‘SAY IT AIN’T SO, JIM’: IMPENDING REORGANIZATION OF CIA LOOKS LIKE SUPPRESSION, POLITICIZING OF INTELLIGENCE
(Washington, D.C.) Senior managers of
the Central Intelligence Agency’s
Directorate of Intelligence (DI) — the
arm of the Agency responsible for
analysis — held an unusual emergency
meeting with their analysts on the
afternoon of 1 July, just before the
start of a long holiday weekend. The
purpose of the meeting was to announce
plans for a complete reorganization of
the Central Intelligence Agency.
Analysts were told that these changes
were necessary for two reasons: First, to
head off Congress, which is considering
several drastic restructuring schemes of
its own to punish CIA for the Aldrich
Ames disaster. And second, to
“serve” U.S. policy-makers
better in the New World Order.
Director of Central Intelligence James
Woolsey is expected to announce this
reorganization — the biggest at CIA
since the early 1980s — during testimony
to Congress on 18 July. This announcement
will draw upon the work of a special
Directorate of Intelligence task force
that was set up for the express purpose
of overhauling the Directorate of
Intelligence. Curiously, the DI managers
said that the Directorate of Operations
(where Ames worked) is preparing its own
reorganization plan — one that will be
less drastic and will, in any event, not
be announced until the fall.
What’s Going On?
It is an open secret that the Clinton
Administration is extremely displeased
with the CIA Directorate of Intelligence.
This animosity toward the Agency’s
analysts stems in part from briefings
supplied to Congress last fall by the
National Intelligence Officer for Latin
America, Brian Latel, which raised
serious questions about the mental
stability, behavior and policy
predilections of ousted Haitian President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The analysis and
judgments — and leaks to the press about
them — briefed by Mr. Latel greatly
sharpened congressional opposition to the
Clinton policy aimed at restoring
Aristide to power, no matter what. The
White House and much of the foreign
policy establishment(1)
will never forgive CIA for thus
complicating its unquestioning embrace of
Aristide.
By April 1994, Administration
displeasure with CIA had turned into
indignation. Faced with a growing number
of foreign policy debacles, Clinton
officials — notably several on the staff
of the White House and National Security
Council — grew increasingly furious at
CIA intelligence assessments which
suggested that Administration policy in
North Korea, Somalia, Bosnia, China, and
Russia was in trouble. Administration
officials started to argue that CIA was
not providing them with “the
proper support.” Some
officials implied that if CIA had done a
better job analyzing the world, Mr.
Clinton’s foreign policy would not be in
trouble.
The Damage Already Done
The Deputy Director for Intelligence
(DDI), Douglas MacEachin, began to make
changes in early 1994 to accommodate
Administration concerns. These changes
accelerated as the summer approached.
They included:
- The style of Directorate
of Intelligence papers was
altered in such a way as to alter
the content, as well.
Starting in late 1993, MacEachin
decreed that future DI papers
would rely on a strictly-enforced
“evidentiary base.”
What this meant was that DI
analyses would henceforth be
strictly limited to factual
statements bereft of forecasts —
dismissed as “crystal
ball-gazing” — and very
short on informed, if necessarily
somewhat subjective, judgments.
Starting in April 1994, most DI
analytical papers were limited to
3 to 7 pages, including
graphics and illustrations. - A special staff was
created — the Presidential
Support Staff — to see
personally to the daily briefing
needs of senior policy-makers.
This new organization replaced
the President’s Daily Brief Staff
which performed this task
effectively for at least the past
20 years. The reason for the
change appears to be an
unwillingness to receive
information from other than
briefers who are sufficiently
attuned to the briefees’
sensibilities as to avoid
bringing up unwelcome issues or
information. - “Sore spot”
items — involving, for example,
politically sensitive issues like
China’s MFN status — have
disappeared from the National
Intelligence Daily and the
President’s Daily Brief,
according to a Washington
Times‘ “Inside the
Beltway” item which ran on 7
June 1994. - A number of analysts who
have challenged or refused to
conform to these new policies
were demoted, reassigned or sent
abroad.
What’s in Store?
In private meetings with other senior
DI officials, MacEachin — who is said to
have claimed that he is acting on behalf
of Director Woolsey — laid down the real
objectives of his reorganization plan:
- Consolidating and
institutionalizing changes
already made. - This would involve, among other
things, “purging the
culture of the 1980s”
at the CIA. No one knows exactly
what this means. It could be
interpreted as a sign that the
Administration wants to purge a
so-called “Cold War
mindset” from DI products.
(Indeed, MacEachin, as an analyst
in the Agency’s Soviet Affairs
Bureau and former head of the CIA
Arms Control Intelligence Staff,
has long been susceptible to the
moral equivalency and
multilateralist notions that
underpin much of the
New-World-Order-think.) - Assuring that CIA
briefings coincide with
Administration policy and cannot
lead policy makers to accuse the
Agency of “disloyalty.”
MacEachin was quoted as having
actually said in a recent meeting
with senior CIA officials:
“Analysts must recognize
that if they give a briefing
which deviates too much from
official policy, they may be
accused by Clinton Administration
officials of being
disloyal.”
On the other hand, the
“1980s culture” that
the DDI wants to purge may be
that instituted under former CIA
Directors William Casey and
Robert Gates designed to maximize
the quality and utility of
intelligence analysis by
encouraging competition in
analysis, incorporating
alternative scenarios and
publishing dissenting points of
view.
In pursuit of these objectives, three
draft plans were unveiled on 14 July,
featuring — among other things — a
number of troublesome bureaucratic
changes, including the following:
- Most if not all DI
regional offices will be merged.
A single DI career service will
be created. This new system will
stress “well-rounded”
analysts over experts. MacEachin
appears to have a low regard for
expert analysts; he does not like
analysts to stay in any given job
for more than two-to-three years
and thereby develop such
expertise. - The CIA Office of
Leadership Analysis (LDA), which
produced the controversial
Aristide psychological profile
and biography, will be abolished. - The CIA Office of
Training and Education course on
intelligence writing will be
completely redesigned to teach
rookie and veteran analysts how
to write fact-based,
“judgment-free”
analytical papers.
Some in the DI believe that
Clinton foreign policy officials
who seem to share this attitude
are simply intimidated by
experienced hands at State and
CIA whose corporate memories may
prove inconvenient. By doing away
with longtime experts, CIA would
avoid this problem and allow
relatively inexperienced
policy-makers to see themselves
as unrivaled authorities on the
subject at hand.
Regrettably, many veteran CIA analysts
and managers support MacEachin’s efforts.
They see a Central Intelligence Agency in
serious political trouble as a result of
congressional micromanagement and the
hostility of the Clinton team. Some
appear preoccupied with concerns about
job security arising from the Ames
affair, recent ambitious bids by the FBI
to steal CIA turf, and Senator Daniel
Patrick Moynihan’s perennial effort to
abolish the Agency outright. Simply put,
a number of senior CIA employees and
analysts believe that to survive, CIA
needs to give the Administration whatever
political correctness it wants.
What Will Result?
The MacEachin strategy appears aimed
at using the cover of the Ames affair to
blow through a major reorganization of
the CIA that will have long-term
consequences for U.S. intelligence and
for American security policy. The
incipient invasion of Haiti is a case in
point: Accommodating the Clinton
Administration’s adamant opposition to
the unvarnished truth about the nature of
the actors and the complexion of the
problem in Haiti appears likely to result
in dead American troops and the
assumption of an onerous new U.S.
responsibility for the turbulent domestic
situation there.
In short, this reorganization
of the Directorate of Intelligence will
not provide the hard-headed, critical
intelligence support President Clinton
and his team so desperately need.
Instead, it will institutionalize pandering
to policy officials who become spiteful
when confronted with bad news concerning
their assumptions and decisions. For
example, the kind of rigorous analysis
which U.S. policy-makers and commanders
will have to have if they are actually
directed to invade Haiti will not be
produced under this plan. Similarly, CIA
analyses of many other issues this
Administration finds politically
neuralgic — for example, North Korea’s
ongoing nuclear weapons program; the
resurgent anti-Western forces in the
former Soviet Union; the potential for
further, strategically significant
conflict in the Persian Gulf; the
long-range problems for American
interests in East Asia and beyond arising
from China’s economic growth and military
build-up; and the need for effective
missile defenses — are also likely to
suffer as a result of this scheme.
The Bottom Line
Clearly, there are areas of the CIA’s
performance — both on the operational
side (involving everything from
counterintelligence to the running of
secret agents) and on the analytical side
(from assessing potential adversaries’
actual capabilities to divining their
intentions) — that warrant reform and
refocussing. Such improvements should
reflect the continuing importance of
having intelligence serve
policy-making and policy execution in a
proper way, i.e., by being timely,
accurate and relevant.
But this reorganization and
reinvigoration must be done with
toughness, thoughtfulness and with a
vision for future needs. It must not
proceed as the product of the political
displeasure of the current administration
with the intelligence judgments being
produced. While the intelligence
community must always be professionally
responsible to the true needs of the
President and his policy officials in
formulating and executing U.S. policy, it
must never “cook the books” —
either by direction, out of fear, in
order to protect its “rice
bowls” or to curry favor.
CIA officials may think that the
current reorganization plan will spare
them the budget cutter’s ax by winning
kudos from the Administration and
congressional critics. In the
long-run, however, by creating conditions
under which the Agency becomes, at best,
irrelevant and, at worst, a contributor
to ill-considered policy decisions, they
may instead be writing the CIA’s
epitaph.
– 30 –
1. In this regard,
see “Psychology and the CIA: Leaders
on the Couch,” by Thomas Omerstad,
in Foreign Policy, Summer 1994,
pp. 105-122.
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