|
The U.S. has run amok; former CIA analyst
By AMBIKA BEHAL
UPI Correspondent
03/12/06 --- WASHINGTON, March 9 (UPI) -- Corruption has run amok in
intelligence circles and the president should be impeached, a former
CIA analyst says.
Also, he said, the United States is undergoing a constitutional
crisis.
"I do not wish to be associated, however remotely, with an agency
engaged in torture," wrote Ray McGovern in a recent letter as he
returned his Intelligence Commendation Award medallion to
Congressman Pete Hoekstra, R-MI, and Chair of the House Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence.
At the time, McGovern was wearing an orange jump suit, similar to
those worn at Guantanamo Bay, with a gag over his mouth on which was
written the word, "torture." Along with 15 other individuals,
dressed alike, he wandered the halls of Congress.
"It was simply a slow, dead man walking kind of thing," said
McGovern, who said the reaction he received was interesting. "I had
expected turbulence, the worst I experienced was people averting
their eyes and the most common reaction was people looking at me,
silence," he said.
He described the experience as having "a certain somberness and
reverence."
There were more volunteers wanting to take part, he said, but "not
enough jump suits."
A 27-year veteran of the CIA, spanning administrations from John F.
Kennedy to George Herbert Walker Bush, the current president's
father, McGovern has taken, in recent years, a vocal stand on
several aspects of the current Bush administration's handling of the
war in Iraq and ensuing events.
Returning his medal for "especially commendable service" took a lot
of thought. "I had been thinking of ways I could disassociate myself
from torture," he said, describing it as a response for his
grandchildren who, he said, would ask him what role he played in
current events.
"Pete Hoekstra was one of the few people in our government who would
be able to stop this," said McGovern. But neither has he seen any
action from Hoekstra in attempt to stop torture of prisoners at
American hands, nor has he received any response from the return of
his medal yet, he said.
"In my view, this is an order of magnitude different from my
experiences in the past -- there has been torture before, but never
before has it been ordered and openly 'justified'," he said.
Recent months have seen CIA Director Porter Goss and Vice President
Dick Cheney unsuccessfully try to prevent Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.
from his successful initiative to ensure there were legal restraints
on torture.
Attorney General "Alberto Gonzalez in London was unwilling to say
whether dogs were used in torture," said McGovern. "Even thought
torture has always been conducted separosa, there should be a debate
in this city," he said.
During his time at the CIA, McGovern at one point was responsible
for daily briefings to the first President Bush. After retiring in
1990; he said he received a "wonderful letter from Bush, Sr. We do
stay in touch periodically," but would not comment on the former
president's opinions on McGovern's current activities.
Today, he spends his time writing and speaking around the world and
abroad, mostly about the Iraq war, "trying to spread a little truth
around," he said.
The alleged corruption of intelligence strikes a heavy chord with
McGovern. The war in Iraq started, he said, because former CIA
director George Tenet, was given no choice but to state the presence
of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
"Back in my day, I like to think we would have got up and walked
out," if asked to force intelligence, he said. "Cooking intelligence
is a cardinal sin in the intelligence world."
In a chapter in the new book, "Neo-Conned Again!" -- a compilation
of condemnations of the war in Iraq -- McGovern referred to the New
Testament passage carved into the marble entrance at CIA
headquarters. "You will know the truth, and the truth will set you
free."
"This was the ethos of the intelligence analysis directorate during
most of the 27 years I spent there," McGovern wrote.
"As outraged as we are by the politicization, some say prostitution,
of intelligence procedures, we are upset by the undermining of the
Constitution," he said, speaking for the anti-war group, Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, of which he is a founder.
Currently the group has 54 members who are former and some current
intelligence professionals from all branches of the government. VIPS
started in 2003 with five members -- all former agency analysts.
"If you're going to have an intelligence apparatus that tells the
president what he wants to hear, you might as well just abolish the
whole thing," and let the State Department run intelligence
operations, said McGovern. The point of the CIA was to be
accountable, he said. "We're supposed to tell the truth."
VIPS focuses on putting out memos to critique and comment official
actions regarding controversial subjects related to the War on
Terror. "People can and do come to us for the straight answers,"
McGovern said.
"When I speak frankly about the real reasons why we went into Iraq,"
he said, "I use the acronym OIL - Oil, Israel, Logistical bases." In
recent months, the debate has turned to Iran.
McGovern refers to a former colleague at the CIA -- Paul Pillar,
recently retired and now able to voice his perspectives on current
situations.
McGovern quoted Pillar's words from a talk given at the Council on
Foreign Relations in Washington Tuesday, "It is important to bear in
mind that we don't know if Iran is pursuing a nuclear weapon."
His point, he said, was that one must not only analyze the
historical facts that would lead to such a conclusion, but also
provide hard evidence -- not corrupted evidence. He said he believed
that, if not prevented now, another war will start in the next month
or two.
"The American people need to wake up now, the evidence is all
there," he said. "Our president and vice president have started a
war of aggression defined by Nuremberg as a supreme international
crime."
Describing members of Congress as tools of the White House, McGovern
expressed a need for the people to take a different way. "Together
with torture and clearly illegal wiretapping, we need to look for
ways to stop all these crimes and indignities," he said.
McGovern also discussed the constitutional provision of impeachment.
"I think impeachment proceedings should begin" against President
Bush, he said.
© Copyright 2006 United Press International, Inc.
Click below to read or post comment's on this article
(In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to
those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational purposes.
Information Clearing House has no affiliation whatsoever with the
originator of this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.) |