‘In Lake We Trust’? Confirmation Make-Over Exacerbates Senate Concerns About D.C.I.-Designate’s Candor, Reliability

(Washington, D.C.): The phenomenon of
a presidential nominee feverishly trying
to recast long-held positions and obscure
his established record on the eve of his
consideration by the Senate is nothing
new. In fact, this sort of
“confirmation conversion” is
often a tell-tale sign that a candidacy
is in serious trouble. Frequently, it has
the opposite of the intended effect —
sinking a nomination, rather than saving
it.

This may be the case with President
Clinton’s latest candidate for the office
of Director of Central Intelligence
(DCI). The spectacle of Anthony Lake’s
attempted make-over is only reinforcing
Senators’ fears that the former National
Security Advisor is too political, too
facile, in short too untrustworthy to
hold what is, by definition, a position
of ultimate trust. After all, the DCI
works not just for the President but for
the legislative branch, as well. Congress
simply cannot afford to turn over the CIA
to a man in whose judgment, independence
or integrity it lacks confidence.

This has rarely been more true than at
the current moment. As the Center for
Security Policy noted on 16 December
1996:

“Even if the CIA
were in top form — with no
problems with moles, morale,
quality control or the
recruitment and retention of
qualified people — Tony Lake
would be an undesirable choice to
serve as DCI. Under the Agency’s
present dire circumstances,
however, his nomination is a
formula for disaster
.” href=”97-T4.html#N_1_”>(1)

A Bill of Particulars

Manifestations of Mr. Lake’s
confirmation conversion are not hard to
find. In backgrounding sympathetic press
outlets and damage-control conversations
with Senators, the DCI-designate and his
supporters have made, among others, the
following representations:

  • Actually, Lake Believes
    Alger Hiss Was a Spy:
    In
    an appearance on NBC’s “Meet
    the Press” on 24 November
    1996, then-National Security
    Advisor Lake responded
    to a direct question about
    whether Alger Hiss was a Soviet
    spy by saying: “I’ve read a
    couple of books that certainly
    offered a lot of evidence that he
    may have been. I don’t
    think it’s conclusive.
    href=”97-T4.html#N_2_”>(2)
    When this astounding statement
    precipitated sharp criticism in
    the media, among U.S.
    intelligence and
    counter-intelligence operatives
    and on Capitol Hill, Mr. Lake put
    out the word that (according to
    the 30 December issue of U.S.
    News and World Report
    )
    “[he] does believe in the
    former diplomat’s guilt — but
    did not think that a television
    interview following Hiss’ recent
    death was the appropriate venue
    in which to express it.”
  • It Was a ‘Mistake’ to
    Conceal the Iran-Bosnia Scandal
    From Congress:
    Tony
    Lake played a central role in
    preventing the responsible
    congressional committees from
    knowing about the
    Administration’s fateful decision
    to acquiesce in radical Islamic
    Iran’s effort to penetrate the
    European continent through arms
    shipments and military
    cooperation with the Bosnian
    government. So much so that he is
    cited by name in a criminal
    referral from the House select
    subcommittee seeking Janet Reno’s
    appointment of a special counsel
    to investigate the legality of
    Administration actions in the
    Iran-Bosnia affair. Not
    surprisingly, this episode
    engenders unease in the Senate
    about how forthcoming a DCI Lake
    would be with Congress regarding
    politically sensitive covert
    initiatives.
  • In a classic instance of
    confirmation conversion, Tony
    Lake has reportedly told Senators
    that he now believes it was a
    mistake to have withheld
    information about the Clinton
    role in Iran’s equip-and-train
    program in Bosnia. Even President
    Clinton has been brought into the
    act, declaring on 16 December
    that he “accepts” Mr.
    Lake’s statement that “it
    probably would have been better
    to inform key members of Congress
    on a confidential basis.”

  • Lake Didn’t Mean to
    Suggest that Environmental
    ‘Intelligence’ will be a
    Priority:
    When
    challenged about his statement at
    the time he was nominated about
    the importance he attached to
    collecting
    “intelligence” on the
    environment, Mr. Lake has
    suggested that this was nothing
    more than a sop to Vice President
    Al Gore. In fact, as former
    Secretary of Defense Caspar
    Weinberger and Peter Schweizer
    recently noted in National
    Review
    on Tony
    Lake’s watch, CIA resources have
    been massively diverted from
    monitoring military threats

    to addressing precisely the sorts
    of “global issues” so
    dear to the Vice President’s
    heart (e.g., the extent of
    ecological degradation taking
    place in Lake Victoria). This
    could prove to be an expensive
    “sop” — particularly
    if it were to continue at a Lake
    CIA so that Al Gore will not
    “get mad” at the
    Director.
  • The Clinton
    Administration’s N.I.E. on
    Missile Threats was Fatally
    Flawed, After All:
    Over
    the past year, National Security
    Advisor Tony Lake has joined
    other Administration officials
    who professed confidence in the
    conclusions of a controversial
    1995 National Intelligence
    Estimate (NIE). This NIE arrived
    at the preposterous conclusion
    that there would be no threat of
    ballistic missile attack against
    the United States for at
    least
    fifteen years. This
    NIE became a cornerstone of the
    Clinton stonewall against prompt
    deployment of anti-missile
    systems to protect the American
    people. When combined with
    concerns about the NIE’s
    contents, the use to which this
    estimate was put reinforced the
    perception that the
    Administration was brazenly
    politicizing the U.S.
    intelligence community.
  • Mr. Lake now claims he agrees
    with the findings of a special
    panel commissioned by departing
    DCI John Deutch and chaired by
    former DCI Robert Gates. href=”97-T4.html#N_3_”>(3)
    Presumably that is because the
    Gates panel claimed the NIE was
    not politicized. It nonetheless
    found that the NIE’s methodology,
    assumptions and conclusions were
    sufficiently flawed as to make
    the estimate deficient as a basis
    for policy-making about deploying
    missile defenses. Even by the
    standards of past confirmation
    conversions, it would be a
    stunning reversal if Tony Lake
    were actually to embrace this
    critique.

The Bottom Line

Tony Lake’s make-over also involves
demurrals about his past associations
with the radical Left Institute for
Policy Studies, a “university”
it ran and one of its spin-off
organizations, the Center for National
Security Studies. Like other statements
made in a bid to shore up support for his
nomination, these demurrals — which bear
directly on the DCI-designate’s historic
views of, for example, covert operations
and counter-intelligence activities —
will have to be carefully evaluated by
the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence.

One thing is clear already, however: A
man with a demonstrated reluctance to
tell the truth lest he, by so doing, hurt
others’ feelings, engender the anger of
his executive branch bosses or complicate
the President’s political and/or policy
agenda, should be considered wholly unfit
for the job of Director of Central
Intelligence.

– 30 –

1. See the
Center’s Transition Brief
entitled Why Tony Lake Is
Unfit
— And Unlikely — To Be
the Next Director of Central Intelligence

(No. 96-T
129
, 16 December 1996).

2. See the
Center’s Transition Brief
entitled No Go: Lake’s
Position on Russian Spying, Alger Hiss
Should Disqualify Him For Director of the
C.I.A.
( href=”96-T_118″>No. 96-T 118,
25 November 1996).

3. For particulars
on the Gates panel’s criticisms of the
NIE, see the Center’s Transition
Brief
entitled It
Walks like a Duck…: Questions Persist
That Clinton C.I.A.’s Missile Threat
Estimate Was Politically Motivated

(No. 96-T
122
, 4 December 1996).

Frank Gaffney, Jr.
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