SHELBY’S STEEL
Hand it to Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.): he drives
himself around Washington in his own car, unlike other big-wig
types, and then there’s the sixth sense he has about people. Maybe
that’s why he’s the ranking Republican and “vice chair” of the
Senate Intelligence Committee. And it’s also probably why
Britt Snider is no longer staff director of the
joint Senate and House intelligence committee now looking into the
intelligence failures that helped bring about September 11.
In February the Prowler reported
on Capitol Hill preparations for a multiple-committee investigation
and the anger of senators on the Senate Intelligence Committee upon
learning that CIA director George Tenet hadn’t
ordered a full review of his own.
Another source of contention was the hiring of Snider, a retired
CIA inspector general, to oversee the joint committee’s examination
of the roles of the CIA, the National Security Agency, and the FBI.
“But everyone knows the hearings would definitely have put a
spotlight on the CIA. That was the big target,” says a House
intelligence committee staffer.
For that reason alone, Shelby objected to the hiring of Snider,
a former Senate Intelligence Committee staffer and aide to
then-staff director Tenet. He also served as a special counsel to
Tenet at the CIA and eventually became the agency’s inspector
general before retiring last year.
But Shelby lost out to Democratic Intelligence chairman
Bob Graham and Republican House Intelligence
chairman Porter Goss, and ranking Democrat
Nancy Pelosi, all of whom wanted Snider. Shelby’s
main concern was the close relationship between Snider and Tenet,
who despite being a Clinton appointee has remained director of the
CIA under Bush. “He [Shelby] had his doubts about Snider, and he
monitored Snider’s activities pretty closely once he came on
board,” says a Senate Intelligence Committee staffer.
Last week, Snider resigned over his failure to disclose to the
joint committee a possible security leak by one of the staff he
hired. No one would comment on or off the record on the events
leading up to Snider’s leaving, but the Senate staffer did say that
Snider’s exit was acrimonious. Shelby’s staff, apparently, came up
with some of the information that led to the showdown with Snider,
leaving Goss and Graham in the awkward position of having to admit
that Shelby may have been right all along.
“We’ll never know if Snider was the right man for the job or
not,” says the Senate staffer. “And we don’t know if he would have
given the CIA a free pass on its screwups prior to 9/11. But Snider
seemed to be watching his step, knowing that Shelby was looking for
a slip-up.”
The committee is determined to hire a new staff director as
quickly as possible, and now Shelby has the upper hand. “His
misgivings about the cronyism weren’t necessarily confirmed,” says
the House staffer. “But Graham and Goss will have to listen to him
now that their boy is off the board.
WHO GOT DRUNK WHERE?Although Texas Republican Sen.
Phil Gramm, is not seeking re-election this fall,
he has no plans to leave early. Were he to step down before the
election, it would allow Texas’s governor, a Republican, to appoint
John Cornyn, the Republican running to succeed
Gramm, to the vacant seat and likely give Cornyn a huge boost in
what would then become a run for “re-election.” But again, Gramm
doesn’t want to retire early, and no one can make him do it.
So Gramm was surprised when Texas newspapers ran reports last
week claiming he was mulling stepping aside early. Gramm denied
that he was and chalked the stories up to “Democrats who got drunk
in Austin.”
Well, it wasn’t Democrats and it wasn’t in Austin. Gramm should
check down the hall inside the offices of Republican Minority
Leader Trent Lott. According to a leadership
source, Lott floated the rumor through friends in the Texas state
Republican Party, hoping it would allow him to then raise the issue
of Gramm’s early retirement.
“Lott was trying to nudge him a bit, get him thinking about it,
without his asking,” says the source. “The RNC would like to help
Cornyn, but it’s not the party’s place to push for something like
that.” Nor, at this point, is it Lott’s.