Exposing Shabby Intelligence
There’s a long history of skepticism
among ex-spooks.
By Philip Giraldi
March 24, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- There is a perception among some
of the public and within the
alternative media that America’s
burgeoning national-security state
is a monolith, a collective entity
pursuing its own interests
regardless of what is good for the
country or its people. From both
progressives and conservatives who
mistrust the government, I often
hear comments such as, “Once in the
CIA, always in the CIA”—as if
onetime employment in the agency
forms an unbreakable bond.
Those familiar with both the
national-security community and the
peace movement are aware that
something like the reverse is true.
Individuals who were attracted to
careers in intelligence, law
enforcement, or the military are
often sticklers for doing what is
right rather than what is expedient.
That often puts them at odds with
their political masters, leading
sometimes to resignations and a
resulting overrepresentation of
former national-security
professionals in the anti-war
movement.
One
manifestation of this is an
organization of former
national-security officers,
including myself, called Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for
Sanity, or VIPS. VIPS was founded in
2003 out of revulsion on the part of
many former officials over the
shabby intelligence that was driving
the decision to invade Iraq. The
group includes officials from the
whole alphabet soup of national
security—CIA, NSA, FBI, FS (Foreign
Service), and DOD. VIPS’s emergence
and its ongoing letters of protest
on national-security policy reflect
a reality going back to the early
debates surrounding the U.S.
government’s stealthy escalation of
the Vietnam War and its woeful
handling of that conflict, ending in
a humiliating defeat.
The lies that led to that Vietnam
experience produced one of the first
well-known rebels against
intelligence corruption. Sam Adams,
a CIA analyst who was assigned to
the agency’s Vietnam desk in 1965,
observed that the strength estimates
for the North Vietnamese Army and
Vietcong guerrillas consistently
underreported the true strength of
the enemy. This led to a prolonged
conflict with Army and White House
officials, as well as with Adams’s
own bosses, all of whom promoted the
false notion that the Vietnam
challenge was a limited insurgency
easily defeated, a fabrication
intended to ensure U.S. popular
support for the conflict.
Though Adams eventually was forced
out of the agency, he continued to
expose how intelligence had been
hijacked to suit a political agenda.
He served as a witness in the trial
of Daniel Ellsberg, the man behind
the Pentagon Papers revelations. He
wrote about the Vietnam “cover-up”
and spoke to the House Intelligence
Committee’s Pike Commission, which
credited his allegations.
Today there are many former
national-security officials in the
mold of Sam Adams. For many, the
disillusionment with the corruption
of intelligence and betrayal of
national security began with Iraq.
CIA officers in the clandestine
service such as European Division
chief Tyler Drumheller pushed hard
against CIA Director George Tenet
and the White House, insisting that
field reporting demonstrated that
Iraq had no weapons of mass
destruction. Drumheller also
dismissed “Curveball,” the
German-Iraqi source of the false
intelligence that Iraq was building
mobile biological-weapons labs. The
source, said Drumheller, was merely
“a guy trying to get his green card
essentially, in Germany, and playing
the system for what it was worth.”
CIA analysts also sought to expose
false claims that Iraqi intelligence
officials had met with al-Qaeda.
Senior State Department officials
John Kiesling, John Brown, and Ann
Wright resigned over the march to an
avoidable war.
For others, increasing governmental
attacks on the Constitution proved
decisive. National Security Agency (NSA)
officer Tom Drake went through
channels after he learned the agency
was illegally collecting information
on U.S. citizens in violation of the
Fourth Amendment. He was joined by
former NSA officers William Binney,
J. Kirk Wiebe, and Ed Loomis. Their
efforts were rebuffed by the
government. Despite whistleblower
protections, Drake later was charged
under the Espionage Act.
The large numbers of former foot
soldiers in the national-security
establishment who are now opposed to
the warfare state should be an eye
opener for many Americans,
suggesting that there is no “high
confidence” among many of those who
are actually best positioned to know
the truth regarding Washington’s
perpetual warfare policies.
Which brings us back to VIPS and the
dissident former national-security
officers who have found a home
there. One is Tom Drake, who was
involved from the start, as was Ray
McGovern, a former senior CIA
analyst and presidential briefer.
VIPS has produced 47 memos on
national-security policy. Its first
official action was a February 2003
memo to President George W. Bush
condemning the United Nations speech
by Secretary of State Colin Powell
that established the pretext for
invading Iraq. The memo said, “you
would be well served if you widened
the discussion beyond … the circle
of those advisers clearly bent on a
war for which we see no compelling
reason and from which we believe the
unintended consequences are likely
to be catastrophic.”
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More recently, VIPS has raised
serious questions about the
conclusion of U.S. intelligence
agencies that Russian President
Vladimir Putin ordered “Russian
hacking” designed to destabilize
American politics and, if possible,
put Donald Trump in the presidency.
The group called on President Obama
to release solid evidence of this,
even if it creates difficulty for
ongoing intelligence operations. The
former security officials suggested
the evidence released by the
government thus far “does not pass
the smell test,” and they noted
particularly the lack of any public
evidence linking the Russians to
WikiLeaks, which published the bulk
of the information in question.
“We urge you to authorize public
release of any tangible evidence
that takes us beyond the
unsubstatianted, ‘we-assess’
judgments by the intelligence
agencies,” said the VIPS statement,
addressed to Obama. “Otherwise, we …
will be left with the corrosive
suspicion that the intense campaign
of accusations is part of a wider
attempt to discredit the Russians
and those—like Mr. Trump—who wish to
deal constructively with them.”
The VIPS statement didn’t get much
attention. Indeed, such warnings
from former intelligence, security,
law-enforcement, and military
personnel are largely frozen out of
the establishment media. When VIPS
presents its annual Sam Adams award
for integrity in intelligence, the
recipients get more media attention
in Europe than in the U.S. Rarely do
the 50-plus associates of VIPS
appear in the U.S. mainstream media,
although they are frequently
interviewed by the foreign press,
particularly in Western Europe.
The government also does its best to
repress any dissident opinion by
requiring many former intelligence
and law-enforcement personnel to
have their writings reviewed by
security officers prior to
publication. The reviews can take
months, make no effort to
accommodate publishing deadlines,
and often result in a heavily
redacted text that is unreadable.
The government sometimes strikes
back in less subtle ways. Ray
McGovern’s 2006 return of his
Intelligence Commendation Medal over
reports of CIA torture led to a
provision in the Intelligence
Authorization Act of 2007 enabling
Congress to strip retirees of their
pensions.
Pushback from former
national-security officials is a
good thing for the country and the
agencies once served by these
dissidents. Just as the Founders
envisioned a citizen army so the
defense of the nation would be in
the hands of the people, a
national-security structure
responsive to responsible dissent
should be cherished. The Obama
administration, to its discredit,
routinely punished legitimate
whistleblowers and covered up its
misdeeds through invocation of the
state-secrets privilege. We can hope
that the new Trump administration
will have the wisdom and confidence
to call off the dogs.
Philip Giraldi, a former CIA
officer, is executive director of
the Council for the National
Interest.
This article was first published at
the
American Conservative