Friday, November 10, 2006

like re-shuffling a marked deck...


I was reading e-mail and about to go out for a little morning coffee when stumbling across this article . "The Secret World of Robert Gates"The Secret World of Robert Gates http://www.consortiumnews.com/2006/110906.html

a mind-opening read about the new secretary of defense nominee robert gates .

when "rumsy" so suddenly quit and gates was nominated to replace "the donald" , i heard that gates was daddy bush's former cia director --well , it was once again obvious who was pulling dub's strings ...

gates was a player in the iran-contra scandal , helped armed saddam hussein during iraq / iran war , while at the same time selling arms to iran through the israelis .

gates helped create the islamic -fundamentalist / osama bin laden "blowback" menace by arming the jihadis in the afghan/ soviet war ...one of the resulting side effects of that little adventure being , in part , the networks that laid the groundwork for a nuclear armed pakistan and north korea .

gates was also instrumental in the fixing the intelligence around the desired outcome / policy that as we see from the iraq war , that now pervades cia-- with honest intelligence being shelved in favor of administration propaganda --blind foreign policy in line with presidential ideology and spin , but totally devoid of connection with reality .

the same bull---t that led america into iraq was preceded by gates being a key player in efforts to try to falsely connect the old soviet union to world terrorism and the deliberate over estimations of soviet military power in order to justify reagan-bush era unprecedented arms races and military buildups -- fixing intelligence to fit the desires of the whitehouse and its political objectives is no new thing to gates .


this nimrod was part of the cia crew that totally missed that the soviet union --far from being the menacing "evil empire" threat that reagan-bush made it out to be --was instead "the mexico of europe", on the verge of collapse...

to top it off , the article describes how gates is suspected of being part of the "repugnacants" october surprise --the secret negotitations between the reagan-bush team and iran to delay the release of american embassy hostages in iran until after the election in order to insure a "repugnantcan" victory in the elections of 1980 .

with the election of reagan/bush we saw the return of the disgraced , dishonest and incompetent "greedy old party" back into the whitehouse to begin the first feeding frenzy for the rich also known as the "reagan revolution"


The Secret World of Robert Gates


By Robert Parry
November 9, 2006

Robert Gates, George W. Bush..s choice to replace Donald Rumsfeld as Defense Secretary, is a trusted figure within the Bush Family..s inner circle, but there are lingering questions about whether Gates is a trustworthy public official.



The 63-year-old Gates has long faced accusations of collaborating with Islamic extremists in Iran, arming Saddam Hussein..s dictatorship in Iraq, and politicizing U.S. intelligence to conform with the desires of policymakers .. three key areas that relate to his future job.



Gates skated past some of these controversies during his 1991 confirmation hearings to be CIA director .. and the current Bush administration is seeking to slip Gates through the congressional approval process again, this time by pressing for a quick confirmation by the end of the year, before the new Democratic-controlled Senate is seated.



If Bush..s timetable is met, there will be no time for a serious investigation into Gates..s past.



Fifteen years ago, Gates got a similar pass when leading Democrats agreed to put ..bipartisanship.. ahead of careful oversight when Gates was nominated for the CIA job by President George H.W. Bush.



In 1991, despite doubts about Gates..s honesty over Iran-Contra and other scandals, the career intelligence officer brushed aside accusations that he played secret roles in arming both sides of the Iran-Iraq War. Since then, however, documents have surfaced that raise new questions about Gates..s sweeping denials.



For instance, the Russian government sent an intelligence report to a House investigative task force in early 1993 stating that Gates participated in secret contacts with Iranian officials in 1980 to delay release of 52 U.S. hostages then held in Iran, a move to benefit the presidential campaign of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush.



..R[obert] Gates, at that time a staffer of the National Security Council in the administration of Jimmy Carter, and former CIA Director George Bush also took part.. in a meeting in Paris in October 1980, according to the Russian report, which meshed with information from witnesses who have alleged Gates..s involvement in the Iranian gambit.



Once in office, the Reagan administration did permit weapons to flow to Iran via Israel. One of the planes carrying an arms shipment was shot down over the Soviet Union on July 18, 1981, after straying off course, but the incident drew little attention at the time.



The arms flow continued, on and off, until 1986 when the Iran-Contra arms-for-hostages scandal broke. [For details, see Robert Parry..s Secrecy & Privilege. For text of the Russian report, click here. To view the actual U.S. embassy cable that includes the Russian report, click here.]



Iraqgate Scandal



Gates also was implicated in a secret operation to funnel military assistance to Iraq in the 1980s, as the Reagan administration played off the two countries battling each other in the eight-year-long Iran-Iraq War.



Middle Eastern witnesses alleged that Gates worked on the secret Iraqi initiative, which included Saddam Hussein..s procurement of cluster bombs and chemicals used to produce chemical weapons for the war against Iran.



Gates denied those Iran-Iraq accusations in 1991 and the Senate Intelligence Committee .. then headed by Gates..s personal friend, Sen. David Boren, D-Oklahoma .. failed to fully check out the claims before recommending Gates for confirmation.

However, four years later .. in early January 1995 .. Howard Teicher, one of Reagan..s National Security Council officials, added more details about Gates..s alleged role in the Iraq shipments.

In a sworn affidavit submitted in a Florida criminal case, Teicher stated that the covert arming of Iraq dated back to spring 1982 when Iran had gained the upper hand in the war, leading President Reagan to authorize a U.S. tilt toward Saddam Hussein.

The effort to arm the Iraqis was ..spearheaded.. by CIA Director William Casey and involved his deputy, Robert Gates, according to Teicher..s affidavit. ..The CIA, including both CIA Director Casey and Deputy Director Gates, knew of, approved of, and assisted in the sale of non-U.S. origin military weapons, ammunition and vehicles to Iraq,.. Teicher wrote.

Ironically, that same pro-Iraq initiative involved Donald Rumsfeld, then Reagan..s special emissary to the Middle East. An infamous photograph from 1983 shows a smiling Rumsfeld shaking hands with Saddam Hussein.

Teicher described Gates..s role as far more substantive than Rumsfeld..s. ..Under CIA Director [William] Casey and Deputy Director Gates, the CIA authorized, approved and assisted [Chilean arms dealer Carlos] Cardoen in the manufacture and sale of cluster bombs and other munitions to Iraq,.. Teicher wrote.

Like the Russian report, the Teicher affidavit has never been never seriously examined. After Teicher submitted it to a federal court in Miami, the affidavit was classified and then attacked by Clinton administration prosecutors. They saw Teicher..s account as disruptive to their prosecution of a private company, Teledyne Industries, and one of its salesmen, Ed Johnson.

But the questions about Gates..s participation in dubious schemes involving hotspots such as Iran and Iraq are relevant again today because they reflect on Gates..s judgment, his honesty and his relationship with two countries at the top of U.S. military concerns.

About 140,000 U.S. troops are now bogged down in Iraq, 3 ½ years after President George W. Bush ordered an invasion to remove Saddam Hussein from power and eliminate his supposed WMD stockpiles. One reason the United States knew that Hussein once had those stockpiles was because the Reagan administration helped him procure the material needed for the WMD production in the 1980s.

The United States also is facing down Iran..s Islamic government over its nuclear ambitions. Though Bush has so far emphasized diplomatic pressure on Iran, he has pointedly left open the possibility of a military option.

Political Intelligence

Beyond the secret schemes to aid Iran and Iraq in the 1980s, Gates also stands accused of playing a central role in politicizing the CIA intelligence product, tailoring it to fit the interests of his political superiors, a legacy that some Gates critics say contributed to the botched CIA..s analysis of Iraqi WMD in 2002.

Before Gates..s rapid rise through the CIA..s ranks in the 1980s, the CIA..s tradition was to zealously protect the objectivity and scholarship of the intelligence. However, during the Reagan administration, that ethos collapsed.

At Gates..s confirmation hearings in 1991, former CIA analysts, including renowned Kremlinologist Mel Goodman, took the extraordinary step of coming out of the shadows to accuse Gates of politicizing the intelligence while he was chief of the analytical division and then deputy director.

The former intelligence officers said the ambitious Gates pressured the CIA..s analytical division to exaggerate the Soviet menace to fit the ideological perspective of the Reagan administration. Analysts who took a more nuanced view of Soviet power and Moscow..s behavior in the world faced pressure and career reprisals.

In 1981, Carolyn McGiffert Ekedahl of the CIA..s Soviet office was the unfortunate analyst who was handed the assignment to prepare an analysis on the Soviet Union..s alleged support and direction of international terrorism.

Contrary to the desired White House take on Soviet-backed terrorism, Ekedahl said the consensus of the intelligence community was that the Soviets discouraged acts of terrorism by groups getting support from Moscow for practical, not moral, reasons.

..We agreed that the Soviets consistently stated, publicly and privately, that they considered international terrorist activities counterproductive and advised groups they supported not to use such tactics,.. Ekedahl said. ..We had hard evidence to support this conclusion...

But Gates took the analysts to task, accusing them of trying to ..stick our finger in the policy maker..s eye,.. Ekedahl testified

Ekedahl said Gates, dissatisfied with the terrorism assessment, joined in rewriting the draft ..to suggest greater Soviet support for terrorism and the text was altered by pulling up from the annex reports that overstated Soviet involvement...



..Casey and Gates used various management tactics to get the line of intelligence they desired and to suppress unwanted intelligence,.. Ekedahl said.

Career Reprisals

With Gates using top-down management techniques, CIA analysts sensitive to their career paths intuitively grasped that they could rarely go wrong by backing the ..company line.. and presenting the worst-case scenario about Soviet capabilities and intentions, Ekedahl and other CIA analysts said.

Largely outside public view, the CIA..s proud Soviet analytical office underwent a purge of its most senior people. ..Nearly every senior analyst on Soviet foreign policy eventually left the Office of Soviet Analysis,.. Goodman said.

Gates made clear he intended to shake up the DI..s culture, demanding greater responsiveness to the needs of the White House and other policymakers.


...Gates's message was that the DI, which had long operated as an ..ivory tower.. for academically oriented analysts committed to an ethos of objectivity, would take on more of a corporate culture with a product designed to fit the needs of those up the ladder both inside and outside the CIA.

..It was a kind of chilling speech,.. recalled Peter Dickson, an analyst who concentrated on proliferation issues. ..One of the things he wanted to do, he was going to shake up the DI. He was going to read every paper that came out. What that did was that everybody between the analyst and him had to get involved in the paper to a greater extent because their careers were going to be at stake...

...Gates soon was salting the analytical division with his allies, a group of managers who became known as the ..Gates clones... Some of those who rose with Gates were David Cohen, David Carey, George Kolt, Jim Lynch, Winston Wiley, John Gannon and John McLaughlin.

Though Dickson..s area of expertise .. nuclear proliferation .. was on the fringes of the Reagan-Bush primary concerns, it ended up getting him into trouble anyway. In 1983, he clashed with his superiors over his conclusion that the Soviet Union was more committed to controlling proliferation of nuclear weapons than the administration wanted to hear.

When Dickson stood by his evidence, he soon found himself facing accusations about his psychological fitness and other pressures that eventually caused him to leave the CIA.

Dickson also was among the analysts who raised alarms about Pakistan..s development of nuclear weapons, another sore point because the Reagan-Bush administration wanted Pakistan..s assistance in funneling weapons to Islamic fundamentalists fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan.

One of the effects from the exaggerated intelligence about Soviet power and intentions was to make other potential risks .. such as allowing development of a nuclear bomb in the Islamic world or training Islamic fundamentalists in techniques of sabotage .. paled in comparison.

While worst-case scenarios were in order for the Soviet Union and other communist enemies, best-case scenarios were the order of the day for Reagan-Bush allies, including Osama bin Laden and other Arab extremists rushing to Afghanistan to wage a holy war against European invaders, in this case, the Russians.

As for the Pakistani drive to get a nuclear bomb, the Reagan-Bush administration turned to word games to avoid triggering anti-proliferation penalties that otherwise would be imposed on Pakistan.

..There was a distinction made to say that the possession of the device is not the same as developing it,.. Dickson told me. ..They got into the argument that they don..t quite possess it yet because they haven..t turned the last screw into the warhead...

Finally, the intelligence on the Pakistan Bomb grew too strong to continue denying the reality. But the delay in confronting Pakistan ultimately allowed the Muslim government in Islamabad to produce nuclear weapons. Pakistani scientists also shared their know-how with ..rogue.. states, such as North Korea and Libya.

..The politicization that took place during the Casey-Gates era is directly responsible for the CIA..s loss of its ethical compass and the erosion of its credibility,.. Goodman told the Senate Intelligence Committee in 1991. ..The fact that the CIA missed the most important historical development in its history .. the collapse of the Soviet Empire and the Soviet Union itself .. is due in large measure to the culture and process that Gates established in his directorate...

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