This does spell out a problem. It is that oversight itself is not transparent. What i mean here is that the content very much needs to be secret and that means oversight by a body able address ethical options and make hard choices. After all if perfect intelligence existed, in 1920, any of us would have shot Hitler without a tinge of conscience .
That is an extreme but the decissions are often that important. We have paid with thousands of lives because Osama Bin Ladin was treated with benign neglect. We face a serious professed threat from both Iran that may actually becoming tamer and the Islamic State. No acting is no longer an option.
The CIA has a checkered performance, but it is still the only tool we have and it is not easily penetrated. Solving the oversight function correctly once and for all would be welcome.
The CIA Won the Midterm Elections
By Philip Giraldi
November 17, 2014
http://www.lewrockwell.com/2014/11/no_author/the-cia-won/
The wheels up party is a venerable CIA tradition, normally
celebrated at overseas stations when a particularly incompetent Chief of
Station or a hostile ambassador was in the process of permanently
leaving post. The drinking would begin at a time estimated to coincide
with the moment when the dearly departed’s aircraft lifted off from the
tarmac on its way to Washington.
Wheels ups are rarer at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., though
celebrations were reported when Ronald Reagan defeated Jimmy Carter in
1980; but as a number of senior officers in the Agency actually had a
hand in that development, there was probably a measure of
self-congratulation at a job well done.
One might well imagine that the partying began at Langley shortly
after the polls closed last Tuesday, as soon as it became clear that
there would be a GOP Senate majority. More to the point, Sen. Dianne
Feinstein would be performing her own wheels up, relinquishing her
position as Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI) chair to be replaced
by the little known Richard Burr of North Carolina. Burr is regarded by
the Agency as a good friend, someone who had already staked out a position in
favor of protecting government secrecy, stating “I personally don’t
believe that anything that goes on in the intelligence committee should
ever be discussed publicly.” He also
basically supports the CIA position that torture produced information
critical to the killing of Osama bin Laden, commenting that “The
information that eventually led us to this compound was the direct
result of enhanced interrogations…” Burr is regarded as a right-wing
conservative and has earned the ultimate accolade of a zero rating from
the American Civil Liberties Union.
Now some might argue that Feinstein herself did her best to preserve
the executive branch’s right to assassinate Americans overseas, to spy
secretly, set up black site prisons and to engage in other activities
that are best not discussed in polite company. Many of these activities
were carried out by the CIA, but Feinstein did draw the line at torture,
which is one of the few illegal acts that the Obama administration
credibly claims to be against, placing Feinstein on safe ground
bureaucratically speaking. She only turned against the Agency when she
learned that it had had the temerity to spy on the activity of her own
committee.
In a recent speech made
before the midterms, election Director of National Intelligence, James
Clapper expressed his confidence that congressional moves to rein in
National Security Agency spying had pretty much lost momentum. With
Republicans now firmly in charge, remaining watered down measures are
likely to die in committee.
And given the post electoral euphoria, does anyone inside the Beltway
even remember the passionate debate over the SSCI report on CIA
torture? The hotly contested issue of when or how to release the report,
or sections of it, to the public is now as dead as the proverbial
dodo—even if some heavily redacted version of the report summary does
somehow emerge, particularly as the White House has effectively
distanced itself from the entire process. The meticulously researched Senate report,
covering 6,700 pages and including 35,000 footnotes, apparently
concluded that torturing terrorist suspects was not only illegal under
the United Nations Convention on Torture, to which Washington is a
signatory; it was also ineffective, producing no actionable intelligence
that was otherwise unobtainable. The CIA is reportedly working on
a rebuttal maintaining that the extreme measures were effective and has
also been blocking “naming names” in the final document based on cover
and other security concerns.
Since a “forgive and forget” forward-looking White House has already
indicated that no one will ever be punished for illegal actions
undertaken in the wake of 9/11, why is the torture issue important
beyond the prima facie case that a war crime that was authorized by the highest levels of the federal government?
It is important because of its constitutional implications and its
contravention of the principle of rule of law in the United States. The
constitutional issue, in its simplest terms, is that the CIA works for
the president, and when it operates without legally mandated oversight
by the executive branch and judiciary, it makes the Agency little better
than a secret army run by the POTUS.
Even conceding that Feinstein might have been proceeding with the
best interests of the country in mind, the past 24 months of delay in
the report’s release have demonstrated that the intel community, with
the support of the White House, can stonewall any issue until the cows
come home.
It has been suggested that the Agency is trying to avoid the
inclusion in any released summaries any blame or suggestion of “mission
failure” which would potentially affect budgets and broader Agency
political interests, but some of us who were once in CIA suspect that
the report includes information that might be much more damaging, to
include really nasty details, possibly identifying many more deaths
under interrogation than have been previously admitted. Former CIA
General Counsel John Rizzo has suggested in a recent interview that
some “lethal” proposals for retaliatory action made post 9/11 were
“chilling,” though he refused to describe them in any detail. When
Feinstein was railing at the Agency stonewalling there was genuine
concern at Langley that a new Church Commission going through the CIA’s
dirty laundry might well be the result, leading to more legal
restrictions on clandestine activity.
So the downfall of the Democrats did indeed provide cause for
celebration. If the Dom Perignon was flowing on the seventh floor at CIA
Headquarters and its counterparts working for Clapper, it is partly
because they had obtained a get out of jail free card. But more
important, they now also have every expectation of seeing recent budget
cuts linked to drawdowns in Iraq and Afghanistan reversed and possibly
even go the other way. Currently $67.9 billion is spent on civilian and
military spying, down 15 percent since
2010, but Burr is on record as favoring more spending on defense, and
as much of the intelligence budget is rolled into the massive Pentagon
bill one hand will likely be washing the other, as the Italians would
put it.
The grounds for such a reversal of fortune has been well prepared by
the intelligence community’s persistent overhyping of what Clapper refers to as
a “perfect storm” of “diverse” threats currently confronting the United
States, most notably ISIS and associated groups together with the
manufactured crisis in Ukraine. And it comes at the time when the
government’s bete noire Edward Snowden has weakened the capability to
strike back. The White House and mainstream media have taken their lead
from the intelligence community, convincing the public that radical
Islam and Moscow are at it again, requiring a return to post-9/11
thinking. All of which means that the gravy train has again arrived at
Washington’s Union Station.
What goes on in Washington committees would be comic opera or even
institutionalized buffoonery but for the fact that there are real world
consequences. If torture is not discredited as a tool for national
security it will undoubtedly
be used again in the wake of another terrorist attack, further damaging
U.S. credibility and inevitably distancing Washington from its actual
and potential allies. The Republican effort to scuttle negotiations with
Iran might also feature an intelligence sidebar. Incoming House
Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes has already announced his
intention to look into any involvement of the Agency in secret
negotiations with Iran being conducted by the White House. He wants to
discredit the process by claiming that the intelligence role had not
been acknowledged in oversight briefings before his committee,
suggesting that the Obama administration was covering up and is heading
towards a bad deal with Tehran.
And so it goes. Feeble congressional attempts to rein in and
establish some accountability relating to the out-of-control
intelligence community are now dead. Worse still, the likely acceptance
of a GOP perception that the United States is experiencing a national
security failure as it confronts a broad array of intractable foreign
threats fits in neatly with the Clapper warning about a “perfect storm.”
Budgets will rise and concerns over extraordinary measures being used
to confront the menace will be placed on the back burner. How long will
it be before we again start referring to the “global war on terror?”
Reprinted with permission from GlobalResearch.ca.
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