Policy Report
February 2001
CIA: The Need for Reform
By Melvin A. Goodman
Melvin A. Goodman <Goodmanm@ndu.edu>
is professor of international security at the National War College and
a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy. A former senior
Soviet analyst at the Central Intelligence Agency, he is the author and
coauthor of six books on Russian and American security issues and has
written for numerous publications. His most recent book, The
Phantom Defense, will be published by Praeger
Publishers; his most recent article, “The Politics of Getting it Wrong,”
appeared in the November 2000 issue of Harper’s
Magazine.
 
cia.pdf
This special report has been cosponsored by the Center for
International Policy, an institution founded in 1975 to promote a U.S.
foreign policy that reflects democratic values. Through research, education,
and direct public advocacy, CIP works to define and put into practice
a more sympathetic, farsighted, and non-militaristic approach to the developing
world.
The Need to End Covert Action
The Need for Glasnost
The Need to Demilitarize Intelligence
The Need for an Intelligence Network
“As you are aware, recent media coverage has painted a very bleak
picture of the CIA’s capabilities—depicting an organization which is
both unable to run secure and worthwhile operations and which blindly
(and perhaps willfully) ignored numerous blatant signs of espionage
in progress…. You and I know that this is just not the case. Certainly,
systemic problems exist. Some are more easily identified. Others will
take longer to understand. But we will get all of them.”
—Ted Price, CIA deputy director for operations, in 1994 after a Soviet
“mole” (spy) in the CIA was exposed.
This
cable, sent to CIA stations in the wake of the revelation that Aldrich
Ames had been a Soviet spy for nearly a decade, could not hide the trauma
that overwhelmed the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Reprimands in
the Ames case prompted a mass exodus of bitter senior managers, who had
refused to accept the need for punishing those who ignored the fact that
a Soviet spy had contaminated the agency at the highest levels. These
managers were the generation that had run the CIA during the cold war
and had served as the agencys institutional memory for clandestine
operations. Perhaps as a result, espionage operations have gotten increasingly
clumsy, causing major strains with such key nations as France, Germany,
India, Italy, and Japan. Operational failures in recent years include
the unbelievable bombings of both the Chinese embassy in Belgrade and
a pharmaceutical plant in Sudan. Intelligence failures include the agencys
surprise over the nuclear tests in India in 1998 and the skewing of judgments
on the implications of a national missile defense in 1999.
President George W. Bushs decision to retain CIA
Director George Tenet for at least the short term indicates that Bush
has no major problems with Tenets stewardship of the agency over
the past several years. The Bush administration has no plans for reforming
the CIA and may even endorse Tenets efforts to increase government
secrecy at the expense of the publics right to know. As director
of central intelligence (DCI) under Clinton, Tenet promoted an antileak
statute, designed to make potential felons of those who express
themselves on any issue about which they ever had access to classified
information. In November 2000, Clinton vetoed this bill establishing a
national secrets act. Tenet, who renamed the CIA the Bush Intelligence
Center (after Bush, Sr.), may believe that in the Bush W. administration
he will have license to make another assault on free speech under the
phony cover of national security. Tenet also presented former senator
Warren Rudman with the agencys highest award. It was Rudman who
tried to silence CIA critics at the nomination hearings for Robert Gates
in 1991.
The
Need to End Covert Action
The end of the cold war over a decade ago provided the United
States with an opportunity to end intelligence abuses, restructure the
CIA (saving money in the process), and use the agencys extensive
intelligence capabilities to address the new crises and challenges of
the post-cold war environment. The United States can no longer afford
a bloated intelligence community that defines too much information as
intelligence and spends $30 billion a year in the process. The first step
in the reform process should be the end of covert action, which grew out
of an exaggerated notion of the threat to U.S. security during the cold
war.
The cold war and the Soviet threat generated the rules
that historically governed the use of covert action. But the end of the
cold war and the dissolution of the Soviet Union have made the need for
covert action less demonstrable and should prompt a reexamination of every
aspect of these activities. The boilerplate language of the Aspin-Brown
Commission on the Role and Capabilities of the United States Intelligence
Community argued in 1996 that covert operations should take place only
when they are essential and where the reason for secrecy is
compelling. But most covert operations are operations for
operations sake, undertaken with no careful reckoning of the result
beforehand. It is not enough to suggest (as defenders of covert action
have) that the world remains a dangerous place and the president needs
an option short of military action when diplomacy alone cannot do the
job.
Covert action could be radically reduced, if not eliminated,
with no compromise of U.S. national security. CIA propaganda has had little
effect on foreign audiences and should end immediately. The Johnson administration
wrongfully authorized efforts to ensure the defeat of the Chilean socialist
candidate Salvador Allende in 1964, and the Nixon administration went
even further in 1973,
sponsoring actions that led to the overthrow and assassination of Allende.
Covert efforts to influence foreign elections or political parties should
stop.
Many problems that have been considered candidates for
covert action were ultimately addressed openly by unilateral means or
cooperatively through international measures, both preferable to clandestine
operations. Nuclear proliferation problems created by missile programs
in Iraq and North Korea in the 1990s led to congressional calls for covert
actions, but, in both cases, overt multilateral activity, with the United
States in a pivotal role, contributed to denuclearization. Conversely,
we learned in 1999 that the United States and the CIA used the cover of
the United Nations and the United Nations Special Commission (UNSCOM)
to conduct a secret operation to spy on Iraqi military communications.
The UN effort, which did not authorize or benefit from U.S. surveillance,
had already successfully gathered information on Iraqs nuclear,
chemical, and biological weapons. CIA penetration of Iraqi communications,
contrived to topple the regime of Saddam Hussein, made a liar out of the
White House and a truth-teller of Saddam Hussein. It also doomed further
inspection efforts in Iraq and undercut the credibility of multilateral
inspection teams around the world.
The CIAs emphasis on covert action has led the agency
to support such world-class criminals as Panamas General Manuel
Noriega, Guatemalas Colonel Julio Alpírez, Perus intelligence
chief Vladimiro Montesinos, and Chiles General Manuel Contreras.
In addition to the CIA involvement in overthrowing the democratically
elected government of Chile in the 1970s, it has recently been disclosed
that a CIA assetGeneral Contrerasdirected assassinations in
the United States against a Chilean official and an American citizen.
Documents released in 2000 revealed that the CIA had placed Contreras
on its payroll, despite its acknowledgement that he was, according to
one of the declassified CIA documents, the principal obstacle to
a reasonable human rights policy in Chile. The State Department,
moreover, had ordered its ambassadors in Latin America to warn Latin leaders
not to carry out assassinations of left-wing opponents, but the American
ambassador in Chile, David Popper, refused. Contreras was sentenced to
seven years in jail for the most brazen terrorist attack ever orchestrated
in the U.S. capitalthe 1976 car bombing that killed former Chilean
Ambassador Orlando Letelier and his American associate, Ronni Karpen Moffitt.
In early 2001, Contreras finished his sentence and was released, but almost
simultaneously the Chilean government put Contreras former boss,
General Pinochet, under house arrest for deaths of civilians he is suspected
to have ordered during his dictatorship.
Another operative on the CIA payroll was Peruvian intelligence
chief Vladimiro Montesinos, who was responsible for two decades of human
rights abuses in Peru. The CIA helped Montesinos flee the country in September
2000 to avoid standing trial for crimes that included the massacre of
innocent civilians in the early 1990s. However, Montesinos was also involved
in a 1998 transfer of arms from Jordan to leftist guerrillas in Colombia,
perhaps Washingtons most notorious enemies in Latin America. The
CIA station in Amman actually approved the arms deal between Jordanian
officials and Montesinos, another indicator of the ineptitude of the CIAs
directorate of operations.
There is no absolute political and ethical guideline delineating
when to engage in covert action. However, former Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance (in the Carter administration) articulated a standard two decades
ago when he recommended covert action only when absolutely essential
to the national security of the United States and when no
other means would do. The CIA observed this standard in the breach
when it placed General Contreras on its payroll despite knowledge of his
responsibility for murders abroad. The CIA has so far refused to address
how the agency failed to avert a planned terrorist act in Washington directed
by its own asset. Radical reform of the CIA, particularly the abolition
of covert action, would allow the agency to return to President Harry
Trumans original conception of it as an independent and objective
interpreter of foreign events.
The
Need for Glasnost
CIA Director George Tenet has reversed the modest steps
toward greater openness that were instituted by several of his predecessors.
At his confirmation hearings in 1997, Tenet promised to continue the policy
of openness, but he also emphasized that it was time for the agency to
stop looking over its shoulder at its critics and to increase its clandestine
role in support of national security.
Tenet initially withheld thousands of sensitive documents
detailing covert operations in Chile that took place more than 25 years
ago, despite demands for openness by President Clinton and Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright. Though he finally responded to additional pleas
from National Security Adviser Sandy Berger to release the Chilean documents,
by this time, the CIAs reticence had marred the credibility of the
governments declassification effort. Tenet argued that releasing
these documents would compromise covert sources and methods; more likely,
he feared that declassification would embarrass the United States both
by revealing the efforts of the Nixon administration to overturn a constitutionally
elected government and by exposing the details of the Letelier/Moffitt
murders during the Ford administration.
The Central Intelligence Agency has repeatedly hidden behind
official secrecy and the need to know to remove its operations
from legitimate public scrutiny, making difficult or impossible any reasoned
assessment of important historical events. The CIAs unwillingness
to declassify documents concerning covert actions ensures that the governments
official histories of American foreign policy will continue to be misleading,
if not inaccurate. Much worse, high-level agency officials have continued
to lie with impunity to the Senate Intelligence Committee in order to
conceal the agencys involvement in human rights abuses in Central
America.
Former CIA Director Richard Helms (1966-73) was fined in
1977 for lying to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee about the CIAs
role in the overthrow of Chilean leader Salvador Allende. High-ranking
CIA officials in the directorate of operations raised the money to pay
Helms fine. They then conspired to weaken the leadership of Helms
successor at the CIA, William Colby (1973-76), who understood the need
for a secret agency to cooperate with a democratically elected government.
And in the late 1980s, CIA directors failed to punish those who withheld
information and lied to Congress about Iran-contra matters.
More recently, former CIA Director Robert M. Gates (1991-93)
did not share with the White House the fact that a CIA operative (confessed
spy Aldrich Ames) had compromised every agency operation aimed at the
former Soviet Union. Former CIA Director James Woolsey (1993-95) never
punished those officials who failed to monitor the Ames case. And former
Director John Deutch (1995-97) upheld a decision to revoke the security
clearance of Richard Nuccio, the State Department whistle blower who tried
to expose CIA lying when he revealed a suspected murderer on the CIAs
payroll in Guatemala.
Sadly, the U.S. Senate aggravated the situation in September
2000, when it passed a bill that would have criminalized the disclosure
of all properly classified information, thus creating an official
secrets act. It is already a crime to disclose classified information
about nuclear weapons, codes, intelligence communications, and the names
of covert agents. The CIA successfully convinced the Senate to criminalize
all leaks of classified information, and President Clintons Justice
Department was persuaded to reverse its position and support the measure.
Properly classified information is too broad
a category; as noted in the New York Times, even the Pentagon Papers were
properly classified. Far too much information is classified,
and the recent disclosures on the role of the CIA in Chile demonstrate
that a great deal of information is classified to cover up government
embarrassments and CIA misdeeds. Opposition to the bill was bipartisan,
but when the House of Representatives did not block it in a House-Senate
conference, the threat of another torment of secrecy akin
to the worst days of the cold war was anticipated. Fortunately, President
Clinton vetoed the bill in November 2000, dealing another political setback
to DCI George Tenet, one of the main proponents of the bill. Clinton chose
to protect his legacy and the publics right to know rather than
endorse the zeal of his CIA director.
Former Senator Daniel Moynihans 1995-96 commission
on secrecy concluded that the American public both needs and has a right
to a full accounting of the history of U.S. covert operations. A presidential
executive order to extend openness to intelligence matters is required
along with congressionally mandated limits on the intelligence communitys
prerogative to conceal information. A balancing test between public interest
and national security must be part of the classification/declassification
process, and this would include judicial review of CIA denials to release
of information under the Freedom of Information Act.
The CIA should not be able to hide behind its secret budget
and remain in violation of Article I/Section 9 of the Constitution, which
demands that a regular Statement and Account of the Receipts and
Expenditures of all public Money shall be published from time to time.
The overall intelligence community budget (approximately $30 billion)
was declassified on a one-time basis, but the CIA budget (approximately
$3 billion) has never been declassified.
The
Need to Demilitarize Intelligence
Previous directors of central intelligence, particularly
Robert Gates and John Deutch, did great harm to the CIA and the intelligence
community by deemphasizing strategic intelligence for use in civilian
policymaking and catering instead to the tactical demands of operational
officers in the Pentagon. Gates brought an end to CIA analysis on key
order-of-battle issues in order to avoid tendentious analytical struggles
with the Pentagon, and Deutchs creation of the National Imagery
and Mapping Agency (NIMA) at the Department of Defense (DOD) enabled the
Pentagon to be the sole judge of its procurement needs. Imagery analysis
is used to calibrate the defense budget, gauge the likelihood of military
conflict in the third world, and verify arms control agreements. In creating
NIMA, Deutch abolished the CIAs Office of Imagery Analysis and the
joint CIA-DOD National Photographic Interpretation Center.
The director of central intelligence operates in an organizational
maze, since the secretary of defense controls nearly 90% of the intelligence
budget and personnel. Although executive orders give the DCI the statutory
authority to establish requirements and priorities for the entire intelligence
community, the Pentagon dominates the structure that can and does block
such purview. In fact, the DCI needs the authority in peacetime to direct
intelligence funding and operational assignments for data collection agencies
such as the National Reconnaissance Office, the National Security Agency,
and the National Imagery and Mapping Agency. This authority would revert
to the secretary of defense in wartime.
The militarization of the intelligence community has contributed
directly to several policy fiascoes in the past several years, including
the bombing of both the Chinese embassy in Belgrade (during the war in
Kosovo) and a pharmaceutical factory in Khartoum. These operations were
part of the CIAs participation in the wars against Serbia and terrorism
respectively, and both suffered from faulty data collection and failures
of leadership at the highest levels of the CIA. The Pentagons downgrading
of satellite collection in South Asia led directly to the intelligence
failure to anticipate Indian nuclear testing in 1998. Open sources did
a far better job of detecting the nuclear tests than the U.S. intelligence
community, which operates on a $30 billion annual budget.
The
Need for an Intelligence Network
The collapse of the Soviet Union and its Eastern European
empire in 1990-91 fundamentally altered the strategic environment of the
United States, but there has been an inadequate attempt to redefine U.S.
national security and intelligence needs in the wake of this event. Other
nontraditional security problems, which will define U.S. policy choices
in the 21st century, have thus been given short shrift. Such problems
include the scarcity of water in the Middle East, the social migration
caused by coastal flooding in South Asia, infectious diseases in Africa
and Russia, and contamination caused by nuclear and chemical weapons stored
and tested in the former Soviet Union.
The Russian Federation presents a particularly difficult
problem because of the fundamental instability of most Russian institutions
and the lack of resources to deal with major discontinuities. When the
Kursk submarine dropped to the bottom of the Barents Sea in August 2000,
dragging 118 Russian crewmen to their deaths, it seemed a sad metaphor
for the rapid descent of Soviet and Russian power during the past two
decades. The collapse of the Soviet Union also created new areas of geostrategic
weakness in the Caucasus, Central Asia, and Southeastern Europe.
The nontraditional national security problems that confront
the United States should give the CIA a competitive advantage because
of its data storehouse on oil reserves, demographics, and water supply.
The CIA is in a position to provide information on a variety of environmental
issues, using baseline data from satellite photography documenting global
warming, ozone depletion, and environmental contamination. Spy satellites
already provide key environmental data on the earths diminishing
grasslands, forests, and food resources. Yet the CIA has not been forthcoming
with its data.
When Al Gore was in the Senate, he chaired the Science,
Technology, and Space Subcom-mittee where he was active in pushing for
release of this data to the scientific community. Director of Central
Intelligence Tenet, however, has not been cooperative in releasing unclassified
information or in declassifying intelligence. Former Director Woolsey
was particularly lukewarm to the idea of sharing intelligence with international
agencies. And former Director Deutch, who had no compunctions about storing
sensitive information on his home computers, was stubbornly opposed to
providing information to the United Nations, though it would have been
helpful in peacekeeping situations.
With the proliferation of international peacekeeping missions
around the world, the intelligence community is a natural resource for
providing political and military data to peacekeepers in places like Bosnia,
Cambodia, and Somalia. The Central Intelligence Agency should have been
assisting the UN monitoring programs in Iraq rather than running its own
operations against Saddam Hussein. War crimes tribunals also require funds
and expertise for collecting data on political and military officials,
which would be a less difficult task if the political and biographic assets
of the CIA could be used. And it is unlikely that such global institutions
as the International Atomic Energy Agency can successfully monitor strategic
weapons production in North Korea or Iraq without support from the CIA.
The changed nature of international conflict will alter
the intelligence needs for future confrontations and will require a global
intelligence network or alliance to track such trends as the development
of civil society in the former Soviet Union or the introduction of new
technology into countries with strategic weapons programs. Greater sharing
of intelligence data is required, along with a rigorous intelligence network,
to orchestrate the development of new intelligence requirements. Thus
far, consumer-driven intelligence collection, particularly from the Pentagon,
has emphasized short-term tactical problems and ignored long-term strategic
issues. Presidential Decision Directive (PDD)-35, which tried to define
new intelligence targets in 1995, was a consumer-driven list that gave
low priority to such important regional issues as South Asia. High-level
intelligence officials need to expand the list of intelligence requirements
and create more autonomy for intelligence analysts in the PDD process.
The information revolution that has thus far dominated the post-cold war
era requires greater entrepreneurial and cooperative efforts on the part
of the entire analytical community.
Finally, there is need for a new director of central intelligence
who is capable of introducing accountability and responsibility to the
intelligence culture. High-ranking CIA officials have lied with impunity
to the Senate Intelligence Committee to cover up the CIAs involvement
in human rights abuses. They have also failed to report drug activities,
including drug smuggling into the United States, to the Justice Department
as normally required by law. The revolving door of CIA directors (five
directors in nine years) must end, and the Senate Intelligence Committee
should endorse the idea of a statutory six-year term for future directors.
When President Nixon fired DCI Helms in 1973 for failing
to assist in the cover-up of Watergate, his action precipitated an expectation
by each new president that he should appoint his own director of central
intelligence. This pattern politicized the CIA. Instituting a statutory
director would remove the post of DCI from presidential politics and would
hopefully return the CIA to its primary missionproviding objective
intelligence to U.S. policymakers.
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