WASHINGTON - CIA Director George J. Tenet is on his way out,
leaving an ambivalent legacy in his wake.
Despite all the confidence that President Bush expressed in Mr.
Tenet, it was probably past time for him to move on. Retaining an
intelligence chief who allegedly claimed it was a "slam dunk" that
Iraq had a robust weapons of mass destruction program, when the
data were actually far more ambiguous, would have been, well,
untenable.
This is not to say that Mr. Tenet didn't inherit a tough job or
that he was completely ineffective. Transforming the CIA from a
Cold War institution into an agile, post-Cold War intelligence arm
is a daunting task. It was complicated by years of underfunding and
the inability of the Clinton administration to craft a strategy to
stem the rise of transnational terrorism.
Mr. Tenet performed yeoman's service during the wilderness years.
He served his nation for a long time (at seven years, his is the
second-longest tenure as CIA chief). And the CIA had its successes,
including outing Pakistan's nuclear peddler Abdul Qadeer
Khan.
But there was also a litany of strategic failures - from missing
the signs of India's nuclear tests to failing to get Osama bin
Laden and inaccurately assessing the state of Saddam Hussein's
weapons programs.
It's hard to avoid the conclusion that Mr. Tenet failed to provide
the critical, objective analysis the president needs, as both the
House and Senate intelligence committees have noted. Yes, mistakes
will be made. And it is unrealistic to expect strategic
intelligence to provide all of the answers, all of the time. But
the record of national strategic intelligence over the last decade
is not good enough. It is time to move on.
Mr. Tenet's departure provides a perfect opportunity for Congress
and President Bush to press as quickly as possible for responsible
intelligence reform.
Today's intelligence network is staffed with dedicated men and
women who do fine work, but it's not the right instrument for
facing the challenges of the 21st century. The Bush administration
has done much to improve counterterrorism operations by adding
resources and shifting priorities, but more needs to be done. The
United States needs intelligence agencies that are as facile in
dealing with shadowy transnational gangs as they are in countering
conventional enemies.
Today's national intelligence community consists of 15 agencies
within the CIA, Defense Intelligence Agency, National Security
Agency, Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard and departments of
Defense, Energy and Treasury. The result is a deeply fractured and
parochial intelligence community, unable to exploit information-age
technologies and operational practices. Turf battles and
cross-agency communication problems are the rule rather than the
exception, and no one is in charge.
Mr. Tenet has served as director of the CIA and is the president's
senior intelligence adviser, but his title remains a misnomer. The
secretary of defense owns 80 percent of the intelligence budget and
seven of the 15 intelligence agencies. During the Cold War, it made
sense for the defense secretary to own the majority of intelligence
assets because the Soviet military posed the primary threat to U.S.
security. Today, threats are more diffuse.
Testimony before the 9/11 commission clearly demonstrates the need
for better sharing and dissemination of information at all levels
of government. Specifically, the United States needs:
- A national leadership that will ensure rapid improvement in
information-gathering capabilities at all levels and access to
timely, reliable and actionable information from both foreign and
domestic sources for use at the federal, state and local
levels.
- An information clearinghouse where all intelligence and law
enforcement agencies can screen data about terrorist
activities.
- The Department of Homeland Security to become the single
integrator of the domestic intelligence picture as envisioned by
the Homeland Security Act.
- Strengthened use of intelligence in visa issuance and monitoring, enforcement of immigration laws and anti-money-laundering activities.
Mr. Tenet noted yesterday that he was leaving "with sadness, but
with my head held very, very high." Only if policy-makers undertake
some serious reforms of our intelligence community - and ensure
that our president is given the rock-solid, reliable information he
needs to make responsible decisions - can we share in the second
half of his sentiment.
James Jay Carafano, a 25-year veteran of the armed forces, is a
senior research fellow in defense and homeland security at The
Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in The Baltimore Sun