burdens (integrity, nonpoliticization, tradecraft, etc.) that make the analyst imprimatur meaningful. Like McLaughlin, he seems eager to play handmaiden to a predetermined agenda.
In fact, the case you make, correctly, is that Morell is the quintessential intelligence community bureaucrat – who has survived and prospered by subscribing to a particular worldview and steering clear of the alternatives declared off-limits by the U.S. right wing.
A couple of more specific comments:
–Your use of the word “loyalty”: Morell will be loyal to his boss – i.e., he will not upset him – the way McLaughlin was loyal to Tenet. That ignores, of course, that the deputy’s job is to protect his boss from himself and from his own biases.
McLaughlin’s “loyalty” to Tenet wound up screwing Tenet, and Morell’s “loyalty” to Petraeus is going to do the same. A man like Petraeus shows up with HUGE blind spots, and Morell – rather than help him see into those blind spots – almost certainly will reinforce them.
Your use of the word “loyalty” conveys that it’s a virus that will harm Petraeus. And that’s what it is.
The “winds blowing from the White House” requires a little elaboration. Just as Panetta was captured, so has this White House been – via the person of CIA veteran John Brennan on site. Brennan, of course, is the fellow who could not get confirmed as director because of his well known past history, so he’s running things from the White House.
The number of Obama flip-flops on intelligence issues has been stunning. The “winds,” you might say, have been blowing from CIA’s own Tenet protégé Brennan.
I personally would say Morell, like McLaughlin, knows and accepts that the operations people and their rightwing allies in the Admin, at the Pentagon, and in the Congress (and there are many!) set the direction the wind blows; Morell will always urge his boss to tack accordingly.
In fact, the parallels with McLaughlin are strong — an analysis directorate fellow of modest capabilities, desperate for acceptance by the operations people and the rightwing downtown, jettisoning tradecraft and going with the flow.
The Gorman piece in the WSJ was disgraceful cooptation in action. The fact that she could list his many failures as “lessons learned” was amazing. It’s as if the rightwing were signaling to Petraeus not to judge Morell by his repeated failures and repeated inaction; judge him by our right-wing love for him.
On the many failures, I don’t have first-hand knowledge of Morell’s role in the historic intelligence cook-job of WMD and the fateful State of the Union lies about yellow cake; all I know is that Alan Foley was the designated representative in that coordination.
But your sourcing of Tenet on that is compelling — and I think your sanity-check on Morell’s performance is fair.
–Words like “wow-response” are also fair — and effective. The “wow” factor is used to shock and awe people – to squeeze them into the tiny space in which conformity is expected and challenges rejected.
For me, particularly with a weak Administration with no policy bearings like this one, the problem is that operations are done for operations’ sake – sans policy, sans review.
I’m reading Joby Warrick’s book, and his worship of targeters is somewhat jarring when there’s no discussion of the number of innocent people killed and no discussion of why this is an “intelligence” vice military mission. We know why, but his readers don’t – making such worship rather cynical.
You’re probably right that it “strains credulity” that Morell didn’t know how fraudulent the whole National Intelligence Estimate on WMD in Iraq was. I just don’t know, however, whether he was able intellectually to see what was going on.
He was so close to power and so close to their mindset and so eager to stay in their good graces that he may have believed all the horse manure.
Wrapped up as he was, he may not have fully appreciated what the thing was – especially because key elements of the intelligence community funneling info to him were also true-believers — as were those in charge of community analysis.
Who could ever have been giving Morell an alternative view? The most senior people were all true-believers. It was very much frowned upon to ask real questions.
So how could a man of Morell’s background and capabilities ask them? If you preferred not to say outright that Morell was guilty of fraud, you could be somewhat more charitable and put it this way: He was surrounded by true-believers and didn’t have the fortitude or candlepower, or even perceived space, to question the bogus intelligence he was involved in validating.
Not a good harbinger for the future.
The second comment (on the remarks above) is from Larry C Johnson, former CIA intelligence officer.
Your observations provide important context. The lies that paved the road to war in Iraq are being revived this week as part of the 10-year anniversary of 9/11.
We have not learned a damned thing. Meanwhile, Iraq remains a deadly place for the various Iraq factions and our actions have completely disrupted the balance of power in the Middle East. Of course, neither the media nor the majority of the pundits want to focus on that.
And a brief but important point made by first commenter in reaction:
And cranking up for Iran?
Comment from Mary McCarthy, former Senior Intelligence Service officer and White House official
You asked if I knew Morell and what he is like. I do; you nailed it.
The only moment of discomfort is when you use Tenet as a compass point for the actual truth. Because, of course, Tenet often has his own version of the facts.
An earlier version of this article first appeared on Consortiumnews.com.


24 Comments so far
Show AllThis sounds like bad news for the Middle East and the likelihood of war with Iran alot more likely..."Intelligence" seems an oxymoron in the upper circles of CIA...
I like the reference from a "recently retired Senior Intelligence Service office" to the Obama Administration:
"For me, particularly with a weak Administration with no policy bearings like this one,"
Thank you, Mr. McGovern, for this truly informative article. Quite a bit of this information has been published in the past by Commondreams, but your deft connecting of the (human) dots is inordinately helpful in putting a full narrative together. And while you describe the former CIA as a place where dissent was helpful, principled, and even appreciated... in my view, your acts of conscience now, from this laser-sharp expose, to your participation in the recently thwarted Flotilla (to Israel) are proof positive of the cathartic power of making amends. Thank you. More voices like yours NEED to speak up... lest lies turn our nation to ashes, dust and ruin.
My first reaction when I read the article was fuck you mister but then I thought about you and your intelligent description of trolls trying to discredit valuable authors and how no matter what nobody ever could get every thing 100% right 100% of the time. And I do appreciate the insight Mc Govern brings on that Morell character (I also admire him very much for turning his back on the horrendous clintona) however what got me going is the fact that he equates integrity with working for the CIA, for f*ck sake the C.I.A!!! I have the same sick feeling when relatives here in France tell me that the colonies weren’t all that bad didn’t we bring them civilization (and we are talking lefties here not some crazy nationalists) or Usan friends turning a blind eye on the real foundation of the USA, namely genocide and slavery (including indentured whites). Wasn’t it Hannah Arendt who observing Eishman during his trial argued on the absolute ordinary evil of the efficient bureaucrat? So thanks to you I exercised restraint but I’d like to see one day a full mea culpa from mister Mc Govern on his role in the blood drenched CIA.
veenataos wrote:
"Wasn’t it Hannah Arendt who observing Eishman (sic) during his trial argued on the absolute ordinary evil of the efficient bureaucrat?"
Yes she did. Hannah Arendt recorded that Eichmann had undergone evaluation by a number of psychiatrists and was found to have no significant underlying psychiatric disorder.
Eichmann had stated to investigators that he was well educated and intelligent. The presiding judge at Eichmann's trial asked Eichmann if he was familiar with Immanuel Kant's "categorical imperative". Kant wrote:
"Act according to that maxim which you can at the same time will to become a universal law."
In other words, Kant says that we should act in a manner that we would will everyone to act. Hannah Arendt, who was well versed on the works of moral philosophers, stated that she had never heard an explanation of Kant's categorical imperative that was more complete than that which Eichmann provided to Judge Landau at his trial.
Hannah Arendt concluded that Eichmann was not an inherently evil man. He was an efficient bureaucrat who had lost his ability to think critically. She referred to him as a "desk murderer".
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"but I’d like to see one day a full mea culpa from mister Mc Govern on his role in the blood drenched CIA."
Nobody will ever give that in one day. When you're out of serving or working for any company related to the military and no longer interested in returning, chances are that you're either growing a class conscious, has what it takes to survive and get back your goodwill, or both. It's a lot to explain but what I'm trying to say is that you have to give them a chance and not pelt them. I dunno if you're aware of this but millions of Americans are tied directly or indirectly to the MIC. Not all of them are pro-war and plenty of them are progressive/liberal. At France isn't that way and your country's economy isn't as tied to the war machine and people are not so aggressive unlike Americans that you don't have as many French working for anything related to the military. I can't guarantee that your country will stay that way if austerity gets its way and more French people end up having to choose between goodwill but risk of not being able to keep up with the rising costs of living and survival but at the cost of long term guilt associated with working with a bad type of industry even when they had no other choice for survival.
I don’t think I have pelted McGovern in any way and to be fair I know it is essential we have people like him having some conscious, writing and acting on this side (more or less) of the divide, still though he talks about loyalty and integrity to the good old CIA from the time he served there, when was that; the 70s, the 80s, the 90s, my memory is not that short that I have forgotten what happened then due to CIA peddling in countless countries (I won’t even begin to make a list I think you know what I’m talking about). As for austerity in France we’ve had some form of it off and on since the late 70s when outsourcing began in earnest, unemployment has never been under 8% for 30 years, it’s only by the sheer resistance and the willingness of the people to call out their politicians that we still retain some of the social contract we agreed (as a nation) upon on the ruins of 1944, contract expanded along the years by demonstrations, strikes, even riots… One thing our society may not be as militarized as in the US but we understand that one way or another we work (unwillingly most of the time and unknowingly sometimes) for the corporate empire.
Thanks for the clarification and sorry to hear that about France. Most people on this site and other progressive sites never mentioned all that about France and in many ways, I thought France was a whole lot better than that. It's interesting that France kept its cool all these years while the US would never be that tolerating on unemployment but our country has its data skewered on unemployment so it's possible that unemployment is actually much higher than your country's and may have been that way for so long. We Americans aren't all that good in organizing or uniting on the left or we might have been successful at abolishing the CIA. Hopefully, our empire will collapse before your country gets anymore affliction from us. Hang in there and keep up the good work.
The irony is French people would never accept the dismal level of social programs and the huge gap between rich and the rest in the US, as a matter of fact every time a public social program is even discussed in the legislature there are huge demonstrations in the order of at least 100 000 (and not only in Paris) as a warning shot to not push it, some times we lose as in the retirement struggle last fall but then we know there are national elections in 2012 and the price is going to come due. Never ever the US version of health care or higher education would be tolerated here, somewhat it is understood that unemployment is manufactured so we more or less accept to pick up the slack through taxation, solidarity (a word I never see in Usan’s forum) is a national cause, the dream was every body on earth should get what we are fighting for, now days as we become more and more under the boot of corporate empire it’s more like sorry dude you cost too much I’m on my way to have those kids work in the poorest countries and the poorest the better. People are down right scared and outraged and start to realize they’ve been bought and more or less pacified by cheap junk. The fall should be interesting here.
Thank you for an informative article. While reading it, I came up with a new thought.
The PDB that said AQ determined to strike, and Bush's comment said " ok, you have played your part in this scheme" was just the first part of the plot they had hatched. Can't believe it took me so long. Since they knew the date, why did they tell public officials to stop flying in June? Curious. Any answers?
If they got specific on the date, they could not claim surprise and it would make them accomplices just on the face of it.
They are not as stupid as they want us to think... that is their guarded secret and confusion is their MO.
Excuse me?
McGovern says the CIA better served America’s need when it the CIA had less sycophants. He pretends that with reforms, the CIA could be a source of truth, and a defense of liberties
LIES!
The CIA has always been evil. It does not matter whether it is filled with yes-men and sycophants. The CIA’s only function is to help the rich get richer. It topples foreign governments that nationalize their resources or their central banks. It arranges for civil wars, military coups and NATO invasions. Remember El Salvador and Nicaragua? How about Chile and Argentina? The Iranian coup of 1953? The CIA is now in Mexico, stoking and exploiting the drug war. It has a torture center in Somalia. The list is endless.
Shame on Common Dreams for reprinting McGovern’s filth. And shame on CD readers who let themselves be seduced by it.
Since its inception, before it was the CIA, the organization proved itself to be a ship of fools. Truman put up with it, Eisenhower distrusted it, and Kennedy hated it - I guess because they had nothing else to fall back on. Everything the organization touched turned to shit, if not before, then certainly in the time of the bay of pigs and fg powers u2 fiasco and thereafter. What they produced was nothing but shit. The org recruited its confederacy of dunces from such fine jingoist, nationalist, ass licking institutions as Fordham U and Georgetown. I knew all this when I played rugby with FU's old maroon team back in the early '60s.
Think of all the billions of dollars that were pored down that rat hole since the 40's. And the ignorant, clueless voting population of this imperial lunatic asylum continues to pour its wealth down that rat hole, the FBI's, the NSA's, and that mindless abomination of the DHS. Abandon all hope, yeh who enter here. Ah si signore - Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'entrate ....,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1NquIKlMQ4U&feature=player_embedded
also: on the domestic front;
Aug 24, 8:05 PM EDT
With CIA help, NYPD moves covertly in Muslim areas
By MATT APUZZO and ADAM GOLDMAN
Associated Press
FULL ARTICLE:
http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BC_US_SEPT_11_NYPD_INTELLIGENCE_ABRIDGED?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT
(EXCERPT OF INTRODUCTION):
“The day that `changed everything’
10 years after 9/11, 1 family fights on in court
Mexican soap opera takes close look at 9/11
Scientists man bioterror front lines post-9/11
Buy AP Photo Reprints
NEW YORK (AP) — Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the New York Police Department has become one of the nation’s most aggressive domestic intelligence agencies, targeting ethnic communities in ways that would run afoul of civil liberties rules if practiced by the federal government, an Associated Press investigation has found.
The operations have benefited from unprecedented help from the CIA, a partnership that has blurred the line between foreign and domestic spying.
The department has dispatched undercover officers, known as “rakers,” into minority neighborhoods as part of a human mapping program, according to officials directly involved in the program.”
On the surface it seems to be justifiable, the implications are not of degree, however, but qualitatively unprecedented and is going unchallenged.
You can be sure that whatever the government does in secret will be evil. The government doesn't plan surprise birthday parties. More Evil, more Secrecy, more Secrecy, more Evil.
Conspiracy In Action. That's what it should stand for.
There's a reason why what the CIA does must remain covert. Because the average 'merkan' would be shocked, disillusioned and outraged. Someone mentioned that anything the CIA touches turns to crap. Well, the most common thing they touch are the lives of millions of (usually innocent) people around the world, who subsequently suffer greatly because of it. The agency should be dismantled, deeply investigated, and the results should be widely and comprehensively published for the world to look at and wonder. I have read a number of books on the type of morals, mentality and behavior taking place within this organization, and scary is just scratching the surface. How many lives have been destroyed by them? Countless. How many lives have been protected? Compared to the fomented insurrections against democratically elected gov'ts, compared to the coup d'etats, the false-flags, the undermining of valid opposition to tyranny, the assassinations of dissidents, revolutionaries and radicals... compared to the lives destroyed by unwitting druggings, extrajudicial kidnappings, and habitual torture, I would say the number of people the CIA has helped pales in comparison to those they've harmed.
Of course, all this dirty work is helping *somebody*.
The courts of law and the Lawyers are just as much under the thumb of the Bankster's Class War Machine with control of information as the media and most of the public.
This is bigger than the CIA and too big to fail is the first step towards too big to last.
Nothing lasts forever except change.
It is up to us to stop the circular firing squad we are engaged in and help the process of change.
From my experience with the CIA and the larger system it feeds off, it is gonna take a lot more time and effort.
A hint from Buckminster Fuller:
CIA=Capitalism's Invisible Army
Restate the initials using the words in most any reading. The practice can be quite clarifying.
OK. all well and good; now we have been told a bit more about the "how". Now tell us all about the 'why". Thanking you in advance.
It is difficult to imagine that an organization like the CIA, with billions in unaccounted money, an unknown number of front organizations, a certain attraction to a host of college students, an insider self-perpetuating bureaucracy that mimics some religious organizations (esp. the secrecy), several supportive intellectuals in academic, business, NGO, and "social network" organizations, etc., etc., would find it easier to work with genuinely democratic societies than with tyrannies, however disguised.
Such organizations seek "predictability," as it enables "planning," while as many have observed, real democracy can be messy and outcomes may not be known, as every once in a while a new variable can come out of nowhere, which is why democracy is evolutionarily beneficial while every straight-laced politically-servile bureaucratic system has ended up crashing, regardless of ideology and ultimately regardless of evident "efficiency." (It is reported that, for example, the Nazis kept detailed records.)
I have no problem with Ray McGovern, whose writings I respect. We who are outside that System may be correct to eviscerate them intellectually, morally, culturally, even cosmologically, but please recognize the courage of this man. And his publishing at CD (and a few other venues) ought also be appreciated, given the cacophony of spitterers in what remains of the ether (aka, the Electromagnetic Spectrum...). McGovern is a careful writer. He has a deep and abiding interest in history.
So do I. I grew up totally opposed to government surveillance systems. When I was a small child the Rosenbergs were big news, betrayal of atomic secrets and all. I knew their names and I knew they were Jews, and my German-Jew mother had married a Midwestern Mormon.
Read between McGovern's lines. I think he sees the need for Multiculteralism even if in his active days with the CIA, it was in strong opposition to that. The CIA, after all, is mostly the product of elite NE schools of the Skull & Bones variety.
In other words, the CIA could not but develop its own ideas of what was best for the preservation and expansion of its OWN agenda, and semi-unregulated Capitalism hides their activities quite well. Someone above wrote that most Presidents from even Truman on were at least suspicious of it, and JFK "hated" it.
Can we have a National Commission of Truthful Reconciliation? Can we discover who "really" runs this country, and why we the Everyday People are kept in a constant state of FEAR and discombobulation when most of us really are interested and concerned and want things to change for the better?
Keep it up, Ray! Important work.
-30-
OLE MAN RIVER: Great post. Incidentally, when I was in high school, I read the book, "The Implosion Conspiracy" by Louis Nizer, and it made the case that the Rosenbergs were framed. This was the whole cold war era, re'ving up McCarthyism phase, and scapegoats were needed. They always are. It's a fascinating book, although I'm not even sure it's still in print.
The truth is coming and the pun is kinda cool too.
Abolishing the CIA used to be in the Libertarian platform but as cassandra mentioned the other day, the platform was neoconservatized by Boortz and his goons. The CIA needs to be abolished given the magnitude of damage it has done not only to this country but also other countries all over the world.