If Seymour Hersh is right, aggressive neoconservatives will have a free hand
in George W. Bush's second term. -- The investigative reporter
extraordinaire reports in the new number of the New Yorker that those who
think that a new realism and pragmatism is in the cards for George W. Bush's
second term are wrong. -- According to Hersh, the adminstration's
intentions are as ideologically fanatical as ever, and the neoconservatives are
in the driver's seat. -- Hersh is generally believed to have an
unparalleled circle of inside informants in government defense and intelligence
circles. -- Hersh's main points in his new article: --
(1) "The war on terrorism [will] be expanded, and effectively placed under
the Pentagon’s control. The President has signed a series of findings and
executive orders [to get a sense of how important such orders are, see Steven
Aftergood's Jan. 11 piece --H.A.] authorizing secret commando
groups and other Special Forces units to conduct covert operations against
suspected terrorist targets in as many as ten nations in the Middle East and
South Asia." -- (2) "The next strategic target [is] Iran." --
(3) "The Administration has been conducting secret reconnaissance missions
inside Iran at least since last summer. . . . The goal is to identify
and isolate three dozen, and perhaps more, . . . targets that could be
destroyed by precision strikes and short-term commando raids." --
(4) "An American commando task force has been set up in South Asia and
. . . has been penetrating eastern Iran from Afghanistan in a hunt for
underground installations." -- (5) "The government of Pervez
Musharraf, the Pakistani President, has won . . . American assurance
that Pakistan will not have to hand over A. Q. Khan." -- (6)
"Defense Department civilians, under the leadership of Douglas Feith, have been
working with Israeli planners and consultants to develop and refine potential
nuclear, chemical-weapons, and missile targets inside Iran." -- (7)
"Strategists at the headquarters of the U.S. Central Command, in Tampa, Florida,
have been asked to revise the military’s war plan, providing for a maximum
ground and air invasion of Iran." -- (8) "The hawks in the
Administration believe that it will soon become clear that the Europeans’
negotiated approach [to Iran] cannot succeed, and that at that time the
Administration will act." -- (9) "A broad counter-terrorism
Presidential finding [permits] the Pentagon 'to operate unilaterally in a number
of countries where there is a perception of a clear and evident terrorist
threat.' . . . Algeria, Sudan, Yemen, Syria, and Malaysia.
(. . . Tunisia is also on the list.)" -- (10)
"Rumsfeld . . ., Stephen Cambone, . . . and Army
Lieutenant General William G. (Jerry) Boykin, will be part of the chain of
command for the new commando operations. Relevant members of the House and
Senate intelligence committees have been briefed." -- (11) "The
legal questions about the Pentagon’s right to conduct covert operations without
informing Congress have not been resolved." -- (12) "The new rules
will enable the Special Forces community to set up what it calls 'action teams'
in the target countries overseas. . . . [A] former high-level
intelligence official . . . said. “The objective now is to recruit
locals in any area we want. And we aren’t going to tell Congress about
it.” -- (13) "The intelligence-reform bill . . . was 'a
compromise . . . in which the Pentagon keeps its marbles and the
C.I.A. loses theirs.'" ...
Fact
Annals of National Security
THE COMING WARS By Seymour M. Hersh
New Yorker January 24 & 31, 2005 (posted Jan. 17)
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?050124fa_fact
** What the Pentagon can now do in secret. **
George W. Bush’s reëlection was not his only victory last fall. The President
and his national-security advisers have consolidated control over the military
and intelligence communities’ strategic analyses and covert operations to a
degree unmatched since the rise of the post-Second World War national-security
state. Bush has an aggressive and ambitious agenda for using that control --
against the mullahs in Iran and against targets in the ongoing war on terrorism
-- during his second term. The C.I.A. will continue to be downgraded, and the
agency will increasingly serve, as one government consultant with close ties to
the Pentagon put it, as “facilitators” of policy emanating from President Bush
and Vice-President Dick Cheney. This process is well under way.
Despite the deteriorating security situation in Iraq, the Bush Administration
has not reconsidered its basic long-range policy goal in the Middle East: the
establishment of democracy throughout the region. Bush’s reëlection is regarded
within the Administration as evidence of America’s support for his decision to
go to war. It has reaffirmed the position of the neoconservatives in the
Pentagon’s civilian leadership who advocated the invasion, including Paul
Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, and Douglas Feith, the
Under-secretary for Policy. According to a former high-level intelligence
official, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld met with the Joint Chiefs of
Staff shortly after the election and told them, in essence, that the naysayers
had been heard and the American people did not accept their message. Rumsfeld
added that America was committed to staying in Iraq and that there would be no
second-guessing.
“This is a war against terrorism, and Iraq is just one campaign. The Bush
Administration is looking at this as a huge war zone,” the former high-level
intelligence official told me. “Next, we’re going to have the Iranian campaign.
We’ve declared war and the bad guys, wherever they are, are the enemy. This is
the last hurrah -- we’ve got four years, and want to come out of this saying we
won the war on terrorism.”
Bush and Cheney may have set the policy, but it is Rumsfeld who has directed
its implementation and has absorbed much of the public criticism when things
went wrong -- whether it was prisoner abuse in Abu Ghraib or lack of sufficient
armor plating for G.I.s’ vehicles in Iraq. Both Democratic and Republican
lawmakers have called for Rumsfeld’s dismissal, and he is not widely admired
inside the military. Nonetheless, his reappointment as Defense Secretary was
never in doubt.
Rumsfeld will become even more important during the second term. In
interviews with past and present intelligence and military officials, I was told
that the agenda had been determined before the Presidential election, and much
of it would be Rumsfeld’s responsibility. The war on terrorism would be
expanded, and effectively placed under the Pentagon’s control. The President has
signed a series of findings and executive orders authorizing secret commando
groups and other Special Forces units to conduct covert operations against
suspected terrorist targets in as many as ten nations in the Middle East and
South Asia.
The President’s decision enables Rumsfeld to run the operations off the books
-- free from legal restrictions imposed on the C.I.A. Under current law, all
C.I.A. covert activities overseas must be authorized by a Presidential finding
and reported to the Senate and House intelligence committees. (The laws were
enacted after a series of scandals in the nineteen-seventies involving C.I.A.
domestic spying and attempted assassinations of foreign leaders.) “The Pentagon
doesn’t feel obligated to report any of this to Congress,” the former high-level
intelligence official said. “They don’t even call it ‘covert ops’ -- it’s too
close to the C.I.A. phrase. In their view, it’s ‘black reconnaissance.’ They’re
not even going to tell the CINCs” -- the regional American military
commanders-in-chief. (The Defense Department and the White House did not respond
to requests for comment on this story.)
In my interviews, I was repeatedly told that the next strategic target was
Iran. “Everyone is saying, ‘You can’t be serious about targeting Iran. Look at
Iraq,’” the former intelligence official told me. “But they say, ‘We’ve got some
lessons learned -- not militarily, but how we did it politically. We’re not
going to rely on agency pissants.’ No loose ends, and that’s why the C.I.A. is
out of there.”
For more than a year, France, Germany, Britain, and other countries in the
European Union have seen preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon as a race
against time -- and against the Bush Administration. They have been negotiating
with the Iranian leadership to give up its nuclear-weapons ambitions in exchange
for economic aid and trade benefits. Iran has agreed to temporarily halt its
enrichment programs, which generate fuel for nuclear power plants but also could
produce weapons-grade fissile material. (Iran claims that such facilities are
legal under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, or N.P.T., to which it is a
signator, and that it has no intention of building a bomb.) But the goal of the
current round of talks, which began in December in Brussels, is to persuade
Tehran to go further, and dismantle its machinery. Iran insists, in return, that
it needs to see some concrete benefits from the Europeans -- oil-production
technology, heavy-industrial equipment, and perhaps even permission to purchase
a fleet of Airbuses. (Iran has been denied access to technology and many goods
owing to sanctions.)
The Europeans have been urging the Bush Administration to join in these
negotiations. The Administration has refused to do so. The civilian leadership
in the Pentagon has argued that no diplomatic progress on the Iranian nuclear
threat will take place unless there is a credible threat of military action.
“The neocons say negotiations are a bad deal,” a senior official of the
International Atomic Energy Agency (I.A.E.A.) told me. “And the only thing the
Iranians understand is pressure. And that they also need to be whacked.”
The core problem is that Iran has successfully hidden the extent of its
nuclear program, and its progress. Many Western intelligence agencies, including
those of the United States, believe that Iran is at least three to five years
away from a capability to independently produce nuclear warheads -- although its
work on a missile-delivery system is far more advanced. Iran is also widely
believed by Western intelligence agencies and the I.A.E.A. to have serious
technical problems with its weapons system, most notably in the production of
the hexafluoride gas needed to fabricate nuclear warheads.
A retired senior C.I.A. official, one of many who left the agency recently,
told me that he was familiar with the assessments, and confirmed that Iran is
known to be having major difficulties in its weapons work. He also acknowledged
that the agency’s timetable for a nuclear Iran matches the European estimates --
assuming that Iran gets no outside help. “The big wild card for us is that you
don’t know who is capable of filling in the missing parts for them,” the
recently retired official said. “North Korea? Pakistan? We don’t know what parts
are missing.”
One Western diplomat told me that the Europeans believed they were in what he
called a “lose-lose position” as long as the United States refuses to get
involved. “France, Germany, and the U.K. cannot succeed alone, and everybody
knows it,” the diplomat said. “If the U.S. stays outside, we don’t have enough
leverage, and our effort will collapse.” The alternative would be to go to the
Security Council, but any resolution imposing sanctions would likely be vetoed
by China or Russia, and then “the United Nations will be blamed and the
Americans will say, ‘The only solution is to bomb.’”
A European Ambassador noted that President Bush is scheduled to visit Europe
in February, and that there has been public talk from the White House about
improving the President’s relationship with America’s E.U. allies. In that
context, the Ambassador told me, “I’m puzzled by the fact that the United States
is not helping us in our program. How can Washington maintain its stance without
seriously taking into account the weapons issue?”
The Israeli government is, not surprisingly, skeptical of the European
approach. Silvan Shalom, the Foreign Minister, said in an interview last week in
Jerusalem,with another New Yorker journalist, “I don’t like what’s
happening. We were encouraged at first when the Europeans got involved. For a
long time, they thought it was just Israel’s problem. But then they saw that the
[Iranian] missiles themselves were longer range and could reach all of Europe,
and they became very concerned. Their attitude has been to use the carrot and
the stick -- but all we see so far is the carrot.” He added, “If they can’t
comply, Israel cannot live with Iran having a nuclear bomb.”
In a recent essay, Patrick Clawson, an Iran expert who is the deputy director
of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (and a supporter of the
Administration), articulated the view that force, or the threat of it, was a
vital bargaining tool with Iran. Clawson wrote that if Europe wanted coöperation
with the Bush Administration it “would do well to remind Iran that the military
option remains on the table.” He added that the argument that the European
negotiations hinged on Washington looked like “a preëmptive excuse for the
likely breakdown of the E.U.-Iranian talks.” In a subsequent conversation with
me, Clawson suggested that, if some kind of military action was inevitable, “it
would be much more in Israel’s interest -- and Washington’s -- to take covert
action. The style of this Administration is to use overwhelming force -- ‘shock
and awe.’ But we get only one bite of the apple.”
There are many military and diplomatic experts who dispute the notion that
military action, on whatever scale, is the right approach. Shahram Chubin, an
Iranian scholar who is the director of research at the Geneva Centre for
Security Policy, told me, “It’s a fantasy to think that there’s a good American
or Israeli military option in Iran.” He went on, “The Israeli view is that this
is an international problem. ‘You do it,’ they say to the West. ‘Otherwise, our
Air Force will take care of it.’” In 1981, the Israeli Air Force destroyed
Iraq’s Osirak reactor, setting its nuclear program back several years. But the
situation now is both more complex and more dangerous, Chubin said. The Osirak
bombing “drove the Iranian nuclear-weapons program underground, to hardened,
dispersed sites,” he said. “You can’t be sure after an attack that you’ll get
away with it. The U.S. and Israel would not be certain whether all the sites had
been hit, or how quickly they’d be rebuilt. Meanwhile, they’d be waiting for an
Iranian counter-attack that could be military or terrorist or diplomatic. Iran
has long-range missiles and ties to Hezbollah, which has drones -- you can’t
begin to think of what they’d do in response.”
Chubin added that Iran could also renounce the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty. “It’s better to have them cheating within the system,” he said.
“Otherwise, as victims, Iran will walk away from the treaty and inspections
while the rest of the world watches the N.P.T. unravel before their eyes.”
The Administration has been conducting secret reconnaissance missions inside
Iran at least since last summer. Much of the focus is on the accumulation of
intelligence and targeting information on Iranian nuclear, chemical, and missile
sites, both declared and suspected. The goal is to identify and isolate three
dozen, and perhaps more, such targets that could be destroyed by precision
strikes and short-term commando raids. “The civilians in the Pentagon want to go
into Iran and destroy as much of the military infrastructure as possible,” the
government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon told me.
Some of the missions involve extraordinary coöperation. For example, the
former high-level intelligence official told me that an American commando task
force has been set up in South Asia and is now working closely with a group of
Pakistani scientists and technicians who had dealt with Iranian counterparts.
(In 2003, the I.A.E.A. disclosed that Iran had been secretly receiving nuclear
technology from Pakistan for more than a decade, and had withheld that
information from inspectors.) The American task force, aided by the information
from Pakistan, has been penetrating eastern Iran from Afghanistan in a hunt for
underground installations. The task-force members, or their locally recruited
agents, secreted remote detection devices -- known as sniffers -- capable of
sampling the atmosphere for radioactive emissions and other evidence of
nuclear-enrichment programs.
Getting such evidence is a pressing concern for the Bush Administration. The
former high-level intelligence official told me, “They don’t want to make any
W.M.D. intelligence mistakes, as in Iraq. The Republicans can’t have two of
those. There’s no education in the second kick of a mule.” The official added
that the government of Pervez Musharraf, the Pakistani President, has won a high
price for its coöperation -- American assurance that Pakistan will not have to
hand over A. Q. Khan, known as the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb, to the
I.A.E.A. or to any other international authorities for questioning. For two
decades, Khan has been linked to a vast consortium of nuclear-black-market
activities. Last year, Musharraf professed to be shocked when Khan, in the face
of overwhelming evidence, “confessed” to his activities. A few days later,
Musharraf pardoned him, and so far he has refused to allow the I.A.E.A. or
American intelligence to interview him. Khan is now said to be living under
house arrest in a villa in Islamabad. “It’s a deal -- a trade-off,” the former
high-level intelligence official explained. “‘Tell us what you know about Iran
and we will let your A. Q. Khan guys go.’ It’s the neoconservatives’ version of
short-term gain at long-term cost. They want to prove that Bush is the
anti-terrorism guy who can handle Iran and the nuclear threat, against the
long-term goal of eliminating the black market for nuclear proliferation.”
The agreement comes at a time when Musharraf, according to a former
high-level Pakistani diplomat, has authorized the expansion of Pakistan’s
nuclear-weapons arsenal. “Pakistan still needs parts and supplies, and needs to
buy them in the clandestine market,” the former diplomat said. “The U.S. has
done nothing to stop it.”
There has also been close, and largely unacknowledged, coöperation with
Israel. The government consultant with ties to the Pentagon said that the
Defense Department civilians, under the leadership of Douglas Feith, have been
working with Israeli planners and consultants to develop and refine potential
nuclear, chemical-weapons, and missile targets inside Iran. (After Osirak, Iran
situated many of its nuclear sites in remote areas of the east, in an attempt to
keep them out of striking range of other countries, especially Israel. Distance
no longer lends such protection, however: Israel has acquired three submarines
capable of launching cruise missiles and has equipped some of its aircraft with
additional fuel tanks, putting Israeli F-16I fighters within the range of most
Iranian targets.)
“They believe that about three-quarters of the potential targets can be
destroyed from the air, and a quarter are too close to population centers, or
buried too deep, to be targeted,” the consultant said. Inevitably, he added,
some suspicious sites need to be checked out by American or Israeli commando
teams -- in on-the-ground surveillance -- before being targeted.
The Pentagon’s contingency plans for a broader invasion of Iran are also
being updated. Strategists at the headquarters of the U.S. Central Command, in
Tampa, Florida, have been asked to revise the military’s war plan, providing for
a maximum ground and air invasion of Iran. Updating the plan makes sense,
whether or not the Administration intends to act, because the geopolitics of the
region have changed dramatically in the last three years. Previously, an
American invasion force would have had to enter Iran by sea, by way of the
Persian Gulf or the Gulf of Oman; now troops could move in on the ground, from
Afghanistan or Iraq. Commando units and other assets could be introduced through
new bases in the Central Asian republics.
It is possible that some of the American officials who talk about the need to
eliminate Iran’s nuclear infrastructure are doing so as part of a propaganda
campaign aimed at pressuring Iran to give up its weapons planning. If so, the
signals are not always clear. President Bush, who after 9/11 famously depicted
Iran as a member of the “axis of evil,” is now publicly emphasizing the need for
diplomacy to run its course. “We don’t have much leverage with the Iranians
right now,” the President said at a news conference late last year. “Diplomacy
must be the first choice, and always the first choice of an administration
trying to solve an issue of . . . nuclear armament. And we’ll continue to press
on diplomacy.”
In my interviews over the past two months, I was given a much harsher view.
The hawks in the Administration believe that it will soon become clear that the
Europeans’ negotiated approach cannot succeed, and that at that time the
Administration will act. “We’re not dealing with a set of National Security
Council option papers here,” the former high-level intelligence official told
me. “They’ve already passed that wicket. It’s not if we’re going to do anything
against Iran. They’re doing it.”
The immediate goals of the attacks would be to destroy, or at least
temporarily derail, Iran’s ability to go nuclear. But there are other, equally
purposeful, motives at work. The government consultant told me that the hawks in
the Pentagon, in private discussions, have been urging a limited attack on Iran
because they believe it could lead to a toppling of the religious leadership.
“Within the soul of Iran there is a struggle between secular nationalists and
reformers, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the fundamentalist Islamic
movement,” the consultant told me. “The minute the aura of invincibility which
the mullahs enjoy is shattered, and with it the ability to hoodwink the West,
the Iranian regime will collapse” -- like the former Communist regimes in
Romania, East Germany, and the Soviet Union. Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz share that
belief, he said.
“The idea that an American attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities would produce
a popular uprising is extremely ill-informed,” said Flynt Leverett, a Middle
East scholar who worked on the National Security Council in the Bush
Administration. “You have to understand that the nuclear ambition in Iran is
supported across the political spectrum, and Iranians will perceive attacks on
these sites as attacks on their ambitions to be a major regional player and a
modern nation that’s technologically sophisticated.” Leverett, who is now a
senior fellow at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy, at the Brookings
Institution, warned that an American attack, if it takes place, “will produce an
Iranian backlash against the United States and a rallying around the regime.”
Rumsfeld planned and lobbied for more than two years before getting
Presidential authority, in a series of findings and executive orders, to use
military commandos for covert operations. One of his first steps was
bureaucratic: to shift control of an undercover unit, known then as the Gray Fox
(it has recently been given a new code name), from the Army to the Special
Operations Command (SOCOM), in Tampa. Gray Fox was formally assigned to SOCOM in
July, 2002, at the instigation of Rumsfeld’s office, which meant that the
undercover unit would have a single commander for administration and operational
deployment. Then, last fall, Rumsfeld’s ability to deploy the commandos
expanded. According to a Pentagon consultant, an Execute Order on the Global War
on Terrorism (referred to throughout the government as GWOT) was issued at
Rumsfeld’s direction. The order specifically authorized the military “to find
and finish” terrorist targets, the consultant said. It included a target list
that cited Al Qaeda network members, Al Qaeda senior leadership, and other
high-value targets. The consultant said that the order had been cleared
throughout the national-security bureaucracy in Washington.
In late November, 2004, the Times reported that Bush had set up an
interagency group to study whether it “would best serve the nation” to give the
Pentagon complete control over the C.I.A.’s own élite paramilitary unit, which
has operated covertly in trouble spots around the world for decades. The panel’s
conclusions, due in February, are foregone, in the view of many former C.I.A.
officers. “It seems like it’s going to happen,” Howard Hart, who was chief of
the C.I.A.’s Paramilitary Operations Division before retiring in 1991, told me.
There was other evidence of Pentagon encroachment. Two former C.I.A.
clandestine officers, Vince Cannistraro and Philip Giraldi, who publish
Intelligence Brief, a newsletter for their business clients, reported last month
on the existence of a broad counter-terrorism Presidential finding that
permitted the Pentagon “to operate unilaterally in a number of countries where
there is a perception of a clear and evident terrorist threat. . . . A number of
the countries are friendly to the U.S. and are major trading partners. Most have
been cooperating in the war on terrorism.” The two former officers listed some
of the countries -- Algeria, Sudan, Yemen, Syria, and Malaysia. (I was
subsequently told by the former high-level intelligence official that Tunisia is
also on the list.)
Giraldi, who served three years in military intelligence before joining the
C.I.A., said that he was troubled by the military’s expanded covert assignment.
“I don’t think they can handle the cover,” he told me. “They’ve got to have a
different mind-set. They’ve got to handle new roles and get into foreign
cultures and learn how other people think. If you’re going into a village and
shooting people, it doesn’t matter,” Giraldi added. “But if you’re running
operations that involve finesse and sensitivity, the military can’t do it. Which
is why these kind of operations were always run out of the agency.” I was told
that many Special Operations officers also have serious misgivings.
Rumsfeld and two of his key deputies, Stephen Cambone, the Under-secretary of
Defense for Intelligence, and Army Lieutenant General William G. (Jerry) Boykin,
will be part of the chain of command for the new commando operations. Relevant
members of the House and Senate intelligence committees have been briefed on the
Defense Department’s expanded role in covert affairs, a Pentagon adviser assured
me, but he did not know how extensive the briefings had been.
“I’m conflicted about the idea of operating without congressional oversight,”
the Pentagon adviser said. “But I’ve been told that there will be oversight down
to the specific operation.” A second Pentagon adviser agreed, with a significant
caveat. “There are reporting requirements,” he said. “But to execute the finding
we don’t have to go back and say, ‘We’re going here and there.’ No nitty-gritty
detail and no micromanagement.”
The legal questions about the Pentagon’s right to conduct covert operations
without informing Congress have not been resolved. “It’s a very, very gray
area,” said Jeffrey H. Smith, a West Point graduate who served as the C.I.A.’s
general counsel in the mid-nineteen-nineties. “Congress believes it voted to
include all such covert activities carried out by the armed forces. The military
says, ‘No, the things we’re doing are not intelligence actions under the statute
but necessary military steps authorized by the President, as Commander-in-Chief,
to “prepare the battlefield.”’” Referring to his days at the C.I.A., Smith
added, “We were always careful not to use the armed forces in a covert action
without a Presidential finding. The Bush Administration has taken a much more
aggressive stance.”
In his conversation with me, Smith emphasized that he was unaware of the
military’s current plans for expanding covert action. But he said, “Congress has
always worried that the Pentagon is going to get us involved in some military
misadventure that nobody knows about.”
Under Rumsfeld’s new approach, I was told, U.S. military operatives would be
permitted to pose abroad as corrupt foreign businessmen seeking to buy
contraband items that could be used in nuclear-weapons systems. In some cases,
according to the Pentagon advisers, local citizens could be recruited and asked
to join up with guerrillas or terrorists. This could potentially involve
organizing and carrying out combat operations, or even terrorist activities.
Some operations will likely take place in nations in which there is an American
diplomatic mission, with an Ambassador and a C.I.A. station chief, the Pentagon
consultant said. The Ambassador and the station chief would not necessarily have
a need to know, under the Pentagon’s current interpretation of its reporting
requirement.
The new rules will enable the Special Forces community to set up what it
calls “action teams” in the target countries overseas which can be used to find
and eliminate terrorist organizations. “Do you remember the right-wing execution
squads in El Salvador?” the former high-level intelligence official asked me,
referring to the military-led gangs that committed atrocities in the early
nineteen-eighties. “We founded them and we financed them,” he said. “The
objective now is to recruit locals in any area we want. And we aren’t going to
tell Congress about it.” A former military officer, who has knowledge of the
Pentagon’s commando capabilities, said, “We’re going to be riding with the bad
boys.”
One of the rationales for such tactics was spelled out in a series of
articles by John Arquilla, a professor of defense analysis at the Naval
Postgraduate School, in Monterey, California, and a consultant on terrorism for
the rand corporation. “It takes a network to fight a network,” Arquilla wrote in
a recent article in the San Francisco Chronicle:
“When conventional military operations and bombing failed to defeat the Mau
Mau insurgency in Kenya in the 1950s, the British formed teams of friendly
Kikuyu tribesmen who went about pretending to be terrorists. These ‘pseudo
gangs,’ as they were called, swiftly threw the Mau Mau on the defensive, either
by befriending and then ambushing bands of fighters or by guiding bombers to the
terrorists’ camps. What worked in Kenya a half-century ago has a wonderful
chance of undermining trust and recruitment among today’s terror networks.
Forming new pseudo gangs should not be difficult.
“If a confused young man from Marin County can join up with Al Qaeda,”
Arquilla wrote, referring to John Walker Lindh, the twenty-year-old Californian
who was seized in Afghanistan, “think what professional operatives might do.”
A few pilot covert operations were conducted last year, one Pentagon adviser
told me, and a terrorist cell in Algeria was “rolled up” with American help. The
adviser was referring, apparently, to the capture of Ammari Saifi, known as
Abderrezak le Para, the head of a North African terrorist network affiliated
with Al Qaeda. But at the end of the year there was no agreement within the
Defense Department about the rules of engagement. “The issue is approval for the
final authority,” the former high-level intelligence official said. “Who gets to
say ‘Get this’ or ‘Do this’?”
A retired four-star general said, “The basic concept has always been solid,
but how do you insure that the people doing it operate within the concept of the
law? This is pushing the edge of the envelope.” The general added, “It’s the
oversight. And you’re not going to get Warner” -- John Warner, of Virginia, the
chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee -- “and those guys to exercise
oversight. This whole thing goes to the Fourth Deck.” He was referring to the
floor in the Pentagon where Rumsfeld and Cambone have their offices.
“It’s a finesse to give power to Rumsfeld -- giving him the right to act
swiftly, decisively, and lethally,” the first Pentagon adviser told me. “It’s a
global free-fire zone.”
The Pentagon has tried to work around the limits on covert activities before.
In the early nineteen-eighties, a covert Army unit was set up and authorized to
operate overseas with minimal oversight. The results were disastrous. The
Special Operations program was initially known as Intelligence Support Activity,
or I.S.A., and was administered from a base near Washington (as was, later, Gray
Fox). It was established soon after the failed rescue, in April, 1980, of the
American hostages in Iran, who were being held by revolutionary students after
the Islamic overthrow of the Shah’s regime. At first, the unit was kept secret
from many of the senior generals and civilian leaders in the Pentagon, as well
as from many members of Congress. It was eventually deployed in the Reagan
Administration’s war against the Sandinista government, in Nicaragua. It was
heavily committed to supporting the Contras. By the mid-eighties, however, the
I.S.A.’s operations had been curtailed, and several of its senior officers were
courtmartialled following a series of financial scandals, some involving arms
deals. The affair was known as “the Yellow Fruit scandal,” after the code name
given to one of the I.S.A.’s cover organizations -- and in many ways the group’s
procedures laid the groundwork for the Iran-Contra scandal.
Despite the controversy surrounding Yellow Fruit, the I.S.A. was kept intact
as an undercover unit by the Army. “But we put so many restrictions on it,” the
second Pentagon adviser said. “In I.S.A., if you wanted to travel fifty miles
you had to get a special order. And there were certain areas, such as Lebanon,
where they could not go.” The adviser acknowledged that the current operations
are similar to those two decades earlier, with similar risks -- and, as he saw
it, similar reasons for taking the risks. “What drove them then, in terms of
Yellow Fruit, was that they had no intelligence on Iran,” the adviser told me.
“They had no knowledge of Tehran and no people on the ground who could prepare
the battle space.”
Rumsfeld’s decision to revive this approach stemmed, once again, from a
failure of intelligence in the Middle East, the adviser said. The Administration
believed that the C.I.A. was unable, or unwilling, to provide the military with
the information it needed to effectively challenge stateless terrorism. “One of
the big challenges was that we didn’t have Humint” -- human intelligence --
“collection capabilities in areas where terrorists existed,” the adviser told
me. “Because the C.I.A. claimed to have such a hold on Humint, the way to get
around them, rather than take them on, was to claim that the agency didn’t do
Humint to support Special Forces operations overseas. The C.I.A. fought it.”
Referring to Rumsfeld’s new authority for covert operations, the first Pentagon
adviser told me, “It’s not empowering military intelligence. It’s emasculating
the C.I.A.”
A former senior C.I.A. officer depicted the agency’s eclipse as predictable.
“For years, the agency bent over backward to integrate and coördinate with the
Pentagon,” the former officer said. “We just caved and caved and got what we
deserved. It is a fact of life today that the Pentagon is a five-hundred-pound
gorilla and the C.I.A. director is a chimpanzee.”
There was pressure from the White House, too. A former C.I.A.
clandestine-services officer told me that, in the months after the resignation
of the agency’s director George Tenet, in June, 2004, the White House began
“coming down critically” on analysts in the C.I.A.’s Directorate of Intelligence
(D.I.) and demanded “to see more support for the Administration’s political
position.” Porter Goss, Tenet’s successor, engaged in what the recently retired
C.I.A. official described as a “political purge” in the D.I. Among the targets
were a few senior analysts who were known to write dissenting papers that had
been forwarded to the White House. The recently retired C.I.A. official said,
“The White House carefully reviewed the political analyses of the D.I. so they
could sort out the apostates from the true believers.” Some senior analysts in
the D.I. have turned in their resignations -- quietly, and without revealing the
extent of the disarray.
The White House solidified its control over intelligence last month, when it
forced last-minute changes in the intelligence-reform bill. The legislation,
based substantially on recommendations of the 9/11 Commission, originally gave
broad powers, including authority over intelligence spending, to a new
national-intelligence director. (The Pentagon controls roughly eighty per cent
of the intelligence budget.) A reform bill passed in the Senate by a vote of
96-2. Before the House voted, however, Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld balked. The
White House publicly supported the legislation, but House Speaker Dennis Hastert
refused to bring a House version of the bill to the floor for a vote --
ostensibly in defiance of the President, though it was widely understood in
Congress that Hastert had been delegated to stall the bill. After intense White
House and Pentagon lobbying, the legislation was rewritten. The bill that
Congress approved sharply reduced the new director’s power, in the name of
permitting the Secretary of Defense to maintain his “statutory
responsibilities.” Fred Kaplan, in the online magazine Slate, described the real
issues behind Hastert’s action, quoting a congressional aide who expressed
amazement as White House lobbyists bashed the Senate bill and came up “with all
sorts of ludicrous reasons why it was unacceptable.”
“Rummy’s plan was to get a compromise in the bill in which the Pentagon keeps
its marbles and the C.I.A. loses theirs,” the former high-level intelligence
official told me. “Then all the pieces of the puzzle fall in place. He gets
authority for covert action that is not attributable, the ability to directly
task national-intelligence assets” -- including the many intelligence satellites
that constantly orbit the world.
“Rumsfeld will no longer have to refer anything through the government’s
intelligence wringer,” the former official went on. “The intelligence system was
designed to put competing agencies in competition. What’s missing will be the
dynamic tension that insures everyone’s priorities -- in the C.I.A., the D.O.D.,
the F.B.I., and even the Department of Homeland Security -- are discussed. The
most insidious implication of the new system is that Rumsfeld no longer has to
tell people what he’s doing so they can ask, ‘Why are you doing this?’ or ‘What
are your priorities?’ Now he can keep all of the mattress mice out of it.” |