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To: LindyBill who wrote (100750)2/16/2005 12:23:38 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793755
 
Breaking: U.S. Intelligence Officials Worried About Possible Attack Against the American Homeland
Feb 16, 2005

By Katherine Shrader
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Groups associated with al-Qaida are at the top of the list of threats to the United States, leading government intelligence officials said Wednesday, saying Iran has emerged as the top threat to American interests in the Middle East.
Despite gains made against al-Qaida, CIA Director Porter Goss, in an unusually blunt statement before the mostly secretive Senate Intelligence Committee, said the terror group is intent on finding ways to circumvent U.S. security enhancements to attack the homeland.

"It may be only a matter of time before al-Qaida or other groups attempt to use chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear weapons. We must focus on that," Goss said.

FBI Director Robert Mueller said he worries about a true sleeper operative whom he contended has been in place for years to launch an attack inside the United States. "I remain very concerned about what we are not seeing," he said in his prepared remarks.

Mueller, Goss and other intelligence leaders provided these and other assessments at the annual briefing of threats from around the globe.

The head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Vice Adm. Lowell Jacoby, painted Iran as a leading threat to U.S. interests in the Middle East.

In his prepared testimony, Jacoby said he believes that Iran will continue its support for terrorism and aid for insurgents in Iraq.

He said the country's long-term goal is to expel the United States from the region, and noted that political reform movements there have lost momentum.

In the past year, the intelligence community has been faced with a series of negative reports, including the work of the Sept. 11 commission and the Senate Intelligence Committee's inquiry on the flawed Iraq intelligence.

And next month, President Bush's commission to investigate the intelligence community's capabilities on weapons of mass destruction is also expected to submit its findings.

Given the after-the-fact investigations into the Iraq intelligence, Senate Intelligence Chairman Pat Roberts, R-Kansas, said his panel will become more proactive in how it reviews the intelligence community's strengths and weaknesses, already focusing on nuclear terrorism and Iran.

The hearing came as the White House continues its eight-week-long search for a new national intelligence director, a position created in last year's intelligence reorganization bill.

Democrats were critical Wednesday of the pace of the search, saying the administration has not shown the same urgency that Congress showed in creating the position.

"There should be another chair before us, with an accompanying name card that reads director of national intelligence," said Sen. Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, the panel's ranking Democrat.

Roberts said it was "crucially important" to get the right person.

The hearing marked the first public appearance for Goss, the former House Intelligence Committee chairman, since his confirmation hearing in September.

Critics say he's politicizing the agency by surrounding himself with Republican advisers from his years in Congress. Yet his allies say he's promoting agency veterans to senior management positions and making changes essential to ensure the intelligence community does not repeat the kind of blunders that led up to the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks and the faulty prewar estimates of Iraq's weapons.

---

On the Net:

CIA: cia.gov

Defense Department: defense.gov

State Department: state.gov

Senate Select Committee on Intelligence: intelligence.senate.gov

AP-ES-02-16-05 1058EST

This story can be found at: ap.tbo.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (100750)2/17/2005 12:12:59 AM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793755
 
And another on Scheuer by the same Economist....The Evidence Scheuer Ignored
Weekly Standard ^ | 11/23/04 | Thomas Joscelyn

weeklystandard.com

ON SUNDAY'S Meet The Press Tim Russert asked his guest, Michael Scheuer, to respond to questions concerning his first book from 2002, Through Our Enemies' Eyes. In it, as I pointed out in an earlier article, Scheuer cites numerous pieces of evidence that substantiate the Bush administration's claim that Saddam's Iraq had a relationship with al Qaeda. However, in his recent media appearances, Scheuer now gives the impression that there is no evidence that there was a relationship.

Tim Russert asked Scheuer about this apparent contradiction; his response left much to be desired. Scheuer's response does, however, illustrate one of the many problems Porter Goss and the Bush administration face in their attempt to reform the intelligence community. When asked about his analysis in 2002, Scheuer responded (in part), "I certainly saw a link when I was writing the books in terms of the open-source literature, unclassified literature, but I had nothing to do with Iraq during my professional career until the run-up to the war." (emphasis added)

Scheuer had "nothing to do with Iraq" during his professional career? Scheuer's response implies that during his entire tenure as the head of the CIA's "bin Laden unit" he never seriously investigated the possibility that Saddam's Iraq was aiding bin Laden's al Qaeda in its endeavors. In other words, he never tested the hypothesis of "state support" for al Qaeda's terrorist activities.

This startling admission reveals the type of pathological "group-think" that needs to be purged from the CIA. In the early


'90s the CIA adopted a specific "stateless" paradigm for understanding terrorism. Directly contrary to the prevailing wisdom of the 1980s, terrorist acts were no longer suspected of being "state-backed" affairs. Instead, the mantra of "loosely affiliated" terrorist networks took root and pariah states such as Iraq--despite being on the State Department's list of "state sponsors of terrorism" every year--were increasingly viewed as bit players in the terrorist arena.

As a brief example of how problematic this view became, consider the events of just three months during Scheuer's tenure as the head of the bin Laden unit--from December 1998 until February 1999.

In December 1998 President Bill Clinton ordered Operation Desert Fox, a massive missile strike against Iraqi targets, which lasted from December 16 to 19. Operation Desert Fox was the last of many U.S. / U.K. efforts in 1998 to destabilize and punish the Iraqi regime for its refusal to comply with weapons inspections. For example, the Iraqi Liberation Act, signed into law by President Clinton on October 31, provided direct funding and support for a coalition of Iraqi opposition groups as well as funding for Radio Free Iraq (which broadcasted anti-regime programming into Iraq from Prague).

With such intense Western pressure on the Iraqi regime mounting, and his conventional military forces completely inept (his anti-aircraft artillery could not even shoot down one coalition aircraft), whom could Saddam turn to for support? Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda.

The weeks following Operation Desert Fox were flooded with media reports from around the world warning of an alliance between Saddam and bin Laden. The main event which triggered these reports was Faruq Hijazi's (one of Saddam's top intelligence operatives) visit to Afghanistan on December 21--just two days after the bombing campaign ended--to meet with bin Laden and his cohorts. Scheuer discusses this meeting (as well as an earlier one in 1994) in Through Our Enemies' Eyes.

The first report of the December meeting appeared in Milan's Corriere Della Sera (December 28, 1998) and was quickly followed by reports in virtually every major Western country: for example, the Paris-based Al-Watan Al-Arabi (January 1, 1999), Newsweek (January 11, 1999), ABC News (January 14, 1999), The New York Post (February 1, 1999), the London Guardian

(two articles on February 6, 1999). Even a number of Arab newspapers (and Radio Free Iraq on January 8, 1999) reported the meeting with Hijazi and Saddam's offer of safe haven for, and desire to work with, bin Laden.

Saddam's relationship with bin Laden became so well known that when the Taliban reported bin Laden "missing" (probably a bit of disinformation) in February of 1999, the media knew where he was likely to go: Iraq. The Associated Press led the way by reporting on February 13, "Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has offered asylum to bin Laden, who openly supports Iraq against the Western powers." Similar stories spread, once again, throughout the global media.

The Clinton administration was not unaware of these reports. As reported in the 9/11 Commission Report, Bush administration critic Richard Clarke worried in an email to Sandy Berger on February 11 that bin Laden would find out about a proposed U-2 fly over and "armed with that knowledge, old wily Usama will likely boogie to Baghdad." Also according to the 9/11 Commission Report, Bruce Riedel, of the National Security Council staff, told Berger that, "Saddam Hussein wanted Bin Ladin in Baghdad."

DID SCHEUER


ignore all of this evidence and continue to have "nothing to do with Iraq?" Did he not think it was important to investigate Iraq's relationship with al Qaeda in February of 1999? According to his answer on Meet The Press, he never seriously investigated the possibility that Saddam's Iraq could collaborate with bin Laden's al Qaeda before the run-up to the Iraq war.

Scheuer says that in the prelude to the Iraq war he went through the CIA's classified archives of "roughly 19,000 documents, probably totaling 50,000 to 60,000 pages" and in it he found "absolutely no connection . . . in terms of a relationship." As shown by Stephen Hayes, the evidence cited above is just a small sampling of the total evidence that was available to Scheuer and the intelligence community.

Did the CIA's copious files really not include any mention of this evidence, as Scheuer now suggests? It is hard to believe. It is more likely that Scheuer simply returned to the CIA's institutionalized view of terrorism as "loosely affiliated networks" without significant state support.

Such a mindset offers us a unique view of how the old CIA operated. It had become so "dysfunctional" that existing paradigms for understanding terrorism were treated as unquestionable dogma. Scheuer threw out this old paradigm in 2002 when he wrote, "We know for certain that bin Laden was seeking CBRN weapons . . . and that Iraq and Sudan have been cooperating with bin Laden on CBRN weapon acquisition and development."

Now all Goss has to do is throw out the old mindset altogether. He has his work cut out for him.

Thomas Joscelyn is an economist who works on antitrust and security issues.