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Bush
has ordered new CIA chief to eliminate any and all agents who were
‘disloyal’ to him
by
Knut Royce
WASHINGTON BUREAU
Newsday
November 14, 2004
WASHINGTON -- The White House has ordered the
new CIA director, Porter Goss, to purge the agency of officers
believed to have been disloyal to President George W. Bush or of
leaking damaging information to the media about the conduct of the
Iraq war and the hunt for Osama bin Laden, according to
knowledgeable sources.
"The agency is being purged on instructions
from the White House," said a former senior CIA official who
maintains close ties to both the agency and to the White House.
"Goss was given instructions ... to get rid of those soft
leakers and liberal Democrats. The CIA is looked on by the White
House as a hotbed of liberals and people who have been obstructing
the president's agenda."
One of the first casualties appears to be
Stephen R. Kappes, deputy director of clandestine services, the
CIA's most powerful division. The Washington Post reported yesterday
that Kappes had tendered his resignation after a confrontation with
Goss' chief of staff, Patrick Murray, but at the behest of the White
House had agreed to delay his decision till tomorrow.
But the former senior CIA official said that the
White House "doesn't want Steve Kappes to reconsider his
resignation. That might be the spin they put on it, but they want
him out." He said the job had already been offered to the
former chief of the European Division who retired after a spat with
then-CIA Director George Tenet.
Another recently retired top CIA official said
he was unsure Kappes had "officially resigned, but I do know he
was unhappy."
Without confirming or denying that the job offer
had been made, a CIA spokesman asked Newsday to withhold naming the
former officer because of his undercover role over the years. He
said he had no comment about Goss' personnel plans, but he added
that changes at the top are not unusual when new directors come in.
On Friday John E. McLaughlin, a 32-year veteran
of the intelligence division who served as acting CIA director
before Goss took over, announced that he was retiring. The spokesman
said that the retirement had been planned and was unrelated to the
Kappes resignation or to other morale problems inside the CIA.
It could not be learned yesterday if the White
House had identified Kappes, a respected operations officer, as one
of the officials "disloyal" to Bush.
"The president understands and appreciates
the sacrifices made by the members of the intelligence community in
the war against terrorism," said a White House official of the
report that he was purging the CIA of "disloyal"
officials. " . . . The suggestion [that he ordered a purge] is
inaccurate."
But another former CIA official who retains good
contacts within the agency said that Goss and his top aides, who
served on his staff when Goss was chairman of the House intelligence
committee, believe the agency had relied too much over the years on
liaison work with foreign intelligence agencies and had not done
enough to develop its own intelligence collection system.
"Goss is not a believer in liaison
work," said this retired official. But, he said, the CIA's
"best intelligence really comes from liaison work. The CIA is
simply not going to develop the assets [agents and case officers]
that would meet the intelligence requirements."
Tensions between the White House and the CIA
have been the talk of the town for at least a year, especially as
leaks about the mishandling of the Iraq war have dominated front
pages.
Some of the most damaging leaks came from
Michael Scheuer, former head of the CIA's Bin Laden unit, who wrote
a book anonymously called "Imperial Hubris" that
criticized what he said was the administration's lack of resolve in
tracking down the al-Qaida chieftain and the reallocation of
intelligence and military manpower from the war on terrorism to the
war in Iraq. Scheuer announced Thursday that he was resigning from
the agency.
Comment:
When the Nazis came to power in 1933, they did exactly the same
thing. Karl Rove must read more history than we thought.
Deputy Chief
Resigns From CIA
Agency
in Turmoil Under New Director Goss
by Dana Priest and
Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writers
November 13, 2004
The deputy director of the CIA resigned yesterday after a series of
confrontations over the past week between senior operations
officials and CIA Director Porter J. Goss's new chief of staff that
have left the agency in turmoil, according to several current and
former CIA officials.
John E. McLaughlin, a 32-year CIA veteran who was acting director for
two months this summer until Goss took over, resigned after warning
Goss that his top aide, former Capitol Hill staff member Patrick
Murray, was treating senior officials disrespectfully and risked
widespread resignations, the officials said.
Yesterday, the agency official who oversees foreign operations, Deputy
Director of Operations Stephen R. Kappes, tendered his resignation
after a confrontation with Murray. Goss and the White House pleaded
with Kappes to reconsider and he agreed to delay his decision until
Monday, the officials said.
Several other senior clandestine service officers are threatening to
leave, current and former agency officials said.
The disruption comes as the CIA is trying to stay abreast of a worldwide
terrorist threat from al Qaeda, a growing insurgency in Iraq, the
return of the Taliban in Afghanistan and congressional proposals to
reorganize the intelligence agencies. The agency also has been
criticized for not preventing the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and not
accurately assessing Saddam Hussein's ability to produce weapons of
mass destruction.
"It's the worst roiling I've ever heard of," said one former
senior official with knowledge of the events. "There's
confusion throughout the ranks and an extraordinary loss of morale
and incentive."
Current and retired senior managers have criticized Goss, former
chairman of the House intelligence committee, for not interacting
with senior managers and for giving Murray too much authority over
day-to-day operations. Murray was Goss's chief of staff on the
intelligence committee.
Transitions between CIA directors are often unsettling for career
officers. Goss's arrival has been especially tense because he
brought with him four former members of the intelligence committee
known widely on the Hill and within the agency for their abrasive
management style and for their criticism of the agency's clandestine
services in a committee report.
Three are former mid-level CIA officials who left the agency
disgruntled, according to former colleagues. The fourth, Murray, who
also worked at the Justice Department, has a reputation for being
highly partisan. When senior managers have gone to Goss to complain
about his staff actions, one CIA officer said, Goss has told them:
"Talk to my chief of staff. I don't do personnel."
The overall effect, said one former senior CIA official, who has kept up
his contacts in the Directorate of Operations, "is that Goss
doesn't seem engaged at all."
If other senior clandestine officers leave, said one former officer who
maintains contacts within the Langley headquarters, "the
middle-level people who move up may eventually work out, but
meanwhile the level of experience and competence will go down."
The CIA declined to comment on the issues raised by the current and
former officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. A CIA
spokesman said McLaughlin's retirement "was a long-planned
personal decision taken at a natural transition point in the
administration and not connected to any other factors."
McLaughlin issued a statement that said: "I have come to the purely
personal decision that it is time to move on to other
endeavors."
Goss, too, issued a statement, which applauded McLaughlin's
"outstanding service."
"On a personal note," the statement continued, "I want to
thank John for the kindness he has shown me as Director of Central
Intelligence."
In addition to bringing in his former aides from the Hill, Goss plans to
dilute the authority of the Directorate of Operations by removing
the director as the central figure in appointing country station
chiefs overseas and regional division chiefs at headquarters.
"I definitely think all this is disrupting people's work," one
agency official said. "Everyone is waiting for the centipede to
drop all his shoes."
Associates said McLaughlin was disappointed by Goss's management style
and was particularly disheartened by a series of recent
confrontations between Murray and senior leaders.
In one of those confrontations, on Nov. 5, Murray raised the issue of
leaks with the associate deputy director of counterintelligence.
Referring to previous media leaks regarding personnel, he said that
if anything in the newly appointed executive director's personnel
file made it into the media, the counterintelligence official
"would be held responsible," according to one agency
official and two former colleagues with knowledge of the
conversation.
All three sources gave the following account:
The associate deputy director of counterintelligence, a highly respected
case officer whose name is being withheld because she is undercover,
told Michael Sulick, the associate deputy director of operations,
about the threat. Sulick told his superior, Kappes, and both sought
a meeting with Goss to complain.
Goss, Murray, Kappes and Sulick met to discuss the matter. After Goss
left, Sulick "got in Murray's space," according to one of
his associates whose account was corroborated by another. Murray
then demanded that Kappes fire Sulick. Kappes refused, and told Goss
that he would resign. Goss and other White House officials appealed
to Kappes to delay his decision until Monday.
Goss, a former CIA case officer and Republican legislator from Florida,
promised during his confirmation hearing to set aside partisan
politics and work to strengthen the CIA clandestine service. But
current and former officials have said that his plans have been
unclear to the senior clandestine service officials who would be
responsible for carrying them out. In addition, they have been
concerned by the backgrounds of the senior staff Goss has hired.
Michael V. Kostiw, who was Goss's first choice for executive director --
the agency's third-ranking official -- withdrew his name after The
Washington Post reported that he had left the agency 20 years ago
after having been arrested for stealing a package of bacon.
More generally, Goss's aides arrived at the CIA with harsh views of the
clandestine service. Their views were laid out in a House
intelligence committee report in June. "There is a
dysfunctional denial of any need for corrective action," the
report said. The clandestine service suffers from
"misallocation and redirection of resources, poor
prioritization of objectives, micromanagement of field operations
and a continued political aversion to operational risk."
The report was drafted primarily by Jay Jakub, whom Goss appointed to
the newly created position of special assistant for operations and
analysis.
The House report's critique brought on a tough response from then-CIA
Director George J. Tenet and led to a near-breakdown in relations
between the agency and the panel staff. It was repeatedly noted by
present and past clandestine officers that Jakub had a limited
career at the agency, first as an analyst and later as a case
officer.
"He never distinguished himself before he left," a former boss
said.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A46580-2004Nov12?language=printer
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