Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Crib Notes on Tenet's Book. Doubt I'll read it after all.

As One would expect, it is self-serving and
On Friday, we got a sneak peek at the new memoir by former CIA director George Tenet, “At the Center of the Storm.”
Of course, it’s completely self-serving and takes plenty of not-so-subtle shots at a long line of enemies in the administration from Dick Cheney and Condi Rice to Steve Hadley and Scooter Libby. (And demonstrates that
Tenet has a healthy imagination when it comes to key dates. There isn't much we don't already know or suspect


But it does contain some new revelations about the War on Terror and the behavior of its main players:

“They sought to create a connection between Iraq and the 9/11 attacks that would have made WMD, the United Nations, and the international community absolutely irrelevant.”

Enemies

- Tenet characterizes the war between the CIA and Dick Cheney’s office as “one-sided,” adding that his team at the agency ”were noncombatants.”


- Tenet reserves particular scorn for NSC deputy Stephen Hadley. Among his crimes: ignoring a CIA request in early 2001 to allow the agency to kill Bin Laden, pestering a CIA official to make so many changes to a report that she almost quit. (They didn't want bin Laden dead! How were they going to replace him?)

- Blames Bob Woodward for telling him that the “slam dunk” anecdote wasn’t a signficant part of the journalist’s ”Plan of Attack” book. “I have another two-word reaction to that statement. The first word is ‘bull’.”


- Tenet blames then-FBI director Tom Pickard for accusing him of failing to notify the FBI about Zacharias Moussaoui. “Hell, it was the FBI’s case, their arrest. I had no idea that the Bureau wasn’t aware of what its own people were doing.” Despite repeated emails from CIA reps about Moussaoui’s terror links, the FBI claimed that they didn’t have enough info to get a FISA warrant to search him. (This has got to be bullshit. Somebody, somewhere didn't just drop the ball, they punted the damn thing out the window and down the street.)


9/11

- As Tenet arrived at the West Wing on September 12, 2001 to brief the president, he ran into Pentagon strategist Richard Perle who nodded to him and said, “Iraq has to pay a price for what happened yesterday. They bear responsibility.” Tenet’s reaction: “I was stunned but said nothing… At the Secret Service security checkpoint, I looked back at Perle and thought: What the hell is he talking about? Moments later, a second thought came to me: Who has Richard Perle been meeting with so early in the morning on today of all days? I never learned the answer to that question.”

- The FAA produced 105 daily intellgence summaries for airline industry leaders between April 1, 2001 and September 11, 2000. Almost half of them mentioned al-Qaeda, Bin Laden or both.


War on Terror

- A low-level CIA operative confronted Tenet about the 1998 embassy bombings months after a proposal to strike one of Bin Laden’s compounds was cancelled. “If you had allowed us to go ahead with our operation, those people might still be alive!”

- Despite claims that al-Qaeda detainee Abu Zubaydah was mentally unstable because he adopted multiple personas in his personal diary, CIA analysts determined that the terrorist was using a sophisticated literary device to express himself, including his twisted sexual fantasies about women.

- When the first stories about Khalid Sheik Mohammed’s capture portrayed him as an al-Qaeda James Bond due to a photograph of him wearing his traditional robes, Tenet went on a media offensive. He got CIA spokesman Bill Harlow to pick out the infamous photo of Mohammed looking like a hung-over Ron Jeremy and leaked it to the AP. (Wait...hold it! Didn't Tenet have anything better to do than find an ugly picture of Khalid Sheik Mohammed, in which he appeared hung-over to say the least, or maybe run over by truck. Who the hell cares what he looks like? What damn difference does it make? Maybe I am just dense, but I would think I would have had better things to do than worry about whether or not the "planner of 9/11" looked too good on TV.

- In several clandestine meetings since 1999, the CIA met with Libyan intelligence officers, including chief Musa Kusa, the mastermind of the Lockerbie bombings. The long-awaited deal with Libya almost collapsed when John Bolton planned a press conference to trumpet a weapons seizure. The CIA later learned that the Libyans had been ripped off by a middleman during the deal to acquire nuclear technology from Pakistani rogue scientist A.Q. Khan, paying $200 million for $100 million of materials. Well, that's not surprising. Bolton could screw up a ....well, you know. Musa Kusa? Where do they get these names? Sounds more like a Mediterranean side dish than an accomplished terrorist

- Tenet and Colin Powell were furious about conservative activist Michael Ledeen’s secret meetings with Italian intelligence and Iranian Manucher Ghorbanifar. The CIA came close to filing a “crimes report” about Ledeen with the Justice Department. When Condi Rice naively claimed that Pentagon officials happened to bump into Iranian dissidents while crossing a street in Paris, Tenet told her, “Condi, in this line of work there is no such thing as an accidental meeting.” (Criminal charges should have been filed. Hey George T., doesn't the name Ghorbanifer ring a bell with you? He was mixed up with the Iran/Contra crowd, which included Poppy "out-of-the-loop" Bush. Was Michael Ledeen even in government when this meeting took place? Did you find out about the other Iranians who were there as well, one of them, a former head honcho in the Revolutionary Guard of Iran? I assume we are talking about the meeting in Italy, Dec 2001, not long after which, those naughty little forgeries about Niger yellowcake showed up, as if by magic, at the White House. Wasn't Larry Franklin, of spying for AIPAC fame, in that meeting as well, or did he come into the picture later. Nice shot at showing Condi up as stupid, as PhDs often are, about anything other than what they have studied all their adult lives, but we already know she is true Bushie twit, and a terrible liar. Apparently she thinks Paris is like the local grocery store, where you coud run into almost anyone, including arms dealers, traitors, forgers and pentagon officials. Jeebus!)

- Tenet’s defensiveness about the 9/11 Commission’s conclusion that he lacked a strategic plan to take on global terrorism. “How could a community without a strategic plan tell the president of the United States just four days after 9/11 how to attack the Afghan sanctuary and operate against al-Qaida in ninety-two countries around the world?” (Didn't Junior have a plan for attacking Afghanistan on his desk, several days before 9/11/01? But nevermind, there weren't enough targets in Afghanistan, according to Rummy the Dummy, even after 9/11. No, not many tagrets; just one very tall Arab man, with lots of cash, who had declared war on the U.S. years before and is, to my knowledge, still freer than I am.)


Iraq War


- “If someone had told me to quit paying so much attention to terrorism in the months following September 11 and to start boning up on Iraq instead, I would have stared at them in disbelief.” (Yep, that's pretty much the way Richard Clarke described his reaction, when he was told just that, by no less than the war preznit, himself, the day after 9/11.)

- The CIA predicted some of the chaos that would ensue in the wake of the invasion of Iraq, producing a December 13, 2002 report titled “The Perfect Storm: Planning for Negative Consequences of Invading Iraq.” Among them was anarchy and the territorial breakup of Iraq, major oil supply disruptions and a surge of global terrorism against US interests. (Everybody warned them George, just like everyone warned them about Al Qaeda. Obviously, my dear, they did not give a damn; not then, not now. Anyone who had bothered to read a few books about Iraq, the middle east, Islam or any other pertinent subject, after the shock of 9/11 had worn off enough to think straight, could have warned them about those things. It isn't rocket science. Just curious, but did anyone think to warn Junior that insulting and kicking dirt in the face of the practically the entire world have some pretty damn serious consequences as well? Apparently, that obvious fact went over his head as well.)


- When two CIA analysts claimed during a high-level meeting that a much stronger case could be made for Iran’s backing of international terrorism than could be made for Iraq’s, Doug Feith said their objections were “persnickety.” (Persnickity? PERSNIKITY? I can sure believe that Feith said that. He just looks like someone who would use that word. Besides, George, you still do not seem to get that this god-awful nightmare, in which we find ourselves, with quite a bit of help from you, is not now and never has been about fighting terrorism. It is about the NeoCon's all consuming, imperial plan for a New American Century, which involved re-shaping the middle east and other places to better meet the needs of American corporations. All they needed was a "New Pearl Harbor." They got one and you got most of the blame. See how that works, "Condi" Tenet?

- The CIA analyst who managed the NIE on Iraq, Bob Walpole, a motorcycle-driving Mormon, was against the war. “I just don’t believe in this war,” he told Tenet. “Some wars are justifiable, but not this one.” (I'll drink to Mr. Walpole and his Harley. Too bad you didn't say that to Junior!)


- After his capture, Saddam Hussein told FBI special agent George Pirro that he pretended to have WMDs because he was trying to send a message to the UN Security Council to encourage a broader disarming of the Middle East and to longtime enemy Iran: “You guys just don’t understand. This is a rough neighborhood.” (I still don't think WMDs had anything to do with the pre-emptive invasion of Iraq. The inspectors were there, in Iraq, running to every site our government told them was suspicious; you know those sites that were just to the East, North, West and South, whatever, of Baghdad? Junior was in such a rush to get in there, the inspectors had to leave or get their butts blown off. Saddam bluffed and went down. He misunderestimated a madman or two.

- Paul Wolfowitz and Scooter Libby were the two most ardent proponents of a link between Iraq and al-Qaeda, asking CIA analysts repeatedly to recheck their information. (More egg-heads, without a freakin' clue)


- Tenet implicitly claims that Democratic wrangling over the disputed 2000 election distracted the US from retaliating for al-Qaeda’s deadly attack on the USS Cole. “Perhaps it would have been difficult to launch new military ventures while the country was fixated on counting chads and Supreme Court votes.” (OK, that is it! Tenet, you are a true, no-nothing jackass. Do you have any idea how many Americans had no freakin' idea who Osama bin Laden was on 9/11. Why do you suppose that is? After all, according to this government, this man had declared war on America, bombed two of our embassies, almost simultaneously, and one of our naval vessels and yet, while some had maybe heard the name, they knew very little about him. Why? Because the American news media and the public were absolutely obssessed with Bill Clinton's penis and Monica's stained dress; for months on end, that is all we heard. When Clinton fired off a few missiles in Al Qaeda's direction, the Goopers went nutz: Wag the dog, wag the dog, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. How can the entire government be so distracted because of an election, that it cannot seem to function when under a huge threat? That is BS. Democratic wrangling? It was their duty to their voters to wrangle. Democracy goes on, no matter what, or it should, but the government needs to be functional while Democracy is going on.

- Tenet dismissed Internet rumors that Osama Bin Laden had worked for the CIA during the Afghan-Soviet war, stating categorically that the al-Qaeda mastermind had no contact with the agency during that period. (I don't believe this particular rumor, anyway. That is not to say that we did not, in large part, help create Al Qaeda, intentionally or not. We are always creating monsters over which, sooner or later, we lose control. Then, something like this happens.)


- Tenet felt that the incoming Bush administration wasn’t focused on the al-Qaeda threat, citing “a lack of urgency.” (Then, it was your job to make them focus or resign in protest. You weren't all alone. Richard Clarke did all in his power, except resign. The lights were blinking red. You kept saying, we are gonna get hit. They had no desire to stop it. Hell, they were awaiting for it. Junior put Cheney in charge of the terrorism threat. Vice didn't even bother to have a real meeting until a week before 9/11. Everyone warned them! )

- Tenet criticized Pakistan’s former intelligence chief Gen. Mahmood Ahmed for his lack of cooperation. Two days before 9/11, the pair had lunch and Tenet claims that he pushed him on Mullah Omar, the Taliban leader protecting Bin Laden. Mahmood praised Omar and didn’t budge his position.


- CIA field officers had a sure-fire clue to figuring out when Iraq would be invaded: the Starbucks at CIA headquarters switched over to a twenty-four-hour-a-day operation. (Gee, I guess Starbucks, Inc. knew too, eh? The whole world knew it was coming, when the inspectors had to haul ass out of Iraq, before they could finish their jobs.

- Tenet would have fired weapons inspector David Kay if he had been a regular officer at the agency. Kay outraged the CIA by refusing to lend some of his staff to the military’s efforts to track down insurgents in Iraq. (He might as well have. There seems to be no shortage of "insurgents," if that is the noun we are using this week, and a rather huge shortage of WMD, until we got there with ours.)


- The Coalition Provisional Authority was so committed to their optimistic propaganda that the White House had to rely on the British to tell them what was really going on in the country. One CIA analyst told Tenet that CPA “runs like a graduate school seminar, none of them speaks Arabic, almost nobody’s ever been to an Arab country and no one makes a decision but [Jay] Bremer.” (But they were all loyal little Bushies and that's all that matters when fortunes are being made off death and carnage. )

- The Pentagon was so determined to exclude Ba’athists and ex-Army members from the future of Iraq that a U.S. Army colonel, who had been DIA’s liason to Ahmed Chalabi, once advised, “We should round them all up and shoot them.” (We didn't even do that to the Nazis. Why did our military hate these guys so much. Maybe they knew too much, about U.S./Iraq relations over the years.)


- The administration was so obsessed with Chalabi that “you had the impression that some Office of the Vice President and DOD reps were writing Chalabi’s name over and over again in their notes, like schoolgirls with their first crush.” Tenet claims that President Bush was frustrated by the focus on Chalabi, twice asking “What the hell is going on with Chalabi” and concluding “I don’t think he ought to be working for us.” (Then why was he allowed to continue on at a six figure salary. Who is the damn president, anyway?

- Joseph Wilson’s briefing about his notorious trip to Niger? He gave an oral briefing to two CIA analysts at his home one night over Chinese takeout food. Blah, blah, whatever....


- Tenet goes out of his way to prove that the CIA made several attempts to get erroneous information about yellowcake out of presidential speeches in 2002.


Oddball


- When Tenet met his counterparts at Russia’s FSB at a fancy restaurant in Moscow, they were greeted by a voluptuous blonde flanked by two dwarves who escorted them inside. During dinner, Tenet’s aide John McLaughlin performed a magic trick where he turns a 1000-ruble note into a 100,000-ruble note, stunning FSB director Nikolai Kovalev.

- Tenet started a fire at CIA headquarters during a celebration over the capture of Pakistani terrorist Aimal Kasi. After he lit a victor cigar, it fell on the floor in all the excitement and set the carpet on fire in the 6th-floor Global Response Center. Later, that piece of burned carpet was framed and hung on the wall.


- During the 2000 summit at Sharm el-Sheik, Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak made fun of Yasser Arafat. While Tenet was huddling with Arafat, he noticed Mubarak quietly laughing and “twirling his finger beside his head, the universal symbol for ‘This guy you’re talking to is nuts!’”

- During the Church of the Nativity crisis in 2002, when Palestinian gunman holed themselves up in the holy site, the CIA’s Geoff O’Connell almost saved the day. He proposed that the Palestinians’ weapons be thrown into the sea. But of course the deal fell apart over a dispute: the Palestinians wanted the guns thrown in the Dead Sea and the Israelis wanted them tossed into the Mediterranean. (If this is true, it is just the kind of thing that causes cranial explosions in normal people.)


- Tenet and his CIA buddies had a pool going over how long it would take Arafat to say “I’m still suffering.” They’d each pick a time and put their money down. Another time, when Tenet was lying on his back on the floor to ease his back pain, Arafat flopped down next to him, saying that he did the same thing for his back. Tenet’s team was petrified that some photojournalist would capture the scene for posterity.

- The CIA’s liason to the Saudis, John Brennan, once spooked the head of Iranian intelligence by walking up to his car and knocking on the window. “As John tells the story, the guy got out of the car, claimed that Iran was a peace-loving country, then jumped back in the car and sped away.”


- In the run-up to the Iraq War, the CIA got an urgent message from Chinese intelligence, sending along the geographic coordinates for their embassy in Baghdad. They were hoping that it was accurately listed in Pentagon databases after their Belgrade embassy was mistakenly bombed by U.S. aircraft in 1999.

- Tenet’s decision to resign was sealed over a meeting with former FBI chief Louis Freeh, whom he accidentally ran into at a local A&P when they were both shopping for Sunday meals.

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. The Lantern has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is The Lantern endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)

....And The Truth Shall Set Us Free

1 comment:

Seven Star Hand said...

The pivotal import of Yellowcake, False Flags, & "Big Time" Evil

Hello Pelican,

The combination of George Tenet's book, At the Center of the Storm, Eisner & Royce's The Italian Letter and the books and research of many others in recent years now provides enough of a foundation for everyone to finally discern that 9:11 was a "false flag" operation against both the American public and the Muslim world. Likewise, the uncanny synchronicity of Al Qaeda's videos and other activities perfectly timed to reinforce and support the Bush/Cheney administration's political needs coupled with the actions of the Bush admin actually serving to strengthen Al Qaeda's position, now makes perfect sense. The apparent mistakes and chaos that have characterized the Iraq war, the easily prevented resurgence of the Taliban, and permitting Bin Laden to escape Tora Bora to a safe haven in Pakistan all fit the same pattern. It's hard to maintain a state of continuous war if you allow your made-to-order enemies to be defeated too early. It is likewise hard to remain a "war president" if your wars end too soon!

The letterhead used to forge the "Yellowcake letter" that was then used to help "sell" the Iraq war was stolen in Rome on 1/1/2001, more than nine months before 9:11 and before Little W. became president. Consequently, the use of the "Yellow-Cake Lie" was obviously discussed and planned before then! The import of this fact is that the Niger embassy in Rome was burglarized, before Bush became president, to lay the groundwork for the web of deception used to sell the Iraq War, after 9:11. More importantly, it is highly unlikely that the Iraq war could ever have been sold to the American public, without something like 9:11 happening first. Any excuses of other uses for the stolen letterhead are laughable since the letterhead burglary would have been pointless, without 9:11. This evidences foreknowledge of those attacks, a full nine months before they occurred, among other things!

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