By Philip Klein on 1.9.09 @ 6:09AM
What does Barack Obama's surprise choice as CIA director mean for
the future of American intelligence?
Barack Obama's choice of Leon Panetta, the former congressman who
went on to serve as chief of staff for President Clinton, to head
the Central Intelligence Agency has members of the intelligence
community scratching their heads.
To defenders of the choice, Panetta's reputation as a competent
manager and loyalty to Obama may help to shake up the agency and
keep it from undermining the White House. But several ex-CIA
officials contacted by TAS greeted the pick with
trepidation.
"Everybody is shocked and concerned about his lack of any
intelligence experience," a former senior officer at the CIA told
TAS, asking that his name be withheld because he still
does some work with the agency. "What kind of signal is this
sending?"
One fear the ex-official raised is that the pick is an indication
that Obama, like President Clinton before him, does not have much
of an interest in intelligence. Another possibility is that
Panetta can be a repeat of the failed tenures of Stansfield
Turner under Jimmy Carter and John Deutch under Clinton -- both
of whom were outsiders brought in to reform the agency.
Initially, John Brennan, who had a strong intelligence
background, was seen as the leading candidate to head the agency
under Obama, but he withdrew his name from consideration after
coming under fire from liberals, who associated him with Bush
administration detention and interrogation policies. Panetta has
been a fierce critic of such practices.
To skeptics, the fact that interrogation policy played such a
crucial role in the selection process indicates that the incoming
administration may not understand the broader scope of the
agency's responsibilities.
"People think the left-wing bloggers are running the asylum now,"
the ex-CIA official lamented. "They want to completely neuter the
agency."
However, he noted that if Stephen Kappes were to remain as deputy
director to run the day-to-day functions of the agency, it would
be a reassuring signal to the rank and file.
An additional source of confusion resulting from the appointment
is what Panetta's role would be relative to retired Admiral
Dennis Blair, who has been chosen as director of national
intelligence, a position created in the wake of the September 11
attack to oversee all intelligence agencies.
"When he was chief of staff, Panetta was the gate keeper who
controlled the president's schedule," explained another former
CIA official. "I find it very difficult to believe that he would
be at ease reporting to or through Admiral Blair. Who's in
charge? Is the director of the CIA in charge of the final product
that reaches the president? Or is the Office of National
Intelligence?"
To this former official, the nation would have been better served
if Obama had appointed somebody who had CIA field experience, who
understood the institutional culture, and who is apolitical,
rather than a Democratic Party loyalist who may only tell the
president what he wants to hear.
In contrast, Ken deGraffenreid, who was a senior intelligence
official in the Reagan White House and also at the Department of
Defense during the current Bush administration, presented a
critical assessment of the state of the CIA. A significant
portion of his workload at the Pentagon involved trying to undo
many of the things the CIA did to weaken the Bush administration,
deGraffenreid said, including leaking intelligence reports to the
media that undermined the administration's foreign policy. This
is how deGraffenreid sees the Panetta move making sense for
Obama.
"If you put a loyalist in there who runs things, maybe he is in a
position to block some of the shenanigans that the CIA pulls," he
said. "Panetta is probably a good political move from the
perspective of protecting Obama's rear end."
According to deGraffenreid, those in the CIA have lost sight of
the fact that they're not supposed to craft foreign policy.
"They're out of constitutional control and they've become
incompetent at their basic function of getting secrets," he said.
"If the criticism of Panetta is that he does not have
intelligence experience, my answer is, so what? Let's get down to
brass tacks. Does he know what's wrong and is he going to bring
that agency under constitutional control?"
While politically speaking it may prove a savvy decision for
Obama to have Panetta at the CIA, he said that it's unclear if
either the president-elect or his choice to head the agency
understands that "it's a Herculean task to do what needs to be
done for American intelligence."
"It's unclear to me whether Obama understands the degree to which
we need intelligence in this world, because he's mostly a
domestic guy," deGraffenreid said. "From the campaign it didn't
seem that he had a very realistic understanding of the dangers in
this world."