SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (86755)11/17/2004 1:38:01 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793780
 
Looks like this new blog by Steve Clemons will be an excellent source of info. The opinions, however, will be from the left.

ISRAEL'S MOSSAD HAS ITS OWN PUTSCH UNDERWAY

This just in from UPI's Intelligence Watch, authored by John C.K. Daly and Martin Sieff:

Turmoil rocks politicized Mossad

The CIA is not the only major intelligence agency rocked by resignations of senior veteran officials and charges of politicization. Disgruntled veteran spooks of Israel's famous Mossad intelligence service are now going public with their complaints too.

Israel's Channel 2 has run a documentary claiming that no less than 200 agents including seven department chiefs have resigned in recent months.

They were furious, the documentary claimed because the Mossad's current chief Meir Dagan, a long time close friend of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, was politicizing the agency and massively downgrading the Mossad's traditional low expertise in humint, human intelligence, gathering and its analysis in favor of the currently fashionable war against Islamic terrorism.

Dagan, according to the claims, has put the emphasis on carrying the war against terror to previously secure strongholds of Islamist militant organizations in Arab countries. The September assassination of a Hamas senior official in Damascus is believed to have been one of the first successful operations carried out under this policy.

Dagan's purge of the Mossad, carried out with Sharon's full approval has striking parallels with the turmoil now shaking the discreet corridors of CIA headquarters in Langley, Va. Porter Goss, President George W. Bush's recent pick to replace George Tenet as Director of Central Intelligence, distrusted the old intelligence establishment as liberal wimps, the same attitude Dagan has shown to old-time spymasters in the Mossad.

At least one charge that Dagan's critics have made against him looks like falling by the wayside: They told Channel 2 that relations with the CIA deteriorated badly on his watch. But with Goss making the same kind of shake-up at Langley that Dagan has been carrying out in Tel Aviv, and pushing the same macho priorities that Sharon and Dagan favor, the two services will very likely soon be on the same page again.

However, Dagan's neglecting of humint could have serious repercussions for the United States, too. Over the past 30 years, the CIA has greatly relied on the Mossad's traditional expertise in running deep cover moles throughout the Middle East to compensate for its own miserable lack of them in the region. Under Dagan's policies, Israel's loss may be America's, too.

The new reality is that our government -- here and in Israel it seems -- is bent on manufacturing its own reality, glossing over inconvenient feedback and data, and turning civil servants into political hacks.

Not good at all -- neither for Red Americans (and Israelis) nor Blue.

-- Steve Clemons
thewashingtonnote.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (86755)11/17/2004 2:35:00 PM
From: D. Long  Respond to of 793780
 
Someone on the radio on NPR yesterday called it the "missionary model". Sending forth the WH faithful to convert the heathens at the agencies.

The biggest gripe I've heard so far is that the nominations are "too close" personally and intellectually to the President. Yeah, and this is a bad thing... how? The Secretaries are the agents of the President as head of the Executive, not emissaries of the opposition and foreign governments to the President.

Derek